Bravehearts of Bharat (Vikram Sampath)
Bravehearts of Bharat (Vikram Sampath)
Bravehearts of Bharat (Vikram Sampath)
BHARAT
ADVANCE PRAISE FOR BRAVEHEARTS OF BHARAT
‘How many names in this list of fifteen Bharat Bravehearts ring a bell?
Contrary to perception, history is rarely objective. Such is the retelling of
Bharat’s history, and the lens used, that few of these names will be
recognized. Vikram Sampath has done a great service by correcting a biased
narrative that has coloured perceptions of Bharat’s history.’—Bibek Debroy,
eminent economist, author and translator
SAMPAH
BRAVEHEARTS OF
BHARAT
VIGNETTES FROM INDIAN HISTORY
Contents
Prologue
1 Lalitaditya Muktapida of Kashmir
2 Rajaraja Chola and Rajendra Chola
3 Rani Naiki Devi of Gujarat
4 Rani Rudrama Devi of Warangal
5 Maharana Kumbha of Mewar
6 Rani Abbakka Chowta of Ullal
7 Chand Bibi of Ahmednagar
8 Lachit Barphukan of Assam
9 Kanhoji Angre
10 Banda Singh Bahadur
11 Martanda Varma of Travancore
12 Devi Ahilya Bai Holkar of Indore
13 Rajarshi Bhagyachandra Jai Singh of Manipur
14 Velu Nachiyar of Sivaganga
15 Begum Hazrat Mahal of Awadh
Acknowledgements
Bibliography
Follow Penguin
Copyright
For my parents—my pillars of strength and the perennial wind beneath my
wings!
कोटि -कोटि कण्ठ कल-कल निनाद कराले
कोटि -कोटि भुजैर्धृत खरकरवाले,
अबला के न मा एत बले।
बहुबलधारिणीं नमामि तारिणीं
रिपुदलवारिणीं मातरम्।
वन्दे मातरम्।
Who hath said thou art weak in thy lands,When the sword flesh out in the
seventy million handsAnd seventy million voices roarThy dreadful name
from shore to shore?With many strengths who art mighty and stored,To thee
I call Mother and Lord!Thou who savest, arise and save!To her I cry who
ever her foe man droveBack from plain and SeaAnd shook herself free.
Puravruttam or narratives of the past that are in story form (katha yuktam)
and impart upadesha or instruction in the four limbs of humanity’s pursuits
—dharma (righteousness), artha (material pursuits), kama (sensual
pleasures) and moksha (liberation) is called itihasa (literally translating to
‘It thus happened’). This is a very clear, cognitive and self-assured vision of
what history and its role needs to be in society, which is an Indic alternative
to the modern, Western empiricist historiography that is popular, but also
one that has hardly been entertained or engaged with in any serious manner.
I hope these fifteen stories also have their own didactic message for the
readers about what they wish to take away from these glorious lives.
May this book inspire the flowering of the retelling of the tales of
numerous other such unsung and forgotten heroes of the past.
VIKRAM SAMPATH
BENGALURU
July 2022
Notes
1 Interview by Jerome Brooks, ‘Chinua Achebe, The Art of Fiction No.
139’, The Paris Review. Available at
https://www.theparisreview.org/interviews/1720/the-art-of-fiction-no-
139-chinua-achebe.
2 E.H. Carr, What is History? Penguin Classics (Penguin Random House
UK, 2018), p. 100.
Lalitaditya Muktapida of Kashmir
C
limbing up the tall steps that led to the inner sanctum of the colossal,
grand, intricately carved and geometrically precise temple, he turned
around to admire the beauty of his own creation. The snow-capped
mountains in the background seemed to provide a perfect foil to the holy
shrine. This temple, named after Martand or the Sun God of the Hindu
pantheon, was built by his architects on silted ground (karewas) on the top
of a plateau that overlooked the entire Kashmir valley. He looked
admiringly at the wide premises—220 x 142 feet in dimension, which he
had walked to reach the central sanctorum. His creation had aesthetically
blended the best of Gandhara, Gupta and Chinese forms of architecture,1 as
also the ancient Greek and Roman peristyle,2 to create a distinctive
Kashmiri style of architecture. The water tank (kund ) in the centre of the
yard was glistening with the reflections of nearly eighty-four smaller
shrines that dotted the entire perimeter of the courtyard. The walls of the
antechamber had beautiful carvings of Hindu gods such as Shiva, Vishnu,
and river Goddesses Ganga and Yamuna, among others. His face beamed
with joy as he looked at this sheer spectacular expanse, brimming with his
subjects who were showering encomiums on him and his recent spate of
numerous successful conquests. This auspicious moment was definitely the
crowning glory in the career of Kashmir’s ‘world-conqueror’3 monarch,
Lalitaditya Muktapida.
Its beauty though significantly devastated by a ruthless demolition in
the fifteenth century ordered by the tyrannical Sultan Sikandar Butshikan of
the Shah Miri dynasty4 did not fail to catch the attention of several
chroniclers. Centuries later, in 1909, British army officer and explorer Sir
Francis Younghusband, who was famous for his travelogues through
Central Asia and the Far East, was to eulogize these magnificent ruins thus:
On a perfectly open and even plain, gently sloping away from a background of snowy
mountains looking directly out on the entire length both of the Kashmir valley and of the
snowy ranges, which bound it—so situated in fact as to be encircled, yet not
overwhelmed by snowy mountains—stand the ruins of a temple second only to the
Egyptian in massiveness and strength and to the Greek in elegance and grace. It is built
of immense rectilinear blocks of limestone, betokening strength and durability … any
overweighing sense of massiveness is relieved by the elegance of the surrounding
colonnade of graceful Greek-like pillars … no one without an eye for natural beauty
would have chosen that special site for the construction of a temple and no one with an
inclination to the ephemeral and transient would have built it on so massive and enduring
a scale … Of all the ruins in Kashmir the Martand ruins are both the most remarkable
and the most characteristic. No temple was ever built on a finer site. It stands on an open
plain, where it can be seen to full advantage. Behind it rises a range of snowy mountains.
And away in the distance before it, first lies the smiling Kashmir valley, and then the
whole length of the Pir Panjal range, their snowy summits mingling softly with the azure
of the sky. It is one of the most heavenly spots on earth … the finest example of what is
known as the Kashmirian [sic] style of architecture … the most sublime site occupied by
any building in the world—finer far than the site of the Parthenon or of the Taj, or of St.
Peters, or of the Escurial—we may take it as the representative, or rather the culmination
of all the rest, and by it, we must judge the people of Kashmir at their best.5
His reign was to mark the veritable golden era in the annals of Kashmir’s
history.
Before reaching Sindh via the Bolan Pass, Qasim had to face stiff resistance
from the Turk Shahi rulers and Kashmir’s Chandrapida. Qasim, however,
managed to reach Sindh and attack the Debal port. The town was
surrounded by a large fort at the centre of which was a towering stupa of
about 120 yards. The Chachanama that chronicles29 the exploits of the
Sindh royal family of Chacha and Dahar states that the stupa was
surmounted by so large a flag that when the wind blew it used to fly all over
the town and touched the turrets of the fort wall. The belief was that the
stupa had a magical talisman in it and if it stood and the flag fluttered,
Debal would never fall to any conqueror. An insider, however, turned
treacherous and informed Qasim about this secret and hence the stupa and
the flag became the first target of his battering artillery. Debal fell to the
invaders on the ninth day of the conquest. The conquerors gave their first
lessons of a bloody conquest to the Hindu and Buddhist population of
Debal by massacring the entire male population of the town in a gory blood
bath.30 Women were taken as slaves and the town was pillaged. As historian
Chintaman Vinayak Vaidya states: ‘700 beautiful females under the
protection of Buddha who were of course made slaves.’31 Debal was largely
Buddhist, as was its governor whom the Chachanama names as Jahin Budh
and he ran to take shelter under Dahar’s son Jayasimha (Jaisiah).
Dahar had all along complacently presumed that the port would resist
these attacks like it had done so successfully in the past. He even wrote to
Qasim nonchalantly, with an air of bravado:
Be it known to you that the fortified town of Debal, which you have taken is an
insignificant town, where only traders and artisans reside … If I had sent against you Rai
Jaisiah who is the most victorious of all the rulers on the face of the earth, and who can
wreck vengeance on the strongest men of his age, or the King of Kashmir who is the
mighty possessor of a crown; who sways the whole of Hind and even the country of
Makran and Turan … if I had sent these heroes against you, you could not have done the
slightest harm to them and no army would have dared to pass through the remotest limits
of this country.32
But this invasion was different given the superior military might and
weapons of destruction of the Arabs that were unknown to the Indian side.
Qasim obviously had not come all the way to merely capture a small
seaport. After its capture he advanced towards Brahmanabad, the summer
capital of Sindh, defeating several chieftains enroute. Dahar decided to take
on the enemy frontally and left his capital Alor and marched towards Rewar
to halt Qasim’s victorious march. However, about 500 Arabs who were in
Dahar’s army under one Allafi and who could have assisted in knowing the
mind and strategy of the invaders deserted Dahar as they were reluctant to
attack their co-religionists. Undeterred by this treachery, Dahar faced
Qasim’s forces along with Jayasimha. He bravely declared:
My plan is to meet the Arabs in open battle, and fight with them with all possible vigour.
If I overpower them, I shall crush them to death and my kingdom will then be put on a
firm footing. But if I am killed honourably, the event will be recorded in the books of
Arabia and Hind, and will be talked of by great men, and it will be said that such and
such a king sacrificed his precious life for the sake of his country, in fighting with the
enemy.33
When the two armies finally met in a dreadful conflict, for a while, it
seemed that Sindhi forces had an upper hand in the battle. But again, the
opponent’s numerical strength, treachery of insiders and sheer bad luck had
turned the game against Dahar. A burning arrow fired by an Arabian rear
guard pierced his white elephant. The scared animal ran towards the river
where the Arabian encampment had been established. Dahar single-
handedly fought the Arab soldiers there till an arrow pierced his shoulder
and another, which got buried in his throat, appeared out from the back of
his neck. The last mighty Hindu king of Sindh had thus fallen, in 712 CE.
His decapitated head was sent back as a gift to the Caliph.34
The capital of Sindh was pilloried to the last brick. Sixty thousand
people including several women of princely families were taken as slaves.
Dahar’s wife Rani Bai decided to defend the fortress of Raor with about
15,000 warriors, but eventually gave up.35 As documented by Chintaman
Vinayak Vaidya, Qasim molested and forcefully married one of Dahar’s
wives Ladi,36 while Rani Bai immolated herself along with several Rajput
women after failing to protect the fortress—perhaps the first instance of
jauhar in India where royal women gave up their lives to prevent
themselves from falling into the hands of lustful and barbaric conquerors.
Dahar’s daughters Suryadevi and Parimaldevi were packed off to the
Caliph’s harem.
After giving some resistance even after Dahar’s death, Jayasimha fled
from Sindh and was given shelter in Kashmir.37 This incensed Qasim, who
attacked Kashmir, but he could only reach till the border of the kingdom at
Jalandhar as he was given a stiff opposition by Chandrapida.38 Qasim was
forced to turn away and instead attack the smaller kingdom of Kangda in
Himachal Pradesh.39 Thus Chandrapida had managed to keep the borders of
Kashmir safe against the Arab army that was equipped both with the latest
weaponry and brutal savagery.
Qasim had planned to attack Kannauj too. But his envoy who had been
sent to the court of Kannauj’s ruler Rai Harchandar with an order to
surrender was given a dressing down:
This kingdom has remained in our possession for nearly 1,600 years; and during our rule
no enemy has ever dared to set foot within our territories with offensive intentions or to
stretch his hand to dispossess us of any part of our country. What fear we have of your
absurd vapourings? It is improper and against the rules of etiquette to imprison an envoy
or put him in chains; or else, for this nonsensical talk and absurd boast of yours, I would
have made an example of you to serve as a warning to other enemies of kings. Now go
back to your amir and tell him that we must meet once and measure each other’s strength
and prowess. Then, either we shall overpower you or be overpowered. When the strength
and bravery of both sides is put to test on the field of battle, we shall decide whether to
make peace or to carry on war.40
Even before Qasim could react, he had by then he received a stern message
from the Caliph to return immediately. Dahar’s daughter Suryadevi was
somehow able to convince the Caliph that Qasim had already ‘used her’
and, therefore, she was not worthy of being a part of the Caliph’s harem. An
enraged Caliph issued orders to arrest Qasim and drag him to Baghdad
stitched and packed in a leather box. Qasim meekly followed the orders but
died in the route due to suffocation. Later, Suryadevi confessed to the
Caliph that she lied to him only to avenge her father’s death from Qasim.
An enraged Caliph ordered his soldiers to bury her and her sister alive in
the ground (or in a wall). Both sisters died but as true warriors they had
avenged their father’s death.41 Thus ended the story of the royal house of
Sindh in great tragedy. Sindh remained under the distant rule of the Caliphs
with different governors stationed at Multan to administer the province and
several subordinate governors in the minor towns of the Indus. The Arabs
could not extend their conquests into the Indian mainland due to the stiff
resistance they faced during each such misadventure and with the passage
of time their influence remained shrunk to Multan and Mansurah. A major
bulwark to their expansionist plans was Kashmir.
In the past too, the T’ang dynasty had sent a delegation to the Karkota court
in 722 CE expressing their gratitude to Tarapida (called by them as ‘Ti-an-
mu’) for providing food supplies and military assistance to the Chinese
army that had established its base in Gilglit.50 The Chinese control over
Gilgit during this period is further corroborated in the account of Korean
monk Hyech’o who visited Kashmir around 723–24 CE.51 But this time
around, in 733 CE, China was in no position to respond to this generous
offer of Lalitaditya as the T’ang Emperor Xuanzong was busy quelling the
rebellion of his general Gan Lah Shan, an officer of Turkish descent. Civil
wars and dissensions were tearing the T’ang Empire apart and as a
consequence the Chinese emperor had to eventually flee his capital.52
The successful campaigns against the Arabs, Turks and Tibetans
brought for Kashmir immense prestige and wealth from war spoils. It was at
this juncture in his reign that Lalitaditya seems to have conceived the idea
of leaving his legacy behind on the footprints of time by becoming a master
builder of iconic monuments and cities. He established a new capital city
named Parihaspur (City of Joy, today’s Paraspore, which is about 22 km
from Srinagar and part of Baramulla district). A massive palace for himself
and the construction of four grand temples, other than the Martand Sun
temple was commissioned at Parihaspur. These were the Parihaskeshav,
Muktakeshav, Govardhan Dev and Mahavaraha temples. Kalhana states that
the idol of Parihaskeshav was made of 3,600 kg of silver, while the
Muktakeshav idol was made of 84,000 tolas (about 840 kg) of gold. A fifty-
four-arm’s length tall Garuda pillar was also erected. Inspired by the
gigantic sculptures of the Buddha at Bamiyan in Tokharistan, Lalitaditya
had a chaitya established in his capital with a giant Buddha statue that was
made of 62,000 kg of copper and seemed to ‘reach the sky’.53 German art
historian Hermann Goetz opines that the Afghanistan influence could be
deeply seen in the architecture styles of Kashmir under Lalitaditya.54
Lalitaditya’s ‘Digvijaya’
After a brief hiatus from the battlefield, Lalitaditya seems to have set out on
what Kalhana describes as his ‘digvijaya’. It was a campaign in ancient
India that a king (or a scholar) undertook in all the proverbial four
directions against their political opponents (or intellectual, for a scholar)
and after a victory in which he was acclaimed as a ‘Chakravarti’. Quite
ironically, the first target of this campaign was his hitherto ally in his
expeditions against the Arabs and Turks—Yashovarman of Kannauj. Some
scholars opine that Yashovarman’s own successful digivijaya expeditions
conquering Gaud (Bengal), Magadh (Bihar), Thanesar (Haryana) and parts
of Maru Desh (Rajasthan)55 made Lalitaditya both jealous as well as
insecure. Yashovarman had the king of Gaud, Dharma, killed and from
among his court the talented poet Vakpati was captured and imprisoned. In
captivity, Vakpati wrote a eulogy to Yashovarman in Prakrit titled
Gaudavaho or the ‘Killing of the Gaud king’, where he painted an
exaggerated picture of the valour of his new master, possibly to escape the
pain of captivity. This work paints a picture of an ambitious and
expansionist Yashovarman, bolstered by the victory against the Tibetans.
The last straw in this thawed friendship between the two hitherto allies
was a long-drawn encampment by Yashovarman in Kurukshetra, which was
quite near the border of Lalitaditya’s domains. It is quite possible that
Lalitaditya declared war when Yashovarman tried to extend his boundaries
at Jalandhar up to the Yamuna.56 Stein determines the possible year of his
launching an attack on Kannuaj to sometime after 736 CE.57 (He possibly
left Kashmir for Kannauj in 738 CE). On his way to the Antarved or the
Doab region between the Ganga and Yamuna, where Kannauj was located,
Lalitaditya vanquished smaller kingdoms such as Kangda, Kumaun, Lohara
(Poonch), Garwhal (the then Strirajya or matriarchal ‘queendom’, which is
perhaps Suvarnagotri and could have comprised Kumaun and Garwhal) and
brought them all under the suzerainty of Kashmir. About this victorious
conquest till Kannuaj, Kalhana states:
When he [Lalitaditya] launched his digvijaya he used to abandon his anger on seeing the
opposite kings standing in the battlefield with their hands folded in respect; when the
thunderous noise of the war drums rent the air people ran away leaving their homes and
estates behind. Such towns looked like women having had an abortion. Like the sun
revolving around the earth constantly that victorious king spent most of his days in
travelling, when he collected the obeisance money in the East, the cloth of prestige over
his head had lent glory to the Antarved region.58
When the armies of the two equally competent and valorous warrior kings
met, it was naturally a long-drawn skirmish that left the armies and soldiers
exhausted.59 There are very few details of this war but what we do know is
that Lalitaditya eventually emerged victorious. As Kalhana states: ‘At
Gadhipura where Vayudeva (wind God) had made the virgins humpbacked,
in that very place, he (Lalitaditya) bent the backs of many great warriors.
Like the bright sun that evaporates rivers in a moment he dried up the river-
like army of the mountain-like Yashovarman. The ruler of Kanyakubja was
intelligent. He bowed before the great Lalitaditya.’60 Yashovarman sent a
draft peace treaty to his friend turned foe. Rather inadvertently (or
knowingly) in the treaty he preceded his own name before that of
Lalitaditya. This supposed lapse and breach of protocol by the vanquished
towards a victor was spotted by Lalitaditya’s alert minister Mitrasharma
who brought it to the notice of his monarch who was enraged.61 The treaty
was shredded, and Kashmir’s forces remounted a virulent attack that
resulted in a complete rout for Yashovarman, who was made a vassal of
Lalitaditya. He remained a feudatory of Kashmir till his death in c. 753 CE.
All the territories that were part of Kannauj now came under the control of
Kashmir. To stamp his suzerainty over these places, which included the
latest conquests of Yashovarman in Magadh, Gaud and Vanga, Lalitaditya
marched along to all these kingdoms, parading his new vassal to instill a
sense of fear in the feudatories there and to let them know who their new
master was. Without a war with any of these kingdoms, all of them came
under the control of Kashmir, which now extended ‘from the northern
banks of Yamuna to river Kalika (possibly around Gwalior), the
Kanyakubja (Kannauj) country became the courtyard of his house for
Lalitaditya’,62 potentially making it the largest empire of contemporary
India. Lalitaditya took back all the renowned poets and scholars—Vakpati,
Bhavabhuti, Kamalayudh and Atrigupta from Kannauj to his court. Of
these, Atrigupta, was an ancestor of the most celebrated icon of Kashmir
Shaivism Abhinavagupta. In the Indic imagination of the building of an
empire, not only were massive structures, palaces and temples important,
but the emergence of an intellectual and philosophical centre for excellence
and learning was also paramount.
After this conquest, Kalhana makes Lalitaditya set off on a triumphant
conquest across the length and breadth of India, which seems extremely
mythical and legendary. As Stein cautions, ‘The absence of all historical
details, as well as the strict geographical order of the countries named,
shows that we have in this account merely a conventional elaboration of the
popular belief, which attributed to Lalitaditya the customary ‘Digvijaya’ of
an Indian hero.’63 From Bengal he moved towards Kalinga (Odisha) and
brought it under his sway. Kalinga was under the Shailodbhava dynasty
during this time and the meltdown of their kingdom is obscure. In either
case Kashmir’s control over this region, if at all, seems to have been short-
lived as the Bhaumakara dynasty became a prominent power in Kalinga
towards the end of the eight century.
From Kalinga, we see the victory march of Lalitaditya moving
southwards to the Karnata land (a reference to the Rashtrakuta dominions,
possibly Karnataka) where Kalhana mentions a certain Queen Ratta sending
him an emissary seeking help. Contextualizing the dominant queens of the
south during this time, Ratta perhaps is an allusion to the Rashtrakuta
Queen Bhavanaga. She was a princess of the dynasty of the Chalukyas from
Gujarat and was abducted and married by Indra I of the lineage of the
Rashtrakutas of Manyakheta. After Indra’s death, Bhavanaga was the regent
queen of the minor, Dantidurga (735–56 CE).64 With her brother-in-law
Krishna casting threats on the throne, she is supposed to have sought
Lalitaditya’s help as he was right there in the vicinity in Kalinga. Along
with his vassals Jivitagupta of Gaud and Yashovarman, Lalitaditya is said to
have come to her aid against her detractors. However, no Rashtrakuta
inscription mentions either a visit or a war fought in their domains by a
Kashmir monarch.
Kalhana then takes us through Lalitaditya’s victorious march through
the Tamil country, crossing over the seas and reaching Sri Lanka as well.
On his way back to Kashmir he is supposed to have launched another
victorious avalanche over the Konkan, Dwarka, Ujjain, Kathiawar, Malwa
and Marwar, shaking the tottering power of the Maitrakas of Vallabhi (in
Gujarat) and the Mauryas of Chittorgarh (in Rajasthan).65 He also talks of
Lalitaditya’s annexation of Pragjyotishapura, the capital of the ancient
Kamarup kingdom of Assam. Most scholars, including Stein who has
translated the Rajatarangini, have discounted this as a fantastic tale and
being highly unlikely. While Vakpati’s eulogy to his victorious master is
understandable, one wonders why Kalhana who was writing about
Lalitaditya 400 years after his reign needed to employ such hyperbole, other
than the need to reinforce the supremacy of his Kashmir kingdom in the
pan-Indian context. He also exaggerates the treatment that Lalitaditya
meted out to the vanquished: ‘That victorious king made the defeated kings
wear certain emblems showing their status as defeated kings, which they
continue to wear even today. To the Turks, he made them shave only half
their heads, which they continue to do even today. To prove the lower status
as animal of the southerners, he made them leave one end of their loin
cloths long enough to touch the ground behind them.’66
A few mentions of victories seem plausible, however, such as the
conquest of the Lat principality (Gujarat) and its ruler Kayya becoming a
vassal. Kayya’s construction in Kashmir of a Kayyeshwar Shiva temple and
a vihara called Kayyavihara where a Buddhist monk Sarvadnyamitra lived
corroborates this theory that he must have been brought under the Karkota
umbrella and then encouraged to contribute to the construction activities in
the empire.
Despite all the exaggeration of Kalhana, undoubtedly at the end of a
long war campaign, when Lalitaditya returned to his capital in c. 744 CE,
he had built one of the largest contemporary empires of India and stamped
the dominance of Kashmir in the subcontinent.
After a period of lull in the Gilgit–Baltistan region for four to five years
after their defeat to the combined forces of Lalitaditya and Yashovarman,
Tibet began to flex its muscles yet again. In 737–38 CE, the Tibetan army
under its minister Bel Kyesang Dongstab tried to regain control over the
important trade routes of the region. But Lalitaditya forced him to retreat
after inflicting a crushing defeat. Almost a decade later, in 747 CE, when
the Tibetan aggression made a menacing reappearance, China sent its
military commander Kao Hsien-chih to ally with Lalitaditya in order to
repel Tibet.67 Lalitaditya got a strategic bridge over the Sei River that used
to send in reinforcements to the Palur region for the Tibetan army
destroyed, thereby choking them eventually. The combined forces won yet
another decisive victory over Tibet in a war where Kashmir provided
military and civil assistance along with food supplies to the Chinese army.
