Rajput Article Index for
Rajput
Articles about
Rajput
 

Information About

Rajput




Rajputs (from the Sanskrit Tatpurusha compound '''', "son of a king") are a prominent social group of India , Nepal and Pakistan . They claim descent from the ancient royal dynasties of the region. Among Hindus , Rajputs are one of the principal groups belonging to the Kshatriya Varna within the Hindu Caste System .

Rajput dynasties played a prominent role in the history of found support. Thus, the Rajputs have contributed directly and indirectly to many facets of the Indian crasis.


DEMOGRAPHICS

.]]
The 1931 census of British India was the last to record caste affiliation in a manner that provides reliable information on Rajput demographics. Any present-day estimates are therefore speculative; they also vary widely.

The 1931 census reported a total of 10.7 million people self-describing as Rajput. Of this population, about 8.6 million people also self-described as being Hindu , about 2.1 million as being Muslim and about 50,000 as being Sikh by religion. The United Provinces (being approximately present-day Uttar Pradesh and Uttaranchal combined) reported the largest population of Rajputs, at 3,756,936. Next came the undivided province of Punjab with 2,351,650. The (then united) province of Bihar & Orissa , largely co-terminus with the eponymous present-day provinces, reported a Rajput population of 1,412,440, while Rajputana , which was almost co-terminus with the present-day state of Rajasthan , reported a figure of 669,516. The Central Provinces And Berar reported a figure of 506,087, the Princely State of Gwalior of 393,076, the Central India Agency of 388,942, the Bombay Presidency of 352,016, the Princely State of Jammu & Kashmir of 256,020, and the Western India States Agency of 227,137 Rajputs. The undivided province of Bengal (including present-day Bangladesh reported a figure of 156,978 Rajputs. The Princely State s of Baroda and Hyderabad reported figures of 94,893 and 88,434 respectively.

Rajputs typically speak whatever languages are spoken by the general population of the areas they live in. Hindi , Punjabi , Gujarati , and dialects of these languages are the major native languages (mother tongues) of the Rajputs.


ORIGINS

See Also: Origin of Rajputs


The traditional occupations of the Rajput are war and agriculture. As many scholars have pointed out, these areas lend themselves uniquely to the ingress of groups that were not formerly affiliated with those professions. The gradual accommodation of the new entrants into the social and family circle of the traditional community is the essential ''quid pro quo'' of the Sanskritization that the aspirant community essays. This phenomenon of gradual inclusion has indubitably obtained in the case of the Rajputs, with certain Jat and Maratha dynasties being among the most recent to venture the claim of affiliation with the Rajput community. In view of this, to seek a single and common, definitive origin for every present-day Rajput is widely recognised as being an exercise in futility. We however present both traditional legends and some scholarly speculations made by researchers on the origin of the Rajputs.


Legendary accounts

See Also: Rajput clans


As Kshatriya s, the Rajputs regard themselves as being descended from the Vedic warrior class. Legend ascribes to the Rajputs an origin stemming from certain Hindu deities; every Rajput must eventually belong to one of three great patrilineages, being:
  • the Agnivanshi lineage, claiming descent from Agni , the Hindu Fire-god;

  • the Suryavanshi lineage, claiming descent from Surya , the Hindu Sun-god;

  • the Chandravanshi lineage, claiming descent from Chandra , the Hindu Moon-god.

  • Some scholars also count '' Nagavanshi '', ''Rishivanshi'' and ''Vayuvanshi'' as traditional lineages. The ''Yaduvanshi'' lineage, claiming descent from the Hindu god Krishna , are in fact a major sept of the ''Chandravanshi'' lineage.


The aforementioned three patrilineages (''vanshas'') sub-divide into 36 main clans (''kulas''), which in turn divide into numerous branches (''shakhas'') to create the intricate Clan System of the Rajputs. The principle of patrilineage is staunchly adhered to in determining one's place in the system and a strong consciousness of clan and lineage is an essential part of the Rajput character. As the EB (1911) states, this tradition of common ancestry permits a poor Rajput yeoman to consider himself as well born as any powerful landholder of his clan, and superior to any high official of the professional classes. Authoritative listings of the 36 Rajput clans are to be found in the ''Kumārpāla Charita'' of Jayasimha and the '' Prithvirāj Rāso '' of Chandbardai .

