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 HISTORY OF INDIA 
 CHAPTER XX THE NATIVE STATES OF NORTHERN INDIA FROM A.D. 1000 TO 1526 
 On no occasion were the earlier 
        Muslim invaders of India called upon to meet a mighty Indian ruler. No 
        Asoka, Kanishka, or Harsha arose to defend the rich and alluring plains.
        Such rulers were, indeed, rare phenomena in India, which has never been
        the home of a nation, and whose normal condition was that of a 
        congeries of independent and mutually hostile states, fortunate if they 
        could agree temporarily to sink their differences before a common foe. When Muhammad b. Qasim invaded Sind
        in 711 the Chalukyas, the Pallavas, and the Rashtrakutas were 
        contending for supremacy in the Deccan, and the Arab geographers of a 
        later date corrupted Vallabha Rai, the title borne by many of the 
        Rashtrakutas, imitating the Chalukyas, into Balhara, and used this word 
        as a generic title for the leading ruler in India; but in Northern India
        the empire of Harsha had dissolved on his death in the middle of the 
        preceding century, and no power had succeeded to the hegemony. How Muhammad dealt with Dahir, the 
        local ruler of Sind, we have seen. The Chavadas of Kathiawar, the 
        Gahlots of Chitor, the Chauhans of Sambhar, and probably other houses 
        claim to have met and defeated the Arab invaders, but these chiefs ruled
        principalities contiguous to or not far distant from the conquered 
        state, and their opposition to Muhammad was not a united effort. The 
        claims may well be true, but the conflicts were of little importance. 
        The Arabs had Sind, and if they ever contemplated an extension of their 
        conquests in India they soon abandoned the idea. At the time of Mahmud's invasions 
        India north of the Vindhyas was divided into a number of independent 
        states. The Hindu Shahiya dynasty, founded by Lulliya the Brahman at the
        end of the ninth century, with its capital at Und on the Indus existed 
        on sufferance for some time after the establishment of the Turkish power
        in Ghazni, but was extinguished by Mahmud. Of the history of the 
        kingdom of the Punjab, with its capital at Bhatinda, little is known. 
        Its position compelled its kings, Jaipal I, Anandpal, Jaipal II, and 
        Bhimpal the Fearless to stand forth for a time as the principal 
        champions of Hinduism, and though their end was unfortunate it was not 
        dishonorable. On Bhimpal's flight to Ajmer in 1021 his kingdom became a 
        province of Mahmud's empire. The other states in northern India at this time were Sambhar, or Ajmer, ruled by the Chauhan Rajputs; Delhi, lately founded by the Tomaras near the site of the ancient Indraprastha (Indarpat); Chitor, already possessed by the Gahlots, who were not prominent among the opponents of the invader; Kanauj, still held by the Gurjara Pratiharas, Harsha's descendants, whose power had waned before that of the Chandel rajas of Jijhoti (the modern Bundelkhand), chieftains of Gond origin, who had advanced northwards until they made the Jumna the boundary between their territory and that of Kanauj; and Gujarat, ruled by the Chalukyas or Solankis, who had superseded the Chawaras. The Jats inhabited the country on the banks of the Indus between Multan and the Sulaiman Range, and their chieftains seem to have owned allegiance to the Muslim rulers of Multan. To the south of Jijhoti lay Chedi, held by the Kalachuris or Haihayas, another tribe of Gond origin, and to the west of Jijhoti and Chedi lay Malwa, governed by a line of Paramaras or Pawars which had been founded early in the ninth century. Bengal was ruled by the Pala dynasty, founded in the eighth century by Gopala, who was elected king of Bengal and founded the city of Odantapuri (Bihar). Kamarupa, or Assam, was ruled by an ancient family of Koch, or Tibeto-Chinese origin, which had become completely Hinduized. In Kashmir the Karkota dynasty, founded in Harsha's lifetime by Durlabhavardhana, still reigned. The fortress of Gwalior was the capital of the Kachhwaha Rajputs, who were probably feudatories of Jijhoti. Rajput Leagues against Mahmud The leading confederates of Jaipal I
        in his campaign against Sabuktigin were Rajyapala of Kanauj, styled 
        Jaichand by Muslim historians, and Dhanga of Jijhoti. The confederacy 
        formed against Mahmud in 1001 was far more formidable, and Anandpal of 
        the Punjab was joined by Visaladeva, the Chauhan king of Sambhar or 
        Ajmer, to whom was given the chief command, his vassal the Tomara raja 
        of Delhi, Rajyapala of Kanauj, Ganda of Jijhoti, Vajradaman Kachhwaha of
        Gwalior and Narwar, and the Pawar raja of Dhar, or Malwa, all of whom 
        shared in the disastrous defeat suffered by the Hindus on December 31, 
        1001. Ganda Chandel, who had succeeded 
        his father Dhanga in 999, and appears in Muslim annals as Nanda, raja of
        Kalinjar, which was his principal fortress, succeeded Visaladeva of 
        Sambhar as the leader of the Hindu confederacy, and, on Mahmud's return 
        to Ghazni in 1019, from the expedition in which he plundered Muttra and 
        captured Kanauj, Manaich, and Asni, took upon himself the probably 
        congenial duty of punishing Rajyapala for having, in order to save 
        Kanauj from pillage and destruction, betrayed the national cause by 
        swearing fealty to the foreigner. Ganda's son, Vidhyadara, aided by the 
        prince of Gwalior, invaded Kanauj and defeated and slew Rajyapala, who 
        was succeeded by his son, Trilochanapala. Mahmud was not slow to avenge his 
        vassal, and in 1021 invaded India to punish Ganda. The details of this 
        invasion have already been given. Ganda, with the confederate army of 
        36,000 horse, 105,000 foot, and 640 elephants, prepared to meet the 
        invader on the Sai, between the Ganges and the Gumti, but his courage 
        failed him, and after his flight Mahmud captured Bari, the new Pratihara
        capital, and returned to Ghazni with the booty which he had taken from 
        Ganda's camp. In 1022 he returned and compelled Ganda's son to surrender
        to him Kalinjar, which long remained a bone of contention between Hindu
        and Muslim in India, and was regarded as the key to the region south of
        the Jumna and east of Malwa. Hindu annals do not credit the 
        Solankis of Gujarat with a share in the various confederacies formed to 
        oppose the invader, but the considerations which led Mahmud to undertake
        the most famous of all his expeditions, that to Somnath, have been 
        recorded. Bhim the Solanki then ruled Gujarat, having his capital at 
        Anhilvara, in the neighborhood of the modern Patan. After the capture of
        Beyt Shankhodhar and the flight of Bhim, Mahmud, before returning to 
        Ghazni, made arrangements for the administration of Gujarat. According to the legend related in 
        some Muslim histories an ascetic named Dabshilim, who had some claim to 
        the throne, was brought to his notice as a fit person and was appointed 
        by him to govern the country. At his request Mahmud carried to Ghazni 
        for safe custody another Dabshilim, a relative whose pretensions the 
        newly made king dreaded, and detained him until king Dabshilim was 
        securely seated on his throne, when he sent him back to Gujarat at the 
        king's request. When the prisoner approached Anhilvara the king, 
        according to custom, went forth to meet him, and, arriving at the 
        appointed spot before him, passed the time in hunting. At length, 
        overpowered by the heat and by fatigue, he lay down under a tree to 
        rest, covering his face with a red handkerchief. A bird of prey, taking 
        the handkerchief for a piece of flesh, swooped down upon it and, driving
        his talons into the king's eyes, destroyed his sight. One so injured 
        was disqualified from reigning, and the prisoner Dabshilim, arriving at 
        that moment, was acclaimed by the popular voice as king, while the 
        blinded man was confined in the dungeon under the throne-room which he 
        had destined for his relative. Dabshilim is well known in Muslim 
        literature as the king to whom the Brahman, Pilpay, related the fables 
        of the jackals Kalila and Dimna, which have been translated into Arabic 
        and Turkish, and twice into Persian, but the name is unknown in Indian 
        history and it is difficult to connect it with any Indian king. It has 
        been suggested that Mahmud, after the flight of Bhim I, appointed his 
        uncle, Durlabha, to the government, and that the two Dabshilims 
        represent Durlabha and his son, but Lt.-Colonel Tod's explanation 
        appears to be more probable. He says that the Dabhis were a well known 
        tribe, said by some to be a branch of the Chawaras, who had preceded the
        Solankis on the throne of Gujarat, and suggests that the name is a 
        compound of Dabi Chawara. The remnant of the dominions of 
        Rajyapala of Kanauj had passed to his son, Trilochanapala, who first 
        transferred his capital to Bari, which was taken by Mahmud, and 
        afterwards resided much at Benares, which was attacked and plundered by 
        Ahmad Niyaltigin, the traitor who governed the Punjab for Masud, the son
        of Mahmud. Hansi, a possession of Mahipal, 
        raja of Delhi, was captured early in 1038 by Masud, but in 1044 Mahipal 
        recovered from Maudud, Masud's son, not only Hansi, but also Thanesar 
        and Kangra. In 1079 Ibrahim, the eleventh king of the Ghaznavid dynasty,
        led a raid into Western India, and early in the twelfth century 
        Muhammad Bahlim, a rebellious governor of the Punjab under Bahram, the 
        fifteenth king, established himself as far south as Nagaur, from which 
        town he governed a large tract of country; but the power of the 
        Ghaznavids had long been declining, and, with the exceptions already 
        mentioned, the Hindu states of India were not molested, and were left 