The trade routes to Khurasan and Gandhara were thus secured. In a region
where control normally oscillated between the powers, it was Lalitaditya’s
efforts, with and without the Chinese, that kept the Palur free from Tibet for
a long period from 731 to 747 CE.
Though Tibet was subdued, its ally, the Jieshi kingdom in the Kashkar–
Chitral mountain region strategically placed between Kashmir and Gilgit
kept mounting low-intensity attacks. A concern about this was raised by
Tokharistan too when it sent a delegation to the Chinese court in 749 CE,
drawing attention to the nuisance from Jieshi.68 It also recommended that
China renew its successful alliance with Kashmir that had stood the test of
time and wars and to win over the king of Kashmir through costly gifts.
These recommendations were promptly acted upon by the T’ang court. In
750 CE, Lalitaditya’s forces, along with the Chinese army under Kao
Hsien-chih, sacked Jieshi. Its ruler Botemo was deposed, and his elder
brother Suojiya put in his place as a vassal. Kalhana perhaps alludes to
Botemo when he talks about a certain ruler named ‘Mummuni’ whom
Lalitaditya decisively vanquished in a third attempt. Historian R.C.
Majumdar contends that Mummuni was perhaps the Arab governor whom
Lalitaditya had defeated early in his career. Thus, there are various allusions
about who this man Mummuni really was.
He also instructed them that in the eventuality of his non-return, his eldest
son from Kamaladevi, Kuvalayapida should be crowned king and if found
wanting, he should be dismissed. He had a special word for his favourite
grandson Jayapida (son of Lalitaditya’s son Vajraditya, from
Chakramardika) to emulate his grandfather and carry forward the legacy. In
a tragic and mysterious turn of events, Lalitaditya never returned from this
far-north campaign. A monarch whose life and achievements were coloured
by fantastic legends had his death, too, shrouded in equal myth and
obscurity.
Various theories abound of how he met his end. According to one
legend that Kalhana mentions, the Kashmir battalion was struck with severe
water shortage in the midst of their expedition within the Taklamakan
Desert. An emissary of a rival king appeared as an imposter trying to guide
them to a water source and misled them to their eventual nemesis. On his
disappearance and death, Kalhana states with poetic flourish:
Some say the king died because of the enormous snowfall in the Aryajak (or Aryanaka)
country. Some even say he submitted himself to fire when faced with an imminent,
inevitable danger to preserve his eternal prestige. Some others say, in the Uttarapatha that
is beyond the human reach but easily reachable for the divine beings, that king went into
the earth along with his army. Just like the story of his astonishing achievements is told,
the various wondrous stories about his death are also narrated. When the sun sets, some
say it drowned in the sea, some say it entered the fire and some say he [the sun] went to
another country. Likewise, many marvelous stories are related to the death of the great
men.83
Notes
1 Andre Wink, Al-Hind, The Making of the Indo-Islamic World: Early
Medieval India and the Expansion of Islam, 7th–11th Centuries (BRILL,
2002), pp. 250–51.
2 Peristyle, a feature of Greek and Roman architecture, is a continuous
porch formed by a row of columns surrounding the perimeter of either a
building or a courtyard.
3 Repeatedly referred to as such through his ‘digvijaya’ or world conquest
according to twelfth-century Kashmir scholar Kalhana whose Sanskrit
text Rajatarangini (The River of Kings) is one of the extant chronicles of
Kashmir and its Hindu rulers.
4 Walter Slaje, ed., Kingship in Kashmir (A.D. 1148–1459): From the Pen
of Jonaraja, Court Pandit to Sultan Zayn al-‘Abidin (Germany: Studia
Indologica Universitatis Halensis, 2014), p. 171.
5 Sir Francis Younghusband, Kashmir (London: Adam & Charles Black,
1911), pp. 114–15, 135–36.
6 The Nilamata Purana also mentions the Naga Karkotaka in the beginning
of the list of Kashmir Nagas along with Nila, Vasuki and Takshaka.
7 Kalhana. Kalhana’s Rajatarangini: A Chronicle of the Kings of Kashmir,
Book 3, trans. Marc Aurel Stein. (London: Archibald Constable & Co.
Ltd., 1900), verses 490–91, p. 115.
8 Hsuan-Tsang, Si-Yu-Ki: Buddhist Records of the Western World, trans.
Samuel Beal (London: Trubner & Co., 1884), p. 148.
9 P.N.K. Bamzai, Cultural and Political History of Kashmir, Vol. 1
(Srinagar: Gulshan Books, 1994), p. 83.
10 Ibid., pp. 87–88.
11 M.L. Kapur, Kingdom of Kashmir (Srinagar: Gulshan Books, 2005), p.
50.
12 Kalhana, Kalhana’s Rajatarangini: A Chronicle of the Kings of Kashmir,
Book 4 (Hereinafter referred to as RT4), trans. M.A. Stein (London:
Archibald Constable & Co. Ltd., 1900), verse 43, p. 123.
13 RT4, verse 119, p. 130.
14 RT4, verse 124, p. 130.
15 RT4, verses 126–27, pp. 130–31.
16 Ibid., verse 343, p. 154.
17 Ram Gopal Misra, Indian Resistance to Early Muslim Invaders up to
1206 A.D. (Bengaluru: Sahitya Sindhu Prakashana, 2020), p. 37.
18 M.S. Commissariat, A History of Gujarat, Vol.1 (Bombay: Longman,
Green & Co., 1938), p. LI.
19 H.M. Elliot and John Dowson, The History of India as Told by Its Own
Historians: The Muhammadan Period. Vol.1 (London: Trubner and Co.,
1867), p. 88.
20 Ram Gopal Misra, Indian Resistance to Early Muslim Invaders up to
1206 A.D. (Bengaluru: Sahitya Sindhu Prakashana, 2020), p. 37.
21 Ibid.
22 Chacha Rai supplanted the last ruler of the Rai dynasty, Rai Sahasi II.
23 The Origins of the Islamic State, pt. 2, trans. Francis Murgotten Clark
from the Kitab Futah al-Buldan by al Baladhuri (New York: Columbia
University, 1924), p. 209.
24 Ram Gopal Misra, Indian Resistance to Early Muslim Invaders up to
1206 A.D. (Bengaluru: Sahitya Sindhu Prakashana, 2020), p. 43.
25 H.M. Elliot and John Dowson, The History of India as told by its Own
Historians: The Muhammadan Period, Vol. 1 (London: Trubner and Co.,
1867), p. 118.
26 The Chachanamah: An Ancient History of Sind, trans. Mirza Kalichbeg
Fredunbeg from the Persian original Tarikh al-Hind wa al-Sind (Karachi:
Commissioners Press, 1900), p. 71.
27 Ibid. pp. 71–72.
28 H.M. Elliot and John Dowson, The History of India as told by its Own
Historians: The Muhammadan Period, Vol.1, (London: Trubner and Co.,
1867), p. 120.
29 The Chachanamah: An Ancient History of Sind, trans. Mirza Kalichbeg
Fredunbeg from the Persian original Tarikh al-Hind wa al-Sind (Karachi:
Commissioners Press, 1900).
30 Chintaman Vinayak Vaidya, History of Mediaeval Hindu India: Being a
History of India from 600 to 1200 A.D. (Poona: The Oriental Book-
Supplying Agency, 1921), p. 171.
31 Ibid.
32 Chachanama, p. 87.
33 Ibid., p. 123.
34 Ibid.
35 Elliot and Dowson, The History of India, p, 171–72.
36 Vinayak Vaidya, History of Mediaeval Hindu India, p. 179.
37 A Gazetteer of the Province of Sindh (Sindh: G. Bells & Sons, 1874), p.
25.
38 Andre Wink, Al-Hind: The Making of the Indo-Islamic World: Early
Medieval India and the Expansion of Islam, 7th–11th Centuries (BRILL,
2002).
39 Rama Shankar Tripathi, History of Kanauj: To the Moslem Conquest
(Motilal Banarsidass, 1989), p. 218.
40 Chachanamah, p. 193.
41 This is one version as stated in The Chachnamah, pp.142–44. However,
al-Baladhuri states (as is translated by Elliot and Dowson, pp. 437–38)
that the new Caliph Sulayman ibn ‘Abd al-Malik bore grudges against
Hajjaj and his relatives, and to take revenge he ordered Qasim back, had
him imprisoned, tortured and murdered.
42 Mohibbul Hasan, Kashmir under the Sultans (New Delhi: Aakar books,
1959), p. 30.
43 Not much details are known of him, or if this was the name of a dynasty.
Arab records, like Al-Bahaduri’s account, mention him variously as
Ranbal, Rantal, Rantbil, Ratbal, Zambil, Zantil etc. Historian Ram Gopal
Misra contends in his book that this could be a corruption of the word
‘Ratna Pala’ or ‘Rana Bala’ (strong in battle), p. 66, fn. 12.
44 RT 4, p. 89.
45 Ibid., verse 211, p. 143.
46 Ibid., verse 168, p. 137.
47 Andrew Wink. Al-Hind: The Making of the Indo Islamic World, Volume
2, 11th -13th Centuries, (New York: Brill, 1997), pp. 73-74.
48 Bamzai, Cultural and Political History of Kashmir, p. 141; RT 4, 168.
49 Tansen Sen, ‘Kashmir, Tang Dynasty, and Muktapida Lalitaditya’s
Ascendancy over the southern Hindukush Region’, Journal of South
Asian History, Vol. 38, no. 2 (2004), pp. 145–46.
50 Ibid., p. 143.
51 Ibid., p. 152.
52 Bamzai, Cultural and Political History of Kashmir, p. 141
53 RT 4, verses 193–203, pp. 141–42.
54 For more, please see Hermann Goetz, Studies in the History and Art of
Kashmir and the Indian Himalaya (Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz,
1969).
55 Shyam Manohar Mishra, Yas’ovarman of Kanauj: A Study of Political,
Social and Cultural Life of Northern India during the Reign of
Yas’ovarman (New Delhi: Abhinav Publication, 1977), p. 92.
56 RT 4, p. 90.
57 Ibid., p. 89.
58 Ibid., verses 128–32, p. 131.
59 Ibid., p. 4.
60 Ibid., verses 133–36, p. 132.
61 Ibid., verses 136–40, pp. 132–33.
62 Ibid., verse 145, p. 134.
63 Ibid., p. 90.
64 The Rashtrakutas of Manyakheta (near Gulbarga) were vassals of the
Chalukyas of Badami. Dantidurga (735–56) refused ascendancy of
Chalukyan King Kirtivarman II from Badami and founded the
Rashtrakuta dynasty. He eventually defeated the Chalukyas in 753 and
became a major power in the south.
65 Bamzai, Cultural and Political History of Kashmir, p. 140.
66 RT 4, verses 178–80, pp. 188–89.
67 René Grousset, The Rise and Splendour of the Chinese Empire
(Berkeley: University of California Press,1962), p. 160.
68 Tansen Sen, ‘Kashmir, Tang Dynasty’, p. 147.
69 Bamzai, Cultural and Political History of Kashmir, p. 142.
70 Tansen Sen, ‘Kashmir, Tang Dynasty’, pp. 147–48.
71 RT 4, verse 191, pp. 140-41.
72 Ibid., verses 309–21, pp. 151–52.
73 Ibid., verse 323, p. 152.
74 Ibid., verses 322–29, pp. 152–53.
75 Ibid., verses 265–76, pp. 147–48.
76 Mu Shun-ying and Wang Yao, ‘The Western Regions under the Tang
Empire and the Kingdom of Tibet’, in History of Civilizations of Central
Asia, Vol. 3, ed. B.A. Litvinsky et al. (Paris: UNESCO Publishing, 1996).
77 RT 4, verses 337–38, p. 153.
78 Goetz, Studies in the History and Art of Kashmir, p. 20.
79 Sanjay Sonawani, Emperor of Kashmir: Lalitaditya the Great (Pune:
Chinar Publishers India, 2019), p. 218.
80 RT 4, verses 340–44, pp. 153–54.
81 Ibid., p. 93.
82 Ibid., verses 349–52, p. 154.
83 Ibid., verses 367–71, pp. 155–56.
Rajaraja Chola and Rajendra
Chola
R
ajendra Chola’s naval fleet shocked the countries of South East Asia
with its heroic raid in 1025 CE of fourteen flourishing port cities on
the Malay Peninsula and in Sumatra, called then as Suwarnadwipa or
the island of gold. The Chola navy had a combination of merchant vessels,
which were possibly assembled to carry the troops on their long voyage to
South East Asian shores. Merchant coastal vessels called sangara1 were
built with single logs of wood bound together tightly with ropes, to carry
large amounts of cargo. Another category, the colandia, which were
possibly used in this expedition, was the larger ocean-going vessel, capable
of distant voyages. This conquest of South East Asia was a culmination of a
four-decade strenuous effort on the part of the Cholas—the illustrious
Rajendra and earlier his chivalrous father Rajaraja to establish Chola
supremacy, particularly in the sea-trade routes. From Sri Lanka to Maldives
and later Indian coasts in Odisha and Bengal, the Cholas successfully sealed
their authority over the seas with this conquest of Srivijaya in Sumatra.
Historian Nilakanta Sastri tries to decode these places, and the chronology
of their occurrence in the inscription gives us an indication of the sequence
of the battle.34 Nakkavaram was the Tamizh name of the Nicobar Islands
and Papphala was a port in Ramanna, the Talaing territory of Burma. Pannai
is identified with Pani/Panei on the east coast of Sumatra. Ancient Malaiyur
was a principality ‘at the southern end of the Malay Peninsula, and
precisely on the northern shore of the Old Singapore Strait where one
encounters the Malayu river’.35 Mayirudingam that has the deep sea for a
moat is among the dependencies of Srivijaya. Ilangaashokam identified as
Ling-ya-sseu-kia was to the south of the state of Kedah in the Malay
Peninsula. Mapappalam could be a place in the Tailang region of Lower
Burma. Talaittakolam is localized in the modern Takuapa district, south of
the Isthmus of Kra and identified by its chief town, also called Takuapa, and
is on the West Coast of the Malay Peninsula. Madamalingam (Temiling or
Tembeling) is at the mouth of the Kwantan River in Pahang on the East
Coast of the Malay Peninsula. Ilamuridesam is the country in the northern
part of the island of Sumatra.
The inscription makes it clear that it was a widespread conquest spread
across the peninsula and aimed at Srivijaya and its several dependencies in
the region. Kadaram port, too, was at the time a Srivijaya dependency and
the first place that the Tamils touched in their passage into that kingdom.
The Chola armada sailed directly to the west coast of Sumatra. The port of
Barus in north Sumatra belonged to Tamizh trading guilds and helped the
fleet to replenish and recharge before they continued to sail southward into
the Strait of Sunda. The Srivijaya navy guarding the Malaccan Straits were
caught completely unaware by this sudden and swift attack. Their capital
city of Palembang was attacked and plundered by the Cholas. The armada
seems to have taken advantage of the monsoons to keep moving from one
port to another swiftly. These fast-moving, sudden attacks gave the
opponent no opportunity to prepare or regroup, resulting in a complete rout
of Srivijaya. After the successful raid Rajendra married Onang Kiu, the
daughter of Sangrama Vijayottunga, and forced Srivijaya to make peace
with the Javanese kingdom of Kahuripan. The Shailendra dynasty of
Srivijaya collapsed after the raids. The hegemonic hold of Srivijaya over
the maritime trade was weakened, though it did not result in a permanent
Cholan occupation as that does not seem to have been Rajendra’s intention.
This great naval expedition and conquest of more than a dozen harbour
ports of Srivijaya and the Malay Peninsula was a unique event in the
otherwise peaceful and culturally fruitful relationship that India shared with
her South East Asian neighbours. Curiously enough, the Cholas seemed
reluctant to convert this spectacular military and naval success into a more
permanent political dominion, by, for instance, establishment of a fortified
settlement of Tamizh merchants in the Straits of Malacca. South Indian
merchant guilds named Ayyavole (Ainnaruvar) and Manigramam were
already playing an important and active role in the maritime power politics,
as mentioned earlier.36 Their permanent establishment there could have
cemented Chola supremacy for times to come, though this invasion clearly
furthered the expansion and prestige of the guilds in the Malay Peninsula
and Sumatra.
Though the naval raid stunned the wits out of Srivijaya, they slowly
tried to regain their dominant position in the western Malay world with its
important straits. A third offensive (after 1017 CE and the big naval raid of
1025 CE) was conducted on Srivijaya in the 1070s by Rajendra’s successors
Virarajendra and Kulottunga I to quell an internal rebellion. It was
eventually under Emperor Kulottunga I (r. 1070–1122 CE) that Chola
overlordship was established over the Srivijayan province of Kedah in the
Malay Peninsula. An inscription of a Taoist temple in Guangzhou, dated c.
1079 CE declares Kulottunga, King of Chulien (Chola), to be the supreme
chief of the Land of San-fo-tsi (Srivijaya).37 According to Tan Yeok Seong,
the editor of the inscription, Kulottunga ruled both the Chola and Srivijaya
kingdoms.38 In the small Leyden grant dated 1090 CE, the king of Kadaram
is mentioned as a vassal of Kulottunga.39
Scholars have marvelled and hypothesized about the precision with
which the Chola fleet managed to attack Srivijaya and have attempted to
investigate the contributive factors for this. Their ships ‘were not fitted with
a rudder and magnetic compass and they had to do either coasting or
parallel/great circle sailings’.40 The Cholas had mastered the science of
studying the winds and currents in the Bay of Bengal, South East Asian
waters and even China, along with a thorough knowledge of astronomy,
celestial objects and stars. It is said that the seafarers had knowledge of at
least fifty-six stars seen in the lower latitudes of the northern hemisphere.41
Historian Radha Kumud Mookerji writes that Chola ports were marked
by lighthouses built of brick and mortar that were kept alight at night to
guide ships to ports.42 Given the seasonal currents, the most appropriate
time for the expedition to Sumatra from the Coromandel Coast might have
been in December. Scholar B. Arunachalam opines that the voyage would
have commenced after the sighting of Mrigasiram, Ardra and Ottaraivelli
stars in the southern horizon and the Kootu star on the port bow of Ardra.43
As scholars Vijay Sakhuja and Sangeeta Sakhuja postulate: ‘Importantly the
voyage had to be started before the Ardra Darshan i.e., Poornima (full
moon) when Ardra is sighted at dawn for the last time. In case the voyage
was delayed beyond mid-January, then the guiding star would be Sravan
(Alpha Aquila).’44 In their view the passage to west Sumatra would have
been covered in about twelve to fifteen days. On reaching the Sumatra
coast, the ships would have then coasted along the archipelago, through the
Sunda Strait, into the Strait of Malacca.45 The Chola mariners used a variety
of instruments and objects for navigation—Ra-p-palagai (for sighting
stars), Tappu Palagai (for speed measurements), human hand (for
measurement of attitude of stars), flat bronze plates (for measurement of
depth of water) and pigeons for sighting land.46
There were far-reaching cultural impacts too on South East Asia of both
the Tamizh maritime trade and the invasion and conquest of Srivijaya. A
South Indian cultural base had already been established with the Pallava
influence on the region, which only got further cemented with the Chola
conquests. Quite like the divine identification of the Cholan emperor, the
Cambodian and Javanese monarchy, too, thought of themselves as Vishnu
and Shiva or their representatives. The Thai kings considered themselves as
incarnations of Indra. In Champa, Shiva imagery and iconography became
omnipresent. Cham sculptures in Vietnam were representations of the
Hindu pantheon.47 Just as Cholan temples were showcases of art, culture,
painting, music and dance, we find similar echoes in peninsular Siam in the
stone sculptures on Pranarai Hill at Takupa. Battle scenes from the
Ramayana against a plain white background are popular in Bali, traceable
to Chola temple hangings. Burmese kalagas or hangings have elaborate
Jataka tales of Buddhist mythology. The influence of Hindu iconography
and use of motifs of Garuda and Naga, as also apsaras, kinnaras,
gandhravas on textiles is notable in many countries of South East Asia.
This legacy of the fabric trade of the Cholas survived long after their empire
itself declined. The Ramayana and Mahabharata epics became (and
continue to remain) the subjects of royal ballets, classical theatre
performances and village rituals. Royal ceremonies in Thailand and
Cambodia still follow Hindu ritual procedures. Thus, a civilizational impact
that India and the Cholas left on this region has lasted almost a millennium
now.
Notes
1 K.A. Nilakanta Sastri, The Colas (Madras: University of Madras, 1955),
pp. 85–86.
2 Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum, Vol. 1, p. 2ff. and plate.
3 M. Rajamanikkam, Tamilmoli Ilakkiya Varalaru (Madras, 1963), p. 44.
4 J. Abu-Lughod, Before European Hegemony: The World System A.D.
1250–1350 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1989), p. 226.
5 S.D. Goitein, ‘From the Mediterranean to India: Documents on the Trade
to India, South Arabia and East Africa from the Eleventh and Twelfth
Centuries’, Speculum 29 (1954), pp. 181–97. For more also see Hermann
Kulke, ‘The Naval Expeditions of the Cholas in the Context of Asian
History’ in Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa: Reflections on the Chola
Naval Expeditions to Southeast Asia, ed. Hermann Kulke, K. Kesavapany
and Vijay Sakhuja (Singapore: ISEAS Publishing, 2009), pp. 1–19.
6 Nilakanta Sastri, The Colas, p. 172.
7 R. Shama Sastry, ed., South Indian Inscriptions, Vol. 9, Pt. 1, No. 77.
(Madras: Manager of Publications, 1939), pp. 47–49.
8 Nilakanta Sastri, The Colas, p. 182.
9 Ibid., p. 183.
10 E. Hultzsch, ed., Epigraphia Indica, Vol. 8 (Calcutta: Office of the
Superintendent of Government Printing, India, 1905–06), pp. 261–62.
11 Nilakanta Sastri, The Colas, p. 207.
12 Ibid., p. 208.
13 Ibid., p. 210.
14 Sailendra Nath Sen, Ancient Indian History and Civilization (New
Delhi: New Age International Publishers, 1999), p. 281.
15 J. Allan, Sir T. Wolseley Haig and H.H. Dodwell, eds., The Cambridge
Shorter History of India (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1934),
p. 145.
16 Nilakanta Sastri, The Colas, p. 206.
17 Tansen Sen, ‘The Military Campaigns of Rajendra Chola and the Chola–
Srivijaya–China Triangle’, in Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa:
Reflections on the Chola Naval Expeditions to Southeast Asia, ed.
Hermann Kulke, K. Kesavapany and Vijay Sakhuja (Singapore: ISEAS
Publishing, 2009), p. 63.
18 Ibid. pp. 63–64
19 Hermann Kulke, ‘The Naval Expeditions of the Cholas in the Context of
Asian History’ in Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa: Reflections on the
Chola Naval Expeditions to Southeast Asia, ed. Hermann Kulke, K.
Kesavapany and Vijay Sakhuja (Singapore: ISEAS Publishing, 2009), p.
4.
20 Ibid.
21 Ibid. Also, for more details on the region, please see O.W. Wolters,
Early Indonesian Commerce: A Study of the Origins of Srivijaya (Ithaca
and London: Cornell University Press, 1967).
22 Sten Konow, ed., Epigraphica Indica, Vol. XXII (Bombay: British India
Press, 1913–14), p. 257.
23 Kenneth.R. Hall, ‘International Trade and Foreign Diplomacy in Early
Medieval South India’, Journal of the Economic and Social History of
the Orient 21.1 (January 1978), pp. 75–98. Also, Hermann Kulke, ‘The
Naval Expeditions of the Cholas in the Context of Asian History’ in
Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa: Reflections on the Chola Naval
Expeditions to Southeast Asia, ed. Hermann Kulke, K. Kesavapany and
Vijay Sakhuja (Singapore: ISEAS Publishing, 2009), p. 6.
24 Nilakanta Sastri, The Colas, p. 220.
25 Kenneth R. Hall, ‘Khmer Commercial Development and Foreign
Contacts under Suryavarman I’ Journal of the Economic and Social
History of the Orient 18 (3), October 1975, pp. 318–36.
26 Hermann Kulke, ‘The Naval Expeditions of the Cholas in the Context of
Asian History’ in Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa: Reflections on the
Chola Naval Expeditions to Southeast Asia, ed. Hermann Kulke, K.