Among the legends mentioned above, the one which addresses the origin of the '' Agnivanshi '' Rajputs is particularly interesting, not least because they were the earliest to rise to political prominence. This legend begins with the Puranic legend wherein the traditional '' Kshatriyas '' of the land were exterminated by Parashurama , an Avatara of Vishnu . Later, the legend says, sage Vasishta performed a great ''Yajna'' or fire-sacrifice, to seek from the gods a provision for the defense of righteousness on earth. In answer to his prayer, a youth arose from the very flames of the sacrifice -- the first ''Agnivanshi'' Rajput. In some versions of the legend, ''all'' the Rajput lineages rose thus from the sacred flames.


Modern hypotheses

Many scholars view the ''Agni kunda'' (fire-sacrifice) legend as suggesting, in an allegorical manner, the possibility that people who were not hitherto regarded as kshatriyas/Rajputs could come to be regarded as such after the customary fire-sacrifice based purificatory rituals. This legend has been used as the basis for many scholarly speculations on the origin of the Rajputs. James Tod uses this legend as a basis for speculating upon a Scythian origin for the Rajputs. He suggests that Scythian ( Saka , Huna ) tribes which invaded India in the 6th Century AD and disappeared into the population soon afterwards were the forbears of present-day Rajputs. Of course, the view that Rajputs are descended from Vedic-era Kshatriya s is widely accepted; many people see no reason to seek for origin in recently invading tribes or elsewhere.


POLITICAL HISTORY

See Also: History of Rajputs


, Rajasthan, which was built by Kachwaha Rajputs]]
Rajput history, being a part of broader North India n history, can be classified easily into several distinct periods.


Early history (7th-11th centuries AD)

The first Rajputs kingdoms are attested to in the 7th Century and the Rajputs rose to prominence in Indian History in the 9th and 10th centuries. The four '' Agnivanshi '' clans, namely, the Pratihara s (Pariharas), Chauhan s (Chahamanas), Solanki s (Chaulukyas) and Paramara s (Parmars), rose to prominence first. The Pratiharas established the first Rajput kingdom in Marwar in southwestern Rajasthan, with the Chauhans at Ajmer in central Rajasthan, the Solankis in Gujarat , and the Paramaras in Malwa .

The . These may have been the continuation of the usual invasions into India by warlike but less civilized tribes from the north-west, a phenomenon amounting almost to a tradition. Lalitaditya of Kashmir defeated one such invasion in the 8th century and the Pratiharas rebuffed another in the 9th century. The Pratiharas initially established themselves at Ujjain and ruled Malwa . Later, they established themselves at Kannauj , from which they ruled much of northern India, from Kathiawar in the west to Magadha in the east, in the 9th century.

Early kingdoms: The '' Suryavanshi '' and '' Chandravanshi '' Rajputs, who were originally vassals of the ''Agnivanshi'' clans, later established independent states. The Guhilots (later known as the Sisodia s) established the state of Mewar in the 8th century. This state was founded by Bappa Rawal, who ruled from Chittorgarh . The Kachwaha clan came to rule Dhundhar , with their capital at Amber , and later Jaipur . The Chandela clan ruled Bundelkhand after the 10th century, occupying the fortress of Kalinjar ; they later built the famous temples at Khajuraho . The Tomara clan established a state in present-day Haryana . They founded (c.736) the city of Dhiliki, later known as Delhi . The Kachwahas, Chandelas, and Tomaras were all originally vassals of the Pratihara kingdom.

The organization of Rajput Clan finally crystallized in this period. Intermarriage among the Rajput clans interlinked the various regions of India, facilitating the flow of trade and scholarship. Archaeological evidence and contemporary texts suggest that Indian society achieved significant prosperity during this era. The literature composed in this period, both in Sanskrit and in the Apabhramsha s, constitutes a substantial segment of classical Indian literature. The early 11th century saw the reign of the Polymath king Bhoja , Paramara ruler of Malwa. He was not only a patron of literature and the arts but was himself a distinguished writer. His '' Samarangana-sutradhara '' deals with architecture and his ''Raja-Martanda'' is a famous commentary on the Yoga - Sutra s.


