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The Rajputs (from the Sanskrit tatpurusha compound rājaputra, "son of a king") are a prominent social group belonging to the
northern part of the Indian sub-continent. In the Hindi and Gujarati languages, those belonging to the Kshatriya caste of Hindus
are generally referred to as "Rajputs" (alternately: "Thakurs").
The term rājaputra is first found in the 7th century AD. Rajputs are dominant in the state of Rajasthan, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh and
Bihar. Rajput dynasties played a prominent role in the history of northern India. They developed an ethos of warlike chivalry that
served as the benchmark for other Indian communities as the latter ascended to regional dominance. This martial ethos did not preclude patronage of
the arts: distinctive forms of painting and architecture developed under the aegis of rajput courts, and classical music
found support. Thus, the rajputs have contributed directly and indirectly to many facets of the Indian crasis.
Origins
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. We present both the traditional view and certain scholarly speculations made by
researchers on the origin of the rajputs.
Traditional
Main article: Rajput clansAs Kshatriyas, the rajputs regard themselves as being descended from the vedic warrior class. Legend ascribes to the
Rajputs an origin springing 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 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. Authoritative listings of the 36 rajput clans
are to be found in the Kumārpāla Charita of Jayasimha and the Prithvirāj Rāso of Chandbardai.
Scholarly speculations
Main article: Origin of RajputsAmong the origin-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, sage Vasishta performed a
great Yagya 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 from the sacred
flames in this manner.
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.
Political history
Main article: History of RajputsRajput history, being a part of the broader north Indian, can be classified classified easily into several distinct periods.
Early history (7th-11th centuries AD)
The first Rajputs kingdoms are attested in the 7th century, and the Rajputs rose to prominence in Indian history in the ninth and tenth centuries.
The four Agnivansha clans, the Pratiharas (Pariharas), Chauhans (Chahamanas), Solankis (Chaulukyas), and
Paramaras (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 Rai dynasty ruled Sindh during
the 6th and 7th centuries AD. Sindh was conquered by an Arab Muslim army of the Caliphate, led by Bin Qasim, in the 8th century. According to
some sources, Bin Qasim also attacked Chittorgarh, and was defeated by Bappa Rawal. Certain other invasions by murauding "Yavvanas" are
also recorded in this era. By this time, the terms "Yavvana" (literally: "Greek") was applied any tribe that resided to the west and north-west of
present-day Pakistan. 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.
Archaeological evidences and contemporary texts suggest that the Indian society had achieved significant prosperity during the Rajput rule.
Numerous inscriptions from this period have been found. The literature composed in this period in Sanskrit and in Apabhramshas constitutes a
large segment of the classical Indian literature. The early 11th century also saw the reign of the polymath king Bhoj, Paramara ruler of Malwa. He
was not only a patron of scholars, but was himself a distinguished writer. His Samarangana-sutradhara deals with architecture and
Raja-Martanda is a famous commentary on Yoga-sutra.
Early kingdoms: The Rajput clan organization first become crystallized in this period. Intermarriage among the Rajput clans
interlinked the various regions of India, facilitating the flow of trade and scholarship. Clans claiming descent from the Solar and Lunar races later
established independent states. The Guhilas (later called the Sisodias) established the state of Mewar (later Udaipur) in the 8th
century, under Bappa Rawal, who ruled from Chittorgarh. The Kachwaha clan came to rule Dhundhar, with their capital at [[Amber,
India|Amber]], and later Jaipur. The Chandela clan ruled Bundelkhand after the tenth century, occupying the fortress-city of Kalinjar
and building the famous temple-city of Khajuraho. The Tomaras established a state in Haryana, founding the city of Dhiliki (later Delhi)
in 736.
Islamic invasions (11th-16th c.)
Main article: Rajputs and invasions of IndiaDue to geographic reasons, rajput-ruled states suffered the brunt of aggression from various Mongol-Turkic-Afghan warlords who
repeatedly invaded the Indian subcontinent. Within a hundred years after Muhammad's death, Islam had invaded the countries of Asia as
far as the Hindu Kush. Fifteen years after the death of prophet, Usman sent a sea expedition to Thana and Broach on the Bombay
coast. Other raids towards Sindh took place in 662 and 664 with no results. Due to the military organization of the Hindu kingdoms, it was
only from ca. 1000 AD that the Islamic armies could establish any foothold in the Punjab.
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 Chandelas. In 1018 AD, Mahmud sacked the city of
Kannauj, seat of the Pratihara kingdom. He later withdrew to Ghazni, being interested in loot rather than empire. In the ensuing chaos, the
Gahadvala dynasty established a modest state centered around Kannauj, ruling for about a hundred years until they were defeated by
Muhammad of Ghor in 1194 AD; the city was again sacked.
Meanwhile, a nearby state centered around present-day Delhi was ruled successively by the Tomara and Chauhan clans. The Rajputs
fought each other in the eleventh and twelfth centuries. Prithiviraj III, ruler of Delhi, defeated Muhammad of Ghor in 1191 at the [[First
Battle of Tarain]], who however defeated Prithviraj the following year at the Second Battle of Tarain. 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. The Chauhans led by Govinda, grandson of Prithviraj
III, later established themselves a small state at Ranthambore. The Songara sept of the Chauhan clan later ruled the town of Jalore, while
and Hada sept 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.