        free to pursue their internecine strife. After the submission of Rajyapala of Kanauj to Mahmud the power of the Pratiharas declined, Trilochanapala and his successors were styled rajas of Kanauj, but lived principally at Manaich, now Zafarabad, near Jaunpur, and more remote than their ancient capital from the menace of the Chandel. Shortly before 1090 Chandradeva, of
        the Gaharwar clan, acquired possession of Benares and Ajodhya, both of 
        which had been included in the kingdom of Kanauj, and extinguished the 
        last vestiges of the authority of the Pratiharas by extending his 
        dominions as far as Delhi, which he is said to have captured and 
        occupied, reducing the Tomaras to vassalage. Gangeyadeva Kalachuri of Chedi, who reigned from 1015 to 1040, extended his ancestral dominions, and almost succeeded in becoming the paramount power in Northern India, but was not powerful enough to crush the Chandel kingdom. His son Karnadeva, who reigned from 1040 to 1100, invaded the Pala kingdom of Magadha, or Bihar, in 1039, before his father's death, and defeated the reigning king, Nayapala. In 1060 he and Bhim II of Gujarat attacked and crushed Bhoj, the learned king of Malwa. Malwa had been ruled for two centuries and a half by chiefs of the Paramara or Pawar tribe, whose capital was at first Ujjain and later Dhar. The line was honorably distinguished by its love for and encouragement of learning, and in this respect Bhoj was not the least distinguished of his house. The death of Bhoj broke the power of the Pawars, who, however, ruled Malwa until the beginning of the thirteenth century, when they were ousted by the Tomaras. The inclusion of the Deccan in the 
        Muslim kingdom of Delhi between the years 1294 and 1347 made Malwa a 
        highway between the northern and the southern provinces, and destroyed 
        the power of the Hindu rulers of the country; but the Tomaras were 
        succeeded by the Chauhans, who enjoyed some power and influence in Malwa
        until the end of the fourteenth century, when it became an independent 
        Muslim kingdom. The victory over Bhoj of Malwa 
        benefited the Kalachuri but little. Some years later Karnadeva suffered 
        several defeats at the hands of his enemies, the chief of whom were 
        Kirtivarman Chandel, who reigned from 1049 to 1100, and Vigrahapala III,
        king of Bihar and Bengal; and little more is heard of Chedi. After 1181
        the Kalachuri rajas of northern Chedi disappear, having probably been 
        supplanted by Baghel chiefs of Rewa. Palas and Senas of Bengal The Gahlot kingdom, which is still represented by the State of Udaipur, had been founded before the invasion of Sind by Muhammad b. Qasim, and tradition credits its ruler with having met the Muslims in the field in those early days, but the state seems to have taken no part in the resistance offered to Mahmud. The same may be said of the Pala kings of Bengal and Bihar, who apparently believed that they were not concerned in the fate of the Punjab and Hindustan, though the dominions of Dharmapala, the second of the line, are said to have extended from the Bay of Bengal to Delhi and Jullundur. They were devout Buddhists, and their religion perhaps set a gulf between them and their Brahmanical neighbors. Mahipala I was reigning in Bengal 
        during the period of Mahmud's raids, but before the next wave of 
        invasion, destined to engulf Bengal, had broken over Northern India, and
        during a serious rebellion which broke out in the Pala kingdom about 
        the year 1080, Choraganga, king of Kalinga, extended his conquests to 
        the extreme north of Orissa, and Samantasena, a chieftain from the 
        Deccan, founded a principality at Kasipuri, now Kasiari, in the 
        Mayurbhanj State. His grandson, Vijayasena, established his independence
        about 1119, and took much of Bengal from the Palas, his aggression 
        being doubtless stimulated by religious antagonism, for all the Senas 
        were Brahmanical Hindus. Yallalasena, or Ballal Sen, Vijayasena's son 
        and successor, was the most powerful of the line. He introduced Kulinism
        into Bengal, and is said to have founded Gaur, or Lakhnawati, but the 
        city was probably built before his reign. About 1175 he was succeeded by
        his son, Lakshmanasena, who was driven from his capital, Nadiya, by 
        Ikhtiyaruddin Muhammad b. Bakhtyar. The capture of Nadiya (Nuddea) did 
        not immediately extinguish the dynasty, which continued its existence 
        for four generations after Lakshmanasena, but the rajas were mere 
        vassals of the Muslim rulers of the country. Ramapala, who reigned from about 
        1077 to 1120, was one of the most famous of the Pala kings. His father, 
        Mahipala II, was slain by rebels, and Ramapala was compelled to flee, 
        but obtained assistance from many other princes, defeated and slew the 
        rebel chief, and regained the throne. He extended his dominions and 
        encouraged Buddhism, and it was not until the end of his reign that the 
        Senas established themselves in Bengal. Ramapala has sometimes been 
        regarded as the last of the Palas, but he was succeeded by five kings of
        his family, who, though Bengal had been lost, retained Bihar. 
        Indradyumnapala, the last known raja of the line, was reigning at the 
        time of the Muslim invasion of Bihar, in which he probably lost his 
        life, as nothing more is heard of his house. The Muhammadan kingdom of the 
        Punjab had long ceased to be a menace to the Hindu princes of India, but
        they cannot have been ignorant of the rise of new powers beyond the 
        Indus. No menace, however, sufficed to deter them from their internecine
        disputes. A long line of princes of the Chauhan tribe had ruled the 
        principality of Sambhar, of which Ajmer had become the chief town, and 
        in the middle of the twelfth century Vigraharaja (Visaladeva or Bisal 
        Deo) of this line extended his dominions in an easterly direction by 
        capturing Delhi from a chief of the Tomara tribe, who had founded the 
        city in a.d. 993-94 by building the Red Fort where the Qutb Minar now 
        stands. The city was of no great importance but Vigraharaja's victory 
        extinguished a minor dynasty and might have made for unity and strength,
        had there not been other competitors for power in the field. Vigraharaja's nephew and successor 
        was Prithvi Raj, known to Muslim historians as Rai Pithaura, the most 
        chivalrous warrior of his time in India : but the most powerful of 
        Indian princes at the end of the twelfth century was Jayachandra, the 
        Gaharwar raja of Kanauj and Ajodhya, styled by the Muhammadans 
        'Jaichand, raja of Benares'. He had a marriageable daughter, in whose 
        honor he held a swayamvara, the assembly to which, in 
        accordance with ancient custom, princes prepared to offer themselves as 
        suitors for the lady's hand were summoned, in order that she might make 
        her choice of a husband. The swayamvara was regarded as an 
        assertion of superiority and Prithvi Raj failed to respond to the 
        invitation and to appear as a formal suitor, but his reputation had 
        reached the princess and he wounded Jayachandra's honor by carrying off 
        the not unwilling damsel. This romantic exploit bred bitter enmity 
        between the two leading powers of Northern India, and a victory in 1182 
        over the Chandel raja, Parmab, and the capture of the important fortress
        of Mahoba, while they enhanced the reputation of Prithvi Raj, weakened 
        the Hindu cause by sowing further dissension between the native princes. These princes, however, sank their 
        differences and united to oppose the invader at the first battle of 
        Taraori, in which Muhammad b. Sam was defeated, for the Muslim writers 
        say that all the rajas of Hindustan were present at that battle; but 
        Jayachandra of Kanauj seems to have found an alliance with his son-in-law 
        too high a price to pay even for national freedom, for he stood aloof 
        from the Hindu confederacy at the second battle of Taraori, which laid 
        the foundation of Muslim rule in Hindustan, and if Hindu legend is to be
        believed even allied himself to the national enemy. The operations of the Muslims after
        the second battle of Taraori, in 1192, have been described in Chapter 
        III. Muhammad b. Sam marched at once on Ajmer, the Chauhan capital, and,
        after sacking the city and enslaving many of its inhabitants, appointed
        Govindaraja, the son of Prithvi Raj, as its governor. According to the 
        Muslim chroniclers the new raja was distasteful to his subjects by 
        reason of his illegitimacy, but the truth was that he was a minor, and 
        was not fit to contend with the enemies of his people. Hariraja, called 
        Hemraj by Muslim historians, who was the younger brother of Prithvi Raj,
        accordingly deposed his nephew and usurped the throne. Govindaraja fled
        to the fortress of Ranthambhor, where, as will be seen, he carried on 
        the line of his house, not without glory. He was succeeded by his son, 
        Balhanadeva, who was reigning in 1215, and Balhanadeva was succeeded by 
        his son Prahlad, who was killed by a lion. Vira Narayan, Prahlad's 
        infant son, succeeded to the throne of Ranthambhor, and his uncle, 
        Vagbhata, assumed the regency. The history of the Chauhans of 
        Ranthambhor will be resumed later. The fate of Hariraja in Ajmer has already been recorded. After suffering two defeats at the hand of Muhammad's lieutenant, Qutbuddin Aibak, he committed suicide, and Ajmer, the capital of the Chauhans, became a Muslim city. Extinction of the Gaharwars Jayachandra of Kanauj had, since 
        the second battle of Taraori, acquiesced in all the acts of aggression 
        committed by the invaders, but Muhammad b. Sam learned that he had 
        repented of the alliance and was preparing to oppose him, and in 1193 he
        invaded India with the object of attacking him. It was probably the 
        invasion of Bihar, the fate of its monks, and his own isolation that 
        aroused in him, too late, a sense of the folly of his association with 
        the enemies of his country. His fate has been recorded in Chapter III. 