Islamic invasions (11th-16th c.)

The fertile and prosperous plains of Northern India had always been the destination of choice for streams of invaders coming from the north-west. Incidentally, the last of these waves of invasions were of tribes who had previously converted to Islam. Due to geographic reasons, Rajput-ruled states suffered the brunt of aggression from various Mongol - Turkic - Afghan warlords who repeatedly invaded the subcontinent.

Within 15 years of the death of the Muhammad , the caliph Usman sent a sea expedition to raid Thana and Broach on the Bombay coast. Other unsuccessful raiding expeditions to Sindh took place in 662 and 664 . Indeed, within a hundred years after Muhammad 's death, Muslim armies had overrun much of Asia as far as the Hindu Kush . However, it was not until c.1000 AD that they could establish any foothold in India.

In the early 11th century, Mahmud Of Ghazni conquered the Hindu Shahi kingdom in The Punjab . His raids into northern India weakened the Pratihara kingdom, which was drastically reduced in size and came under the control of the Chandela s. In 1018 AD, Mahmud sacked the city of Kannauj , seat of the Pratihara kingdom, but withdrew immediately to Ghazni, being interested in booty rather than empire. In the ensuing chaos, the Gahadvala dynasty established a modest state centered around Kannauj, ruling for about a hundred years. They were defeated by Muhammad Of Ghor in 1194 AD, when the city was sacked by the latter.

Meanwhile, a nearby state centered around present-day Delhi was ruled successively by the Tomara and Chauhan clans. Prithiviraj III , ruler of Delhi, defeated Muhammad Of Ghor in 1191 AD at the First Battle Of Tarain . The latter returned the following year and defeated Prithviraj at the Second Battle Of Tarain (1192 AD). In this battle, as in many others of this era, rampant internecine conflict among Rajput kingdoms became a primary cause for the victories gained by the invaders.
, ancient home of the Rathore rulers of Marwar in Rajasthan ]]

Important relocations

Prithviraj Chauhan proved to be the last Rajput ruler of Delhi . The Chauhans, led by Govinda, grandson of Prithviraj, later established a small state centered around Ranthambore in present-day Rajasthan . The Songara sept of the Chauhan clan later ruled the town of Jalore , while and Hada sept of the same clan established their rule over the Hadoti region in the mid-13th century. The Tomaras later established themselves at Gwalior , and the ruler Man Singh built the fortress which still stands there. As we have seen, Muhammad's armies later brought down the Gahadvala kingdom of Kannauj in 1194 AD. Some surviving members of the Gahadvala family are said to have refugeed to the western desert, where they formed the Rathore clan and founded the state of Marwar . Other relocations surmised to have occurred in this period include the emigration of Rajput clans to the Himalaya s. The Katoch clan, the Chauhans of Chamba and certain Rajput clans of Nepal are counted among this number.


Conflict with the Sultanate

witnessed several heroic battles between Rajputs and Muslim invaders. Three different times did its womenfolk perform '' Jauhar ''.]]
The Delhi Sultanate was founded by Qutb Ud Din Aybak , Muhammad of Ghor's successor, in the early 13th century. Sultan Alauddin Khilji (1296-1316) conquered Gujarat (1297), Malwa (1305), Ranthambore (1301), Chittorgarh (1303) and Jalor (1311), all after long sieges and fierce resistance from their Rajput defenders.

First Jauhar: In particular, the siege of Chittor (1303), its brave defence by the Guhila s, the saga of Rani Padmini and the '' Jauhar '' she led are the stuff of immortal legend. This incident has had a defining impact upon the Rajput character and is detailed in a succeeding section.

Ala-ud-din Khilji delegated the administration of the newly conquered areas to his principal Rajput collaborator, Maldeo Songara, ruler of Jalore ; the latter was soon displaced by his son-in-law Hammir , a scion of the lately displaced Guhila clan, who re-established the state of Mewar some time after 1326 AD. Mewar was to emerge as a leading Rajput state, after Rana Kumbha expanded his kingdom at the expense of the sultanates of Malwa and Gujarat .


Mughal era (16th-18th c.)