Kesavapany and Vijay Sakhuja (Singapore: ISEAS Publishing, 2009), p.
7.
27 R.C. Majumdar, ‘The Overseas Expeditions of King Rajendra Cola’,
Artibus Asiae 24 (3/4), pp. 338–42.
28 Nilakanta Sastri, The Colas, p. 219.
29 Tansen Sen, ‘Maritime Contacts between China and the Cola Kingdom
of South India: 850–1279’, in Mariners, Merchants and Oceans: Studies
in Maritime History, ed. K.S. Mathew (New Delhi: Manohar, 1995), pp.
25–42.
30 N. Karashima, ‘Relations between South India and China in Chola
Times’ in Professor K.A. Nilakanta Sastri Felicitation Volume (Madras:
Prof. K.A. Nilakanta Sastri Felicitation Committee, 1971), p. 69f.
31 Tansen Sen, ‘The Military Campaigns of Rajendra Chola and the Chola–
Srivijaya–China Triangle’, in Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa:
Reflections on the Chola Naval Expeditions to Southeast Asia, ed.
Hermann Kulke, K. Kesavapany and Vijay Sakhuja (Singapore: ISEAS
Publishing, 2009), p. 66.
32 Ibid., pp. 68–69.
33 Nilakanta Sastri, The Colas, pp. 211–13.
34 Ibid., pp. 213–18.
35 Ibid., p. 215.
36 M. Abraham, Two Medieval Merchant Guilds of South India (New
Delhi: Manohar, 1988).
37 Tansen Sen, ‘The Military Campaigns of Rajendra Chola’, p. 71.
38 Ibid.
39 Benjamin Lewis Rice, Mysore Gazetteer, Vol. 2, Pt. 2, (Bangalore:
Government Press, 1930), p. 1030.
40 Vijay Sakhuja and Sangeeta Sakhuja, ‘Rajendra Chola’s Naval
Expedition to Southeast Asia and the Chola–Srivijaya–China Triangle’ in
Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa, ed. Hermann Kulke et al., p. 81.
41 ibid.
42 Radha Kumud Mookerji, Indian Shipping: A History of the Sea-Borne
Trade and Maritime Activity of the Indians from the Earliest Times
(Bombay: Longmans, Green & Co., 1912), p. 137.
43 B. Arunachalam, Chola Navigation Package (Mumbai: Maritime
History Society, 2004), pp. 81–82.
44 Vijay Sakhuja and Sangeeta Sakhuja, ‘Rajendra Chola’s Naval
Expedition’, p. 83.
45 Ibid.
46 Ibid., p. 84.
47 Hema Devare, ‘Cultural Implications of the Chola Maritime Fabric
Trade with Southeast Asia’, in Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa, ed.
Hermann Kulke et al., pp. 178–92.
48 K.V. Subrahmanya Aiyer, South Indian Inscriptions, Vol. LII (Madras:
Government Press, 1937), p. 56.
Rani Naiki Devi of Gujarat
W
alking down the seven layers of stairs of the intricately carved,
eleventh-century monument, known popularly as Rani ki Vav or the
Queen’s Step Well, is like taking a time machine through the very
womb of history, utterly spellbound. Measuring 64 m in length and 27 m in
depth, this marvellous subterranean water storage structure is built entirely
of sandstone in Maru–Gurjara style. One is mesmerized by the sheer
number of complex carvings—more than 500 principal sculptures and over
a thousand minor ones—of gods, goddesses and mythical beings on the
many pillared pavilions and terraces that lead one down to the reservoir.
Jain scholar Merutunga who composed a poetic chronicle on the kings of
Gujarat titled Prabandha Chintamani in 1304, records that this step well
was built by a queen named Rani Udayamati of the Solanki or Chaulukya
dynasty (942–1244 CE) of Gujarat. While generally it was kings who made
monuments in memory of their favourite spouses, here was a queen who
built this unique monument as a tribute to her husband, the Chaulukya king
Bhimadeva I (1024–1066 CE).
The vav is located in the town of Patan in the Western Indian state of
Gujarat—a town that was built by Vanraj Singh of the Chavda (or
Chapotkata) dynasty in 746 CE. The older name of the town was Anahilvad
Patan or Anahilapatan. Historian Tertius Chandler estimates that by 1000
CE Anhilwara was the tenth largest in the world, with a population of about
100,000.1 In a generally arid, water-starved region, this inverted temple
structure of the vav underscores the sanctity and importance of this
indispensable natural resource. Even as the sands of time literally drowned
the well that got submerged in silt, archaeological excavations in 1958
revealed a marble statue that had the name of ‘Maharajni Shri Udayamati’
inscribed on it, corroborating Merutunga’s account. There was to be yet
another queen in this lineage of the Chaulukyas of Gujarat who was to
record an important milestone in the annals of Indian history.
Notes
1 Tertius Chandler, Four Thousand Years of Urban Growth: An Historical
Census (New York: St. David’s University Press, 1987).
2 Asoke Kumar Mazumdar, Chaulukyas of Gujarat (Bombay: Bharatiya
Vidya Bhawan, 1956), p. 7.
3 H.M. Elliot and John Dowson, The History of India as Told by its Own
Historians: The Muhammadan Period, Vol. 2 (London: Trubner and Co.,
1869), p. 24 (citing the Tarik-i-Yamini of al-‘Utbi).
4 Muhammad Nazim, The Life and Times of Sultan Mahmud of Ghazna
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1931), p. 29.
5 Mahomed Kasim Ferishta, Tarik-i-Firishta; trans. Alexander Dow, The
History of Hindostan: From the Earliest Account of Time to the Death of
Akbar, Vol. 1 (London: T. Becket and P.A. De. Hondt, 1768), p. 18.
6 Ibid., p. 46.
7 Ibid., p. 47.
8 Elliot and Dowson, The History of India, Vol. 2, p. 447, citing the Tarik-i-
Firishta.
9 Alexander Dow, The History of Hindostan: From the Earliest Account of
Time to the Death of Akbar, Vol. 1 (London: T. Becket and P.A. De.
Hondt, 1768), p. 73. This is a translation from the Persian Tarik-i-Firishta
by Mahomed Kasim Ferishta.
10 Sita Ram Goel, Heroic Hindu Resistance to Muslim Invaders (New
Delhi: Voice of India, 1984), p. 23.
11 Firishta, History of Hindostan, p. 75.
12 Ibid., pp. 80–81.
13 Ibid., p. 82.
14 Elliot and Dowson, The History of India, Vol. 4, p. 182.
15 Firishta, History of Hindostan, Vol. 1, pp. 86.
16 Ibid.
17 The entire episode at Somnath is drawn from Firishta’s History of
Hindostan, Vol. 1.
18 Some historians assume that this reference is to the great Paramar ruler
Bhoja (r.1011–1055), though most others concur that it was the
Chaulukyan king Bhima I.
19 Al Gardizi, Zayn ul Akhbar, Vol. IX, trans. (into English) R. Sarma, pp.
941–42.
20 Elliot and Dowson, The History of India, Vol. 2, pp. 474–75, citing the
Tabakat-i-Nasiri of Minhaj-i-Siraj.
21 Merutunga, Prabhanda Chintamani, ed. Jinavijaya Muni, trans. (into
English) C.H. Tawney (Calcutta: The Asiatic Society, 1901, p. 97 (in
Kumarapaladi Prabandh).
22 Ibid; G.M. Moraes, The Kadamba Kula: A History of Ancient and
Mediaeval Karnataka (Bombay: B.X. Furtado and Sons, 1931), 198 ff
23 The Kadambas of Banavasi ruled from the fourth century CE to the end
of the sixth century CE. In the first half of the tenth century, a number of
Kadamba branches came into existence—Goa Kadamba, Hanugal
Kadamba, Chandavar Kadamba, Nolambavadi Kadamba, Rattihalli
Kadamba, Bellary Kadamba, etc. The Kadambas of Goa ruled for over
350 years and later lost their power to the Yadavas of Devagiri.
24 Asoke Kumar Mazumdar, Chaulukyas of Gujarat (Bombay: Bharatiya
Vidya Bhawan, 1956), p. 131.
25 Merutunga. Prabhanda Chintamani, p. 97
Marco Polo had got the name of the kingdom wrong as also the relationship
of the queen with the ruler who was deceased. ‘Mutfili’ was the Kakatiya
kingdom of Andhra, and the queen he was referring to was the valorous
Rudrama Devi, who had succeeded her father (not husband, as Marco Polo
suggested) Ganapatideva, who had died in 1269 CE. She is, however, the
only independent female ruler mentioned by Marco Polo in his journeys
across the world.
External Aggression
Towards the end of Ganapatideva’s reign, skirmishes with the Pandyas led
to loss of territories in southern Andhra for the Kakatiyas. Coupled with this
loss of authority, the ascent of a woman to the throne seemed to have
emboldened the other kingdoms in the neighbourhood as they saw this as an
opportune moment to capture Warangal. She faced a series of attacks from
the Yadavas of Devagiri, the Gangas from Kalinga and the Pandyas from
the south. In the early years of her reign, the Yadava king Mahadeva
invaded the Kakatiya domains and reached the very gates of Warangal. The
Pratapacharitra mentions that after fifteen long days of incessant battle,
Rudrama succeeded in chasing away the Yadava army back to Devagiri,
killing 3,00,000 invading soldiers and even forced them to pay a large
indemnity of a crore in money and horses.5 To hide the loss of face that this
defeat caused them, the Yadava records of court poet Hemadri, in his Vrata
Khanda, talk of how their king magnanimously and voluntarily stepped
back, taking pity on a woman and wished to spare her life!6 If such was the
magnanimity, there was no reason to attack her in the very first place.
Yadava coins that were discovered later in archaeological finds buried deep
inside the Andhra territories, and inscriptions where local rulers pledged
allegiance to Rudrama—found in Bidar that was deep inside the Yadava
territory—testify the Kakatiya claim of a complete rout of the invaders.
After this victory, Rudrama took the title of ‘Raya Gaja Kesari’ or the lion
to the elephant-like enemy kings. She also built a rangamandapa or
pavilion in the Swayambhu temple in Warangal to commemorate this
massive victory. In the motif there, she is shown as a warrior mounted on a
lion with a sword and shield in her hands and an elephant trunk holds a
lotus to her in abject submission. She also got coins and measures issued
after this, carrying the same title of Raya Gaja Kesari.
In 1262 CE, it was the turn of the Ganga king of Kalinga Narasimha I
(whose family had adopted the tile of Gajapati after the famed elephants of
Odisha) to avenge an earlier defeat he had suffered at the hands of
Ganapatideva. He marched into the Godavari Delta area and occupied
Vengi. It took Rudrama Devi fifteen long years to recapture this territory. In
1278 CE, her commanders Poti Nayak and Proli Nayak fought against Vira
Bhanudeva I, son and successor of Narasimha I, and inflicted a convincing
defeat on him. They thereafter assumed titles of ‘Thangasimha’ (A lion to
the strutting elephant, i.e., the Gajapati), and ‘Oddiya raya manamardana’
(the destroyer of the pride of Oddiyaraya or Odiya ruler). This re-
established Kakatiya power in the coastal Andhra region.
The toughest challenge that Rudrama faced came from the south. In the
first two or three years of her joint rule with her father, the kingdom was
thrown into utter confusion and disarray due to the invasion of Jatavarma
Sundara Pandya I. The Kakatiyas were disastrously defeated in the battle of
Muttukur, near Nellore. They lost the principality of Nellore despite being
able to turn the tide of the invasion, and it was after this that Ganapatideva
decided to retire. Rudrama’s loyal feudatories, the Kayastha Chief
Jannigadeva and his brother Tripurarideva, later partially reoccupied some
of this territory from the Pandyas7 though the rest of the territory was
permanently lost for the Kakatiyas.
To gain the goodwill of the common masses, Rudrama Devi was supposed
to have made meeting her subjects and learning about their joys and
sorrows first-hand an important part of her state policy. This was another
way of circumventing the traditional nobility that was opposed to her and
directly establish a connect with the masses and win their love.
To strengthen her position in the wake of repeated onslaughts, Rudrama
got the nearly impregnable Warangal fort’s construction that had begun
under her father’s tenure completed. One still sees the concentric circular
walls of the fort. There exists a citadel, which is protected by an inner wall
that is a kilometre in diameter and made of huge blocks of granite. These
blocks are irregular in shape but are perfectly fitted without the use of any
mortar. Rudrama Devi had the height of this wall increased to over twenty
feet. Forty-five massive bastions, from forty to sixty on a side, project
outward from the wall and into the waters of a 150-feet wide moat that she
built around the fort.11 The fort encloses beautiful temples and buildings
carved intricately out of single pieces of granite stone. Many of these, stand
desecrated today by successive invasions by the Khiljis.
Rudrama Devi was also far-sighted to increase the area under
cultivation in her kingdom. The Kakatiyas, by and large, built more than
5,000 reservoirs and tanks by damming streams12—many of which are still
in use today. This abundant supply of water brought large tracts of land
under cultivation and also enhanced the revenues to the royal coffers.
Among other things, Marco Polo during his visit to Warangal also spoke
about the diamonds that were found in the kingdom:
And you must know that in this kingdom there are many mountains in which diamonds
are found, even as you shall hear. Know, then, that when it rains in winter, the water runs
down the mountains, flowing impetuously in great torrents through deep caverns. When
the rain has stopped, and the water has ceased flowing, they go searching in the torrent
beds, and find many diamonds. In summer too, when not a drop of water is to be seen,
they find numbers of them on those mountains … There are certain great, deep gullies,
with such precipitous sides, that no one can go to the bottom of them. But this is what the
people do: they take many pieces of raw and bleeding flesh, and throw them into the
gullies. The places into which the flesh is thrown, is full of diamonds, which get stuck to
the flesh. Now you must know that on these mountains there are many white eagles, that
feed on the serpents. When they see the pieces of flesh at the bottom of the gullies, they
swoop down upon them, and carry them away. Then the men, who have all the time been
carefully watching whither the eagles fly, as soon as they see them settled down and
tearing the flesh, hasten thither as fast as possible. The eagles fly away, and in their fear
at seeing the men suddenly coming upon them, do not carry the flesh away with them; on
reaching the spot where the flesh lies, the men take it, and find plenty of diamonds stuck
to it … when the eagles eat up the flesh of which I have spoken, they also eat up
diamonds. So, at night, when they return to their nests, they drop the diamonds they have
eaten, together with their dung. Then the people go and gather these droppings, and find
quite a number of diamonds … and you must know that diamonds are not found in any
part of the world except this kingdom alone. But here they are both plentiful and good …
you must know that in this kingdom the best and most beautiful, and finest buckrams in
the world are made—and the most costly too. For I assure you that they are like tissues of
Rheims linen. Indeed, they are so beautiful, the greatest Kings and Queens might wear
them as something truly regal. They have quantities of cattle, and the biggest sheep in the
world. They have great abundance and plenty of all the necessaries of life.13
Marco Polo also states that the fabrics of the Kakatiya kingdom were famed
and were an important export item to other kingdoms within and even
outside India. The magnificent Kohinoor diamond, too, came from here. It
is rumoured to have been the eye of an idol in Warangal during the
Kakatiya times. When the Kakatiya kingdom was attacked and ransacked
by Malik Kafur, the general of the Delhi Sultan Allauddin Khilji in 1310
CE, he carried away the Kohinoor with him, and it later passed on to the
Mughals as part of the Delhi treasury. It later changed hands again, reaching
the Punjab rulers and finally the British monarchy, with whom it sits today.
Though not a keen connoisseur of the arts, Rudrama Devi is said to
have encouraged the performance of Perini Shiva Tandavam by the soldiers
of the army. It was an extremely vigorous and powerful dance performed to
the beat of drums by soldiers as a prelude to war and was part of the
training for the royal forces.14 The dance form died down in due course of
time, but the several poses and postures have been depicted in the famous
Ramappa temple15 at Warangal. From these sculptural references, renowned
dance guru the late Dr Nataraja Ramakrishna reconstructed the dance form
in contemporary times. The dance today gives an idea of the athletic nature
of Rudrama’s army and its war-preparedness.
Notes
1 Perhaps an allusion to the port of Motupalli that was part of the Kakatiya
kingdom, which he conflated as the name of the entire kingdom.
2 Aldo Ricci, The Travels of Marco Polo: Translated into English from the
Text of L.F. Benedetto (New Delhi: Asian Educational Services, 2001), p.
307.
3 Orugallu means single stone in Tamil. Another name for Warangal is
Ekasilanagaram or ‘single stone city’ in Sanskrit.
4 Cynthia Talbot, Precolonial India in Practice: Society, Religion, and
Identity in Medieval Andhra (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001),
p.144.
5 Alekhya Punjala, Rani Rudrama Devi (New Delhi: National Book Trust,
2016), pp. 28–29.
6 Ibid.
7 Evidenced in the Nandaluru Inscription of 1264 CE in J. Ramaiya, The
South Indian Inscriptions, Vol. X: Telugu Inscriptions from the Madras
Presidency (Archaeological Survey of India, 1948).
8 J. Ramaiya, The South Indian Inscriptions, Vol. X: Telugu Inscriptions
from the Madras Presidency (Archaeological Survey of India, 1948), 10.
423 and 424
9 Ibid.
10 Cynthia Talbot, Precolonial India in Practice: Society, Religion, and
Identity in Medieval Andhra (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001),
pp. 164–66.
11 Archana Garodia Gupta. The Women Who Ruled India: Leaders,
Warriors, Icons. Gurugram: Hachette India, 2019, p. 47.
12 Ibid. p. 48.
13 Aldo Ricci. The Travels of Marco Polo: Translated into English from the
Text of L.F. Benedetto (New Delhi: Asian Educational Services, 2001),
pp. 307–09.
14 Archana Garodia Gupta. The Women Who Ruled India: Leaders,
Warriors, Icons. Gurugram: Hachette India, 2019, p. 49.
15 This famous temple was constructed by Recharla Durga, the famous
general of Ganapatideva in about 1213 CE. This information is provided
in the inscription on the four faces of a polished column within a
mandapa, in the northeastern corner of the temple. See Alekhya Punjala.
Rani Rudrama Devi (New Delhi: National Book Trust, 2016), p. 71.
16 Ibid., p. 34.
17 Ibid., p. 37.
18 Cynthia Talbot, Precolonial India in Practice: Society, Religion, and
Identity in Medieval Andhra (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001),
p.135.
Maharana Kumbha of Mewar
E
xpansive, breathtaking, majestic and spectacular—these are some of
the adjectives that come to mind when one tries to capture the vision
of the stonewalls of this famed fort that embraces the arid, westerly
edges of the Aravalli Hills in Rajasthan. Stretching over nearly 36 km, the
Kumbhalgarh Fort nestled on the arid hill slopes, about a 100 km from the
city of Udaipur, finds a place in the Guinness Book of World Records for
being the longest fort wall in the world.1 Harsh and formidable, like the arid
landscapes that it engulfs, the fort—a medieval wonder and a UNESCO
world heritage site—was built by the Maharana of Mewar, Kumbhakarna or
Kumbha for short. It was completed in 1458 CE after fifteen long years of
construction. The palace within the fort stands at 3,568 ft above sea level
and commands an extensive and fine view of the wild and rugged scenery
of the Aravallis and the sandy plains of Marwar. Below the peak, on every
side there are numerous old temples, reservoirs, barracks for the garrison,
granaries and domed buildings. Seven gates lead up to the summit of the
three-storied fort with the principal exterior one being named as Hanuman
Pol (gate). The fort was to be the birthplace of another heroic legend from
the same dynasty—Maharana Pratap (1572–97 CE).
It was to this impregnable fortress that the maharanas of Mewar always
turned to, when either Udaipur became unsafe or Chittor was untenable.
From Udai Singh to Raj Singh, every maharana of the dynasty sent their
royal household for safekeeping to Kumbhalmer, when the aggression of
the Mughals was directed against them. Centuries after it was built, Mughal
Emperor Akbar coveted the fort and through a large Rajput confederacy,
besieged the fort that was then under Maharana Pratap. The fortress briefly
fell but quickly recovered and all of Akbar’s successors, be it Jahangir,
Shah Jahan or Aurangzeb, attempted in vain to capture it. When Rana
Pratap’s son Amra was attacked by Shah Jahan or Rana Raj Singh was
ambushed by Aurangzeb, it was the Kumbhalgarh fort that never failed to
shelter and protect its ruler.
Quite like this wonder monument, its builder Rana Kumbha had the
unique distinction of being an undefeated hero of Indian history who
vanquished every invader, and won every skirmish that destiny put him in.
The Guhilots of Mewar
Maharana Kumbha belonged to the chivalrous dynasty of the Guhilots
(Gehlot) of Mewar that ruled the region for fourteen centuries in an
unbroken chain. They traced their origin to the Sun God and called
themselves Surya Vamshis or descendants of the Sun. Kumbha was the
eldest son of Rana Mokal (r. 1397–1433 CE) and his Parmar queen
Sobhagya Devi (the daughter of Raja Jaitmal Sankhla)2 and was born on the
Makar Sankranti day of 1417 CE. Mokal had seven sons and a daughter Lal
Bai. Historians have traced back the story of the heroic Rana Kumbha from
the several inscriptions of eulogy written about his life, called prashastis—
the Kumbhalgarh Prashasti in the Kumbhalgarh fort (1460 CE), the
Kirtistambh Prashasti in the Chittorgarh Fort (1460 CE) and the Ranpur
Prashasti in the Ranakpur Jain temple (1439 CE), among others.
The political scene in India had seen numerous changes by then. After
the first Delhi Sultanate of the Slave Dynasty of Qutub-ud-din Aibak, the
Khilji dynasty of Turko-Afghan descent had taken over the reins of Delhi in
1290 CE with is founder Jalal-ud-din Khilji at the helm. One of the most
tyrannical and expansionist rulers of the clan, Alauddin Khilji (r. 1296–
1316 CE) attacked Chittorgarh, the stronghold of Mewar and its Rajputs, in
1303 CE and laid siege to it. Rawal Ratan Singh was the ruler then, but the
Rajput forces lost to Khilji, and Chittorgarh was ruthlessly ransacked. The
legend of the queen of Ratan Singh, Rani Padmavati, committing self-
immolation or jauhar along with numerous other women to save
themselves from the brutalities of the enemy is part of folklore and popular
culture in India. The infant Rana Hammir Singh, who was barely a year or
two old, was taken away to the Kumbhalgarh fort for safekeeping.
Providentially, the Khilji power in Delhi soon weakened and by 1320
CE they were replaced by the Tughlaqs. Taking advantage of the political
flux, Hammir was crowned the Rana of Mewar. Fierce battles ensued
between the Tughlaq King Muhammad-bin-Tughlaq (r. 1325–51 CE) and
Rana Hammir at Singoli. The sultan’s armies were taken aback by the
guerilla warfare techniques and clever war strategies of Hammir. What
followed was a total destruction of the Tughlaq army and a worse
humiliation for the sultan who was taken prisoner for three months. He was
released on a bond of five lakh rupees and a promise to never interfere with
the independence of Mewar. Hammir became the progenitor of the Sisodia
clan, a branch of the Guhilot dynasty and assumed the title of Rana instead
of Rawal. Hammir Singh was the great grandfather of Mokal and was
succeeded by Kshetra Singh and Laksha Singh (Lakha). Thus, it was the
hard-won victory of the brave Hammir that ensured a resurgence of
Mewar’s supremacy, and his successors proved their mettle to maintain this
glory.
While on a battle, Mokal was deceitfully killed in 1433 CE by his own
uncles Chacha and Maira who felt inferior and slighted by the Rana as they
came of a mother who belonged to the carpenter caste.3 The young sixteen-
year-old prince Kumbha was packed away in haste to a safer location so
that he did not fall into the hands of the miscreants who were eyeing the
throne. When Mokal’s maternal uncle Rao Ran Mal, who belonged to the
brave clan of Rathors, heard of the misfortune that had befallen his nephew
and the teenaged prince, he was seized with rage and an intense desire to
avenge the assassins. Leaving his ancestral place in Nagaur, he rushed to
Chittorgarh, drove away the usurpers and placed the infant Kumbha on the
throne as the next Maharana. The cowardly usurpers fled to the hills of Pai
Kotra, with Ran Mal in hot pursuit along with a force of 1,140 Gehlots and
Rathors. With the help of the Bhils, Ran Mal managed to have Chacha and
Maira slain. Another accomplice in Mokal’s murder, Mahpa Panwar and
Chacha’s son Ekka however disguised themselves as women and managed
to run away to seek refuge in the court of the neighbouring Sultan of Malwa
Mahmud Khalji in Mandu.