        Benares was plundered, Kanauj was destroyed, and the kingdom of the 
        Gaharwars came to an end. The Muslims did not, however, immediately 
        establish their authority in this region, and chiefs of the Chandel 
        tribe from Mahoba ruled as local sovereigns in Kanauj for eight 
        generations. The Gaharwars were extinguished, and there is no evidence 
        to support the legend that a remnant migrated to the country now known 
        as Marwar and became known as Rahtors, or the claim of the Maharaja of 
        Jodhpur to descent from the old royal house of Kanauj. The conquest of Bihar involved the destruction of the Pala dynasty, which had borne sway in Bengal and Bihar for nearly four centuries, and in the latter country alone for nearly a hundred years. Indradyumnapala, the last king of the line, was alive in 1197, but retained no power during the later years of his life. Ikhtiyaruddin Muhammad b. Bakhtyar,
        having extinguished the Palas of Bihar, drove Lakshmanasena or Lakshman
        Sen of Bengal from his capital and established Muslim rule in Bengali 
        Lakshmanasena, and, after him, his son and his grandson ruled at 
        Vikrampur as vassals of the Muslim governor of Bengal, but the dynasty 
        virtually came to an end with the capture of Nadiya (Nuddea). His 
        conqueror died shortly after his disastrous expedition into Bhutan, or 
        Tibet, where the destruction of his army was partly due to the treachery
        of the king of Kamarupa (Kamrup), or Assam. This kingdom successfully 
        resisted all attempts of the Muslims to invade it, but the Hinduized 
        Koch, who ruled it at this time, succumbed in 1228 to an invasion by the
        Ahoms, a Shan tribe, whose chiefs ruled the country until 1816, when 
        they were conquered by the Burmese, who in 1824, during the first 
        Burmese war, were expelled by British and Indian troops, and in 1826 
        Assam became a province of the British empire in India. The extinction of the Kanauj 
        dynasty and the disappearance of the Gaharwars left the Chandels of 
        Jijhoti the only formidable neighbors of the Muslims. Paramardi, or 
        Parmal, who had been defeated by Prithvi Raj, was still reigning at 
        Mahoba, which had superseded Khajraho as the residential capital of the 
        Chandels. The principal fortress in their dominions was Kalinjar, which 
        had been surrendered to Mahmud of Ghazni by the son of Ganda Chandel, 
        and in 1202 Qutbuddin Aibak marched against the fortress, the account of
        his siege and capture of which has already been related. After the 
        death of Paramardi, the Chandels, as an important dynasty, disappeared, 
        and the tribe dispersed, but petty chieftains of the race held lands in 
        Malwa, as local rulers, until the sixteenth century. All the ruling houses of Hindustan 
        proper, except the Chauhans of Ranthambhor and the Katehriya Rajputs of 
        Katehr, the modern Rohilkhand, had now been extinguished or expelled, 
        and the latter were held in check by the Muslim garrison of Budaun, 
        their former capital, which had been one of the earliest conquests of 
        Qutbuddin Aibak and remained ever after in Muslim hands; but the Rajputs
        made Aonla their capital, and Katehr virtually retained its 
        independence until the Mughul empire was firmly established in the 
        middle of the sixteenth century. A strong king at Delhi might cow the 
        Rajputs into submission, but whenever the central authority was weakened
        the Hindus rose and attacked the Muslims. The inhabitants of Katehr 
        often suffered severely for the turbulence of their chiefs, who 
        themselves usually found an asylum in the hills of Kumaon until the 
        storm had passed. Ranthambhor But though the great ruling houses 
        were extinct, the people were not left leaderless. The history of the 
        Doab and the country on either side of the Ganges contains evidence that
        the local Hindu landholders, petty rajas, who were probably regarded as
        fief-holders and paid tribute or rent when the central government could
        enforce the demand, were ever ready to resist oppression, as in the 
        reign of Muhammad Tughluq, and to take advantage of the weakness of 
        their rulers, as during the reigns of the feeble Sayyids, or of their 
        dissensions, as in the struggle for supremacy between the kingdoms of 
        Delhi and Jaunpur. The most turbulent of these petty 
        chiefs were the leaders of the Meos, inhabitants of Mewat, the 
        ill-defined tract lying south of Delhi and including part of the British
        Districts of Muttra and Gurgaon, and most of the Alwar and a little of 
        the Bharatpur State; the Hindu landholders of Baran, or Bulandshahr, and
        Etawah; and various chiefs holding lands near the confluence of the 
        Ganges and the Jumna. The depredations of the Meos extended across the 
        Jumna into the Doab, and northward even into the streets of Delhi. The 
        ruling family accepted Islam, and became known as Khanzadas; and Bahadur
        Nahar, whose tomb still stands at Alwar, and who ruled Mewat at the 
        time of Timur's invasion at the end of the fourteenth century, was one 
        of the most powerful chiefs in the neighborhood of Delhi. The capture of Ranthambhor by 
        Shamsuddin Iltutmish adds little to the reputation of that great king. 
        According to the Hindu records he was defeated before the fortress in 
        1225, but succeeded in persuading the young raja, Vira Narayan, to visit
        him at Delhi, poisoned him, and took possession of his capital. Malwa 
        was still independent under the Pawars, and the raja then reigning at 
        Dhar attempted to win the favor of Iltutmish by attacking Vagbhata, Vira
        Narayan's uncle, who had been regent at Ranthambhor, but Vagbhata 
        defeated him, and after the death of Iltutmish recovered Ranthambhor 
        from the officer who held it for Raziyya, and was acclaimed by the 
        Chauhans as their king. Muslim historians allege that he was defeated at
        Ranthambhor by Raziyya's troops, but are constrained to admit that the 
        troops evacuated the fortress after dismantling it. In 1249 Ghiyasuddin Balban, who afterwards ascended the throne of Delhi, attempted to recover Ranthambhor for his master, but was obliged to retire discomfited. The Muslim historian styles Vagbhata Nahar Deo, confusing him, perhaps, with a Meo chief, who had probably allied himself to Vagbhata, for Balban, before marching on Ranthambhor, had been engaged in an attempt to establish order in Mewat. Vagbhata was succeeded by his son, Jaitra Singh, who abdicated, and was succeeded in 1282 by his son Hamira, known to the Muslims as Hamir. Hamira was warlike and enterprising. After subduing Arjuna, a minor chieftain of Malwa, he attacked the Gond raja of Garha-Mandla, who submitted and paid tribute. The Pawar had gained little by his 
        attempt to ingratiate himself with the foreigner. In 1234 Iltutmish 
        invaded Malwa and sacked both Bhilsa and Ujjain, and Hamira, after 
        succeeding his father at Ranthambhor, resolved to punish Bhoja II, the 
        reigning king of Malwa, for the crime of his predecessor. Bhoja was defeated, 
        and Hamira made a triumphal entry into Ujjain, the ancient capital of 
        Malwa. Not content with this success, he marched northward, compelled 
        the Gahlot, Lachhman Singh, to acknowledge his supremacy, captured Abu 
        and restored it to its hereditary prince in return for a promise to pay 
        tribute, and marched homeward through Ajmer, Pushkar, Sambhar, and 
        Khandela, all of which places he captured. This vainglorious expedition 
        enhanced Hamira's military reputation and was probably not without 
        effect on the attitude of Jalaluddin Firuz, the first king of the Khalji
        dynasty, who, in 1291, marched to Ranthambhor, but decided, after 
        reconnoitring the fortress, that it would be dearly captured at the 
        price in human lives which he would have to pay, and turned aside to 
        Jhain and Mandawar. Hamira's defiance of Alauddin 
        Muhammad by harboring the leaders of the mutiny which had broken out in 
        Ulugh Khan's army at Jalor, as it was returning from the conquest of 
        Gujarat, cost him his kingdom and his life. Ulugh Khan followed the 
        fugitives into the territory of Ranthambhor and defeated the Rajputs 
        under two ofiicers named Bhim and Dharma Singh, but was unable to 
        undertake the siege of the fortress, and retired to Delhi. Hamira 
        emasculated Dharma Singh, and he and his brother fled to Delhi and 
        besought Alauddin to avenge this outrage. Ulugh Khan and Nusrat Khan 
        were sent to open the siege of Ranthambhor, and, having first captured 
        Jhain, encamped before the fortress, but were unfortunate. Nusrat Khan 
        was killed and Ulugh Khan was defeated and driven back to Jhain. 
        Alauddin then marched from Delhi to conduct the siege in person, and 
        after some delay arrived before Ranthambhor. The siege was protracted 
        for some months, and Ranamalla, or Ranmal, Hamira's minister, and some 
        of the principal officers of the garrison deserted to the Muslims. The 
        assault was delivered on July 10, 1301, and according to the Hindu 
        version of the affair both Hamira and Mir Muhammad Shah, the leader of 
        the mutineers who had found an asylum at Ranthambhor, performed the rite
        of jauhar and were slain. The queen, Rangadevi, immolated 
        herself, and Hamira's brother Virama and the heroes Jajar, Gangadhar 
        Tak, and Kshetra Singh Pawar shared their master's fate. The traitor 
        Ranamalla and his companions were put to death by Alauddin. Thus ended 
        Chauhan rule in Hindustan. The Raja of Nimrana, in the north of the 
        Alwar State, claims descent from Prithvi Raj. Conquest of Gujarat Reference has been made to the 
        conquest of Gujarat by Alauddin's officers, Ulugh Khan and Nusrat Khan. 