The Delhi sultanate was extinguished when Babur defeated Ibrahim Lodi at the First Battle Of Panipat in 1526 . Rana Sanga rallied an army to challenge Babur. He was betrayed by one of his Rajput generals and was defeated by Babur at the Battle Of Khanua on March 16 , 1527 . While the Rajput rulers had to submit to Babur, they retained control of their states.

Second Jauhar: Rana Sanga died soon after the battle; shortly afterwards, Mewar came under the regency of his widow, Rani Karmavati. The kingdom was menaced by Bahadur Shah, ruler of Gujarat. According to one romantic legend of dubious veracity, Karmavati importuned the assistance of Humayun , son of her late husband's foe. The help arrived too late; Chittor as reduced by Bahadur Shah. This is the occasion for the second of the three '' Jauhar s'' performed at Chittor. Karmavati led the ladies of the citadel into death by fire, while the menfolk sallied out to meet the besieging Muslim army in a hopeless fight to the death.
from Bengal by Rajput rulers serving as mughal officers in that province.]]

Mughal-Rajput alliance

Babur's son Humayun was an ineffectual ruler who perforce spend long periods in exile. His son was made of a different mettle; Akbar consolidated his inheritence and expanded what had been the "Delhi sultanate" into a wide empire. A main factor in this success was indubitably his co-option of native Rajput chiefs into his empire-building project; his reign countenanced, for the first time, the involvement of Hindu s in the affairs of the empire. The Rajput chiefs collaborated with alacrity, an alliance cemented by marriage, with numerous Rajput noblewomen being wed to mughal grandees. The Kachwahas were the first to give a daughter to Akbar; they pioneered a trend that soon turned pervasive and played no small role in extending Rajput influence across the Indian Sub-continent , from Bengal to Afghanistan to the Deccan . Indeed, two successive mughal emperors, Jehangir and Shah Jehan , were born to Rajput mothers.

Rajput chiefs served as mughal officers and administrators across the mughal empire and enjoyed much influence in the government. In this period, the ''aristocratic'' image of the Rajputs can be said to have finally crystallized; consequently, caste-divisions became rigid. The trend of political relations between Rajput states and the central power was the precursor for similar relations between them and the British.
of Mewar ,
immortal Rajput hero]]

Rana Pratap

Third Jauhar: However, these relations were not universally approbated. Mewar , which justly enjoys a unique position in the Rajput mind, held out and valiantly gave battle to Akbar. After a brave struggle, during which the ladies of the fort perfomed ''Jauhar'' for the third and last time in its history, Chittor finally fell to Akbar in 1568 .

Mewar's ruler, Udai Singh, had retired to the nearby hills prior to this event; he was succeeded, while in exile, by his son Rana Pratap as head of the Sisodia clan. Even in exile, the Sisodias did not rest; they harassed the mughal administrators of the land enough to cause them to make accommodatory overtures. Rana Pratap , a present-day Rajput icon, rebuffed every such overtures of friendship from Akbar, and rallied an army to meet the mughal forces. He was defeated at the battle of Haldighati on June 21 , 1576 and was forced to withdraw to the Aravalli ranges. However, he carried out a relentless guerilla struggle from his hideout in those hills.

Although Rana Pratap never gave in to the mughal power, his son Amar Singh entered into the vassalage of the mughals and thus regained control of his state. The Rajputs thereafter remained loyal to the mughal dynasty and empire for over two centuries, until that empire disintegrated. Indeed, even as late as in the 19th century, Rajput courts rarely failed to formally affirm their loyalty to the (by now entirely powerless) mughal emperor in all their official ''communiques'' and documents.


Maratha and British suzerainty (18th-20th c.)

Jodhpur was conquered by Sindhia , who levied a tribute of 60,000 rupees, and took from it the fort and town of Ajmer . Internecine disputes and succession wars disturbed the peace of the early years of the 19th century, and the Rajput princes asked for British protection from the Marathas during the Third Anglo-Maratha War of 1817 - 1818 . At the conclusion of the war in 1818, 18 states in the Rajputana region, of which 15 were ruled by Rajputs, became Princely State s of the British Raj , while the British took direct control of Ajmer, which became the province of Ajmer-Merwara . A number of other Rajput states in central India, including Rewa , Ajaigarh , Barwani , Chhatarpur , Datia , Orchha , and Ratlam , became princely states as well, and were placed under the authority of the Central India Agency .