At Abu, Kumbha built the temple of Kumbhaswami that still stands, with a
large tank named Ramakund in front of it.16 He contributed richly to the
construction of a spectacular three-storied Jain temple that was built by his
favourite architect Dharnak. The temple’s foundations were laid in 1438
CE, and it is dedicated to Rishabdeva, the first Jain tirthankara. Kumbha
also had the famous Eklingaji temple in Mewar renovated and constructed
the Kumbha Mandapa in front of the sanctum.
In addition to his heroic exploits, Kumbha was also a polymath with
several scholastic interests ranging from music to drama, poetry and
Sanskrit over which he had considerable mastery. Some seminal works on
Indian musicology such as Sangitaraja, Sangita Mimansa and Rasika Priya
(a commentary on the celebrated Gita Govinda of Jaideva) and a
commentary on Sangita Ratnakara of Sharangadeva are attributed to
Kumbha’s authorship. These works demonstrate his keen interest and
scholarship in both the art and science of Indian classical music. He
contributed the last chapter to the famed treatise Eklinga Mahatmya and is
said to have authored four plays and a commentary on the Chandi Shataka.
The Chittorgarh inscription credits him with knowledge of several
languages too, including Karnataki (Kannada perhaps) and Maharashtri
(possibly Marathi). It is quite amazing that despite a reign splattered with
endless conquests and wars, Kumbha managed to nourish his sensitive side
through an engagement with the fine arts and literature.
While Indian historiography might not have been kind enough to Rana
Kumbha by documenting his life and heroism in the manner that he
deserves to be commemorated, folklore and oral history that celebrate the
glory of Rana Kumbha, as also the innumerable monuments and works of
literature, keep his memory alive. Rana Kumbha became the prototype of
the brave Rajput who was unconquerable in the wake of any aggression and
who combined deft strategy with raw power to keep all his enemies at bay.
That same spirit of valour kept burning relentlessly in the Rajput clan for
generations to come.
Notes
1 For detail information of please refer to
https://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/399990-longest-
fort-walls (Accessed on 6 May 2022).
2 Chittorgarh Kirtistambha Inscription, Verse 179. Also, Kumbhalmer
inscription of Kumbha. See Har Bilas Sarda, Rana Kumbha: Sovereign,
Soldier (Ajmer: Scottish Mission Institutions Company Limited, 1917)
for more details.
3 Sarda, Rana Kumbha, pp. 12–14.
4 Translation from the Persian Tarik-i-Firishta of Ferishta: Alexander Dow,
trans., History of Hindostan, Vol. 2 (London: T. Becket and P.A. De.
Hondt., 1768), p. 6.
5 For details, see Sarda, Rana Kumbha, pp. 32–35.
6 Ibid., p. 48.
7 Sir Edward Clive Bayley, The Local Muhammadan Dynasties of Gujarat
(London: W.H. Allen & Co., 1886), p. 148.
8 The Chittorgarh Kirtistambha Inscription repeats these facts and states
that he destroyed ‘the great mosque built by Sultan Firoz, which showed
Moslems the way to Nagor’ (Verse 19). Verse 22 says: ‘He uprooted the
Mussalman tree of Nagor and destroyed it with all its mosques.’
9 Commentary on the Gita Govinda (said to have been written by Kumbha
himself), verses 60–62, reiterates these.
10 Chittorgarh Kirtistambha Inscription cited in Sarda, Rana Kumbha, p.
55.
11 Lt Col James Tod, Annals & Antiquities of Rajasthan or, the Central &
Western Rajpoot States of India, Vol. 2 (London: Routledge & Kegan
Paul Ltd., 1832), p. 761.
12 Sarda, Rana Kumbha, p. 65.
13 Tod, Annals and Antiquities, Vol 1., p. 290.
14 Chittorgarh Kirti Stambh Inscription.
15 James Tod, Travels in Western India (London: W.H. Allen & Co., 1839),
pp. 94–95.
16 Chittorgarh Kirti Stambh Inscription, Verses 12 and 13, cited in Sarda,
Rana Kumbha.
Rani Abbakka Chowta of Ullal
A
midst the expansive green fields of Tulunadu (today’s Dakshina
Kannada and portions of Udupi districts in Karnataka and Kasargod
in Kerala) in coastal Karnataka, in the wee hours of the night,
villagers gather to witness a spectacular performance of music, dance and
heady vibes. Termed as bhoota aradhane, literally a worship of the spirits,
it has religious connotations too. The spirit possesses the body of the
performer who acts as a medium in this séance and conveys the story to the
audience, in a trance. Through verses, singing, storytelling and dance, the
story of the spirit invoked is communicated to the spellbound audience
through this art form that blurs the horizon between the living and the
departed. The performance has definite stages from the invocation to the
climatic finale. In these bhoota aradhane performances, an oft-invoked
spirit is that of a valorous queen of the little town of Ullal, Abbakka
Mahadevi, as she is hailed by the locals. Sources, such as archival records,
travelogues of several Portuguese travellers and historical analysis point
towards the presence of two or three Abbakkas,1 all of whom fought against
the Portuguese army between the 1550s and 1640s CE. Folklore and
performances such as the bhoota aradhane or yakshagana treat all three
Abbakkas as one great queen and a brilliant personality Abbakka Mahadevi
or Rani Abbakka. In the complete absence of proper archival
documentation around the queens, the life stories of the women are
interchangeably used and are prone to much error. But more than the details
of each individual, what is important is this constant and successful
feminine resistance that this small region in coastal Karnataka offered to a
mighty European power, the Portuguese, for several decades.
Rani Abbakka I3
The Chowtas followed a matrilineal system (called Aliya Santhana Kattu)
but were not matriarchal. This is an interesting system (followed also in
some communities like the Nairs in Kerala) wherein the inheritance
descends from the female line, but the rule is by the male member. The
ruler’s sister’s son becomes the king. However, in the sixteenth century, the
Chowta ruler Thirumala Raya III had no nephews or legitimate heirs. His
wife, possibly the first of the Abbakkas succeeded him.4 She was trained in
military sciences, warfare, archery and sword fighting. Folklore depicts her
as a prodigious child, unequalled in her military exploits and artistic
capabilities. When she was crowned the queen of Ullal (sometime possibly
in the 1540s), Abbakka was acutely aware of the threat posed by the
Portuguese since they had come so close home to the port of Mangalore that
they had annexed in 1525 CE. The annexation of Mangalore by the
Portuguese was followed by loot, plunder, burning and pillage that
continued till 1531 CE.5 Given the experience with the Portuguese in the
near vicinity, Abbakka had a strong, impregnable fort constructed at Ullal to
pre-empt any attacks. She appears in Portuguese records in 1555 CE where
she is referred to as ‘Bukkorani of Ballala’.6
With an eye on Ullal’s lucrative trade that had flourished under the
queen’s able leadership, the Portuguese had been trying to exact tributes
and taxes from Rani Abbakka. More than 200 Portuguese landed in coastal
areas of Karnataka and demanded goods be sold at a price fixed by them.
Abbakka protested the demand and was unwilling to accept the Portuguese
embargo since her ships had been travelling to the Middle East to sell spices
and fabrics since several centuries. For this trade, she was in an alliance
with the Zamorin (the Hindu ruler, the Saamudrin or Protector of the Seas)
of Kozhikode. She continued defying the Portuguese diktats and continued
trading directly with the Middle East. From Mogaveeras and Billava archers
to Mapilla oarsmen, people of all castes and religions found a place in
Abbakka’s army and navy. The Portuguese captured the trading ship of
Ullal that was on its way to the Middle East, in mid-sea. An angered
Abbakka attacked Mangalore fort where the Portuguese had built a factory.
Infuriated by her effrontery to their authority, the Portuguese began
attacking Ullal repeatedly.
Seeing her come, everyone in the bazaar stepped aside to give her place to
pass. Noticing the foreigner amongst the gathering, Abbakka enquired
about Della Valle and if an interpreter was there for her to speak to him. She
heard with rapt attention the introduction that Della Valle gave of himself
and his ancestry from Rome and enquired about the places he had visited
already. When told that he had visited the Great Turks, the Persians, the
Mughals and even Venkatappa Nayaka, she asked self-effacingly what was
he, then, doing in her woods after seeing such splendid places as her
dominion was not worth seeing. Della Valle replied that he had come all the
way not to see her kingdom but to meet her as tales of her bravery had
travelled far and wide. This greatly pleased her. Her maternal instincts then
came to the fore whereby she enquired what he would do in this distant
land, so far away from his near and dear ones and family, if he fell sick or if
any disaster struck, and if he had adequate measures to take care of himself.
To this question of deep concern and compassion that the queen asked him,
Della Valle replied with self-assurance that wherever he went his God went
with him and hence he was not in the least perturbed about his own well-
being. She then asked him if he had become this aimless wanderlust after
losing someone beloved or suffering a heartbreak, once again with the
greatest of concern writ large on her face. Della Valle assured her that it was
none of such triggers that made him wander but a desire to see diverse
countries, cultures and people that made him traverse the world. After
several such questions and a long conversation, Rani Abbakka bid him
farewell and told him to meet her again on a later date of mutual
convenience.
The documentation of this meeting brought to the fore several of
Abbakka’s qualities as a ruler who had such loving concern, even for a
foreigner to her kingdom, and her having kept this softer side of herself
alive in spite of being in the rough and tumble of frequent wars. She was a
just queen, who also took keen interest in the welfare of her subjects and
along with matters of trade that were the mainstay, agriculture and irrigation
projects consumed all her personal attention. She was broad-minded and
egalitarian and had supported the inter-caste marriage of a Mogaveera boy
with a Jain girl, much to the anger of the orthodoxy.19
Della Valle was totally taken in by her demeanour. He asked the people
of the town to tell him more about the queen and her personal life. From the
locals he got to know about her succeeding her sister, her troubles with her
estranged husband and that she had a son who was now going to succeed
her as per the matrilineal system. He also heard rumours of the queen
having an elder son, whom she had wilfully poisoned to death as she feared
that the ambitious young man might usurp her throne. But Della Valle
dismissed these as Portuguese propaganda to paint the queen as a heartless
tyrant and defame her. After all, if she had been so insecure about her
throne, she would not have spared her younger son who was now living
with her in the palace, he rationalized.
Evidently Abbakka seems to have mentioned about the foreigner she
met at the bazaar to her son, who then sent word to Della Valle to meet him.
He was called the king though it was his mother who ran the affairs of state.
Describing the palace that he went to and his meeting with Abbakka’s son,
Della Valle wrote (and reproduced here in considerable measure for its
delightful details):
The Palace (which may rather be call’d [sic] a Royal Lodge) is entered into by a Gate
like the grate or lattice of our Vine-yards at Rome, ordinary enough, seated in the midst
of a field, which like them is divided by a small hedge from the neighboring fields.
Within the Gate is a broad Walk or Alley, on the right side whereof is a spacious plot
sown, at the end of which, the Walk turns to the right hand, and there upon the same plot
stands the Royal Mansion, having a prospect over all the said great green field. In the
middle of this second Walk, you enter into the House, ascending seven or eight wooden
stairs, which lead into a large Porch, the length of which is equal to the whole fore-part
of the House. This Porch was pav’d [sic] with Cow-dung after their manner, the walls
about [=around] shining, and painted with a bad red colour much us’d [sic] by them. The
fore-part of it, which is all open, is up-held by great square posts, of no great height (for
’tis their custom to make all buildings, especially Porches, but low in respect of the
breadth and length, with very broad Pent-houses; which is, I believe, by reason of the
great heat of the Country, where they have more need of shadow and coolness, than of air
or light). Directly opposite to the stairs in the middle of the Porch, was another small
Porch, which was all the entrance into the inner part of the building.
Within the little Porch was a small room long and narrow, where the King sat near the
wall on the left side; and he sat upon the ground after the Eastern manner upon one of
those coarse clothes, which in Persia and Turkie are called Krelim [=qilim], and serve for
poor people; nor was it large, but only so much as to contain the Person of the King, the
rest of the room being bare, saving that it was polish’d [sic] with Cow-dung. Beside the
King, but a little farther on his left hand, sat upon a little mat, sufficient only to contain
him, a Youth of about fifteen or eighteen years of age, called Bale Nairu, who was his
Nephew, and is to succeed him, being the Son of his deceased Sister, who was Daughter
to the present Queen … None other sat with the King, but three or four of his more
considerable servants stood in the room talking with him; and in the great Porch, outside
the little one, stood in files on either side other servants of inferior degree, two of which
nearest the entrance ventilated the Air with fans of green Taffeta in their Hands, as if to
drive away the flies from the King or the entrance; a Ceremony us’d [sic], as I have said
elsewhere, by Indian Princes for Grandeur; and they told me, the green colour was a
Ceremony too, and the proper badge of the King of Olaza, for the King of Bangbel
[Bangadi] uses crimson; other Princes, white, as I saw us’d [sic] by Venk-tapa Naieka
[Venkatappa Nayaka]; and others, perhaps other colours: A small company indeed, and a
poor appearance for a King; which call’d [sic] to my remembrance those ancient Kings,
Latinus, Turnus, and Evander, who, ’tis likely, were Princes of the same sort.
The King was young, not above seventeen years of age, as they told me, yet his
aspect spoke him elder; for he was very fat and healthy, as I could conjecture of him
sitting, and besides, he had long hairs of a beard upon his cheeks, which he suffer’d [sic]
to grow without cutting, though they appear’d [sic] to be but the first down. Of
complexion he was dusky, not black, as his Mother is, but rather of an earthy colour, as
almost all the Malabars habitually are. He had a louder and bigger voice than Youths of
his age habitually have, and in his speaking, gestures, and all other things he shew’d [sic]
Judgment and manly gravity. From the girdle upwards he was all naked, saving that he
had a thin cloth painted with several colours cast across his shoulders. The hair of his
head was long after their manner, and tied in one great knot, which hung on one side
wrapt [sic] up in a little plain linen, which looks like a night-cap fallen on one side. From
the girdle downwards I saw not what he wore, because he never rose from his seat, and
the Chamber was somewhat dark; besides that, the painted cloth on his shoulders hung
down very low. His Nephew who sat beside him was not naked, but clad in a whole
white garment; and his Head was wrapt [sic] up in a greater volume, white, like a little
Turban.20
It was a brief meeting that Della Valle had with the young man where he
kept standing supported by his sword as he did not wish to squat on the
floor like his hosts. Identical questions were asked of him as the mother
had. Della Valle apologized for not having carried any gift for the king as it
had been long since he left his country and so instead, he presented a map
of the world from Italy. A hugely impressed king then spent considerable
time trying to decipher the various aspects of the map and expressed a
desire to travel to several of these countries. Abbakka had once again
resumed her travels outside Manel and so he could not meet her while he
was at the palace. He did call on her briefly while she was in the middle of
commanding labourers, but she told him that she would call him later to
meet her. Della Valle waited for a couple of days, soaking in the landscapes
of Manel in the meanwhile, including visiting a shrine to a ‘devil’ that the
queen had established and hurling profanities at it. Despite waiting and
sending reminders, the queen did not call for him again and so he left Manel
without intruding into her privacy again. But these brief accounts of Della
Valle give a good picture of Abbakka, her palace, her family and also of her
kingdom and its customs.
Abbakka II ruled till about 1640 CE and not much else is known of the
rest of her regime or of any more skirmishes with the Portuguese. A third
Abbakka is supposed to have ruled from Moodbidri from 1666 to 1671 CE
and a fourth one from 1719 to 1725, CE though not much is known about
them. Haidar Ali of Mysore subdued the dynasty’s power to a great extent,
and thereafter the Chowtas became figurehead rulers in the region.
Our historiography might have been unfair to the Abbakkas of Ullal by
not resurrecting their stories enough or placing them suitably within the
rubric of Indian history. But in 2003, the Indian Post issued a special stamp
dedicated to Rani Abbakka, while in 2015 the Indian Navy acknowledged
her naval heroics by naming a patrol vessel after her. In today’s Dakshina
Kannada district in Karnataka, an annual celebration called Veera Rani
Abbakka Utsava is held since a few years, and her statue finds pride of
place in Bangalore. A few monuments and memorials of her times are still
extant—the Abbakka Devi Basadi in Karkala, Shri Adishwara
Parshwanatha Basadi in Ullal, the Somanatha temple, a few fortifications
and inscriptions.
And of course, most importantly the heroic tales of Abbakka Mahadevi
continue to entertain and inspire the people of Tulunadu through their local
performances of yakshagana and bhoota aradhane till this date.
Notes
1 It is unclear if Abbakka was a generic title given to all queens of the
Chowta dynasty or a commonly used title for the ruling ladies, possibly
like how the rulers of Calicut were known by the title of Zamorin or
Saamudrin, and of the Cannanore rulers as Kolathiri. But some past
queens had their original names, such as Padumaladevi I (r. 1335–82 CE)
and Channammadevi I (1382–1403 CE), and hence it disputes the theory
that ‘Abbakka’ was a title.
2 The Goan Inquisition was set up in 1560, briefly suspended from 1774 to
1778 and then finally abolished in 1812. It was an extension of the
Inquisition in Portugal, targeting neo-converts to Christianity accused of
secretly practising their old religion and thereby subjected to the most
horrific tortures.
3 Scholars like Dr K.G. Vasanta Madhava, V.K. Yadav Sasihitlu, Prof.
Tukaram Pujari and others have also referred to an earlier Abbakka who
ruled between 1283 and 1316 CE. So, to that extent this Abbakka
becomes the second one in the list. But the two queens who ruled in the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries are jointly known as Hiriya (Elder)
and Kiriya (Younger) Abbakka and hence they are named here as
Abbakka I and Abbakka II.
4 That Thirumala Raya III was succeeded by his wife and not his niece as is
commonly believed is borne out by the account of Pietro Della Valle,
‘The Queen’s Personal History’ Excerpt from Letter VI, from Mangalore,
9 December 1623 in Selections from the travels of Sig. Pietro della Valle,
a noble Roman into East-India and Arabia Desert, trans. G. Havers
(London: Printed by J. Jacock, for John Martin, and James Allestry; and
are to be sold at their Shop, at the Bell in St. Paul’s Church-yard, 1665).
However, scholars such as K.G. Vasantha Madhava and Dr Ganapati Rao
Aigal in their writings in Abbakka Sankathana believe that it was his
niece who succeeded him. The actual relationship between Thirumala
Raya and Abbakka would never be conclusively understood. An
anthology of writings on Abbakka Ranis by various scholars is a
comprehensive volume that readers who are conversant in Kannada can
access: Dr Amritha Someshwar, ed., Abbakka Sankathana (Mangalore:
Veerarani Abbakka Uthsava Samithi, 2011).
5 Antono Nune’s Book of Weights and Measures and Coins and Simao
Bothelo’s The Inventory of the State in India written in 1554 has details
of the destruction of Mangalore as also the corrupt trade practices of the
Portuguese.
6 Cited in Dr K.G. Vasantha Madhava, Abbakka Deviyaru (Mangalore:
Karnataka Tulu Sahitya Akademi, 1998), p. 22.
7 Vasantha Madhava’s Abbakka Deviyaru dates the first battle to 1556 CE.
8 Vasantha Madhava, Abbakka Deviyaru, pp. 25–26.
9 K.G. Vasantha Madhava cites these Portugese records as Asia Portuguesa
II, pp. 211–12 in Abbakka Deviyaru, p. 26.
10 Diogo do Couto, Decada Da Asia IV, (Lisboa: Na Regia Officina
Typografica, 1790) MDCCLXXXX, p. 91.
11 Cited in Vasantha Madhava’s Abbakka Deviyaru which also describes
the atrocities in Mangalore, pp. 27–28.
12 Cited in Vasantha Madhava, Abbakka Deviyaru, p. 28.
13 Vasantha Madhava, Abbakka Deviyaru, p. 29.
14 ‘A Report on South Indian Epigraphy 1968–69 Ap. A. No. 7’ in Annual
Report of Indian Epigraphy (ARIE), (New Delhi: Director General of
Archaeological Survey of India, Government of India, 1968-69).
15 Some consider Kamarasa as the spouse of Abbakka. Lack of
documentation, however, severely impedes our understanding of the
lineage.
16 Edward Grey, The Travels of Pietro Della Valle in India, Vol. 2 (London,
Hakluyt Society), p. 306.
17 Ibid.
18 Ibid. p. 307.
19 Vasantha Madhava, Abbakka Deviyaru, p. 51.
20 Grey, The Travels of Pietro Della Valle, pp. 317–20.
Chand Bibi of Ahmednagar
The Deccan Sultanates
W
ith the death of the Delhi Sultan Muhammad bin Tughlaq in 1351
CE, south India reconfigured itself into several independent
kingdoms. The Vijayanagara Empire that was founded in 1336 CE
by the chivalrous Hakka and Bukka and the Bahamani Sultanate,
established a decade later, in 1347 CE in Daulatabad (in north Maharashtra)
by a former governor of the Tughlaqs, Alauddin Hasan Bahman Shah,
became the two major powers to reckon with in the south. However, a little
over a century later, by 1481 CE, the Bahamani Sultanate splintered into
five independent kingdoms, collectively called the Deccan Sultanates,
which were constantly at strife with one another. The Sultanate of
Ahmednagar (1490–1633 CE) was established by Malik Ambar, the son of
a Telugu Brahmin1 from Vijayanagara, converted to Islam, and who had
risen to the position of chief minister in the Bahamani kingdom. This
dynasty was known as the Nizam Shahi. The Sultanate of Bijapur (1490–
1686 CE) of the Adil Shahis was founded by Yusuf Adil Shah who was
believed to be of Ottoman or Persian descent. The Sultanate of Berar
(1490–1574 CE) was established by Imad-ul-Mulk, another convert to
Islam; he was born a Kannada Brahmin. The fourth dynasty, Qutub Shahi
Sultanate of Golconda (1512–1687 CE), was founded by Quli Qutb-ul-
Mulk, a Central Asian Turk. Ali Barid claiming Turkic, Armenian or
Hungarian descent established the fifth sultanate of Bidar (1489–1619 CE).
The history of these sultanates is a record of almost continuous strife, both
external and within, through overambitious nobles. Common jealousies not
only prolonged the existence of smaller states but saved each of the larger
of annihilation, and the usual course of warfare was a campaign of two of
the larger states against the third.
These sultanates shared a curious relationship with Vijayanagara too.
Bijapur confabulated with the Vijayanagara Empire for help against their
rivals in Ahmednagar. When the son of Rama Raya, the de facto ruler of
Vijayanagara and the regent of the young king Sadashiva, died, the Bijapur
Sultan Ali Adil Shah (1558–80 CE) courageously went to Vijayanagara in
person to offer condolences, with a mere hundred horsemen. Rama Raya
received the sultan with utmost respect as he and his wife were so taken in
by this warm goodwill gesture. His wife in an impulse even adopted Ali
Adil Shah as her own son. After three days of staying on to support Rama
Raya, Ali Adil Shah took leave. But curiously took great umbrage at the
fact that Rama Raya did not see him off from the city and nursed a grouse
against his ‘adopted father’ for this slight. But he had intense hatred and
rivalry with the Nizam Shahi of Ahmednagar, Hussain Nizam Shah, with
whom there were perennial territorial disputes. In 1558 CE, the combined
forces of Bijapur and Vijayanagara had laid waste to Ahmednagar and
looted it. A harried Hussain Nizam Shah sent out entreaties to his
counterpart in Golconda who initially supported him, but later switched
sides.