        Bhim II, 'the Simpleton', who reigned from 1179 to 1242, was the king 
        who defeated Muhammad b. Sam, and though he was afterwards defeated by 
        Qutbuddin Aibak, who plundered his capital, Gujarat was not occupied by 
        the Muslims, but remained a Hindu state. Bhim II was the last of his 
        line, the Solankis, of which his ancestor Bhim I, the contemporary of 
        Mahmud, had been the second. Gujarat was the richest kingdom of 
        India.  It was to India what Venice was to Europe, the entrepot of the 
        products of both the eastern and western hemispheres. Its princes 
        favored sometimes the Jain and sometimes the Buddhist heresy. The court 
        of Siddharaja Jayasingha, the seventh of the Solankis, who reigned from 
        1094 to 1143 and was one of the most powerful of Indian rulers, was 
        visited by the geographer al-Idrisi. On Bhim's death in 1242 his throne 
        passed to Visaladeva Vaghela of Dholka, who was descended from 
        Siddharaja Jayasingha, and who reigned from 1243 to 1261. Karandeva, the Rai Karan of the 
        Muslims and the fourth of the Vaghela dynasty, was reigning in 1297, 
        when Alauddin Khalji sent his brother Ulugh Khan and Nusrat Khan to make
        an end of Hindu rule in Gujarat. They were successful, and the Rajput 
        Kingdom was overthrown. The walls of Anhilvara were demolished; its 
        foundations excavated, and again filled up with fragments of their 
        ancient temples. The fate of Karan and his family has been related 
        elsewhere. His wife was captured and became the wife or concubine of the
        Muslim king of Delhi. Karan himself fled, with his beautiful daughter 
        Deval Devi, and took refuge with Ramchandra of Deogir, well content now 
        that his daughter should wed his host's son, to whom, in his pride, he 
        had formerly refused her; but the prince of Deogir never possessed his 
        bride, who was captured by the Muslim officer Alp Khan near Ellora and 
        carried to Delhi, where she became the wife first of Khizr Khan, 
        Alauddin's eldest son, who was afterwards murdered by order of his 
        brother, Qutbuddin Mubarak, into whose possession she passed, and at 
        last she suffered the degradation of the embraces of the foul outcaste, 
        Khusrav Khan, who murdered his master and usurped his throne. Karan 
        established himself for a time in the Nandurbar district, on the borders
        of the small state of Baglana, or Baglan, but his line died with him. In Western India, as in Hindustan, 
        Hindu rule, in the hands of minor chieftains, survived the extinction of
        the royal house. Chauhans held Champaner and Pavagarh until 1484, when 
        Mahmud Begarha of Gujarat took their stronghold and the survivors fled 
        to Chota Udaipur and Deogarh Bariya, still held by their descendants. On the north-eastern frontier the 
        state of Sirohi was held, as at present, by another branch of the 
        Chauhans, known as Deora Rajputs from the name of an ancestor, Deoraj, 
        who migrated westward when his clan was driven from its patrimony, 
        Nadol, by Qutbuddin Aibak. The raja of Sirohi was ever ready to take 
        advantage of the weakness of the kings of Gujarat by raiding the 
        northern districts of their kingdom. The peninsula of Cutch, too, remained unmolested by the Muslim governors and kings of Gujarat. Samma Rajputs of Sind, fleeing from that country before the Sumras, who had superseded them as its rulers, found an asylum with the Chavada Rajputs who ruled Cutch, and in about 1320 overcame their hosts and took the kingdom from them. Those of the Samma tribe who remained in Sind accepted Islam, and their kinsmen in Cutch, not prepared entirely to abandon the religion of their fathers, adopted a strange medley of the two faiths. The peninsula was divided between three branches of the tribe, all known as Jadeja, or 'the sons of Jada', until 1540, when Khengar, the head of one branch, with the help of Mahmud III of Gujarat reduced his kinsmen to obedience and became sole ruler. His uncle, Jam Rawal, fled to Kathiawar, and received from the Muslim king of Gujarat the fief of Nawanagar, still held by his descendants. The raja of Cutch was nominally bound to furnish a contingent of 5000 horse to the army of the Sultan of Gujarat. Kathiawar The south-western region of the 
        peninsula of Kathiawar was held by the Chudasima Rajput chief of Girnar,
        the group of hills rising above the fortress of Junagarh. His dominions
        included a great part of the ancient Surashtra, or Sorath, in its 
        modern form. This remote corner of India was not molested by the early 
        Muhammadan invaders, but the raja reigning in the middle of the 
        fourteenth century harbored the rebel Taghi, who had risen in Gujarat 
        against the authority of Muhammad Tughluq, whose evil days were drawing 
        to a close. Muhammad pursued the rebel, and attacked both the raja of 
        Girnar and the raja of Cutch, who was his ally. Taghi evaded him and 
        fled into Sind, but the fortress-capital of Girnar was taken, and both 
        the raja and his ally were compelled to make obeisance to Muhammad, who 
        was too intent on capturing Taghi to remain in Kathiawar, and left that 
        country without any more material assertion of his authority. The raja of Girnar appears to have 
        been independent of the earlier Muslim kings of Gujarat, or at least to 
        have paid tribute irregularly, and only when it was levied by force, for
        in 1466 Mahmud Begarha invaded his state, and by means of wholesale 
        pillage and massacre, including the sacking of a temple and the 
        slaughter of its defenders, compelled him to agree to pay tribute. In 
        the following year a threat sufficed to deter him from using the 
        insignia of royalty, which he had hitherto displayed, and in 1469 
        Mahmud, judging that the time had come to crush the 'misbelievers', 
        invaded the Girnar state and offered the raja the choice between Islam 
        and death. Protestations of loyalty were of no avail, and he was 
        besieged in his fortress, Uparkot, and, when hard pressed there, fled to
        another stronghold in the mountains, where Mahmud besieged him and 
        compelled him, on December 4, 1470, to surrender. He accepted Islam and 
        was entitled Khan Jahan. This raja is styled by Muslim historians Mandalika,
        as though this were his personal name, but the word is evidently no 
        other than Mandalikaj the Sanskrit term for a provincial governor. At about the time when the Arabs 
        were overrunning Sind Bapa, the Gahlot chieftain, captured from the 
        Paramaras or Pawars the fortress of Chitor, which remained the capital 
        of this ancient tribe until it was captured by Akbar in 1567, when 
        Udaipur became their principal seat. Their legends claim for them the 
        credit of having opposed in arms both the Arab invader of Sind and the 
        Turkish conqueror of the Punjab, and though it is possible that they 
        marched, or sent contingents, against both, they were not sufficiently 
        important to be mentioned in Muslim histories, and their own legends are
        not sufficient to establish any historical fact. During the interval of comparative 
        peace between the raids of Mahmud and the more systematic subjection of 
        Northern India by Muhammad b. Sam the Chauhans of Ajmer and the Gahlots 
        of Chitor were alternately friends and foes. The prince of Chitor, who 
        had married a sister of Prithvi Raj of Ajmer and Delhi, espoused his 
        cause in his contest with Jayachandra of Kunauj for supremacy in 
        Northern India. The Solanki in Gujarat and the Pratihara in Mandor 
        supported the claim of the Gaharwar, and, according to Rajput legend, 
        both Kanauj and Gujarat employed Muslim mercenaries whose presence in 
        their armies was a source of useful information to Muhammad b. Sam. The 
        Rajputs of Northern India richly deserved their fate. The prince of 
        Chitor, his son Kalyan Singh, and thirteen thousand of his troops are 
        said to have been slain at the second battle of Taraori, and his widow, 
        on hearing of his death, 'joined her lord through the flame'. North-west of Mewar, the region in which the Gahlots bore sway, lay the desert tract of Marwar, at this time ruled by the Pratiharas, who were afterwards expelled by the Rahtors, the tribe to which the present Maharaja of Jodhpur belongs. West of Marwar lies the present State of Jaisalmer, held by the Jadons, whose home, according to their own traditions, had in ancient times been Zabulistan, between Sistan and Qandahar. Long before the rise of Islam they had been driven thence into the Punjab, where they domiciled for some time, and one branch of the tribe, the leader of which had retired in the eighth century into the desert of western Rajfontana, acquired from an ancestor the name of Bhati. A branch of the Bhatis settled in the north of the modern State of Bikaner, and gave to the town now known as Hanumangarh its original name, Bhatner, which in 1398 was taken by Timur from a Bhati chief named Dul Chand. This clan, as well as those branches of the Jadons which remained in the Punjab, accepted Islam. The main body of the tribe, however, travelling westward, had founded the fortress of Tanot, in the extreme north-western corner of what is now the Jaisalmer State. They afterwards made Ladorva their capital, and in 1156 Rawal Jaisal founded the town of Jaisalmer. In Marwar communities of Gohels, Chauhans, and Pawars disputed the authority of the Pratiharas or Parihars. Rathors of Marwar The founder of the Rathor dynasty 
        of Marwar was Siahji, whom the bards of the Rajputs represent as a 
        prince of the Gaharwar house of Kunauj, who escaped when the rest of the
        family was slain, and, fleeing, established himself in Marwar, where 
        his tribe received the name of Rathor. This they explain as a corruption
        of Rashtrakuta, alleging that the Gaharwars were Rashtrakutas from the 
        Deccan, but there is little doubt that the whole story is fiction. The 
        Gaharwar line was certainly extinguished, and there is no evidence that 
        any escaped; there is no reason to believe that the Gaharwars were 
        Rashtrakutas; and an inscription dated a.d. 997, found in a town in the 
        Jodhpur State, names four Rathor Rajas who reigned there in the tenth 
        century. It was probably from these local chieftains that Siahji was 
        descended. He established himself, with a small number of followers, 
        first in the north of Marwar, where he received, as the price of 
        assistance rendered to a Solanki chieftain, a bride with a dower. On a 
        pilgrimage to Dwarka he encountered and slew the brigand from whom he 
        had delivered the Solanki. The exploit enhanced his reputation and, 
        about 1212, he took up his abode in the fertile region watered by the 
        Luni river, west of the Aravalli Mountains. Here, by violence combined 
        with treachery, he obeyed the Rajput maxim, 'Get land.' One Rajput chief
        and his followers he slew at a feast, another he defeated and killed in
        the field. The Brahmans of Pali besought his aid against the Mers and 
        Minas who ravaged their lands. He drove off the marauders and, having 
        settled at Pali on land granted to him by the grateful Brahmans, slew 
        the leaders of the community and appropriated their lands. His son and 
        successor, Asvatthama, established his brother Soning in Idar, a 
        principality of the Dabhi Rajputs, by treacherously slaying the members 
        of that clan while they were mourning for one of their princes; and Aja,
        another brother, invaded Okhamandal, in the extreme west of Kathiawar, 
        and established himself there by murdering the Chavada ruler of the 
        country. His descendants bear the surname which he assumed, and are 
        still known as Vadhel, 'the Slayers'. Raipal, the fourth of the line, slew the Parihar chief of Mandor, and Chhada and Tida, the seventh and eighth, harassed the Jadons or Bhatis of Jaisalmer and escaped chastisement only by giving the daughter of one of them in marriage to Rawal Chachakdeo I. The Rathors were as prolific as 
        they were unscrupulous, and wide as the lands were which they had 
        obtained by violence and fraud, they were now insufficient for their 
        support. Chonda, their eleventh chief, after suffering many 
        vicissitudes, was able to assemble a large army composed entirely of the
        various clans of his tribe and to attack the Parihar prince of Mandor. 
        He was victorious, and planted his banner 'on the ancient capital of 
        Maru'. Chonda also added to his dominions the important city and 
        district of Nagaur, a Muslim stronghold which the dissolution of the 
        Kingdom of Delhi, following Timur's invasion of India, enabled him to 
        acquire, and it was at this city that he met his death. His fourth son, Aranyakanwal, had 
        been betrothed to Karamdevi, daughter of Manik Rao of Aurint, chief of 
        the Mohil Rajputs, but the damsel met and loved Sadhu, heir of 
        Raningdeo, the Bhati lord of Pugal, a fief of Jaisalmer, and chose him 
        as her husband. The slighted prince of Mandor attacked his rival, and 
        the two met in single combat. Sadhu was slain, and Karamdevi,  at once a
        virgin, a wife, and a widow,' sacrificed herself in the fire. 