The Delhi Sultanate was founded by Qutb ud din Aybak, Muhammad of Ghor's successor, in first decade of the 13th century. Sultan [[Ala ud
din Khilji]] (1296-1316) conquered Gujarat (1297) and Malwa (1305), and captured the fortresses of Ranthambore in 1301, Chittorgarh
(capital of Mewar) in 1303 and Jalor in 1311, all of these after long sieges with fierce resistance from their Rajput defenders. In particular, the
seige of Chittor, its brave defence by the Guhilas, the saga of Rani Padmini and the Jauhar she led are the stuff of immortal legend. Ala ud
din Khilji delegated the administration of the conquered areas to his principal rajput collaborator, based at Jalore; the latter was soon displaced by his
son-in-law Hammir, a scion of the Guhila clan, who re-established the state of Mewar and was progenitor of the Sisodia clan.
Mewar emerged as the leading Rajput state; Rana Kumbha expanded his kingdom at the expense of the sultanates of Malwa and Gujarat.
Mughal era (16th-18th c.)
Babur defeated Ibrahim Lodi at the First Battle of Panipat on April 21, 1526. Rana Sanga rallied an army to challenge Babur. He
was betrayed by one of his Tomar rajput generals, and was defeated by Babur at the Battle of Khanua on March 16, 1527.
During this time, Mewar, which was under the regency of Rani Karmavati, widow of Rana Sanga, was menaced by Bahadur Shah, ruler of Gujarat.
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 Jauhars performed at Chittor. Karmavati leads the ladies of the citadel into death by fire, while the
menfolk sally out to meet the beseiging muslim army in a hopeless fight to the death.
Humayun's son Akbar consolidated control of his inheritence and expanded what had been the "Delhi sultanate" into a wide empire. One main
factor in this success was indubitably his co-option of native rajput chiefs into his empire-building project; his reign countenenced, for the first time,
the involvement of Indians in the affairs of the empire. Akbar married Jodha bai taking her to be a Rajput princess. However she was not the real
daughter of Raja Bharmal, the ruler of Amber. She was actually the maidservant of his wife. Her actual name was Heera Kunwar. When Emperor Akbar
demanded the hand of Raja Bharmal's daughter, the Raja presented his maid-servant instead, rechristened her Jodha Bai, indicating that she was
from Jodhpur. So Jodha Bai was not from the royal stock at all, and Raja Bharmal had tricked Akbar to marry a maidservant, posing her as a princess.
It was political compulsion that had led Raja Bharmal to agree to the alliance.
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. However, after a brave struggle, during which the ladies of the fort perfomed Jauhar for the third and last time in the history
of that citadel, Chittor finally fell to Akbar in 1568. The ruler, Udai Singh, had however retired to the nearby hills prior to this event; he was
succeeded, while in exile, by his son Rana Pratap as head of the Sisodias. Even in exile, the Sisodias knew no rest, and harassed the mughal
administrators of the land enough to cause them to make overtures. Rana Pratap, a present-day rajput icon, refused all such overtures of
friendship and alliance from Akbar, and rallied an army to meet the mughal forces. He was defeated at the battle of Haldighati on June 21,
1576; however, he carried out a relentless guerilla struggle from his hideout in the Aravalli hills. He also banned marraiges between his loyal
rajputs with other rajputs of rajasthan, who has entered into matrimonial alliance with the muslims. Rana Pratap's son, Amar Singh, entered into the
vassalage of the mughals and thus regained control of his state. The rajputs remained loyal to the mughal dynasty and empire even until the 19th
century; in all their official communiques and documents, the rajput courts rarely failed to formally affirm their loyalty to the (by now entirely
powerless) mughal emperor.
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. At the conclusion of the war in 1818, 18 states in the
Rajputana region, of which 15 were ruled by Rajputs, became princely states 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
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? . . . Rajputs 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
mantras 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 Hindus fought against other Hindus 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.
Clan, kinship and communities
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). Some of the Muslim Rajput
groups like Thakurais of East Champaran in Bihar, and some other Muslims of Rajput extraction are notable among Indian Muslims
for their descent from a prestigious Hindu caste. Their marginality is sometimes self-imposed as they want to retain their exclusivity by deciding not
to marry among other Muslims and preserve their distinction (Siddiqui 2004). A number of sub-castes, or jatis, claim to be Rajputs. Some of them
have a historical basis for the claim. Some are considered to be descendants of the Rajputs but are not generally accepted by the main Rajput
community (for example, Girasia). Some branches of Jain's and Marwari's had rajput forefathers but none of them are considered Rajputs
today.
Famous Rajput people
The rajputs have contributed to many facets of Indian life, both historically and in the modern age. A few rajput stalwarts are mentioned here.
Historical heroes
Modern era
- Vishwanath Pratap Singh, Prime Minister of India (Dec.2, 1989-Nov.10, 1990)
- Chandra Shekhar, Prime Minister of India (Nov.10, 1990-June 21, 1991)
- Jaswant Singh, Leader of Opposition, Rajya Sabha
- Bhairon Singh Shekhawat, Vice-president of India.
- Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore, olympic silver medalist
See also
References
- Template:Harvard reference .
- 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)
(review)
- Template:Harvard reference.
- 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
- Rajputs Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition; 2005
- Rajput Encyclopedia Britannica; 1911
- British Association of Rajputs