The British colonial officials as a rule were very impressed by the military qualities of the Rajputs. In his ''Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan'' James Tod wrote.
"What nation on earth could have maintained the semblance of civilization, the spirit or the customs of their forefathers, during so many centuries of overwhelming depression, but one of such singular character as the Rajpoot? . . . Rajast’han exhibits the sole example in the history of mankind, of a people withstanding every outrage barbarity could inflict, or human nature sustain, from a foe whose religion commands annihilation; and bent to the earth, yet rising buoyant from the pressure, and making calamity a whetstone to courage. . . . Not an iota of their religion or customs have they lost. . . ".


Rajput rulers of Rajputana and Central India acceded to newly-independent India after 1947 , and Rajputana, renamed Rajasthan, became an Indian state in 1950 .


CULTURE AND ETHOS

The Rajput ethos is martial in spirit, fiercely proud and independent, and emphasizes lineage and tradition. Rajput Patriotism is legendary, an ideal they embodied with a sometimes fanatical zeal, often choosing death before dishonour. Rajput warriors were often known to fight until the last man. The practice of '' Jauhar '' and '' Saka '' was followed only in Rajput communities. When the outcome of a battle was against the Rajputs, ''jauhar'' would be committed by Rajput women and children in the night and next morning men would commit ''saka''. Brahmin priests would chant Vedic Mantra s and Rajput women wearing their marriage dresses, along with their young children, would embrace Sandalwood flames. The next morning after taking a bath, the men would wear saffron-coloured garments and apply the ash from the pyres of their wives and children on their foreheads and put a Tulsi leaf in their mouth. Then the palace gates would be opened and men would ride out for complete annhiliation of the enemy or themselves. Rajput men and women could not be captured alive. When Hindu s fought against other Hindu s there were never any '' Johars '' or ''saka'' because the defeated were treated with dignity. However, history records very few instances wherein a Rajput king sued for peace after a battle reversal and the Muslims initially agreed to the peace terms, only for the Rajputs, and their women and children, to be slaughtered upon surrender and once the ''pols'' or gates of their mighty fortresses were opened. One example of this is war between Puran Mal of Raisina and Sher Shah Suri. Rajputs honour their word more then their life and are renowned for their loyalty.

Rajasthan , which has a very high concentration of Rajputs , is located in northwestern India , near the Khyber Pass route used by most foreign invasions of India, including the Arabs, Afghans, Turks, Mughals, and other Islamic invaders of the Middle Ages. In his ''New History of India'', Stanley Wolpert wrote "The Rajputs were the vanguard of Hindu India in the face of the Islamic onslaught."

The Rajput lifestyle was designed to foster a martial spirit. Tod (1829) describes at length the bond between the Rajputs and their swords. The double-edged scimitar known as the khanda was the favorite weapon of the Rajput. On special occasions, a primary chief would break up a meeting of his chiefs with khanda nareal, or a distribution of swords and coconuts (453). In order to attain a greater bond with one's sword, Rajputs revered their swords and conducted the ritual of Karga Shapna during the annual festival of Navratri.

By the late nineteenth century, there was a shift from an emphasis on questions regarding the political relations amongst the Rajputs to a concern with kinship (Kasturi 2002:2). According to Harlan (1992:27), many Rajputs of Rajasthan are nostalgic about their past and keenly conscious of their genealogy, emphasizing a Rajput ethos that is martial in spirit, with a fierce pride in lineage and tradition. These lineages were linked to different networks, both sacred and profane. Branches on a stratified lineage could be either Hindu or Muslim (Kasturi 2002:2).

The following excerpt from the Encyclopedia Britannica (1911) sheds some light on the contemporary social values of the community:
The tradition of common ancestry permits a poor Rajput yeoman to consider himself as well born as any powerful landholder of his clan, and superior to any high official of the professional classes. No race in India can boast of finer feats of arms or brighter deeds of chivalry, and they form one of the main recruiting fields for the Indian army of the day. They consider any occupation other than that of arms or government derogatory to their dignity, and consequently during the long period of peace which has followed the establishment of the British rule in India, they have been content to stay idle at home instead of taking up any of the other professions in which they might have come to the front.