        Aranyakanwal died of his wounds, but Raningdeo, not content with the 
        death of his son's rival, led a raid into Chonda's territory to punish 
        the Sankhlas, whose prowess had discomfited the Bhatis in the combat 
        between Sadhu and Aranyakanwal. Having slain three hundred of his 
        enemies Raningdeo was returning with his spoil when he was overtaken by 
        Chonda, who defeated and slew him. Raningdeo's two surviving sons. 
        Tana and Mera, accepted Islam, as so many other Bhatis had done, and 
        thus obtained from Khizr Khan, then governor of Multan, a force with 
        which to attack their enemy, but Kilan, son of the Rawal of Jaisalmer, 
        who joined them, ensured their success by guile. Professing a desire to 
        end the feud, he offered a daughter in marriage to Chonda, but when the 
        Rathor came forth to receive his expected bride his suspicions were 
        aroused by the appearance of the cortege which consisted of an unusually
        large number of armed men, and he turned back towards Nagaur. His 
        enemies pursued him, and slew him at the gate of the town, 'and friend 
        and foe entering the city together a scene of general plunder 
        commenced.' The death of Chonda occurred in 
        1408, and Nagaur was then lost to the Rathors. He was succeeded by his 
        son Ranmall, who took advantage of the marriage of his daughter to Lakha
        Rana, the old chief of Chitor, to obtain a large grant of land from his
        son-inlaw, to whose court he migrated, and was followed thither by his 
        son, Jodha. An account of the growth of Rathor influence at the court of
        Chitor, and of their expulsion from Mewar will be given in the history 
        of that principality. Ranmall, with the aid of the forces of Mewar, 
        captured the city of Ajmer by a stratagem, and thus temporarily added 
        the ancient heritage of the Chauhans to the domains of Mewar. He 
        attempted, after the death of'Lakha Rana, to usurp the throne of his 
        infant son, but was slain in 1444 by Chonda, the old Rana's firstborn, 
        who expelled the Rathors from Mewar. He was succeeded by Jodha, the 
        eldest of his twentyfour sons, who in 1454 acquired Sojat, and in 1459 
        laid the foundation of Jodhpur, which has ever since remained the 
        capital of the Rathor State. On his death in 1488 he was succeeded by 
        his second son, Suja, or Surajmall, the eldest, Santal or Satal, having 
        been slain near Pokharan, where he had established himself on the lands 
        of the Bhatis. Surajmall was the hero of the episode known as the Rape 
        of the Virgins. In July, 1516, a predatory band of Muslims, probably 
        from Ajmer, descended on the town of Pipar during the celebration of the
        Tij festival, and carried off a hundred and forty Rajput maidens. 
        Surajmall, to whom news of the outrage was carried, at once mounted, 
        pursued the marauders, and rescued the maidens, but lost his own life in
        the fray. He was succeeded by his grandson, Ganga, the son of his 
        eldest son, Bhaga, who had predeceased him, but his title was contested 
        by his uncle. Saga, Surajmali's third son, who was supported by Daulat 
        Khan Lodi. Saga and his ally were, however, defeated, and the former was
        slain. Rao Ganga sent a large contingent 
        to join Sangrama Rana in the battle of Khanua, fought against Babur in 
        1527, and on that day, so disastrous to the Rajputs, the young prince 
        Raimall, grandson of Ganga, and many other Rathors fell. Ganga himself 
        survived this event by nearly four years, and died in 1532. Rathors of Baglana The Rathors are widely spread. We have followed one tribe of them into Okhamandal, where they are known as Vadhel, 'the slayers'. The origin of a family which ruled the small principality of Baglana, or Baglan, a country now represented by the Baglan and Kalvan talukas, north of the Satmala hills, is more obscure. They, like the Rathors of Marwar, claimed kinship with the Gaharwars of Kanauj, but did not trace their descent to Siahji. They were perhaps descended from the earlier Rathors of Marwar and merely imitated Siahji in claiming descent from the Gaharwars. Their chief used the honorific title of Baharji and possessed seven fortresses, two of which, Mulher and Salher, were noted for their strength. They seem to have been tributary to the princes of Deogir, and they assisted Karandeva, the last Raja of Gujarat, when he fled, after the conquest of his country, to the Deccan. When the kingdom of the Yadavas was
        annexed by the king of Delhi the allegiance of Baharji was transferred 
        to the conqueror, but the country became independent after the revolt of
        the Deccan and the establishment of the Bahmani dynasty. Later it 
        became tributary to the Sultans of Gujarat, and was invaded and laid 
        waste by Ahmad Shah Bahmani I in 1429. It remained tributary to Gujarat,
        but enjoyed virtual independence until that kingdom was conquered by 
        Akbar in 1573. He failed to conquer Baglana, and was obliged to 
        acquiesce in a treaty with Pratap Shah, the reigning prince, in 1599. The original title of the Gahlot 
        princes of Mewar was Rawal, but early in the thirteenth century Rahup of
        Mewar captured Mokal the Parihar prince of Mandor, who bore the title 
        of Rana, and carried him to Sesoda, the temporary capital of the 
        Gahlots, where he compelled him to forgo the title of Rana and assumed 
        it himself, instead of that of Rawal. It was he, too, who changed the 
        name of his clan from Gahlot to Sesodia, derived from his 
        temporarycapital. The legend that the Gahlots had met
        and defeated the Arab invaders of Sind has already been mentioned. It 
        is to the effect that they repelled an invasion of Mewar led by one 
        Mahmud, whom they defeated and captured. It is certain that no Arab 
        invader from Sind ever reached Mewar, and the name Mahmud suggests 
        confusion between the Arabs of Sind in the eighth century and the Turks 
        of Ghazni in the eleventh. It is possible that a Gahlot prince joined 
        one of the confederacies against Mahmud, or met that invader on his way 
        to Gujarat in the expedition in which he plundered Somnath, but we have 
        no record of the event. The fate of the prince of Chitor at the second 
        battle of Taraori has been mentioned. The Gahlot legend, disfigured by 
        some palpable falsehoods, represents him 'as the Ulysses of the host; 
        brave, cool, and skilful in the fight; prudent, wise, and eloquent in 
        council; pious and decorous on all occasions; beloved by his own chiefs 
        and reverenced by the vassals of the Chauhan. Little more that is authentic is 
        known of the history of the Gahlots or Sesodias until the reign of 
        Alauddin Khalji, who, having already captured Ranthambhor from the 
        Chauhans, besieged and took Chitor in 1303. The bard's account of this 
        siege is most inaccurate and misleading. He antedates it by thirteen 
        years, to a time when Alauddin had not ascended the throne; he makes 
        Lachhman Singh, a distant cousin of the ruling prince, Rana of Chitor at
        the time of the siege; and he makes the fair Padmini, whom Alauddin 
        coveted, the wife of the prince's uncle. These gross inaccuracies 
        entirely discredit a story improbable in itself, at variance with known 
        facts, and designed to minimize the disgrace of the loss of a strong 
        fortress, of treachery on the part of Alauddin. The facts were that Ratan Singh was
        Rana of Chitor, and that Lachhman Singh, Rana of Sesoda, commanded the 
        fortress on his behalf. Their common ancestor was Karan Singh, Rawal of 
        Chitor, from whom Ratan Singh was ninth and Lachhman Singh eleventh in 
        descent. Ratan Singh was apparently in the fortress when it was 
        besieged, but, though the rite of jauhar is said to have been 
        performed and Lachhman Singh and eight thousand other Rajputs fell, he 
        was taken alive and carried off to Delhi. The fair Padmini did not 
        perish in the fire, as related by the bard, but lived to be the subject 
        of negotiation between her husband and his captor, and the object of the
        bard's fiction appears to be the concealment of Ratan Singh's readiness
        to obey the ancient maxim which permits a Rajput to surrender his wife 
        in order to preserve his land. Alauddin left Maldeo, Raja of Jalor, whom he had defeated and who had sworn fealty to him, in command of Chitor, and the towns of Mewar were held by Muslim garrisons, and the survivors of the Sesodias, and those who remained faithful to them took refuge at Kelwara, in the heart of the Aravalli Mountains, and from this stronghold harried the lands of Mewar. Maldeo was shortly afterwards relieved of the command of Chitor, and Khizr Khan, the eldest son of Alauddin, was appointed in his place, but after the rescue of Ratan Singh Alauddin removed Khizr Khan and appointed Arsi, or Ar Singh, to the command. Arsi was, according to the Hindu legend, the elder son of Ajai Singh, Rana of Chitor, and, according to the Muslim chronicles, sister's son to Ratan Singh. The bards do not mention Arsi's appointment to the command of the fortress, but the Muslim historians say that on being appointed he swore fealty to Alauddin, who by this means sowed discord among the Rajputs, some of whom remained faithful to Ratan Singh, while others submitted to Arsi. The history of Chitor at this time 
        is hopelessly confused, owing to the silence of the Muslim historians 
        and the discrepancies between the Hindu legends and the few facts known.