However, soon bad blood began to brew between the allies—the Rayas
and the sultans. Ibrahim Qutub Shah of Golconda tried to play the
peacemaker between the warring kingdoms of Ahmednagar and Bijapur by
invoking the need for all ‘faithful’ to ally together, rather than work in
cahoots with the infidels (i.e., the Hindu rulers). It was also brought to the
notice of Ali Adil Shah that Rama Raya was getting too wealthy and
powerful due to the immense revenues that he was collecting from no less
than sixty seaports in addition to large territories and dependencies, much to
the disadvantage of all the combined Muslim sultanates. Hence, he was
urged to give up his enmity with Ahmednagar and forge a joint alliance
against the Rayas. To cement this political rapprochement, it was decided
that Hussain Nizam Shah would give in marriage to Ali Adil Shah, his
twelve-year-old daughter Chand Bibi, born of his queen Sultana Khunza
Humayun. Khunza drew her lineage from a Turkic monarchy in north-
western Iran, known as the Qara Qoyunlu tribe. The teenage girl thus
became the pawn in the political marriage that welded the unity between
Bijapur and Ahmednagar in 1564 CE. The fortress of Sholapur that was
constantly eyed by Ali Adil Shah was to be given away as Chand Bibi’s
dowry. In return, when Ali Adil Shah’s sister Hadia Sultana would come of
age, she was to wed Chand Bibi’s brother Murtaza. Through these double
matrimonial alliances, it was hoped that eternal friendship could be
brokered between the warring states.
As a child, Chand Bibi had been a precocious learner. She was very
interested in the arts, learnt to play the sitar and was also highly trained in
painting. But quite unlike several princesses of the time, she was interested
in sporting activities such as hawking, usually reserved for men. From a
young age, her father had noticed her keen strategical thinking and military
acumen, which was found to be promising. Her pursuits of learning
continued in Bijapur, even after her marriage to Ali Adil Shah. She was
fluent in several languages—Persian, Dakhani,2 Arabic, Telugu and
Kannada. She is also supposed to have accompanied her husband on some
of his military campaigns, including the famous Battle of Talikota.3 Quite
contrary to the norms followed by royal women, Chand Bibi was often seen
riding astride a richly caparisoned horse, travelling in the city or going
hunting with her face covered by a thin veil.
But the bonhomie among the warring sultanates was short-lived. With the
annihilation of their common foe achieved, they resumed their original
rivalries. Chand Bibi’s father and the Sultan of Ahmednagar, Hussain
Nizam Shah died shortly after this battle and was succeeded by his son
Murtaza. Contrary to expectations that the matrimonial alliance would
broker peace between the two rival kingdoms, Murtaza, egged on by his
mother Khunza Sultana, began to open hostile fronts against Bijapur. After
a few battles between them, they reached a truce and agreed not to interfere
with each other as they extended their respective domains in different
directions. Murtaza who ruled for nearly twenty years conquered Berar in
1574 CE and killed its sultan. Ali Adil Shah focused on subjugating the
feudatory nayakas of the erstwhile Vijayanagara Empire. He also tried
unsuccessfully to wrest Goa from the Portuguese in 1568 CE.
In 1597 CE, Murtaza attacked the Bidar Sultanate and laid siege to its
capital. The distraught Ali Barid sent an emissary to Ali Adil Shah seeking
help. Quite revealing of his inclinations, Ali Adil Shah responded that he
would agree if Bidar handed over to him two eunuchs whom he was totally
besotted with. His sexual inclinations were possibly the reason why Ali
Adil Shah and Chand Bibi never had children, neither did any of his other
wives beget him offspring.7 The two eunuchs were reluctant to be handed
over to the Bijapur Sultan and when the latter took them to his room to
enjoy their company, one of them was incensed enough by his sexual
advances and stabbed the sultan to death. This occurred on 20 April 1579.
Thus, Ali Adil Shah met an inglorious end, leaving Chand Bibi widowed
and his kingdom orphaned.
The siege was finally lifted after one long year. With her knack for creating
alliances and military strategy, Chand Bibi called on the Maratha forces to
cut off the enemy’s supply lines, forcing the besieging force to retreat. The
troops of Golconda and Ahmednagar were thrown out in hot pursuit by the
Bijapur forces under the daring Dilawar Khan who plundered them. On his
return, Dilawar felt puffed enough with strength and confidence to claim the
regency and captured it to become the most powerful man in Bijapur. He
held sway as the regent for the next eight years when Ibrahim Adil Shah
attained maturity and took over the affairs of state.
Chand Bibi felt increasingly sidelined in the new polity in Bijapur. To
consolidate ties between the kingdoms of Ahmednagar and Bijapur she
suggested the marriage of Ibrahim’s sister Khadija Sultana with Murtaza’s
son Meeran Hussain in 1585 CE. As the aunt of both parties, she decided to
accompany the bride to Ahmednagar, her paternal home that she had left
two decades ago. Only this time, she decided to stay back and never return
to Bijapur.
Back in Ahmednagar
On her return to her parental home, Chand Bibi was quite aghast to see that
her brother Murtaza had almost become deranged, leading him to be
addressed as ‘Murtaza Dewana’ (or madman), by the masses. He had
imprisoned his mother whom he thought was excessively interfering in the
matters of state. On one occasion, he asked his chief minister to bring
before him all the precious jewels captured in the battle against
Vijayanagara and when this was done, much to the shock of onlookers, he
set all the jewellery to fire. On another occasion, he allegedly tried to have
his teenaged son Meeran Hussain killed by setting fire to the room where he
was sleeping. Meeran fled to Daulatabad but returned shortly, arrested his
father and soon, allegedly had him murdered by locking him up in a steam
room with the fires turned up. Meeran unleashed a reign of terror after
assuming the throne in 1588 CE, killing all male relatives whom he viewed
as a threat. ‘In one day, for fear of treason,’ writes Cecily Cowley, ‘he put to
death 15 princes of the line of succession’.9 Soon the nobles had had
enough of his bigotry, executed a coup and had him murdered. In a short
span of six years, from 1589 to 1595 CE. Ahmednagar saw a political flux
of the worst kind with over three sovereigns being changed in short
succession, accompanied by immense palace intrigues, deceit, murders and
coups. Four opposing groups set up rival candidates to vie for the kingship
in Ahmednagar. The situation was a political disaster that was any
kingdom’s worst nightmare. Disgusted by the turn of events, Chand Bibi
left Ahmednagar for Bijapur.
Prince Murad was now beginning to get worried about a rebellion among
his forces as his supplies were steadily diminishing. Hence, he decided to
negotiate ceding back the disputed territory of Berar to the Mughals in
return for peace. Chand Bibi initially rejected the terms of truce and
continued to bravely defend her fort. She later reflected calmly and
wondered that if the Mughals regrouped and defeated her allies, she might
not receive even these concessions. Hence, she signed the treaty in Bahadur
Nizam Shah’s name and the Mughals quietly retreated, after feeling much
disgraced by a woman defender of Ahmednagar. Murad was heavily
criticized back in Delhi for his war strategy and for signing a treaty that was
by and large in Chand Bibi’s favour.
The allies meanwhile reached three days after the Mughals lifted the
siege and retreated. Ibrahim Adil Shah helped his aunt sort out the mess that
her paternal kingdom was in. He managed to convince all the contenders to
the throne to accept the suzerainty of Bahadur Nizam Shah and Chand Bibi.
Mian Manju was invited to join the court of Bijapur to relieve his aunt of
the threatening presence. Manju’s protégé Ahmed was given an estate to
sustain himself. One of Chand Bibi’s long-term associates Mahomed Khan
was appointed the new peshwa (chief minister), but very soon he, too,
turned treacherous, forcing the queen to seek the help of her nephew in
Bijapur. Ibrahim Adil Shah sent Sohail Khan again, who sieged the fort for
four months, captured Mahomed and installed Nehung Khan as the new
peshwa.
In 1598 CE, Chand Bibi is said to have even exchanged letters with the
Portuguese Viceroy Francisco da Gama, attempting to strengthen the
relationship of Ahmednagar with the Portuguese, seeking their assistance to
quell an internal rebellion in her realm.
The Mughals Attack Again
The Mughals were restless on the borders of Ahmednagar. One by one the
kingdoms of Gujarat, Malwa and Khandesh fell to their arms, and they
began to occupy districts much to the south of Berar. The sultans of
Golconda and Bijapur, assisted by troops from Ahmednagar, gave them a
tough battle on the Godavari River in the Battle of Sonpeth in January
1597. After a bloody engagement, which lasted two days, the Mughals were
victorious. Sohail Khan barely managed to save his own life. This would
have been an opportune moment for the Mughals to storm into Ahmednagar
and occupy it. But ego tussles and bickering between Prince Murad and his
general Abdur Rahim erupted, as they had during the previous siege.
Murad’s constant letters of complaint exasperated Emperor Akbar who
recalled Abdur Rahim and deputed Abul Fazl12 to the campaign. Murad, by
then, had taken to excessive drunkenness and finally died in 1599 CE at the
age of thirty-two in Shahpur.
The same year, in 1599 CE, Akbar sent his youngest son, Prince
Daniyal Mirza, with Abdur Rahim, to complete the unfinished task in the
Deccan. The scale of the challenge that Chand Bibi and Ahmedngar had put
to the mighty, invincible Mughal forces was proved by the fact that shortly
thereafter, a fifty-seven-year-old Akbar himself moved southwards with
about 80,000 horses to fulfil his long-cherished dream of subjugating the
Deccan. That a woman was challenging the might of Akbar and the Mughal
Empire of Delhi was reason enough for tough action to be taken to quash
her permanently.
While Akbar proceeded to conquer Khandesh and besiege Asirgarh,
Daniyal and Abdur Rahim marched towards Ahmednagar. He would have
joined them later, if need be, even as he was directing the siege from
Burhanpur. As Cowley writes:
Mines were formed from the trenches of the prince, but the besieged broke into them and
filled them. One mine was carried under the palace in the fort before being discovered.
The queen began to despair of success by arms. The armies of Golconda and Bijapur dare
not assist her, and practically no troops were operating on her behalf outside the fort.13
By the summer of 1667 CE, the army was completely toned and galvanized
and was bursting to set forth once it received the royal orders. On 20
August 1667, the Ahom army under Lachit Barphukan, accompanied by
Atan Burhagohain, started from the capital, sailed downstream the
Brahmaputra River in two divisions and encamped at Kaliabar at their
viceregal headquarters to launch their operations against the Mughals in
Guwahati. After offering prayers at the holy shrine of Goddess Kamakhya,
they began their offensive. Syed Firuz Khan, the Mughal governor of
Guwahati, and his army were ill-prepared for this sudden attack and there
was no time for them to seek fresh reinforcements from Rangamati or
Dhaka. Dihingia Phukan in the Ahom army led an attack on the Bahbari
Fort near the Barnadi, on the northern bank of Guwahati and captured it,
along with the fort of Kajali by September 1667. The Shah Buruz and
Rangmahal forts, too, fell soon to the Ahom might.
The Ahoms now directed their efforts to the recapture of Guwahati from
the Mughals. A fierce battle took place between the Ahoms and the Mughal
army detachment issuing out of Itakhuli at Guwahati. Itakhuli was a small
hill on the south bank of the Brahmaputra at Guwahati, and it offered a
panoramic view and a strategic hold over the valley. The Mughals had
established themselves in a fort atop the hill of Itakhuli and this was
attacked by the Assamese army in a daring midnight ambush. The Ahom
spies had managed to render several of the Mughal cannon as unworthy by
filling water in their muzzles. This was led by one Bagh Hazarika, whose
real name was Ismail Siddique, and so called because he had once killed a
tiger barehanded. When the Ahoms attacked, the Mughals realized to their
horror that their cannons were all rendered utterly useless.
The Mughals then advanced with a fleet of boats, but they could not
stand or defend the incessant cannonade of the Ahoms. By the midnight of
2 November 1667, Itakhuli and the contiguous garrison of Guwahati fell
into Ahom hands and the Mughals were chased out of the region to the
mouth of the Manaha river, the original boundary of their empire with
Assam. Syed Firuz Khan and several others were taken captive by the
Ahoms; many were executed and others sent to the jails in Gargaon. Thus,
within a short span of merely two months the Ahoms manage to flush the
Mughals out of Guwahati and west Assam and regain their lost glory and
possessions. For his chivalry and the first major success, Lachit Barphukan
was presented with the Hengdang, a gold-plated sword by the king.
The Ahoms knew that the Mughals would not let go so easily and would
come back again. Hence, retaining Guwahati that they managed to wrest
was essential. Fortifications in Guwahati were strengthened on a maddening
war footing. Atan Buragohain was appointed to erect the necessary
fortifications on both banks of the river, while Lachit Barphukan was asked
to post a contingent of soldiers at all the important and strategic locations.
On the pretext of going on a hunt, Lachit would often inspect the passes and
defiles in and around Guwahati. Every part of Guwahati was well-covered
and protected. Guns were mounted in the ramparts and on hill slopes and
valleys in a state of perennial alert. Lachit Barphukan was merciless when it
came to dereliction of duty on anybody’s part. When his own maternal
uncle did not complete the construction of a rampart near Amingaon on the
north bank on time, he was immediately sacked. Lachit had remarked that
his country was more important to him than his own uncle. This kind of
military zeal infused a sense of immense responsibility in the army.
The Ahoms thus kept themselves ready for any further eventualities
with the Mughal forces.
Notes
1 S.K. Bhuyan, Lachit Barphukan and His Times: A History of the Assam–
Mogul Conflicts of the Period 1667 to 1671 A.D. (Guwahati: The
Department of Historical and Antiquarian Studies, Government of
Assam, 1947), p. 11.
2 Manuscript ‘Assam Buranji’, from the invasion of Mirza Jahina to
Swargadeo Siva Singha, 1630–1744 (Guwahati: The Department of
Historical and Antiquarian Studies [DHAS], Government of Assam).
Also cited in Bhuyan, Lachit Barphukan and His Times, p. 8.
3 Bhuyan, Lachit Barphukan and His Times, p. 11.
4 Manuscript ‘Assam Buranji’, from Swargadeo Pratap Singha to
Ratnadhwaj Singha Sulikhpa Lora Raja, 1603–1681, DHAS, Guwahati.
5 Manuscript ‘Assam Buranji’, from the earliest times to Swargadeo
Gadadhar Singha’s recovery of Guwahati from the Moguls in 1682, with
several historical letters; from the earliest times to the death of
Swargadeo Rudra Singha in 1714, DHAS, Guwahati.
6 Bhuyan, Lachit Barphukan and His Times, p. 23.
7 Manuscript ‘Assam Buranji’: a collection of 192 letters exchanged
between the kings & officers of Assam, and the courts of Delhi, Dacca,
Cooch Behar, Jayanta, Cachar, Sylhet etc.; from the earliest times to the
death of Swargadeo Rudra Singha in 1714, DHAS, Guwahati.
8 Bhuyan, Lachit Barphukan and His Times, p. 34.
9 Ibid., pp. 49–50.
10 Bhuyan, Lachit Barphukan and His Times, p. 58.
11 The name Saraighat was loosely applied in those days, and even now to
Guwahati and its environs, though Sarai was actually the small village
Amingaon.
12 Quoted in Bhuyan, Lachit Barphukan and His Times p. 84.
Kanhoji Angre
F
or close to four decades, his fleet was a terror to the maritime powers
in the narrow, but important coastal strip of western India, where he
led his sailors from victory to victory; an astute diplomat of
uncommon ability, he undoubtedly gave the Maratha navy an
unprecedented power after it was envisaged and founded by the indomitable
Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj; he defied the joint efforts of the English, the
Portuguese, and the Siddis in his numerous wars with them, both on land
and by the sea, thereby raising the Maratha naval prestige to an
extraordinary level. He was Kanhoji Angre, the brave ‘Sarkhel’, or the
Grand Admiral of the Maratha navy, about whom so little is sadly written or
spoken about today. His locus of activity was largely the Konkan, the
narrow strip of land that lies between the high Sahyadri Mountains and the
vast Arabian Sea, stretching from Daman in the north to Goa in the south,
and comprising the three main districts of Thana, Colaba and Ratnagiri.
Early Life
The origins of this daring man are obscure, and he did not belong to the
nobility of the land. A Portuguese viceroy states that he began his life as a
humble servant of other Hindus in the island of Versova.1 Stories about his
origin and exploits were disseminated in the literary works of the English
sailor Clement Downing2 who called him, as his compatriots did, ‘Angria
the Pirate’. Quite confidently, Downing traces Kanhoji’s ancestry to an
‘Arabian Cofferey’ or the kaffirs of Arab, the pagan non-believers,3 who
abandoned the Mohammedan religion to settle down in western India. From
Arabian to Abyssinian origins, there have been varied hypotheses about
Kanhoji’s ancestry. But according to his family lore, he was a Maratha
Kshatriya by birth and his ancestors bore the original surname ‘Sankpal’.
The new surname of Angrey (or Angria) that stuck with them, came from
the village of Angarwadi near Poona, where the family had long resided.
His father Tukoji, son of Sekhoji Sankpal, had shown great daring and
promise while serving under Shahaji, the father of the great Shivaji
Maharaj. Shahaji himself was subservient to the Sultan of Bijapur who held
sway over vast parts of the Deccan. Tukoji continued to serve Shahaji’s son
Chhatrapati Shivaji, who made him a sardar or commander in his fleet.
Tukoji must have taken part in the numerous naval skirmishes that formed
part of Chhatrapati Shivaji’s stormy rule—from the expedition in Karwar in
1665 CE to his lifelong battles with the Siddis of Janjira, whom the
Marathas never managed to vanquish. Tukoji was later appointed as the
surnobat or deputy commander of the seaside fortress of Suvarnadurg, the
fort of gold. 4
Precious little is known about Kanhoji’s formative years. He is said to
have been born around 1669 CE and when he was eight years old, his father
left him under the tutelage of a Brahmin guru in the village of Harnai (in
Ratnagiri district). A popular Konkan folktale goes that5 one day, young
Kanhoji who was herding his guru’s cows decided to take a short nap under
a tree. Since it took long for the boy to return, the guru went looking and
was astonished to find a five-headed cobra guarding the boy’s head from
the harsh sun. This was looked upon as a propitious sign of the boy being
destined for a bright future, possibly becoming the ruler of the land
someday. During his growing up years, Kanhoji developed a friendship
with a studious, bright boy Balaji Vishwanath, who was to later rise to the
position of the peshwa or prime minister of the Maratha kingdom.
1. That he deliver [sic] up all that he has taken that belonged to the
Company and our people.
2. That upon no pretence whatever he meddle [sic] with any English
ships or with the ships belonging to the merchants who live under the
protection of the English as Madras, Bengal or any other factories or
colonies belonging to the English whatsoever.
3. That whatever ships or vessels belong to any nation whatsoever that
are coming into our harbour and in sight thereof he is not (to) meddle
with them that is between Mahim stakes and Cundry and at their going
out the same rule is to be observed.
4. That he grants our merchants the free liberty of his ports they paying
usual customs being conformable to the rules thereof. If any vessels
belonging to Sevagee Raza or Sow Razah shall take or molest any
vessels belonging to Bombay they having his convoy which he is
oblige to give, he shall be answerable for the damage.
5. We on our parts promise that we will permit no ships or vessels
whatever to wear English colours, but what belong to the subjects of
the English nation, which shall be incerted [sic] in all their ships.
6. We grant him free liberty of our port of Bombay to buy, sell and
merchandize he paying the usual custom and observing the rules of our
port, which if he complies with that we send the Blenhein Ann and
Manchua to fetch the Company’s effects, which he has taken and our
people. 20
Kanhoji accepted these terms in April 1713 and bought temporary truce
with the English as he did not want to open multiple fronts of conflict at the
same time. He knew that trouble was brewing with one of the Maratha
kingdoms for him and hostility with the English, too, at the same time
would be imprudent. The fifth clause was important, which obliged the
English not to permit foreign ships or vessels to fly their colours. It was the
interpretation of this last term that led to hostilities a few years later
between Kanhoji and the English.
Notes
1 J.F. Judice Biker’s ‘Biker Manuscripts, Archivo Ultramarino, Lisbon;
Fundo geral 8548, p. 149.
2 Clement Downing, A History of the Indian Wars (London: Oxford
University Press, 1924),
3 Ibid., pp. 8–9.
4 For Tukoji’s exploits, see Manohar Malgonkar, Kanhoji Angey, Maratha
Admiral: An Account of his Life and His Battles with the English
(Bombay: Asia Publishing House, 1959), pp. 11–12.
5 Ibid., pp. 10–11.
6 Uday S. Kulkarni, The Maratha Century: Vignettes and Anecdotes of the
Maratha Empire (Pune: Mula Mutha Publications, 2021), p. 30.
7 For more on the Maratha navy, see B.K. Apte, A History of the Maratha
Navy and Merchant Ships (Bombay: State Board for Literature and
Culture, 1973) and O.K. Nambiar, Our Seafaring in the Indian Ocean
(Bangalore: Jeevan Publications, 1975).
8 Malgonkar, Kanhoji Angey, pp. 57–58.
9 Factory Records, Bombay, Vol. 21, India Office, British Library, London,
p. 83.
10 Ibid., Vol. 23, Set 2, p. 11.
11 Factory Records, Bombay, Vol. 5, Set 3, India Office, British Library,
London, pp. 11–12.
12 Bombay Public Proceedings, Vol. 2, India Office, British Library,
London, pp. 15, 17, 21.
13 Meaning adherents of Shivaji, i.e., the Marathas.
14 Bombay Public Proceedings, Vol. 2, p. 90, India Office, British Library,
London.
15 For more details on these see Malgonkar.
16 The paals and shibars were hybrid vessels, smaller than ghurabs but
bigger than gallivants.
17 J.F. Judice Biker’s ‘Biker Manuscripts’, Archivo Ultramarino, Lisbon, p.
150.
18 Ibid.
19 J.F. Judice Biker’s ‘Biker Manuscripts’, Tratados da India, Vol V.
Archivo Ultramarino, Lisbon, pp. 292–93.
20 Bombay Public Consultations, Range CCCXLI, No. 4, (Consultation 12
February 1712–13), India Office, British Library, London.
21 Malgonkar, Kanhoji Angey, p. 177
22 J.F. Judice Biker’s ‘Biker Manuscripts’, Tratados da India, Vol. VI,
Archivo Ultramarino, Lisbon; pp. 2–4.
23 Bombay Public Consultations, Range CCCXLI, No. 4, pp. 58–61
(Consultation 13 April 1718) and pp. 77–83 (Consultation 7 May 1718),
India Office, British Library, London.
24 Ibid., p. 96
25 J.F. Judice Biker’s ‘Biker Manuscripts’, Tratados da India, Vol. III,
Archivo Ultramarino, Lisbon, pp. 242–44.
26 Biker, ‘Biker Manuscripts’, Tratados da India, Vol. VI, Archivo
Ultramarino, Lisbon, pp. 10–12.
27 Malgonkar, Kanhoji Angey, p. 121.
28 For more on the man and his personal life mentioned in this paragraph,
see Malgonkar, Kanhoji Angey, pp. 120–24.
29 Surendra Nath Sen, The Military System of the Marathas (Calcutta:
Orient Longman Private Ltd., 1928), pp. 189–90.
Banda Singh Bahadur
T
he tenth and last guru of the Sikhs, Guru Govind Singh, was hopeful
of a rapprochement with the Mughal emperor. After the death of
Aurangzeb who had inflicted uncounted miseries on the Sikhs, his son
Bahadur Shah who took over the Mughal throne after a war of succession
invited the Guru for conciliatory talks. On 2 August 1707, the Guru came to
Agra where he was presented with a dress of honour, a jewelled scarf and
other marks of respect. But around this very time, a rebellion of the
emperor’s brother Kam Bakhsh broke out, forcing him to proceed
southwards, towards the Deccan. The Guru, too, accompanied the royal
entourage, but midway their negotiations broke off causing him to separate
himself from the Mughal camp and stop at Nanded.
The Guru had heard from a mahant in Jaipur, Jait Ram, of a curious
occultist who lived in Nanded and who practised strange incantations on
unsuspecting sadhus and visitors. Jait Ram warned him to beware of the
man when the Guru had set out to the Deccan. Disregarding this, in the
autumn of 1708 CE, the Guru promptly went calling on the occultist whose
name was Madho Das and who had a monastery of sorts in Nanded.
Finding him not available at home, the Guru promptly went and plonked
himself on Madho Das’ cot and also ordered his disciples to cook a non-
vegetarian meal for him, knowing pretty well that this was unallowed in the
Vaishnava hermitage of the occultist. When Madho Das heard of this
strange and ill-mannered visitor who had come into his place and literally
usurped it, he was livid with rage and rushed back home hurling invectives
at the man. He used all his secret spirits and sorcery tricks to overturn the
cot on which the Guru was seated but failed miserably. However, when he
came into the Guru’s presence and beheld his effervescent visage, his
temper cooled, and tears began to flow down his eyes automatically. The
following dialogue took place between them, as was recorded in the Zikr-i-
Guruanwa Ibtida-i-Singhan wa Mazhab-i-Eshan by Ahmad Shah of
Batala:1
Madho Das: Who are you?