COGNATE COMMUNITIES

The mainstream Rajput community comprises of Hindu s belonging to the Kshatriya caste and to a specific set of 36 clans. Several other communities identify themselves as being Rajput, typically claiming to be of partial Rajput descent. They are found both in the Hindu community and in other religious groups.


Cognate Hindu communities

Certain Hindu communities claim partial descent from the Rajput community while holding social identities that set them apart from the main communion. The Girasia Scheduled Tribe of the Aravalli hills are among these. Many Rajputs perforce fled to the hills at various points in history, where they are said to have occasionally intermarried with the Bhil s; the Girasia community claim to be descended from such intermarriage. Some sections of the ''' Gaddi ''' scheduled tribe of Himachal Pradesh ascribe to themselves a similar heritage, as do the '''Gade Lohar''' community of nomadic blacksmiths. Certain specific sections of the Jain and Marwari communities also hold themselves to be of part-Rajput descent.


Non-Hindu Rajputs

Sikh Rajputs: The census of 1931 recorded the existence of 50,000 people who claimed to be both Rajput and Sikh . Occasional instances of inter-marriage between them and Hindu Rajputs are recorded.

''', concentrated primarily in Panjab and the United Provinces with smaller numbers in other places. In Panjab, Sindh , and Kashmir , they made up the majority of those claiming to be Rajput. They trace their lineages back to Hindu Rajputs who converted to Islam. Prominent Muslim Rajput personalities include General Asif Nawaz Khan Janjua , former Chief of Staff, Pakistan , General Iftikhar Janjua , Pakistani military commander and Amir Khan , British Olympic silver medalist for boxing.

Normally, there is no inter-marriage between Muslim and Non-Muslim Rajputs; however, Muslim Rajputs are not religiously barred from intermarriage with Muslims of other communities. Nevertheless, Muslim Rajputs usually marry amongst themselves, and depart from the custom of endogamy only seldom. The Thukrai community of East Champaran district in Bihar , India are among those noted for maintaining a strict tradition of Muslim Rajput endogamy.

The great majority of Muslim Rajputs today live in Pakistan . Detailed information on the community is available at the Muslim Rajputs page.


FAMOUS RAJPUT PEOPLE

The Rajputs have contributed to many facets of Indian life, both historically and in the modern age. A few prominent Rajputs are mentioned below:

Historical heroes

Modern age


SEE ALSO



REFERENCES


  Surname1 Harlan
  Given1 Lindsey
  Year 1992
  Title Religion and Rajput Women: The Ethic of Protection in Contemporary Narratives
  Publisher University of California Press
  ID ISBN 0520073398


  • Kasturi, Malavika, '' Embattled Identities Rajput Lineages'', Oxford University Press (2002) ISBN 01956-5787-x

  • M K A Siddiqui (ed.), ''Marginal Muslim Communities In India'', Institute of Objective Studies, New Delhi (2004)

  •   Surname1 Tod
      Given1 James
      Surname2 Crooke
      Given2 William (Editor)
      Year 1994
      Title Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan (2 vols)
      Publisher Trans-Atl
      ID ISBN 8170691281
      Comment The way Surjan Hada was befriended by Man Singh and Akbar and the conditions that Surjan laid down for this friendship are chronicled Surjan's leaving Ranthambore and living in Banaras because of this friendship is also documented by James Tod in this book Treachery against Rana Sanga is also described in this book (Treachery against Rana Sanga: Annals of Mewar, Chapter IX Vol-I: Pages 243-246 Surjan Hada: Page 381-385 volume II)


  • W.W. Hunter, ''The Indian empire, its people, history and products.'' First published: London, Trubner & Co., Ludgate Hill, 1886. ISBN 81-206-1581-6.