        It is certain, however, that Chitor was recovered by the Rajputs 
        shortly after this time, and that Hamir, or Hamira Singh, was the hero 
        of the enterprise. The precise degree of relationship between Hamir and 
        the Rana is uncertain. According to the bards he was the son of Arsi, 
        the elder son of Ajai Singh, but it seems probable that he was the 
        grandson of Ratan Singh. The bards, in recording the recovery of Chitor,
        assign no date to it, but assert that it occurred in the reign of 
        Mahmud Khalji of Delhi, a king unknown to history. Elsewhere the Rajputs
        are said to have recovered Chitor about 1312, four years before the 
        death of Alauddin, who reigned until 1316, to have thrown the Muhammadan
        officers from the ramparts, and to have asserted their independence, 
        but from an inscription at Chitor it appears that the fort was not 
        recovered until the time of Muhammad Tughluq, who reigned from 1325 to 
        1351. According to native annals the 'Mahmud Khalji' in whose reign the 
        fort was taken by Hamir was marching to recover it when he was met, 
        defeated, and captured by the Rana, who imprisoned him for three months 
        at Chitor, and would not liberate him until he had surrendered Ajmer, 
        Ranthambhor, Nagaur, and Sui Sopar, with five millions of rupees and 
        five hundred elephants. No Muslim king of Delhi was ever a prisoner in 
        Chitor, or ever surrendered the fortresses mentioned to a Rana of 
        Chitor, and the story appears to be a clumsy but wilful adaptation of 
        the defeat and capture of Mahmud Khalji II of Malwa by Sangrama about 200 years after 
        this time. Hamir's reputation stands in need of so much manipulation of 
        history. His reign was long and glorious. He lived until 1364, recovered
        all the dominions of his ancestors, and laboured to restore their 
        prosperity. He was succeeded by his son 
        Kshetra, or Khet Singh, who extended the dominions of his house and is 
        credited by the bards with a victory over the Mughul emperor Humayun, 
        considerably more than a century before the latter's birth. He was slain
        in a family brawl in 1382, and was succeeded by his son Laksh Singh, or
        Lakha. He conquered the mountainous region of Merwara and destroyed its
        chief stronghold, Bairatgarh, on the site of which he built Radnor, but
        of greater importance than this conquest was his discovery of the mines
        at Jawar, sixteen miles south of Udaipur city, in territory taken by 
        his father from the Bhils. These produced lead, zinc, and some silver, 
        and the wealth thus acquired enabled him to rebuild the temples and 
        palaces destroyed by Alauddin, and to build dams to form reservoirs or 
        lakes for irrigation. Lakha also defeated the Sankhla Rajputs of 
        Nagarchal, a district lying in the north of the present State of Jaipur,
        but the bards are not content with these exploits, and credit him with a
        victory over an imaginary Muhammad Shah Lodi of Delhi. Rathors expelled from Mewar Lakha's eldest son, Chonda, was to have been betrothed to the daughter of Ranmall the Rathor, but being annoyed by an innocent pleasantry of his father, which he regarded as indelicate, refused to accept Ranmall's offer of his daughter, and, as it could not be rejected without giving grave offence, Lakha himself accepted it, but insisted that Chonda should relinquish his right to the succession in favor of any issue which might be born of the Rathor lady. He agreed, and Lakha was succeeded, on his death in 1397, by his son Mokalji, aged five, for whom Chonda acted as regent until, incensed by the unjust suspicions of the child's mother, he retired from the kingdom. The bards are at fault regarding his destination, which they give as Mandu, the capital of the Muslim kingdom of Malwa, while they place the grant of land which he received in the west of the peninsula of Kathiawar, which was never included in that kingdom. On Chonda's departure the rapacious
        Rathor kinsmen of the young Rana's mother flocked into the state. Her 
        brother Jodha, who afterwards founded Jodhpur, came first, but was soon 
        followed by their father, Ranmall, with a large contingent of the clan. 
        They murdered Raghudeva, the younger brother of Chonda, and their 
        designs on the throne were so evident that the mother, trembling for her
        child's life, begged Chonda to return. He obeyed the summons, and 
        promised to join her and the young Rana on the Diwali festival, the 
        feast of lamps, at Gosunda, seven miles south of Chitor. Chonda and his 
        band obtained admission to Chitor in the guise of neighboring chieftains
        who had assembled to escort their prince to his capital. They 
        overpowered the garrison, slew Rao Ranmall and a large number of the 
        Rathors, and would have slain Jodha, had he not saved himself by flight.
        Chonda pursued him, occupied Mandor, then the Rathor capital, which was
        held by the Sesodias for twelve years, and annexed the fertile district
        of Godwar, which adjoined Mewar. Jodha Rathor was a wanderer for 
        seven years, but eventually succeeded in assembling a force of Rajputs 
        of his own and other tribes, and in expelling the Sesodias from Mandor, 
        where the two sons of Chonda were slain. Mokal's reign was not distinguished
        by any feats of arms. The bards attribute to him a victory over the 
        king of Delhi, but no contemporary king of Delhi was in a position to 
        attack the Rana of Chitor, and if there is any foundation for the bard's
        story Mokal must be suspected of refusing an asylum to Mahmud, the last
        of the Tughluq dynasty, when he was fleeing from Delhi after his defeat
        by Timur. Mokal was assassinated in 1433 by two of his uncles, natural 
        sons of his grandfather, they having interpreted an innocent question 
        put by him as a reflection on their birth. He was succeeded by his son 
        Kumbha, one of the greatest of the princes of Chitor, a soldier, a poet,
        a man of letters, and a builder to whom Mewar owes some of her finest 
        monuments. The temples of Kumbha Sham at Mount Abu and Rishabhadeva in 
        the Sadri pass, 'leading from the western descent of the highlands of 
        Mewar,' still stand as memorials of his devotion.  Of eighty-four fortresses for the 
        defence of Mewar, thirty-two were erected by Kumbha. Inferior only to 
        Chitor is that stupendous work called after him 'Kumbhalgarh, the fort 
        of Kumbha'. He captured Nagaur and gained many successes over his 
        enemies in the intestinal feuds of the Rajputs, but the ascription to 
        him of a great victory over Mahmud I of Malwa, whom he is said to have 
        taken prisoner, and to have released after six months of captivity, is 
        an error. Kumbha was not fortunate in his campaigns against Mahmud I, 
        which have been described in Chapter XIV, and if  the Pillar of Victory'
        at Chitor does indeed describe victories over that king it resembles 
        the bardic chronicles. Mewar's victory over Malwa was gained by Sangrama, Kumbha's grandson, over Mahmud II of Malwa, whom he defeated and took prisoner near Gagraun in 1517. Kumbha was stabbed to death in 1468, after a reign of thirty-five years, by his son Uda, but the parricide was attacked and defeated by his brother Raimall, and is said to have fled to Delhi, and to have offered a daughter in marriage to the Muslim king as the price of his aid in seating him on his throne, but no mention is made by Muslim historians either of this event or of a subsequent Muhammadan invasion of Mewar described by the bards, and Buhlul Lodi, who was then reigning at Delhi, was otherwise too deeply engaged to embark on such a campaign. Battle of Khanua Uda is said to have been struck by 
        lightning and killed, as he was leaving the king's presence at Delhi, 
        but however this may be, no more is heard of him, and Raimall kept the 
        throne. He was a warlike prince, but he certainly did not, as recorded 
        in the Rajput annals, carry on an interminable strife with Ghiyasuddin 
        Khalji of Malwa, a slothful and unwarlike prince who hardly ever left 
        his palace, but it is not improbable that Raimall raided the frontiers 
        of Malwa. He had three sons, Sangrama or Sanga, Prithvi Raj, and 
        Jaimall, whose ambition bred bitter strife between them until Sangrama 
        withdrew from Mewar and lived in concealment to avoid the violence of 
        Prithvi Raj, and Prithvi Raj was banished. Jaimall was now regarded as 
        the heir, but in attempting to gain access to the damsel whom he was to 
        marry was slain by her indignant father, and Prithvi Raj was recalled 
        from banishment and gained the hand of the maiden on whose account his brother had been slain. 
        Another claimant to the throne arose in the person of Surajmall, the 
        cousin of the three princes, but Prithvi Raj defeated him and drove him 
        from Mewar, and his great-grandson, Bika, founded the Partabgarh-Deolia 
        state. Prithvi Raj was afterwards poisoned by his brother-in-law, 
        Jaimall of Sirohi, whose title to Abu had been confirmed by his 
        marriage, and whom Prithvi Raj had punished for ill-treating his sister;
        and on Raimall's death in 1508 his eldest son, Sangrama, succeeded him 
        without opposition. Sangrama, destined to fall on the 
        field of battle, was one of the greatest of the princes of Chitor. 
        Eighty thousand horse, seven Rajas of the highest rank, nine Raos, and 
        one hundred and four chieftains bearing the titles of Rawal and Rawat, 
        with five hundred war elephants, followed him into the field. The 
        princes of Marwar and Amber did him homage, and the Raos of Gwalior, 
        Ajmer, Sikri, Raisen, Kalpi, Chanderi, Bundi, Gagraun, Rampura, and Abu 
        served him as tributaries or held of him in chief. Sangrama, like some 
        of his predecessors, is credited with victories for which there is no 
        historical warrant over the king of Delhi, Ibrahim Lodi, but he profited
        by the weakness and distractions of his enemies to extend and secure 
        his frontiers, and it was he who, as already described, defeated and 
        captured Mahmud II of Malwa, whose army contained a contingent placed at
        his disposal by the Sultan of Gujarat, so that the victor was able to 
        boast that he had defeated the allied forces of two Muslim kings. Sangrama had been in communication 
        with Babur while the latter was still at Kabul, and had agreed, in the 
        event of his invading India, to attack Agra while he attacked Delhi, but
        had failed to fulfil his promise, hoping, apparently, either that both 
        Babur and Ibrahim Lodi would be destroyed or that the victor would be so
        exhausted as to afford him an opportunity of establishing his supremacy
        and restoring Hindu rule in Northern India. Not content with failing to
        aid Babur, he assembled a large army to attack him, and began 
        operations by besieging Bayana. Babur marched to the relief of the fortress, and Sangrama raised the siege and 
        marched to Khanua, near Sikri, where the fate of Northern India was 
        decided. A full account of the battle will 
        be given in the records of Babur's reign. Sangrama displayed no 
        eagerness to attack the Muslims, and according to the Hindu annals the 
        battle was preceded by negotiations, in which Silahdi the Tomar, chief 
        of Raisen, a fief of Malwa, but now virtually independent, was employed 
        as the intermediary. He is said, on the same authority, to have made a 
        private agreement with Babur, in pursuance of which he deserted the 
        Hindu cause andjoined the Muslims during the battle, but the extenuation
        of defeat by allegations of treachery is as common in Hindu annals as 
        in those of other nations. The Rajputs suffered a crushing defeat. 