Guru Govind Singh: He whom you know.
Madho Das: What do I know?
Guru Govind Singh: Think it over in your mind
Madho Das: (after a pause): So, you are Guru Govind Singh!
Guru Govind Singh: Yes!
Madho Das: What have you come here for?
Guru Govind Singh: I have come so that I may convert you into a disciple of mine.
Madho Das: I submit my Lord. I am a Banda (slave) of yours.
From that day, the occultist was not only a changed man but also bore a
new name—Banda Singh Bahadur, the loyal servant of the Guru. From an
occult ascetic, he became a brave warrior and a defender of the Sikh Khalsa
brotherhood that Guru Govind Singh had established.
Early Years
Banda Singh was born as Lachhman Dev on 27 October 1670 in Rajori, in
the Poonch district of western Kashmir. His father was an ordinary Rajput
ploughman who belonged to the Bharadwaj clan. It is believed that they
belonged to the Sodhi community of the Khatris of Punjab, while according
to others, he hailed from Sialkot. Little is known of his younger days except
for a life-transforming incident that happened to him in his teens. As a
young boy who spent all his time less in education and more in pursuits
such as ploughing, hunting, riding and archery, Lachhman had gone hunting
once. He had taken aim and hit a doe and given the perfect aim he managed
each time, the animal was struck by his arrow. When he went to collect his
hunt, he was moved beyond words to see the pitiable eyes of the dying doe
who happened to be pregnant. To compound the poignancy, when he slit
open the stomach of the dead animal, two unborn young ones fell from her
womb. They writhed in pain and died right in front of his eyes in a few
minutes, being born prematurely. Something changed inexorably within
young Lachhman at that instant. His sense of remorse, repentance and grief
grew so strong that his mind took a completely ascetic turn. He began to be
disgusted with everything of the material world and started seeking out the
larger purpose and meaning of life in the company of sadhus and saints who
visited his town on their way to Kashmir. A bairagi, a man dedicated to the
Vaishnava tradition, Janaki Prasad once came to Rajori and when
Lachhman met him, he was so enraptured that he decided to pack his bags
and follow him as his disciple. Barely fifteen then, he left home and kept
roaming from place to place with a new name that his guru gave him,
Madho Das.
In 1686 CE, he accompanied Janaki Prasad to attend the Baisakhi fair at
the shrine of Baba Ram Thamman at a village near Punjab’s Kasur. Here he
met another bairagi, Ram Das, and became his disciple as well. But
somehow, he felt ill at ease and that something was wanting. He had been
on a restless quest and each new guru he took did not seem to satisfy his
spiritual thirst. Looking out for a better preceptor he made his way all the
way down south towards Nasik. Charmed by its beauty and the spiritual
power of the place he selected the woods of Panchvati that had famously
sheltered Bhagwan Ram, Sita and Lakshman during their exile, as his abode
for meditation. Here he got acquainted with an old yogi, Aughar Nath, who
was famous for his tantric achievements and became his steadfast disciple.
The old yogi who was in the last stages of his life was deeply moved by the
affection and devotion that the young disciple showed him. Being pleased,
the yogi bequeathed his entire knowledge and a much-coveted book on the
occult and yogic sciences to the young man around 1691 CE before passing
away.
Madho Das left Panchvati and decided to establish a monastery of his
own, being armed with new magic and tantric tricks. He followed the
course of the Godavari and reached Nanded where he set up a humble
cottage for himself, in which he immersed himself in the austerities and
rigours of meditation and tantric practices. His fame spread soon in the
neighbourhood and the village folk gathered to see this man of God and
hear his talks or watch the magic he performed, in awe. His monastery grew
in stature and attracted large crowds. All the public adulation soon got to his
head, and he became puffed up with a sense of his own superiority. His
haughty and intemperate remarks and his ridicule and abuse of others made
him infamous everywhere. He spent the next sixteen years of his life in this
indolent manner before that fated meeting with Guru Govind Singh
happened—one that transformed him completely into a brave and daring
warrior. Quite ironically, the same man who was so tender and sensitive to
be moved to tears by the death of a doe and her unborn kids, was to become
a warrior who was to lead bloody conquests.
He began reading up and acquainting himself with everything about
Sikhism, its history and its tenets. He read about the pristine teachings of
Guru Nanak and the gurus thereafter who raised a nation of saint-warriors,
mostly from among the long-downtrodden classes of the Punjab. He heard
about how Guru Arjan Dev had fallen a prey to the religious bigotry of
Jahangir, while Aurangzeb had brutally executed Guru Teg Bahadur. Stories
of persecution of millions of helpless non-Muslim subjects at the hands of
the imperial officers riled him up.2 He was moved to tears to read about the
mournful story of Guru Govind Singh’s two young sons, Zorawar Singh
and Fateh Singh. When Guru Govind Singh was forced to evacuate
Anandpur Sahib, in the confusion that ensued, the two young boys and the
Guru’s old, widowed mother Mata Gujri fell into the hands of Aurangzeb’s
army. They were forced to convert to Islam and when they refused, their
fingers were blown off with firecrackers, they were bricked up alive in a
minar (tower) on 27 December 1704 in the presence of the old lady, who
died on the spot out of the shock and grief.3 As historian James Browne
noted: ‘Of all instances of cruelty exercised on the propagators of new
doctrines, this is the most barbarous and outrageous. Defenceless women
and children have usually escaped even from religious fury. No wonder
then, that the vengeance of the Sikhs was so severe.’4 Banda was absorbing
this long history of strife and persecution that the Sikhs had suffered at the
hands of the Mughals. His reverence and admiration for his guru, Govind
Singh, was further enhanced as he realized that despite such personal
traumas, he had remained so calm and composed.
Just around this time, there was news of an attempt to murder Guru
Govind Singh by a Pathan of Sirhind. He was sent by the Mughal Governor
Wazir Khan of Sirhind who was becoming increasingly insecure about the
peace negotiations between the Mughals and Sikhs, given that he had
played the instrumental role in persecuting the Sikhs and also butchering
the two young sons of the Guru. Wazir Khan had sent this Pathan to mingle
with Guru Govind Singh and join his fold and one day when the Guru was
taking a nap, he leapt at him with a dagger that he wanted to strike at his
heart. Fortunately, he missed his target, and the other disciples were aroused
by the commotion. When Banda heard this news, he was livid with rage,
and he begged his Guru to permit him to go the Punjab and seek a
retribution for all the crimes committed against their community. The Guru
was initially reluctant but given his persistence he finally relented and
entrusted the military command of his people to his charge.
Banda Singh Bahadur’s Expedition Commences
Before sending him off to the Punjab the Guru summoned Banda to his
side, gave him the title ‘Bahadur’ or ‘Brave’ and also blessed him with five
arrows from his own quiver as an advance token of victory. The Panj
Piaras or the five favourites who were the first to be a part of the Guru’s
Khalsa—Bhais Binod Singh, Kahan Singh, Baj Singh, Daya Singh and Ram
Singh were told to assist Banda. The flag or Nishan Sahib and drums or
Nagara were given to him as emblems of temporal authority. This
anointment by the Guru raised Banda’s position as a Jathedar or a leader of
the Khalsa and strengthened by the Guru’s command letters or
hukumnamas, Sikhs from all over the country were exhorted to join the
expedition. Banda’s main target was Wazir Khan of Sirhind and his Hindu
secretary or Peshkar, Sucha Nand who had cruelly hacked his Guru’s sons.
With the war cry of ‘Wahe Guru ki Fateh’ (Victory to the Holy Guru) on
their lips, this modest group set out for the Punjab with the blessings of
Guru Govind Singh.
Even as the group headed to the land of five rivers, they sought the
reinforcements coming through the joining of the Sikhs from the Malwa,
Doaba and Majha districts of Punjab, whose routes were being blocked by
the Pathan detachments of Maler Kotla and Rupar. It was decided to
commence the operations from the town of Sonepat with their modest group
of 500 Sikhs. The faujdar of Sonepat was petrified to see the advancing
group that he abandoned the town and fled to Delhi making it an easy fall
for the contingent. Samana was the next target. Around here, in the village
of Bhuna, a Mughal detachment escorting a treasure of the revenue
collections of these villages was to halt. Banda and his men fell upon it and
easily took the treasure that was equally distributed among all the members.
Emboldened by these early and easy successes, the group boldly
proceeded to Samana. This was where the executioner of Guru Teg
Bahadur, Sayyed Jalal-ud-din, and the executioners of the young sons of
Guru Govind Singh, Shasah Beg and Bashal Beg, lived.5 Samana was
among the wealthy towns of the district and its faujdar sat in complacent
inaction, underestimating the Sikhs. He was however rudely jolted when on
26 November 1709, Banda Singh and his men fell upon the town and
encircled it from all sides. Several local folks and peasants and other Sikhs
who had been persecuted for the last 100 years saw these as opportunities to
vent their frustration, and the rage spilt over. What followed was an
unprecedented plunder of Samana. From palatial buildings and domes, by
nightfall, the town was reduced to a heap of ruins that was never going to
be able to regain its glory. Ten thousand people, mostly Mughals, lost their
lives in this bloody conquest. Bhai Fateh Singh, one of the Panj Piaras,
showed great courage in this campaign and Banda Singh made him the
faujdar or commander of this place.
Banda Singh was well aware of the military might of Wazir Khan and
hence did not want to attack Sirhind until the Sikh contingent from the
northern districts of Majha and Doaba reached him. They therefore decided
to move in the eastern direction towards Kiratpur by a long and circuitous
route. On the way, several towns such as Ghuram, Thaska, Mustafabad and
Kapuri were easily taken and added to the growing Sikh dominion. From
there, the contingent moved to Sadhaura. This was the corrupted name for
Sadhu-wara, or the place of sadhus, which was once the holy place for the
Buddhists. But it had long forfeited its holy nature, being under a despotic
tyrant Osman Khan who oppressed his subjects. He had also tortured to
death the great Muslim saint Sayyed Budhu Shah, who came in the lineage
of Nizamuddin Aulia, simply because he had helped Guru Govind Singh in
the battle of Bhangani. The Hindus faced great indignities in Sadhaura and
could not even cremate their dead as per their religious injunctions. Even as
the Sikh contingent made its way to Sadhaura, the locals and the peasants
who had hitherto faced the oppression of Osman Khan felt enthused and
rose in revolt. What followed was a free-for-all attack with the overthrow of
Osman Khan, followed by an unmitigated rampage of revenge and mass
slaughters.6 Sadhaura had now been added to the Sikh kitty.
Wazir Khan had been keeping a close watch of all these developments.
He was dogged in his attempts to prevent the Majha and Doaba Sikhs from
joining the group and swelling their numbers and strength. He deputed Sher
Muhammad Khan of Maler Kotla to deal with this contingent that was
attempting to come from northern Punjab and join Banda Singh. Sher
Muhammad Khan, with his brother Khizar Khan and cousins Nashtar Khan
and Wali Muhammad Khan, marched to prevent the moving contingent of
the Sikhs from the north, who had by then travelled down, up to Rupar. The
two unequal forces clashed at Rupar where Sher Muhammad’s army
comprising of several Afghans of Maler Kotla, the Ranghars of Rupar,
detachments from Sirhind, and equipped with two guns and several other
weapons fell on the less-armed Sikhs. But the spirit of the holy war that
spurred the Sikhs seemed matchless for all the military superiority of their
opponents. With limited resources, the brave men managed to give a tough
time to Sher Muhammad Khan and his men. Khizar Khan who was leading
the attack was killed by a bullet that was shot at him. This led to confusion
and disarray among the Afghan ranks that no one could stem. Soon, Nashtar
Khan and Wali Khan, too, were killed and by the time Sher Muhammad
Khan came in to lead, it was too late. He was severely wounded and had to
retreat, allowing the Sikhs to move forward and join their co-religionists
under Banda Singh. The Sikhs had won the day and soon, amidst great
rejoicings, the Majha and Doab Sikhs merged with their brothers in the
Khalsa.
Other Conquests
With the rise in Sikh political power, many Hindus and Muslims began
converting to Sikhism in different parts of northern India. This led to
societal tensions, especially with the Muslim nobility becoming
increasingly hostile to this development. They began to harass the
converted and also the missionaries who led the conversions.12 One such
case came to Banda Singh’s notice from Unarsa village in the Deoband
district (in present-day Uttar Pradesh). Jalal Khan, the faujdar, ordered the
neo-Sikhs and the older ones, too, to be persecuted and arrested. Banda
Singh marched there with his army to free his brethren from oppression.
Towns of Saharanpur, Behat and Nanauta easily fell to the advancing Sikh
might. They then lay siege to Jalalabad, the town and fort founded by Jalal
Khan who proved to be a very tough nut to crack. The latter also sent
several letters to Emperor Bahadur Shah alerting him of the growing Sikh
menace. After nearly three weeks of laying siege and with loss of life on
both sides, the Sikhs decided that it was a wasteful campaign and lifted the
siege and returned to Punjab to address larger and more pressing concerns
that were emerging there. Such impulsive acts, at a time when they should
have concentrated on consolidating their newly found kingdom, was
another drawback that the new Sikh state suffered from.
A section of the Sikh army felt this overriding need to avenge all the
atrocities that the community had traditionally faced since long and they
decided to overrun the whole of the Punjab.13Accordingly, campaigns were
launched for this. The districts of Batala and Kalanaur were occupied first.
Batala was an important market for commodities from Kashmir and Kabul
and hence conquest of these places added to the heft of the Sikhs. Buoyed
by the success they then decided to attack the important centre of Lahore.
The Mughal forces and the locals in Lahore put up a tough battle, and
despite putting in all the effort and suffering losses of men and material,
Lahore could not be taken by the Sikhs. Except for Lahore proper,
practically the entire territory in the Majha and the Rearki tracts was now
under Sikh occupation.
The next target was the border of Sirhind, known as the Jalandhar Doab
region comprising eastern and south-eastern Punjab and the districts of
Jalandhar and Hoshiarpur. With a vast army of 70,000 to 80,000, the Sikhs
managed to subjugate the local Faujdar Shamas Khan to a nominal position
in the Battle of Rahon on 11 October 1710. The Ganga–Jamuna plains had
been overrun in the campaign in Uttar Pradesh; to the south of the Sutlej
River, the Sikhs now had a complete mastery over the territories of Sirhind,
from Macchiwara to Karnal and Panipat, some six districts in all,
penetrating to the very borders of Delhi too. At this juncture had Emperor
Bahadur Shah not decided to turn away from the Deccan—where he was
busy quelling his brother’s rebellion—to address this issue, there was every
possibility of the Sikh power expanding across northern India and providing
a grave challenge to Mughal imperial power. For a rookie army, to grow in
strength and shake the foundations of the Mughal Empire was indeed a
remarkable achievement.
On reaching the fort, Banda Singh, Baj Singh, Fateh Singh and other
leaders were packed off to the Tripolia prison. Banda Singh’s wife, his four-
year-old son Ajai Singh and the child’s nurse was handed over to the harem.
The remaining 694 Sikhs were sent away for execution that began from 5
March 1716 in batches of hundred every day, going on for a week. Life was
promised to anyone who chose to renounce his faith and embrace Islam, but
not one among the 700 opted for it or sought pardon.26 As William Irvine
states: ‘All observers, Indian and European, unite in remarking on the
wonderful patience and resolution with which these men underwent their
fate. Their attachment and devotion to their leader was wonderful to behold.
They had no fear of death, they called the Executioner Mukt, or the
Deliverer, they cried out to him joyfully, “O! Mukt! Kill me first.”’27 Thus,
far from being scared, they jostled with the executioner to be killed first.
Decapitated heads were collected in carts daily and hung up on trees outside
the city, while their carcasses thrown away ruthlessly to the vultures and
dogs to feed on.
A poignant tale during this time was of one young Sikh prisoner who
was recently married. His old, widowed mother interceded for his pardon
through the Wazir’s Diwan, Ram Chand. The old woman was made to cook
up a story that her son was not a part of the rebel group but was actually
imprisoned by them and hence he should be released. The emperor
considered the case favourably and he was pardoned. When the old woman
joyously accosted her son with the release letter, handing it over to the
kotwal who stood over him with a sword in his hand, the son threw the
letter away. He screamed out saying he did not know who this woman was
and that she was lying, that he was a true and devoted follower of his Guru
and that he should be sent to his companions quickly. No number of tearful
entreaties of the wailing mother or persuasion by the imperial authorities
could shake the young man’s resolve. He quickly met his death without
flinching. Such was the devotion and commitment that the Sikhs had
towards their faith and their Guru.
For three months Banda Singh and his close associates were kept
imprisoned in the fort with the intention that they could extract details of
any treasures that he might have had or of the people who had supported
him. Finally, on 19 June 1716, Banda Singh Bahadur, his son Ajai Singh,
Baj Singh, Ram Singh, Fateh Singh, Ali Singh, Gulab Singh and others
were led out of the fort in a procession. He was placed as before on an
elephant and dressed in garish costumes. Twenty-six other Sikhs in chains
marched behind him. They were taken through the streets of the old city to
the shrine of Khwaja Qutab-ud-Din Bakhtiyar Kaki, near the Qutub Minar.
Banda Singh was offered the usual option between death or Islam and
expectedly he refused to renounce his faith. To compound the brutality, his
four-year-old son was placed in his lap and he was asked to kill him. As no
father could commit such an act, Banda too refused. The executioner then
hacked the little boy to pieces, right in front of Banda’s eyes and his
quivering liver was pulled out and thrust in his father’s mouth, who stood
like a statue, unmoved and completely resigned to God’s will. 28
His own tragic turn came next. First, his right eye was gouged out by a
butcher’s knife and then his left. His left foot was cut off next and then his
two hands were severed from his body. His flesh was then torn with red-hot
pincers. Finally, he was decapitated and hacked to pieces, limb by limb. But
what stunned the barbarians was that all through the ordeal, Banda Singh
Bahadur remained alarmingly calm and serene and died with unshaken
steadiness. Years of spiritual practices and penance had seeped in deep to
make him withstand such unimaginable horrors with surprising calmness
and equanimity. The other Sikh prisoners, too, met similar fates. 29
With the gory murder of Banda Singh Bahadur and his followers a
major chapter in the history of the Sikhs came to a sad, abrupt end. Just as
their ascent was quick and unexpected, their loss of glory, too, was sudden
and unexpected. Despite the short-lived tenure of the Sikh kingdom, Banda
Singh’s exploits had an electric effect on the psyche of the Sikhs and their
military zeal and consciousness. It would not be an overstatement to say
that in a way he had laid the foundations for Maharaja Ranjit Singh, who,
about eight decades later, united all the warring misls or confederacies of
the Sikhs under one united, mighty Sikh Empire. The story of Banda Singh
Bahadur, his unalloyed devotion to his Guru, his indomitable courage and
spiritual strength to face the worst of tortures and a horrifying death make
him an inspirational figure for centuries to come.
Notes
1 Ganda Singh, Life of Banda Singh Bahadur: Based on Contemporary and
Original Records (Amritsar: The Sikh History Research Department,
Khalsa College, 1935), p. 14.
2 Ganda Singh, Life of Banda Singh Bahadur, pp. 20–21.
3 Ibid., pp. 21, 58.
4 James Browne, India Tract, Vol. 2, The History of the Origin and
Progress of the Sikhs (London: Zogographic Press, 1788), p. 8.
5 Ganda Singh, Life of Banda Singh Bahadur, p. 37.
6 For more details on Sadhaura and the atrocities of Osman Khan, see
Ganda Singh, Life of Banda Singh Bahadur, pp. 46–48.
7 Ganda Singh, Life of Banda Singh Bahadur, p. 59.
8 Browne, India Tract, Vol. 2, p. 10.
9 Ganda Singh, Life of Banda Singh Bahadur, pp. 70, 77.
10 Ibid., p. 85.
11 William Irvine, Later Mughals, Vol 1, 1707–1720, ed. Jadunath Sarkar
(Calcutta: M.C. Sarkar & Sons, n.d.), pp. 98–99.
12 Ganda Singh, Life of Banda Singh Bahadur, p. 90.
13 Ibid., pp. 100–01.
14 Irvine, Later Mughals, Vol. 1, pp. 105–06.
15 Gurbaksh Singh, The Khalsa Generals (Vancouver: Canadian Sikh
Study & Teaching Society, 1927). p. 10. Also, Surinder Johar, The Sikh
Sword to Power (The University of Michigan: Arsee Publishers, 2002), p.
27.
16 Quoted in Ganda Singh, Life of Banda Singh Bahadur, p. 146.
17 Ganda Singh, Life of Banda Singh Bahadur, pp. 152–54.
18 Ganda Singh, Life of Banda Singh Bahadur, p. 192.
19 Irvine, Later Mughals, Vol 1, p. 314.
20 Ibid.
21 Ibid., pp. 314–15.
22 This section on the inhuman tortures meted out to Banda Singh and his
followers draws heavily from Ganda Singh, Life of Banda Singh Bahadur
and Irvine, Later Mughals, Vol 1. Readers may refer to those works for
more details on the manner in which the Sikhs were humiliated and
eventually massacred by the Mughal captors.
23 See Ganda Singh, Life of Banda Singh Bahadur for more details on the
atrocities meted to the Sikhs in the procession.
24 Irvine, Later Mughals, Vol 1, p. 318.
25 Harisi, Ibrat Namah, 52b–53a, quoted in Ganda Singh, Life of Banda
Singh Bahadur, pp. 220–21.
26 Ganda Singh, Life of Banda Singh Bahadur, p. 293.
27 Irvine, Later Mughals, Vol. 1, pp. 317–18.
28 Ibid. p. 319.
29 Ganda Singh, Life of Banda Singh Bahadur, pp. 233–35 and Irvine,
Later Mughals, Vol 1, p. 319.
Martanda Varma of Travancore
The year was 1750 CE. After a string of grand military successes, Maharaja
Martanda Varma took a bold decision to dedicate the entire kingdom to the
tutelary deity of the royal house, Sri Padmanabhaswamy. In January of that
year, on an auspicious occasion when the sun changes its direction
northwards, the maharaja, accompanied by his heir apparent and all the
other members of the royal family visited the magnificent Sri
Padmanabhaswamy Temple. The hoary temple and its deity had been
central to the political, social, cultural and religious life of the kingdom
since long. He laid his state sword before the family god, and through a
holy ablution made over all his existing and newly conquered territories to
the deity. From that day onwards, it was Sri Padmanabhaswamy, reclining
in divine glory over his multi-hooded Shesha snake, who would be the ruler
of the kingdom. He assumed the management of the state as the vassal of
the deity, merely officiating on behalf of the divine power. And so it was
that from then on, he and every successive king of his lineage were to
assume the humble title of Sri Padmanabha Dasa or a slave of the God.
They carried out the affairs of state in His holy name; all the riches
belonged to Him and the rulers were merely the custodians and trustees of
the wealth and kingdom. This act of Martanda Varma had a very benign
influence on the people, too, who began to regard the kingdom as belonging
to their favourite God and viewed the king as His mere representative. None
of them would now dare to speak ill of their sovereign as that would be an
insult of His master, the deity. For a kingdom that was born amidst strife
and intrigue, what better political guarantee to its authority could its ruler
seek?
On the morning of 10th August, the battle of Colachel was commenced by the Travancore
line. The Munchees surrounded the Dutch ship, anchored in the Colachel roads, and
watched the landing of men and arms to assist the Dutch detachment then engaged in the
battle. Rama Iyen Dalawah’s army charged the Dutch line, which was drawn up in
fighting order against the Travancoreans. The Dutch line was broken through, the officers
and men were driven from their positions and the whole force thrown into confusion and
disorder. The Dutch having no cavalry, of which the Maha Rajah’s force formed the
largest portion, were placed in the greatest peril and after suffering much, they effected a
precipitate retreat to the fort, leaving behind them several of their comrades dead,
wounded and prisoners … the siege of the Colachel fort took place. In the course of a
few hours, the fort was taken and the enemy driven to their ships, which sailed to
Cochin.7
This was a landmark war and a historic victory that an Indian force had
registered so convincingly against a European power. Such was the blow
that was dealt on the Dutch that their power collapsed thereafter, and they
simply could not establish themselves in India and Kerala after that. Their
dreams of colonizing India, too, were completely shattered and they just
could not recover after this. They did try to align with the Kollam state and
other rival kingdoms of Travancore, but each time were thoroughly
defeated by Martanda Varma and Rama Iyen, further adding to their
decline.