EXTERNAL LINKS



FURTHER READING




  Surname1 Beck
  Given1 Dr Sanderson
  Year 2004
  Title India & Southeast Asia to 1875
  Publisher World Peace Communications
  ID ISBN 0976221004


  Surname1 Bhati
  Given1 Hari Simha
  Year 2002
  Title Annals of Jaisalmer: a pre-medieval history
  Publisher Kavi Prakashan
  ID ASIN B0000CPJC0
  Comment Very detailed description of Bhatti clan of Rajputs Contains details on the siege of Jaisalmer and how proudly Jaisalmer was defended by Bhattis for eight consecutive years


  Surname1 Bhati
  Given1 Dr Narayan Singh
  Year 1991
  Title Maharaja Mansingh: the mystic monarch of Marwar
  Publisher Maharaja Man Singh Pustak Prakash, Jodhpur


  Surname1 Bhatnagar
  Given1 Professor VS
  Title Essays on Bardic literature


  Surname1 Choudhury
  Given1 Bani Roy
  Year 2nd Ed 1977
  Title Folk tales of Rajasthan
  Publisher Sterling Publishers
  ID ASIN B0007ANEHY


  Surname1 Dua
  Given1 Shyam
  Year 2004
  Title The luminous life of Maharana Pratap
  ID ISBN 8175738324


  Surname1 Heinemann
  Given1 S O
  Year 1990
  Title Poems of Mewar
  Publisher Vintage Books
  ID ISBN 81-85326-40-1
  Comment First sack of Chittor Rani Padmini and Rawal Ratan Singh Bravery of Gora, Badal (Chapter 2: Pages 11-39)


  Surname1 Hunter
  Given1 WW
  Year 1886
  Title The Indian Empire, Its People, History and Products
  Publisher London: Trubner & Co, Ludgate Hill, 1886
  ID ISBN 81-206-1581-6


  Surname1 Joshi
  Given1 Dr Sanjay
  Year 2004
  Title Unveiling Ajitsingh's Sanskrit biography : issues in Marwar history and Sanskrit poetics
  Publisher Books Treasure, Jodhpur
  ID ISBN 81-900422-1-1
  Comment A very good biography of Maharaja Ajit Singh Rathore of Jodhpur, son of Maharaja Jaswant Singh Rathore


  Surname1 Kadam
  Given1 Vasant S
  Year 1993
  Title Maratha confederacy : a study in its origin and development
  Publisher Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt Ltd, New Delhi
  ID ISBN 81-215-0570-2


  Surname1 Khan
  Given1 Rana Muhammad Sarwar
  Year 2005
  Title The Rajputs: History, Clans, Culture and Nobility
  Publisher Eastern Book Corporation
  Comment 2 Vols


  Surname1 Mathur
  Given1 Professor GL
  Year 2004
  Title Folklore of Rajasthan
  Publisher Publisher Rajasthani Granthagar, Sojati Gate, Jodhpur


  Surname1 Mathur
  Given1 Dr LP
  Year 2004
  Title War strategy of Maharana Pratap, its evolution and implementation
  Publisher Publication Scheme, Ganga Mandir, Jaipur-1
  ID ISBN 81-8182-016-9
  Comment Maharana Pratap's war strategy is discussed in detail


  Surname1 Nagar
  Given1 Dr (Kr) Mahendra Singh
  Year 2004
  Title The genealogical survey : Royal house of Marwar and other states
  Publisher Maharaja Man Singh Pustak Prakash, Jodhpur
  Comment Lineage of Rathore rulers is provided starting with Rao Sheoji


  Surname1 Ranade
  Given1 M G
  Year 1962
  Title Rise of the Maratha power
  ID ISBN 1135403368


  Surname1 Rathore
  Given1 Professor LS
  Year 1991
  Title Maharana Hammir of Mewar : Chittor's lost freedom restored
  Publisher The Thar Bliss Publishing House, Jodhpur 342 001
  Comment Life of Maharana Hammir and his campaigns to free chittor His wars with Muhammad Tughlaq


  Surname1 Rathore
  Given1 Dr LS Rathore
  Year 1990
  Title The glory of Ranthambhor
  Publisher Jodhpur university press, Jodhpur (India)
  Comment Detailed description of wars between Hammir Dev Chauhan and Khilji


  Surname1 Rathore
  Given1 Dr LS
  Year 1988
  Title The johur of Padmini : the saga of Chittor's deathless heroine
  Publisher Thar Bliss Publishing House, Jaipur
  Comment Description of Padmini's Jauhar, Gora and Badal's bravery, Allauddin's treachery against Rana Ratan Singh