        Sangrama himself was severely wounded, and Rawal Udai Singh of 
        Dungarpur; Ratan Singh, Rawat of Salumbar; Raimall Rathor, grandson and 
        heir of the prince of Marwar; Khet Singh and Ratan Singh of Mertha; 
        Ramdas, Rao of Jalor; Uja Jhala; Gokuldas Pawar; Manikchand and 
        Chandrabhan, Chauhans; and many others of less note were slain. Sangrama retired towards Mewat, 
        resolved not to return to his capital until he had retrieved his defeat 
        and crushed the invader; but his ministers shrank from the discomfort 
        and hardships which his decision imposed upon them, and he died at Baswa
        of poison administered at their instigation. He was succeeded by Ratan Singh II, his eldest surviving son, who was secretly affianced to the daughter of the Kachhwaha, Prithvi Raj, Rao of Amber, but delayed the marriage ceremony, and Surajmall, Rao of Bundi, of the Hara clan of the Chauhans, sought and obtained her hand in marriage. Surajmall and Ratan Singh met and fought in 1531, when each killed the other, and Vikramaditya or Bikramajit succeeded his brother on the throne of Mewar. The new Rana was arrogant, passionate, and vindictive, and alienated his nobles, and the cavaliers of Mewar, by his preference for the society of wrestlers and athletes and for the infantry of his army, which he developed at the expense of his cavalry. An open rupture occurred between the prince and his nobles, and his cavalry refused to perform their duties. Matters had reached this stage when Sultan Bahadur of Gujarat marched against Bikramajit, then encamped at Loicha, in the Bundi territory. The feudal forces of the state deserted their sovereign and marched off to defend Chitor and the infant Udai Singh, posthumous son of Sangrama. Bahadur gained an easy victory over the paiks, or foot-soldiers of Mewar, and turned towards Chitor, to the defence of which the prince of Bundi, the Raos of Jalor and Abu, and many chiefs from all parts of Rajasthan hastened. The siege has been described in Chapter XIII. Chitor fell in 1534, and became for a short time a possession of the kingdom of Gujarat, but Udai Singh, who had been crowned during the siege, was carried off into safety by Surjan, prince of Bundi. There is no truth in the Rajput story of the dispatch of the rakhi to Humayun by the young Rana's mother, and of the latter's chivalrous response, for though he had received gross provocation from Bahadur he punctiliously refrained from attacking him while he was engaged in warfare against the 'misbelievers'. After the fall of Chitor, however, Bahadur was compelled to retire before Humayun, and Bikramajit returned and almost immediately recovered the fortress. He had learned no wisdom in adversity, and his insolence and arrogance towards his nobles culminated in a blow inflicted in open court on Karamchaud of Ajmer, his father's protector and benefactor. On the following day the nobles put the unworthy prince to death and, dreading the rule of a minor at such a critical period, persuaded Banbir Singh, natural son of Prithvi Raj, Sangrama's younger brother, to mount the throne. Banbir immediately sought the life of the infant, Udai Singh, but he was saved by a faithful nurse, who carried him off, and, after some vicissitudes, delivered him to Asa Sah, governor of Kumbhalgarh, who ensured his safety by passing him off as his nephew, and for three years kept the secret of his presence with him. The rumor at length spread that the son of Sangrama was at Kumbhalgarh, and the nobles of Mewar assembled there to do him homage. The pretensions of the bastard, Banbir, had offended them, and all deserted him. He still held the capital, but his ministers admitted a thousand of the adherents of the legitimate prince, and he was deposed, and Udai Singh was enthroned in 1537. Jadons of Jaisalmer The foundation of Jaisalmer by Rawal Jaisal, the Bhati, has been mentioned. The Jadons, or Bhatis, yet occupy their home in the desert. The Rathors were gaining power in the land of Kher, the desert of the west, and the Jadons found them troublesome neighbors, rapacious and unscrupulous. Rawal Chachakdeo, grandson of Jaisal, who reigned from 1219 to 1241, made preparations to chastise them, but their leader conciliated him by giving him a daughter to wife. Karan Singh I, who reigned from 
        1241 to 1271, espoused the cause of a Hindu living near Nagaur, whose 
        only daughter had been abducted by Muzatfar Khan, the Muslim ruler or 
        governor of that district, and defeated and slew the Khan and three 
        thousand of his men. The annals of Jaisalmer record a siege of the city 
        by the troops of Alauddin Khalji of Delhi, which lasted for eight years,
        from 1286 to 1295. Alauddin did not ascend the throne of Delhi until 
        1296, and no such siege as that sung by the bards ever took place. The 
        account of the performance of the rite of jauhar and of the 
        death of 24,000 women in the flames, is detailed and circumstantial. 
        Three thousand eight hundred Rajput warriors rushed on the foe; Mulraj 
        III, the Jadon chief, and seven hundred of his kin fell, and Jaisalmer 
        was occupied by a Muslim garrison which, after holding the place for two
        years, dismantled it and retired. It is impossible to connect this 
        legend with any historical event, but it may possibly be a wilful 
        perversion of the defeat of the Jadons by the Rathors, for the annals 
        proceed to relate that after the retirement of the Muslim garrison 
        Maloji Rathor, chief of Mewa, made preparations for occupying and 
        colonizing the deserted city, but was expelled by the Bhati chiefs, Duda
        and Tilak Singh, the former of whom was elected Rawal, and reigned from
        1295 to 1306. The bards of Jaisalmer, no whit inferior to those of other states in imagination, thus describe the end of Duda's reign: "He even extended his raids to Ajmer, and carried off the stud of Firuz Shah from the Anasagar (lake), where they were accustomed to be watered. This indignity provoked another attack upon Jaisalmer, attended with the same disastrous results. Again the sakha was performed, in which sixteen thousand females were destroyed; and Duda, with Tilak Singh and seventeen hundred of the clan, fell in battle, after he had occupied the gaddi ten years". This statement is quoted merely in 
        order to display the shameless mendacity of the bardic annals. Firuz 
        Shah was Jalaluddin Firuz Khalji, the uncle and predecessor of Alauddin,
        who is said to have taken Jaisalmer in the previous year. It may be one
        more perversion of a defeat at the hands of the Rathors. Jaisalmer was again restored by Ghar Singh, who is said to have received it in fee from the king of Delhi for services rendered against Timur, who did not invade India until nearly a century after this time, but if any such services were rendered the occasion was perhaps, as conjectured by Lt-Col. Tod, one of the many irruptions of the Mughuls which took place at this period. Ghar Singh was assassinated in 1335, and was succeeded by his adopted son, Kehar Singh. Kehar Singh's third son, Kailan, involved the Jaisalmer state in hostilities with the kingdom of Multan by establishing himself on the northern bank of the Sutlej, where he is said to have founded the town of Kahror. The presence of the Bhatis on the Multan side of the river was resented, and Chachakdeo, who succeeded to Jaisalmer about 1448, is said to have resided at Marot in order the more readily to repel raids on his territories from the direction of Multan. He is credited in the annals of the state with two victories over the Muslim kings of Multan, besides others over the Dhundls, the Rathors, and even the Khokhars of the Punjab. He is said to have lost his life in battle with the king of Multan, but the native annals, a most untrustworthy guide, are the only authority for his exploits. Even these fail us after Chachakdeo's reign, and until the time of the Mughul emperors record nothing but a bare list of names. Gwalior The famous fortress of Gwalior was 
        held, at the time of Mahmud's incursions into India, by Kachhwaha 
        Rajputs, probably feudatories of the Chandels of Jijhoti. Mahmud's siege
        of the fortress in 1022 has already been noticed, and its strength at 
        that time may perhaps be gauged by the easy terms on which he raised the
        siege. About 1128 the Parihar Rajputs 
        ousted the Kachhwahas, a scion of whom established himself in the 
        neighbourhood of Amber. Qutbuddin Aibak captured the fortress, but it 
        was recovered during the feeble reign of his son, Aram Shah, by the 
        Parihar Birbal, or Mai Deo, whose son, Mangal Bhava Deo, was holding it 
        in 1232, when Iltutmish attacked it. An account of his siege and capture
        of the place has already been given. It remained in the hands of the 
        Muslims until after Timur's invasion, and was captured, when the kingdom
        of Delhi fell to pieces, by the Tomar, Har Singh, and was successfully 
        defended by his son Bhairon against the attacks of Mallu in 1402 and 
        1403. The sieges of Gwalior in 1416, 1427, and 1432 by kings of the 
        Sayyid dynasty were rather expeditions for the purpose of collecting 
        taxes, or tribute, than serious attempts to capture the fortress, and 
        the raja could always rid himself of the invaders by a payment on 
        account, and an illusory promise to make regular payments in future. In 
        1423 Hushang Shah of Malwa attacked the fortress, but raised the siege 
        when the Sayyid, Mubarak Shah, marched to its relief. During the protracted contest in the reign of Buhlill Lodi between the kingdoms of Delhi and Jaunpur Man Singh of Gwalior espoused the cause of the latter, and gave an asylum to its last king, Husain Shah, when he was fleeing before his enemies. Man Singh profited by the strife 
        between the Muslims to extend his dominions, and when Sikandar Lodi, 
        provoked by his protection of a fugitive rebel, invaded them in 1505 and
        the following years, he did not venture to attack Gwalior itself, but 
        contented himself with reducing Mandrael, Utgir, and other fortresses of
        less importance, and was eventually recalled from this campaign by 
        other affairs, but in 1518 his son, Ibrahim Lodi, incensed by the raja's
        protection of the pretender, Jalal Khan, besieged his capital, and 
        Yikramaditya or Bikramajit, the son and successor of Man Singh, was 
        compelled to surrender. Raja Man Singh, who reigned from 
        1486 to 1517, enriched Gwalior with the great palace which crowns the 
        eastern face of the rock, and earned a name as a patron of music and 
        musicians. The famous singer Tan Sen, and the best musicians and singers
        at Akbar's court had been trained in the Gwalior school. The Kachhwahas of Amber and Jaipur claim descent from the ancient rajas of Gwalior, of that tribe. Tej Karan, known as Dulha Rai, or the Bridegroom Prince, who was eighth in descent from Vajradaman, the first Kachhwaha prince of Gwalior, left that city, for some undetermined reason, in charge of his sister's son, a Parihar, who usurped his throne. Tej Karan married the daughter of the Bargujar Rajput chief of Daosa, and inherited that principality, then known as Dhundhar, from the Dhund river. Maidal Rao, Tej Karan's grandson, took the fortress of Amber from the Mina chief Bhato, and made it his capital. Maidal's great-grandson, Pajun, married the sister of Prithvi Raj of Ajmer and Delhi, and was killed with his brother-in-law at the second battle of Taraori. The Amber state, as it was known after the establishment of that town as the capital, was of little importance until the reign of Humayun. Towards the end of the fourteenth century Udai Karan, prince of Amber, added the Shekhawati district to his dominions, but his house did not otherwise specially distinguish itself. Gond Kingdoms Gondwana, the forest region between Berar on the west and