The Dutch prisoners were treated very kindly by Travancore, and they
decided to stay on in the service of the maharaja. Among them, both De
Lannoy and Danodi were appointed by the maharaja to high military offices
within the state with the objective of modernizing the Travancore army and
navy. De Lannoy came to be fondly known in Travancore as the Valia
Kappithan or the Great Captain. He helped in creating a special regiment of
sepoys within the Travancore army that became famous for its heroic
achievements in times to come. He was made Captain and entrusted the task
of constructing forts and the organization of magazines and arsenals. He
remodelled the Travancore army on European lines, training them in
artillery and weaponry and giving it a smart and efficient new look. De
Lannoy was later given the Udayagiri Fort, near Padmanabhapuram, as his
residence as he was indispensable for the army. The Travancore army was
strong enough in future decades to resist the expansionist attempts in the
Malabar by the rulers of Mysore—Haidar Ali and his son Tipu Sultan.
Though the Battle of Colachel was fought in 1741 CE, peace with the
Dutch was sanctioned by the Batavian Government only by 18 October
1748 and ratified in 1753 CE.
Shortly after the Battle of Colachel, Martanda Varma notched up several
other victories in the major spice-rich regions such as Kollam, Kayamkulam
and Purakkad thereby inflicting further losses, both military and financial,
on the Dutch.
A Victory Column stands at Colachel, erected later by the Travancore
state to mark this triumph with these words engraved on it: ‘In
remembrance of all the brave men of Travancore Army who laid down their
lives in defeating the superior Dutch forces during the Battle of Colachel in
1741.’
Later Conflicts
Martanda Varma also managed to annex Thekkumkur, Vadakkumkur,
Ambalapuzha and Meenachil towards the north of Kerala, bordering Cohin.
The anxious Cochin raja and a few other chieftains got together to put up a
defence against Travancore, but the campaign went against them. Cochin
agreed to pay an indemnity of 25,000 rupees as per a treaty that it signed
with Travancore in 1753 CE. It was agreed that all the pepper in Cochin—
excepting 500 candies—must be given up to Travancore, and the rights over
the important temples of Tiruvalla and Haripad should be surrendered to
Travancore. The treaty however was not ratified, and Cochin began to rise
in rebellion with a few other chiefs. To put Cochin in its place, Martanda
Varma however committed an imprudent act, one that Malabar was to pay a
heavy price for in future time. He invited the supreme dictator or
Sarvadhikari of Mysore Haidar Ali, who had all but taken over the
administration of the kingdom from the titular Hindu ruler, the Wodeyars.
Haidar’s assistance once sought could not be easily shaken off. He wrote to
Martanda Varma that he was ready to march on the disaffected people of
Travancore, but as the rebellion had quietened down the Maharaja declined
Haidar’s assistance—quite like what he did with the French. But Haidar
was no Dupleix and demanded compensation and deemed the maharaja’s
excuses as being specious. The future attacks of Haidar’s son Tipu Sultan
on Travancore and the consequent disasters stemmed from here.
This brave ruler passed away in 1758 CE after a brief illness. He is said
to have called his heir apparent over to his deathbed and given him the
following instructions:
Notes
1 For more details on these palace intrigues, see P. Shungoonny Menon, A
History of Travancore from the Earliest Times (New Delhi: Gyan
Publishing House, 2020).
2 Ibid., pp. 123–25.
3 K.M. Panikkar, Malabar and the Dutch: Being the History of the Fall of
the Nayar Power in Malabar (Bombay: D.B. Taraporevala Sons & Co.,
1931), p. 62.
4 This was the principality that comprised the modern taluqs of Shencottah,
Valliyur, Kottarakara, Pattnapurom and Nedumangad
5 V. Nagam Aiya, The Travancore State Manual, Vol. 1 (Trivandrum:
Travancore Government Press, 1906), p. 341.
6 Ibid., p. 342.
7 P. Shungoonny Menon, A History of Travancore from the Earliest Times
(New Delhi: Gyan Publishing House, 2020), pp. 135–36.
8 Panikkar, Malabar and the Dutch, p. 81.
9 Aiya, The Travancore State Manual, Vol. 1, pp. 348–49.
10 Menon, History of Travancore from the Earliest Times, pp. 174–75.
Devi Ahilya Bai Holkar of Indore
S
cottish poet and dramatist Joanna Baillie was enamoured by the
magnetic and saintly personality of an early modern Maratha queen
from India of the eighteenth century. In glowing terms, she praised her
thus:
For thirty years her reign of peace,
Even to this day, everywhere one goes to in the city of Indore that she
nursed with maternal concern, one encounters the smiling and angelic
visage of ‘Punyashlok’ Maa Saheb Devi Ahilya Bai Holkar, lovingly
holding her favourite god Lord Shiva in her hand and exuding a beatific,
radiant aura. She was everyone’s mother first, queen later. The golden era
and a civilizational revival that she ushered in are part of folklore, centuries
after her death.
The Marathas were devastated at the Battle of Panipat, death tolls mounted
in the lakhs, and they were pushed back to the south of the Narmada River.
Malhar Rao’s domains that were to the north of the Narmada became the
seat of conflict, with the Jats, Sikhs and Bundelas often converging there for
conflicts. The deaths of Sadashiv Rao and the peshwa’s son Vishwas Rao in
the battle, and the massive loss at Panipat jolted the Marathas and the
peshwa, who too died shortly, mourning the grief of the horrific loss. The
peshwa’s second son Madhav Rao was made the new peshwa and he
viewed Malhar Rao with contempt and suspicion for the latter’s conduct
during the battle. But Malhar Rao soon regained his master’s confidence by
his gallantry at Rakshasbhawan where he guided the Marathas to victory.
He then became a part of several of Madhav Rao’s campaigns, including
those against Haidar Ali of Mysore. Incessant fighting and expeditions tired
Malhar Rao, who was now ageing. On his deathbed, he managed to extract
the promise from Mahadji Scindia of Gwalior, who was at that time one the
most powerful Maratha sardars, that after his death, Scindia would protect
the Holkar family and Ahilya Bai. Mahadji kept his word all his life and
remained a trustworthy ally of the Holkars.8 Malhar Rao, the man who had
risen from penniless dependence to the head of a royal house, finally
breathed his last on 20 May 1766 at the age of seventy-six. He had been a
commander of repute for more than forty years of his life, in the later part
of which he was one of the most distinguished amongst the Maratha
confederacy.
Succession Woes
After Malhar Rao’s death, Ahilya Bai’s son Male Rao was invested by the
peshwa as the subedar. But unfortunately for Ahilya Bai, Male Rao was
mentally infirm and this caused her great consternation. Sir John Malcolm
elaborates this:
He had always been considered of weak and unsettled intellect, but no symptom of
positive insanity had appeared before he came to the head of the government, when every
action displayed it. His conduct was at first more marked by extremes of folly than of
guilt. The life of his mother was devoted to acts of charity and benevolence, and she was
particularly kind to Brahmins. This tribe became objects of Mallee Row’s [Male Rao]
malicious ridicule. It was a common usage with him to place scorpions in clothes and
slippers that he gave them [Brahmins]; he also put these venomous reptiles in pots filled
with rupees, which he invited the holy mendicants to take; and when their eager cupidity
caused them to be stung, his joy was so excessive, as the grief of the pious Ahalya Baee,
who used to lament aloud her hard destiny, in having a perfect demon born to her as a
son.9
Within a year of coming to power, Male Rao died at the age of twenty-two.
Malcolm states the insinuations that surrounded Indore was that Ahilya Bai
perhaps accentuated the ‘death of her own offspring’,10 but he thoroughly
and completely rejects these rumours as baseless. In a fit of rage, Male Rao
had killed an embroiderer who he believed had an intimate relationship with
a female attendant whom he fancied. This liaison was later proved to be
false and the remorse of his own crime against an innocent man is said to
have taken Male Rao to extremes of hysteria. There were all kinds of wild
talks that the spirit of the murdered man had occupied Male Rao to seek
revenge. Poor Ahilya Bai sat for days and night on end by the bedside of
her afflicted son, in chants and prayers and supposed communions with the
aggrieved soul, seeking its pardon and redemption. She even offered to
build a shrine for the deceased and settle some estates upon his family, if
only the spirit would leave her son, but none of these worked and he
eventually died.
The issue of succession came up after his untimely demise. Diwan
Gangadhar Yashwant Chandrachur advised her to adopt some male child of
a distant relative as an heir, so as to also confirm his own authority as
minister. But he realized to his horror that Ahilya Bai had no such intention
and she intended to carry on the affairs of the state as its ruler. Diwan
Chandrachur wrote to Raghunath Rao (Raghoba), the uncle of the peshwa
and the de facto regent, to annex Malwa for this intemperance of the queen
and promised Raghoba a substantial gift in return. Raghoba was known to
be avaricious and was delighted to hear of this instability in Indore that he
could use to his advantage. He decided to attack Indore with 50,000 troops
and camped near Ujjain, on the banks of the Shipra River.
Ahilya Bai decided to fight back on multiple fronts. She sent emissaries
to all the Maratha sardars—Scindias, Dabhades, Bhonsales, Pawars and
Gaikwads—reminding them of the immense favours bestowed upon them
by her deceased father-in-law and the bonhomie that existed among them.
She wrote to Peshwa Madhav Rao explaining that it was her due right to
decide who would rule after her son’s death. Malhar Rao’s deputy in war, a
young man Tukoji Holkar, who was just a couple of years older than Ahilya
Bai, was someone who was brought up as a member of the family, though
he was not related. Ahilya Bai called upon Tukoji, too, for his support, even
as she tactfully packed off the venal diwan on a pilgrimage. She then sent a
letter to Raghoba urging him not to make war on a woman, from which he
might incur disgrace, but could never derive any honour. To show Raghoba
as an oppressor of women and widows, she created a contingent of some
500 women, gave them elementary training in warfare and sat them on
horses. She herself got her favourite elephant readied for a combat, with
quivers of arrows placed on all four corners of the howdah, declaring her
intent to lead the battle with an army fully composed of women.
Raghoba had not expected this kind of pushback from a woman whom
he assumed would meekly surrender to the peshwa might. Other Maratha
commanders including Mahadji Shinde, too, were putting pressure on
Raghoba to withdraw and not cause further disgrace by attacking a noble
lady from amongst them. Finally, a letter from the peshwa to his uncle to
desist from all attempts against the respectful lady, sealed the deal in Ahilya
Bai’s favour. She had demonstrated that despite her image of being a
virtuous lady, she was no pushover and could stand up to oppression when
the need arose. To save his face in the wake of such widespread opposition
to his foolhardiness, Raghoba sent a message to Ahilya Bai through Tukoji
that he had not come there with the intention of war but to merely convey
his condolences on her son’s death. He was asked to leave his troops behind
and was warmly welcomed and hosted at Indore for a week, before he
meekly retreated to Poona.
It was perhaps one of those rare occasions when Ahilya Bai had let go of
her characteristic poise and composure and actually lost all self-control in
full public glare. She became a recluse thereafter and the grief seemed to
slowly seep into her vitals. She did not live long after this. She subjected
herself to innumerable fasts and prayers that further sapped her vitality.
Five years later, in 1795 CE, at the age of seventy, Devi Ahilya Bai Holkar,
a mother for all her subjects of Indore state, breathed her last. Since she had
no blood heirs, Tukoji took over the kingdom and ruled for another two
years, and after his death his successors became the rulers of Indore.
Neither did she appreciate flattery, nor could she take an unwarranted
unkind comment. Once a Brahmin had attempted to write her biography
and offered to read it out to her. She patiently heard the narration, including
the high praise that was inherent in the hagiographical narrative. At one
point where the text inadvertently mentioned that ‘she was a weak sinful
woman, and not deserving such fine encomiums’, she had the book seized
and thrown into the Narmada, though no punishment awaited its author.22
Paying the perfect tribute to Devi Ahilya Bai Holkar, theosophist and
women’s rights activist Annie Besant summed up her legacy thus:
This great ruler in Indore encouraged all within her realm to do their best, merchants
produced their finest clothes, trade flourished, the farmers were at peace and oppression
ceased, for each case that came to the queen’s notice was dealt with severely. She loved
to see her people prosper, and to watch the fine cities grow, and to watch that her subjects
were not afraid to display their wealth, lest the ruler should snatch it from them. Far and
wide the roads were planted with shady trees, and wells were made, and rest-houses for
travellers. The poor, the homeless, the orphaned were all helped according to their needs.
The Bhils who had long been the torment of all caravans were routed from their
mountain fastnesses and persuaded to settle down as honest farmers. Hindu and
Musalman alike revered the famous Queen and prayed for her long life. Her last great
sorrow was when her daughter became a Sati upon the death of Yashwantrao Phanse.
Ahalya Bai was seventy years old when her long and splendid life closed. Indore long
mourned its noble Queen, happy had been her reign, and her memory is cherished with
deep reverence unto this day.23
Notes
1 Joanna Baillie, English Poem (1849).
https://www.webnovel.com/book/the-maharani-ahilyabai-
holkar_20309005606244905/an-english-poem-written-by-joanna-baillie-
in-1849-reads_54519571641588394
2 Muntazim Bahadur Mukund Wamanrao Burway, Life of Subhedar Malhar
Rao Holkar, Founder of the Indore State (1693–1766 A.D.) (Indore:
Holkar State Printing Press, 1930), pp. 1–2.
3 N.N. Nagrale, ‘Ahilyabai and Her Benevolent Administration’, in
Proceedings of the Indian History Congress, 40 (1979), pp. 700–06.
4 Archana Garodia Gupta, The Women Who Ruled India: Leaders,
Warriors, Icons. (Gurugram: Hachette India, 2019), p. 193.
5 Major General Sir John Malcolm, A Memoir of Central India including
Malwa and Adjoining Provinces: With the History, and Copious
Illustrations of the Past and Present Condition of That Country, Vol.1
(London: Kingsbury, Parbury & Allen, 1824), p. 150.
6 Ibid., p. 195.
7 Malcolm, A Memoir of Central India, Vol. 1, pp. 153–54.
8 Gupta, The Women Who Ruled India, p. 196.
9 Malcolm, A Memoir of Central India, Vol. 1, p. 157–58.
10 Ibid., p. 159.
11 Ibid., p. 177.
12 Gupta, The Women Who Ruled India, p. 201.
13 Somnath (Gujarat), Mallikarjuna (Srirsailam, Andhra), Mahaakaal
(Ujjain), Omkareshwar (Omkar, MP), Kedarnath (Himalayas),
Bhimashankar (Khed), Vishweshwar (Kashi), Tryambakeshwar (Nasik),
Vaidyanath (Beed), Nagesh (Darukavan, Maharashtra), Rameshwaram
(Tamil Nadu) and Grushneshwar (Verul, Maharashtra)
14 Badrinath (north), Dwarka (west), Rameshwaram (south) and Puri
Jagannath (east).
15 Ayodhya, Mathura, Kashi, Haridwar (Maya), Kanchipuram, Ujjain
(Avantika) and Dwarka as stated in the Garuda Purana: Ayodhya Mathura
Maya Kashi Kanchi Avantika Puri Dwaraavati chaiva saptaita Moksha
daayika.
16 Meenakshi Jain, Flight of Deities and Rebirth of Temples: Episodes from
Indian History (New Delhi: Aryan Books International, 2019), p. 93.
17 Ibid. See this book for more details of the iconoclasm that Kashi
suffered under Aurangzeb.
18 Gupta, The Women Who Ruled India, p. 202.
19 John Keay, India: A History (New York: Grove Press, 2000), p. 425.
20 Malcolm, A Memoir of Central India, Vol. 1, pp. 190–91.
21 Ibid., pp. 192–95.
22 Ibid.
23 Annie Besant, Children of the Motherland (Banaras: Central Hindu
College, 1906), pp. 290–91.
Rajarshi Bhagyachandra Jai Singh
of Manipur
H
is favourite deity Lord Krishna appeared to him in his dream in a
vision and directed him to go back to his kingdom and search for the
divine presence, which would be found in a theibong (jackfruit) tree
at the Kaina Hill. ‘Make an idol for me,’ he was guided in that vision, ‘and
celebrate my arrival through song and dance.’ Upon waking up, he had a
clear memory of what he was directed to in his dream. Summoning his
learned assistant, Pandit Gopiram Singh Patchahanba, he narrated
everything that he was told to execute. The learned Patchahanba ably
recreated the vision that his master had seen in his dream into a beautiful
idol, which came to be known as Shri Govindaji. The song and dance
celebration that he was guided to create in the divine honour was to become
the embodiment of Manipur’s culture and tradition, the Raas. The dance
and its mellifluous music are considered as the highest spiritual expression
of worshipping Krishna in the performing arts of the country. And for this
unique benediction and fortune that accrued to him of being able to see the
Lord Himself in his dream, the king of Manipur, Jai Singh, came to be
known as Bhagyachandra—the lucky one.
Notes
1 Jyotirmoy Roy, History of Manipur (Calcutta: East Light Book House,
1958), p. 31.
2 Ibid.
3 Ibid., p. 35.
4 Ibid., pp. 38–42, for more details on the spread of Vaishnavism in
Manipur.
5 This event is supposed to have occurred in c. 1763 CE and is recorded in
detail in a Bengali book titled Gouranga Sundar, as well as in Shri
Govinda Nirupan, by Rajkumar Sanahal Singh, Jai Singh’s son. Also see,
Ch. Mainhar Singh, A History of Manipuri Literature (New Delhi:
Sahitya Akademi, 1996), p. 157.
6 Roy, History of Manipur, p. 46. Also see R.K. Jhalajit Singh, A Short
History of Manipur (Imphal: n.p., 1992), pp. 176–78, for wars with
Burma.
7 For more details about the temples, see Laishram Hemantakumari Devi,
‘Maharaas: Sri Sri Govindaji Temple and Other Local Temples of
Manipur’ in International Journal of Research -Granthaalayah, 9 (2),
2021, pp. 299–308.
8 Aheibam Koireng Singh et al., eds., Rajarshi Bhagyachandra and the
Bhakti Movement in Eastern Indian Literature (Gurgaon: Shubhi
Publications, 2000), p. 2. Also see, Soyam Lokendrajit, ‘An Artist’s
Response to Contemporary Reality: A Case of Two Directors’ in Seagull
Theatre Quarterly, 14.5 (June/September 1999), p. 6.
9 Haobam Ibochaoba, The Pre-World War II: Form of Ras Leela (Imphal:
Haobam Ongbi Shantibala Devi, 2009), p. 8.
10 L. Bishwanath Sharma, ‘Rajarshi Bhagyachandra: The Harbinger of
Manipuri Renaissance’ in Aheibam Koireng Singh et al., eds., Rajarshi
Bhagyachandra, p. 44.
11 Ibid., p. 42.
12 Roy, History of Manipur, p. 53.
13 Sharma, ‘Rajarshi Bhagyachandra’, p. 42.
14 N. Tombi Singh, Manipur and the Mainstream (Imphal:
Chitrebirentombich and Khorjeirup, 1975), p. 6.
Velu Nachiyar of Sivaganga
I
t was the festival that culminated the nine-days of celebration of the
Divine Feminine. On the tenth day of Vijayadashami, the victory of
good over evil was celebrated all over the country with pomp and gaiety.
The Goddess Rajarajeshwari Temple located within the palace compound of
Sivaganga was bedecked for the occasion. Fragrant flower garlands,
auspicious plantain and mango leaves, festoons and drapes made the
occasion more festive. As per the local tradition, since it was an occasion to
celebrate the goddess, the temple had allowed exclusive access only to
women devotees on that day. Thousands of women, decked in their finest
garments, vermilion and turmeric, and jewellery thronged the temple in
long, serpentine queues. Little did anyone know that among these
seemingly innocent devotees were a large group of female military
commandos, masquerading as common women. Even as the prayers and
chants inside the temple sanctorum were gaining in crescendo, a huge,
earth-shattering explosion was heard from within the palace. As if on cue,
the women in the group pulled out their hidden weapons from within their
garments with loud war cries of ‘Vetrivel, Veeravel!’ (Victorious Vel!
Courageous Vel!) The vel was the divine spear used by the God Murugan or
Karthikeya and an exhortation to this victorious and courageous spear
seemed appropriate on this occasion. Along with this cry, the women
brigade hailed their leader who had inspired them on this path, the
courageous Queen of Sivaganga ‘Veeramangai’ Velu Nachiyar—the Joan of
Arc of India and the first queen to raise a revolt against the British.
Early Years
It was in the Ramnad royal house that a girl, named Velu Nachiyar, was
born on 3 January 1730 to its chieftain Chellamuthu Vijayaraghunatha
Sethupathy and Sakandhi Muthathal Nachiyar. She was the only child of
her parents and in the absence of a male heir, Chellamuthu brought up his
daughter like a prince. She was taught the art of warfare, horse riding,
sword fencing and archery, as also martial arts such as the Valari (a kind of
boomerang) and Silambam, which involved fighting with bamboo sticks.
The Thevar (Tamil for God) community that she belonged to was a warrior
class and specialized in numerous such combative skills.2 The Thevars
claimed descent from a line of ‘Sethupathis’ tasked with protecting Lord
Rama’s sethu or bridge to Lanka. The chieftains of Sivaganga and Ramnad
were Maravars (within the Thevar community), and they were served by
other Thevar clans like the Agamudaiyars, who, along with the Maravars
and the Kallars, form the larger community of Mukkulathor. But
Chellamuthu also ensured that his daughter Velu was given the best of
education and the little girl was fluent in several languages including Urdu,
English and French—a rare feat for a woman of her times.
When Velu turned sixteen, she was married to Prince Muthu
Vaduganatha Periya Oodaya Thevar, the son of Sasivarna, the chieftain of
Sivaganga. After Sasivarna’s death in 1740 CE, Muthu Vaduganatha
became the king of Sivaganga and Velu Nachiyar, its queen. The couple had
a daughter, Vellachi, born after several decades of marriage.
Tumultuous Deccan
Muthu Vaduganatha’s ascent to the throne coincided with the most
tumultuous era in Deccan history. The conflicts between the English and the
French manifested itself in the two-decade long Carnatic wars that drew
within its ambit several local players and kingdoms—the Nawab of Arcot,
the kingdom of Mysore, the Nizam of Hyderabad, the Marathas and the
rajas of the Malabar coast. Claims and counterclaims of succession among
the various feuding kingdoms and protagonists were amply exploited by the
Europeans to their advantage as witnessed during the Carnatic Wars in the
Deccan.
Shortly around the time of the conclusion of the Carnatic wars, by 1761
CE, the kingdom of Mysore was rocked by a huge usurpation. Haidar Ali, a
hitherto adherent of the Wodeyar Maharaja, appropriated the throne as the
supreme dictator in the wake of weak and ineffective rulers. Haidar Ali
came head-on against the English who had charted a series of successes in
the Carnatic wars, as also in distant Bengal—in the Battle of Plassey (1757
CE). The East India Company was able to enforce the cultivation of opium
in sufficient quantities in India and procure enough tea for the British
market, reaping in significant profits. Mysore, under Haidar Ali, was
emerging as the biggest menace for the expanding power of the English,
leading to a series of four long-drawn wars between the two—called the
Anglo–Mysore Wars—that lasted for nearly eighteen years. By 1769 CE,
Haidar was literally at the gates of Madras, the stronghold of the English,
forcing them into a submissive treaty. This first Anglo–Mysore war crushed
the myth of British infallibility and made Haidar a hero for all anti-English
forces.