  Surname1 Sarada
  Given1 Har Bilas
  Year First Ed 1917 Reprint 2003
  Title Maharana Kumbha: sovereign, soldier, scholar
  Publisher Rupa Co Ansari Road Daryaganj, New Delhi 110 002
  ID ISBN 81-29100-33-9
  Comment Detailed description of Maharana Kumbha's life His victory over sultans of Malwa and Gujarat (Chapter 6: Pages 37-43 Chapter 10: Pages 65-80)


  Surname1 Saran
  Given1 Richard
  Title The Mertiyo Rathors of Merto, Rajasthan (2 vols)
  Publisher Series#:51 Michigan Papers on South and Southeast Asia : University of Michigan Press
  ID ISBN 0891480854
  Comment This book describes the battle of Sammel between Maldev's generals and Sher Shah Suri (Volume 1 Page 163-169)


  Surname1 Sharma
  Given1 Professor Dashratha
  Year First ed 1975, Reprint 2002
  Title Early Chauhan dynasties: a study of Chauhan political history, Chauhan political institution, and life in the Chauhan dominions, from 800 to 1316 AD
  Publisher Books Treasure, Sojati Gate, Jodhpur
  Comment Wars between Prithviraj Chauhan and Ghori are described in great detail by Professor Dashrath Sharma in this book (Page 90-100)


  Surname1 Sharma
  Given1 GN
  Surname2 Mathur
  Given2 MN
  Year 2001
  Title Maharana Pratap & his times


  Surname1 Sharma
  Given1 Dr Sri Ram
  Year 2002
  Title Maharana Pratap : a biography
  Publisher Hope India Publications
  ID ISBN 817871003X


  Surname1 Singh
  Given1 Kesri
  Year 2002
  Title Maharana Pratap, the hero of Haldighati
  Publisher Books Treasure, Jodhpur
  Comment A very detailed description of the battle of Haldighati Which clans fought along with Maharana and in what order various Rajputs and Mughals fell It also describes Maharana's personal duels and how his life was saved by his own estranged brother Shakti Singh who was actually fighting against the Maharana (Chapter 1, Page 8-42)


  Surname1 Singh
  Given1 Dhananajaya
  Year 1994
  Title The house of Marwar
  Publisher Lotus Collection, Roli Books, New Delhi
  ID ISBN 8174360026


  Surname1 Sinh
  Given1 Raghubir
  Year 1999
  Title Durgadas Rathor : biography
  Publisher Lotus Collection, Roli Books, New Delhi
  ID ISBN 81-7056-051-9
  Comment Life history of DurgaDas Rathore and his help in getting Ajit Singh out of Delhi and then leading the Rajput rebellion against Aurangzeb while Ajit was still an infant


  Surname1 Sinh
  Given1 Raghubir
  Year 1989
  Title Studies on Maratha & Rajput history
  Publisher Research Publishers, Merti Gate, Jodhpur 342 002
  ID ISBN 81-85310-00-9


  Surname1 Somani
  Given1 Ram Vallabh
  Year 1999
  Title Maharana Kumbha and his times: a glorious Hindu king
  Publisher Jaipur Publishing House, SMS Highway , Jaipur-3
  Comment Life of Maharana Kumbha of Mewar


  Surname1 Thakur
  Given1 Upendra
  Year 1974
  Title Some aspects of Ancient India History and culture


  Surname1 Tiwari
  Given1 Vinod
  Year 2005
  Title Maharana Pratapa
  Publisher Manoj Publications, Delhi 110084
  ID ISBN 81-8133-591-0


  Surname1 Tod
  Given1 James
  Year 1996
  Title Rajput tales: adapted and abridged from Tod's Annals and antiquities of Rajasthan
  Publisher Cosmo Publications, Delhi, India
  ID ISBN 81-7020-753-3


  Surname1 Ujjwal
  Given1 Kailash Dan (Editor)
  Surname1 Singh (IAS)
  Given1 Pushpendra Singh (Editor)
  Year 1999
  Title Rathaudam ri khyata
  Publisher Rajasthan Oriental Research Institute, Jodhpur
  Comment Written records of history of House of Marwar


  Surname1 Warder
  Given1 A K
  Year 1972
  Title An Introduction to Indian Historiography