        Orissa on the east, was sparsely populated by the Gonds, Dravidians who
        had probably migrated northwards from the Deccan, but in the eleventh 
        century the northern and eastern tracts of this region, which were known
        as Chedi, were ruled by two families of Haihaya Bans Rajputs, who were 
        probably, like the Chandels of Jijhoti, Hinduized Gonds. One family, 
        which retained its possessions until it was ousted by the Marathas, had 
        its capital at Ratanpur, in the present Bilaspur District; and the other
        at Tripuri, or Tewar, about six miles from Jubbulpore. The Haihayas 
        were also known as the Kalachuris. Those of Tewar disappeared towards 
        the end of the twelfth century, being supplanted, as is commonly 
        believed, by Baghels of Rewa, but according to Gond tradition by a Gond 
        hero named Jadu Rai, said to be the ancestor of the Gond dynasty which 
        was certainly reigning in that region, with its capital at Garha, not 
        long after that time. Tradition records the existence of a dynasty of Gaoli, or cowherd race, of whom nothing certain is known, at Deogarh, the old fortress which stands twenty-four miles south-west of Chhindwara. This dynasty ended with the twin-brothers Ransur and Ghansur, who reigned jointly, and who befriended a Gond named Jatba. Jatba eventually slew his masters and founded the Gond dynasty which reigned at Deogarh. The only indication of a date in the legend is the record of an imaginary visit paid by Akbar to Jatba, and even tradition is silent as to the history of his successors, of whom hardly anything is known until the time of Bakht Buland, who was reigning at Deogarh at the latter end of the seventeenth century. Rather more than sixty miles west of Deogarh stands the fortress of Kherla, the foundation of which is attributed to a Rajput dynasty, whose capital it remained for a long period. The last of the line, Jaitpal, is said to have been killed after a twelve years' siege by the army of the king of Delhi. No such siege is recorded by the Muslim historians, but it is possible that the officials first placed in Berar by Alauddin Khalji extinguished the Rajput dynasty and built the present fort, which appears to be of Muhammadan construction. It fell afterwards, probably during the rebellion of the Deccan in the latter years of Muhammad Tughluq's reign, into the hands of Gonds, who established a dynasty there. Gond legend assigns a high degree 
        of antiquity to the dynasty of Southern Gondwana, the original capital 
        of which is said to have been Sirpur, near the Pranhita River, in the 
        Adilabad District of the Nizam's dominions. Ballalpur, higher up the 
        river and on the opposite bank, was next selected as the capital, which 
        was moved almost immediately to the newly founded city of Chanda, where 
        the Gonds reigned until the dynasty was extinguished by the Marathas. There were thus, when Muslim rule 
        was established both in Northern and in Southern India, four Gond 
        kingdoms in Gondwana—a northern kingdom with its capital at Garha; two 
        central kingdoms with their capitals at Deogarh and Kherla; and a 
        southern kingdom with its capital at Chanda. There are no materials for a
        detailed history of these kingdoms during the period of which we treat.
        The northern kingdom, known to the Muslims as Garha-Katanga, from its 
        capital and another town, and afterwards as Garha-Mandla, was extended 
        by Sangram Shah, who succeeded about 1480, and developed the little 
        state, consisting of four districts lying about Garha and Mandla, into a
        kingdom containing fifty-four districts, by annexing large portions of 
        the Narbada valley, the districts now called Sangor and Damoh, and the 
        present state of Bhopal. He built the fortress of Chauragarh, he 
        enriched his capital with buildings, and he obtained the fair Durgavati,
        daughter of the Chandel raja of Mahoba, as a bride for his son Dalpat, who succeeded him. The alliance suggests the origin of the Chandels. Durgavati, as regent for her son, 
        Bir Narayan, earned undying fame as the defender of his inheritance 
        against the Muslim ruler of Malwa and against Akbar, though she perished
        in the Mughul's unprovoked attack on the kingdom. Of the history of the neighboring 
        kingdom of Deogarh nothing certain, as has been said, is known until the
        reign of Bakht Buland, late in the seventeenth century. Of Kherla more is known. The fortress is situated near the highway between Hindustan and the Deccan, and could not fail to attract attention. The Muslim kings of the Deccan refrained from molesting this state until, in 1398, Narsingh, the Gond raja, taking advantage of Firuz Shah's preoccupation with Vijayanagar, and instigated by the Muslim rulers of Malwa and Khandesh, invaded and ravaged Berar. He was driven out of that province and obliged to swear fealty to Firuz. Subsequent relations between the three states, the Deccan, Malwa, and Kherla, have been described in Chapter XV. In the reign of Ahmad Shah, brother and successor of Firuz, it was agreed that the allegiance of Kherla should be transferred to Malwa, and the king of Malwa afterwards captured the fortress and exterminated the Gond dynasty. Kherla appears in the Am-i-Akhari as a district in the province of Berar. Kingdom of Chanda Of the southern kingdom, Chanda, yet more is known, but what little certain knowledge we possess is disfigured and obscured by a rank overgrowth of fiction. Despite the claims to antiquity made in the legends of this kingdom it seems to have risen on the ruins of the Yakataka dynasty, whose capital was probably at Bhandak, a village near Chanda, at the end of the eleventh or beginning of the twelfth century, and the names of nineteen kings who reigned between that time and 1751, when the Marathas occupied the kingdom, have been preserved. The first was Bhim Ballar, or Ballal, Singh, whose capital was at Sirpur and his chief stronghold Manikgarh, in the hills west of that town. His grandson was Hir Singh, who induced the Gonds to cultivate the land and introduced a primitive land revenue system. Hir Singh's grandson, Dinkar Singh, was a patron of learning, and was succeeded by his son. Ram Singh, a just ruler and a successful soldier, who extended the frontiers of his kingdom. Ram Singh was succeeded by his son, Surja Ballal Singh, one of the most romantic figures of old Gondwana. Owing to the absence of any written record it is impossible to say precisely at what period he reigned. The early part of the fifteenth century has been assigned as his date, but it appears to be at least as likely that he lived early in the fourteenth century. The romantic circumstances of his supposed visit to Delhi need not be recorded here, but it is probable that he visited that city, though the fact has not been deemed worthy of mention by any trustworthy historian. From the absence of any such mention it may be inferred that the Gond story of his rendering the king of Delhi an important service by capturing the fortress of a Rajput named Mohan Singh which the Muslim officers had failed to take is fiction, as is also the story that the king rewarded him for the exploit with the title of Shah, which no Muslim king of Delhi would have conferred. It is certain, however, that Surja Ballal and all who succeeded him on the throne of Chanda used this title, in the form 'Sa, and it appears that Surja Ballal, who was known after his visit to Delhi as Sher Sah Ballal Sah, assumed it in imitation of the king of Delhi. Surja Ballal was succeeded by his son Khandkia Ballal Sah, who suffered from some disease which caused tumours and swellings on his body. Seeking a healthier capital than Sirpur he built the town of Ballalpur on the opposite side of the river. While hunting he accidentally discovered near the site on which Chanda stands a pool of water in a river bed, and, having drunk and washed himself in the water, found his disease alleviated. It was decided that the spot was the resting-place of the great god Achaleshwar, 'the Immovable One', and Khandkia, having been perfectly restored to health by further use of the water, built a new capital near the site, naming it Chandrapur, or Chanda (the Moon City). Its walls were completed by his son and successor, Hir Sah, who induced or compelled his subjects to undertake the cultivation of fixed holdings, and constructed many reservoirs for irrigation. His revenue from the land was assessed on the ploughs employed. He also built the citadel and the palace of Chanda, parts of which still stand. Of Hir Sah it is recorded that he paid no tribute to any foreign king, from which statement it may be inferred that his predecessors had paid tribute, probably to the Bahmani kings of the Deccan, but the relations between that kingdom and the southern Gond state are most obscure. The kings of Chanda were not, like those of Kherla, drawn into the disputes between the kings of the Deccan and their northern neighbors, and seem wisely to have avoided such entanglements; but when Firuz Shah, the eighth king of the Bahmani dynasty, marched northwards, in 1399 or 1400, to punish Narsingh of Kherla for having invaded Berar, the fortress of Mahur was held by a 'misbeliever', probably a Gond from Chanda who had joined Narsingh; but he was permitted to retain the command of the fortress as governor on behalf of Firuz, on making submission. The same governor was again in 
        rebellion in 1424, and in the following year Ahmad Shah, the successor 
        of Firuz, dealt with him in the manner already described. Continuing his
        march northwards Ahmad found the fortress of Kalam in the hands of a 
        Gond chief, whom he slew or expelled, and then led a raid into Gondwana.
        He probably crossed the Wardha on this occasion, and, if so, this is 
        the only recorded instance of the invasion of the Chanda kingdom by a 
        Muslim king. Hir Sah was succeeded by his two sons, Bhima and Lokba, who reigned jointly until they were succeeded by Karn Sah, the son of one of them, who embraced and propagated the Hindu religion and substituted the regular administration of justice for the primitive system under which each man avenged his own wrongs. Karn Sah was succeeded by his son, Babaji Ballal Sah , who recovered the fortress of Bairagarh and is mentioned in the Ain-i-Akhari as being able to place in the field 1000 horse and 40,000 foot. He paid no tribute. The Gond language possesses no written characters, and a high standard of civilization could hardly exist at the courts of the four Gond kingdoms, but the kings were not mere barbarians. Their architecture proves their taste, and if they possessed no native literature many were enlightened enough to encourage Hindu letters. The northern kingdom, Garha-Mandla, was rich, the rajas of Deogarh and Kherla were warlike, but none could compare with the greatness of the southern kingdom. Unlike the other Gond kingdoms, the house of Chanda seems to have had a long succession of good and intelligent rulers, who resisted the natural temptations to inner strife and intrigue which brought destruction to the other kingdoms. 
 CHAPTER XXIBURMA A.D. 1287-1531.THE PERIOD OF SHAN IMMIGRATION
 
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