The fallout of the defeat of the English in this war was felt on those
principalities that were dependent on them. Given their increasing
insecurity, they tried hard to consolidate their positions and punish any
errant vassals. With Mohammad Ali Khan Wallajah (1717–1795)—the
Nawab of Arcot—and the Tondaiman ruler of Pudukkottai allying with the
British, many of the seventy-two poligars sought to retain their autonomy
by rebelling against oppressive taxation. Haidar Ali became their beacon of
hope against English hegemony. Sivaganga was one such proud inheritor of
the nayaka heritage that refused to kow-tow to the arbitrary taxes that Arcot
and their overlords, the British, had imposed on them. The nawab
complained to the British headquarters, the Madras Council, about this
dereliction, and added that his feudatory, the ruler of Sivaganga, had
illegitimately ascended the throne and had evaded paying him taxes to the
tune of one lakh rupees. Not willing to take any more lapses in the Deccan,
the English forces were swift to subjugate any deviants. A British invasion
of Sivaganga occurred on 25 June 1772 under Colonel Joseph Smith and
Major Abraham Bonjour. This was a surprise attack that took Muthu
Vaduganatha by complete shock. Though they had anticipated an attack and
the wise minister Thandavaraya Pillai had instructed Muthu Vaduganatha to
retreat to the densely forested Kaliyarkovil, they did not expect the British
to trace them down in this cocooned village.
Regaining Sivaganga
After the Treaty of Madras (1769 CE) that concluded the first Anglo–
Mysore War, the relationship between Haidar Ali and the British worsened.
Internationally, the situation was getting tough for the British. The
American War of Independence broke out in 1775 CE, and soon France,
Spain and the Netherlands were all up in arms against Britain. The British
forces had recovered from a shameful debacle in the Maratha war. The
strain of the American war reduced the possibility of reinforcements in
India; British sea power was severely constrained, and it gave the French a
chance of recovery. The French declared their war against the British in
1778 CE, and Haidar Ali, who had remained a trusted ally of the French,
threw in his lot to fight what came to be known as the Second Anglo–
Mysore War. Mysore, allied with the French, also convinced the Nizam and
the Marathas to jointly invade the Carnatic in July 1780, descending on the
territories of the British dependent—the Nawab of Arcot—on the east coast
with about 80,000 soldiers. The outbreak of the Second Anglo–Mysore War
came as a golden opportunity for Velu Nachiyar and her army, who had
now spent eight long years in exile and military preparation, to strike at her
enemy when they were already preoccupied in a bigger combat.
The opportunity presented itself during the most auspicious occasion—
the festival of Vijayadashami. Velu Nachiyar along with her army of
women warriors and the Marudhu brothers reached the outskirts of
Sivaganga just on the eve of the festival. They noticed that the town was so
well-guarded and fortified that it would have been difficult to breach it. On
the day of the festival, it was a common practice for women to gather in
large numbers at the local temple of Goddess Rajarajeshwari that was close
to the palace. Velu and her women corps concealed their weapons and
disguising themselves as common devotees who had gone to offer worship
on the festive occasion thronged the temple. Even as they were busy
infiltrating the temple, Kuyili managed to slip through into the palace
complex and noticed the huge ammunition store of the British that would
invariably be used against her queen and her adherents. She came up with
the most brave and ingenuous method to counter this. Dousing herself with
oil from the burning lamps in the palace, she set herself on fire and charged
inside the ammunition store, blowing it all up in a huge explosion. The
entire palace complex caught fire and was gutted. Kuyili went down in
history as probably the first human bomb who caused such destruction.
Almost simultaneously, the women army in the temple pulled out their
hidden swords and pounced on the soldiers, with the Tamil battle cry of
‘Vetrivel, Veeravel’. The temple bells were all rung vigorously to marshal
the troops to take control of the fortress and the burning palace and the flag
of the dynasty with the insignia of Hanuman went up atop the ramparts.
Sivaganga had been recaptured in the most dramatic manner.
After regaining her principality, Velu Nachiyar honoured the memory of
Udaiyal who had given up her life for the queen by enshrining her in a
temple at Ariyakuruchi village that was about 13 km from Sivaganga,
representing her as Goddess Kali. She donated her mangalsutra (her sacred
matrimonial chain) to the temple.5
Meanwhile in the midst of the Second Anglo–Mysore War, Haidar Ali
died in 1782 CE, and his son Tipu Sultan continued the war that eventually
ended with the Treaty of Mangalore two years later. It is an important
document in the history of India, perhaps the last occasion when an Indian
power dictated terms to the English, who were the humble supplicants for
peace. Warren Hastings, the British Governor General, called it a
humiliating pacification and appealed to the monarch and the British
Parliament to suitably punish the Madras Government for violating the
British nation’s faith and honour.6 This shameful submission demoralized
not only the British but also their subordinate, the Nawab of Arcot. Taking
advantage of her enemy’s weakness, Velu Nachiyar managed to extract a
negotiation with the Nawab to allow her to retain Sivaganga on the payment
of an annual tribute. He agreed as his focus was completely diverted
towards the Mysore forces. Velu Nachiyar began to rule Sivaganga on
behalf of her daughter Vellachi Nachiyar. She made Periya Marudhu the
commander of the army and Chinna Marudhu, her chief minister. The
Marudhus also extended their support to another legendary heroic character
Veerapandiya Kattabomman (r. 1760–1799 CE), a poligar of
Panjalamkurichi, who raised the bugle of revolt against the British.
Uneasy Calm
Despite being in power, Velu Nachiyar had to constantly face incursions
from neighbouring states like Pudukottai and also her own relatives in
Ramnad, in addition to occasional trouble that the Arcot forces kept giving
her principality. Matters came to a pass for Velu Nachiyar when the
relationship began to sour between her and her trusted commanders, the
Marudhu brothers. The reason for this parting of ways was rather innocuous
—the question of who would wed the princess Vellachi. The chieftain of
Ramnad was keen on marrying Vellachi and thereby uniting the two
principalities. But Vellachi was adamant against this, and an angered
chieftain kept raiding the borders of Sivaganga and instigating hostilities.
Velu wanted her daughter to wed a relative of her late husband, Gowri
Vallabha Thevar and install him as her successor to the throne of Sivaganga.
The Marudhu brothers, who should have ideally kept away from the
personal decision of the royal family, insisted that the princess wed one
Vengam Periya Udaya Thevar. They imprisoned Gowri Vallabha in the
Kalaiyarkovil temple, though he managed to escape from there with the
help of Karuppayee, a devadasi (a temple courtesan), and took refuge under
the Pudukottai chieftain, Vijaya Raghunatha Tondaiman. Vellachi was
eventually married off to the choice of the Marudhus, Vengam Periya
Udaya Thevar. This caused much heartburn between them and Velu
Nachiyar.
Things came to such a head by 1789 CE that Velu was constrained to
even seek the support and intervention of her archrivals the Nawab of Arcot
and the British to tame the Marudhus. On 29 April 1789, troops under
British Colonel James Stuart, along with forces from Pudukottai, Madura,
Tanjore and Tiruchirapalli, confronted the Marudhus, who initially lost a
few battles. The French general of the Marudhus, Du Pre, abandoned them
and moved over to Tipu Sultan and that caused further defeats to the
already battered brothers. Beyond a point, the British did not want to
precipitate the war and let Tipu Sultan enter the fray or establish his control
over Sivaganga. So, they quickly sued for peace with Vengam Periya Udaya
Thevar, who decided to suspend hostilities and announced Vellachi as the
official ruler of Sivaganga in 1790 CE. Velu was thus abandoned midway,
and she realized that she had lost control over the affairs of state.
Even as she was nearing sixty, all the travails of exile and war had taken
a toll on her health, and she had developed a cardiac problem. She decided
to relinquish her kingdom to her daughter, and in 1791 CE, she set sail to
France for medical treatment. France was at that time in the peak of the
revolution that brought about radical political and societal changes in the
country. One wonders what soaking in into all those experiences of
cataclysmic changes that she was witnessing around her meant for Velu
Nachiyar while she was in France and whether she managed to meet any of
the revolutionaries, given her fiery spirit. After two years, she returned to
Sivaganga, only to realize that her beloved daughter Vellachi had died in
childbirth and her husband had now wedded one of the daughters of the
Marudhu brothers, who now seemed completely in control of the polity.
Realizing that she had hardly any role to play and being disillusioned with
everything, Velu Nachiyar retired once again to the fort of Virupakshi
where she had hidden once. It was here that she died on 25 December 1796
under somewhat mysterious circumstances.
It took the British a long time to subjugate the rebellions of the Poligars, but
eventually their military might prevailed. Kattabomman was hanged on 16
October 1799, the Marudhu brothers were publicly executed on 24 October
1801 along with their sons and grandsons. A raging Chinna Marudhu was
apparently carried chained in a cage, to his hanging.
The spark of these heroisms that Tamil Nadu witnessed in one of the
earliest anti-colonial struggles was lit by the indomitable Velu Nachiyar. In
recognition of her valour, a commemorative stamp was issued in December
2008, and in 2014 the government of Tamil Nadu inaugurated the Velu
Nachiyar Memorial at Sivaganga. The same year, a memorial
commemorating Kuyili’s bravery was also constructed at Sivaganga by the
Tamil Nadu government. Due to her indomitable courage and bravery, the
queen is fondly referred to as ‘Veeramangai’ or the ‘brave woman’.
While bravehearts like Velu Nachiyar or the Marudhu brothers may
have been eclipsed in our historiography, their heroism lives on in ballads,
folk songs and folk memory, even as they are immortalized and worshipped
as gods in temples built for them by villagers. Where popular
historiography failed them, folk memory redeemed this lapse and kept them
alive till date.
Notes
1 For more details on the Palayakarar system, see S. Rajagopal, ‘Formation
of Palayakarar System by Visvanatha Nayaka (1530–1564): A Study’ in
Pramana Research Journal, 9.6 (2019), pp. 269–81.
2 The Thevars are native to central and southern Tamil Nadu and comprise
the Agamudaiyar, Kallar and Maravar communities. They practice a
Tamil martial art known variously as Adi Murai, Chinna Adi and Varna
Ati.
3 For details on Velu Nachiyar’s exile and the support given by Haidar Ali,
see S. Vanajakumari and P. Vimala, ‘Arc-Veera Mangai Velunachiyar in
Antiquity India (1772–1780)’ in Shanlax International Journal of Arts,
Science & Humanities, 3.4 (April 2016), pp. 23– 30; A. Jekila & P.
Barathi, ‘Queen Velu Nachiyar: First Woman against British’, Infokara
Research, 9.3 (2020), pp. 891–97.
4 Pagoda was a measure of currency of the Vijayanagara Empire and
equalled Rs 3 ½ in value.
5 Archana Garodia Gupta, The Women Who Ruled India: Leaders,
Warriors, Icons, (Gurugram: Hachette India, 2019, p. 215.
6 Vikram Sampath, Splendours of Royal Mysore: The Untold Story of the
Wodeyars (New Delhi: Rupa & Co, 2008), p. 229.
7 Gupta, The Women Who Ruled India, p. 218–19.
Begum Hazrat Mahal of Awadh
W
ith the tumultuous events of the Great Uprising of 1857 being
quelled mercilessly by the English East India Company, India came
directly under the British Crown through a proclamation issued by
Empress Victoria on 1 November 1858. It was simultaneously translated
into all Indian languages and circulated among the princely states. A copy
of one such translation1 reached Begum Hazrat Mahal, Regent of the minor
prince Birjis Qadr, at the palace in Awadh. She was quite miffed by its
contents, which she believed reeked of gross hypocrisy and blatant lies.
Despite being in the thick of conflict while on exile, with the British in hot
pursuit of her, she decided to issue a counter-proclamation to that of the
Empress of England, which was termed as the ‘Begum’s Proclamation’ and
was widely circulated across Awadh and in the capital city Lucknow. It
provided a point-by-point rebuttal of all of Queen Victoria’s promises held
out in her proclamation. Among other things it said:
The proclamation of the 1st November 1858, which has come before us, is perfectly
clear; and as some foolish people, not understanding the real object of the proclamation,
have been carried away, there we, the ever-abiding government, parents of the people of
Oude, with great consideration, put forth the present proclamation, in order that the real
object of the chief points may be exposed, and our subjects placed on their guard … The
Company had seized on the whole of Hindoostan, and, if this arrangement be accepted,
what is there new in it … If our people were discontented with our royal predecessor,
Wajid Ali Shah, how comes it they are content with us? And no ruler ever experienced
such loyalty and devotion of life and goods as we have done. What then, is wanting that
they do not restore our country? … there is a well-known proverb—’A dying man is
desperate’ (Murta kya na kurta). It is impossible that a thousand should attach a million,
and the thousand escape … In the proclamation it is written that the Christian religion is
true, but that no other creed will suffer oppression, and that the laws will be observed
towards all. What has the administration of justice to do with the truth or falsehood of
religion? … the rebellion began with religion, and for it, millions of men have been
killed. Let not our subjects be deceived; thousands were deprived of their religion in the
North-West, and thousands were hanged rather than abandon their religion … we are
deeply concerned for the condition of our people on reading this proclamation, which
palpably teems with enmity. We now issue a distinct order, and one that may be trusted
that all subjects who may have foolishly presented themselves as heads of villages to the
English, shall, before the 1st of January next, present themselves, in our camp. Without
doubt their faults shall be forgiven then, and they shall be treated according to their
merits. To believe in this proclamation, it is only necessary to remember that
Hindoostanee rulers are altogether kind and merciful. Thousands have seen this; millions
have heard it. No one has ever seen in a dream that the English forgave an offence.2
The Early Life of Hazrat Mahal
The queen who was the central protagonist of Awadh’s uprising against
British rule hailed from extremely humble origins. Scattered details are all
that are extant about her early life. She was born as Muhammadi Khanum
to an African slave in Faizabad who was the bonded labourer of one
Ghulam Ali Khan. A significant number of African slaves, largely from
East Africa, had been traditionally imported into India by Arab slave traders
for several centuries. Over time, they became an integral part of Indian
society, and the nawabs of Awadh even had a Hubshiyan Pulton or Black
Platoon comprising African soldiers.3 The platoon even consisted of sturdy
African women, whom the British writers describe as ‘amazons’.
Muhammadi was possibly born in one such family of mixed African–Indian
lineage. At a very young age she was sold into the royal harem as a
khawasin or attendant. This stint gave her an opportunity to acquaint herself
with the ways and etiquette of royalty. Given her striking good looks,
intellect and creativity, young Muhammadi soon naturally found her way to
the royal Pari Khana or House of Fairies that Nawab of Awadh Wajid Ali
Shah (1822–1887) had established. This was an institution that was
intended to teach young and beautiful girls the arts of music, dance and
theatre, so that they could entertain the nawab as professional courtesans
later and also participate in his numerous experiments in art forms. All girls
who found a place in the Pari Khana had their names suffixed with ‘pari’ or
fairy and hence it was that Muhammadi too became Mehek Pari. Quite
quickly she caught the eyes of the nawab who began to fancy her beauty
and talent. As per the Shia form of Islamic marriages, he entered into a
mutah or contractual wedding with her, with the grand title of ‘Iftakar-un-
Nissa’ (Pride of all Women).4 The nawab had numerous such mutah wives
or concubines, and whichever one of them gave him a son was soon
elevated to the status of a ‘begum’ or official wife and granted a separate
mahal or palace in their honour. In 1845 CE, Muhammadi gave birth to
Wajid Ali Shah’s son, who was named Birjis Qadr. As destiny’s favoured
child, she had made her way from being the daughter of a bonded slave to a
courtesan to the nawab’s concubine to finally an ‘official’ wife of the ruler
of Awadh. She was rechristened as ‘Begum Hazrat Mahal’. She became the
apple of the eye of the already smitten nawab.
The nawab’s increasing attention that she began to command caused
great consternation in the royal household and bitter envy among the
nawab’s numerous other wives and concubines. Among her principal haters
was the nawab’s mother, Janab-i-Aliyyah, who despised this woman of
lowly descent occupying the portals of royalty. Hazrat Mahal’s fortunes
were short-lived as by 1850 CE, under increasing pressure of his mother,
the nawab gave talaq (divorce) to six such temporary wives that included
her.5 She was possibly stripped off her grand title and her estates, though
she continued to live on in Lucknow. Little did she or her haters know that
through a strange quirk of fate, she was going to be propelled back, right in
the midst of a huge political storm and a rebellion that would etch her name
forever in the annals of Indian history.
The maulvi made tall claims of invincibility and magical powers; he began
to issue proclamations assuming the airs and ceremonials of royalty and
even called upon the begum and her son to accept him as their king and
become his disciples. An enraged begum organized a force to cut his clout
and he was forced to flee Lucknow to take shelter at a garden house in the
suburbs. But the two joined hands later, relinquishing their differences,
though the association was seemingly fraught with intense mutual
suspicion. Saiyid Zaheer Husain Jafri states that ‘after reaching Bari, prince
Birjis Qadr had the honour of offering bay’at (spiritual allegiance) to Shah.
The arrangement put the entire management in the Shah’s hands; he forced
the officers of the begum to part with their wealth. This would have
certainly caused resentment. Therefore, when the Shah decided to make a
surprise attack on the Gorkha army of Nepal returning after much plunder,
his new allies ditched him. As a result, the mujahideens were left alone in
the assault.’15
Purging British Rule in Awadh
The rebels now focused their attention entirely towards the Residency
where the harried Europeans were held hostage. It was constantly
bombarded and surrounded by more than 35,000 sepoys and other retainers
of the taluqdars, under the orders of Queen Hazrat Mahal and her court.
About twenty to twenty-five superior-quality guns were stationed, directing
their fire at the Residency. The begum’s court quickly slipped into the
process of governance and administration. One part of the court oversaw
administration, payments and other details, while given the fluid situation,
another one focused entirely on military preparations. Even as the British
were making desperate attempts to send out relief to those holed inside,
common villagers, too, joined in to put a spirited resistance to the columns
headed to Lucknow from Kanpur under Henry Havelock and James
Outram. The begum directed attacks against Lt General James Outram nine
times and even contemptuously rejected his offer of a peace treaty with
Queen Victoria and the promise of a pension of one lakh rupees.
The rebels had created a strong fortification of men and material around
the Residency to prevent any relief from coming through. However, by 25
September 1857, the ‘First Relief of Lucknow’ managed to hoodwink the
rebels and reach the Residency, only to get trapped inside with their co-
nationalists. But by October 1857, even as the uprising in Delhi and other
neighbouring areas were being quelled successfully, the British attention
shifted to rescue Lucknow that had still managed to hold its fort strong
against them for this long.
Through the next couple of months, the begum’s army managed to hold
the siege that had begun on 30 May and lasted till 27 November 1857. More
than 50,000 fighting men were there to resist any British attempts to breach
the siege.16 British forces under Colin Campbell were rushing towards
Lucknow to liberate their compatriots. Campbell first attacked Sikandar
Bagh, a pleasure garden that had been built by Wajid Ali Shah and was now
occupied by three sepoy regiments. In a brutal pushback, the British
managed to assert their strength and almost all including another 2,000
rebels were killed on 16 November 1857 as retribution for the Kanpur
massacre.
Notably, when Campbell attacked Sikandar Bagh, he was faced with
several Dalit women who were part of the women’s regiment of Begum
Hazrat Mahal. Chief among these was the commander Uda Devi, who was
a heroic Dalit warrior of the Pasi community and confidante of the queen.
Known also as Jagrani, Uda Devi is supposed to have been born in
Lucknow’s Ujriaon village and was married to Makka Pasi. Her husband
had been martyred in the battle of Chinhat and Uda Devi was burning with
the rage of avenging his death. W. Gordon Alexander’s account of the
storming of Sikandar Bagh mentions how several ‘black women’—possibly
the African women soldiers—led a successful defence:
In addition … there were … even a few amazon-negresses, amongst the slain. These
amazons having no religious prejudices against the use of greased cartridges, whether of
pigs or other animal fat, although doubtless professed Muhammadans, were armed with
rifles, while the Hindu and Muhammadan East Indian rebels were all armed with musket;
they fought like wild cats, and it was not till after they were killed that their sex was
suspected.17
Uda Devi, their commander, climbed over a pipal tree and shot dead some
thirty-two to thirty-six British soldiers. Someone on the enemy side spotted
a silhouette in the tree and shot at it. The person fell down dead and only
then did the troops realize that she was a woman. Seeing her brave feat,
even British officers like Campbell supposedly bowed their heads
reverentially over her corpse.18
Campbell managed to completely evacuate the British residents who
were holed in for so many months as hostages. But given the strong
resistance from the begum’s army they fled Lucknow. Though he had
managed to kill so many rebel sepoys, Campbell’s actions were seen in
Lucknow as one of British fright that made them flee. Buoyed by this, the
rebel strength kept swelling and by January 1858 had become a 100,000-
strong force.
The speech produced the desired impact and stirred the rebels to continue
their fight. However, by March 1858, the tide slowly began to turn in favour
of the British, even as Campbell prepared to attack Lucknow. He was met
with fierce opposition all through the route to Lucknow and in the city, too,
with constant bombardments on the invaders. Eventually, about 3,000
rebels were killed and some eighty guns seized from their side. The rest of
the rebel army dispersed away into hinterland Awadh, as the British failed
to prevent a free pass. Lucknow, that had held on for the longest and
strongest time, had finally fallen to the British, but it was by no means an
easy accession for them. As Rudrangshu Mukherjee rightly notes: ‘The
British had annexed Awadh in 1856 without a shot being fired; in 1858 they
had to conquer it through a show of arms.’21 Lord Canning’s Proclamation,
popularly known as the Awadh Proclamation of March 1858, announced
that just six taluqdars were to be considered as the sole hereditary
proprietors of land that was in their possession during the annexation of
Awadh in 1856. These were the loyalists who had sided with the British and
hence got their rewards. This caused further consternation among the other
taluqdars who were already suffering dispossession under the clauses of the
Summary Settlements.
The begum meanwhile escaped to a fort across the Gogra with her army
and attendants. Maulvi Ahmadullah Shah declared himself as an
independent ruler on 15 March 1858 and continued his military campaigns
against the British in Rohilkhand before his eventual treacherous
assassination by the Raja of Pawayan, who was on the payroll of the
British. The raja even received a cash reward of 50,000 rupees for his
treachery from the British, who were relieved that the maulvi was finally
killed. 22
Hazrat Mahal was still active in the trans-Gogra region and was
conducting her courts and issuing proclamations as though nothing had
changed. She received support from the rajas of Gonda and Bahraich and
this entire belt remained out of British reach till late 1858 CE. Hazrat Mahal
also found support in Shrimant Nana Saheb Peshwa (1824–1859), who was
a close associate of another braveheart woman ruler of the times, Rani
Laxmibai of Jhansi. Nana Saheb’s father was an official in the court of
Peshwa Baji Rao II in Pune. The childless peshwa had been living on
British pension in Bithoor after the Third Anglo–Maratha War. He adopted
Nana as his successor before he died. However, invoking the Doctrine of
Lapse, the British refused to recognize the adoption and stopped the
pension to Nana Saheb, the legal heir of the peshwa. In retaliation, in June
1857, Nana Saheb decided to launch a massive anti-British battle. Nana also
created a group of sadhus to light the fire of revolution. He confabulated
with Mughal Emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar in Delhi on how to organize this
war that broke out on 10 May 1857 in Meerut. Nana declared the uprising
on 4 June 1857 and revolts picked up in Meerut, Bundelkhand and other
places. British rule was extinguished in Kanpur by Nana and his soldiers in
June 1857, and the British were mercilessly hacked. In July 1857, the
British under General Havelock were successful in recapturing Kanpur by
defeating Nana’s forces. Nana escaped to Bithoor where his associates
Tatya Tope, Rani Laxmibai and Azimullah Khan proclaimed him as the new
peshwa. His support to Begum Hazrat Mahal added strength to her efforts,
though it was short-lived. By late September 1858, this group tried to make
elaborate plans for coordinated actions of the rebels across Awadh and
northern and eastern Rohilkhand and block Campbell. However, Campbell
and Lord Clyde managed to circle the rebel forces from all over and pushed
several of them into the Terai region of Nepal. With the British in hot
pursuit, Nana Saheb, too, crossed over to Nepal in disguise and nothing was
known about what happened to him thereafter. Rani Laxmibai died fighting
in battle at Kotah-ki-Serai near Gwalior on 18 June 1858, dressed as a
soldier even in her martyrdom. Nana’s associate Tatya Tope was deceitfully
arrested by the British and was eventually executed at the gallows in
Shivpuri on 18 April 1859. One by one, all the protagonists of the First War
of Indian Independence were liquidated, and the revolution was unravelled.
Notes
1 On the 1 November 1858, Charles Canning, then Governor-General of
India, announced Queen Victoria’s proclamation to ‘the Princes, Chiefs
and Peoples of India’.
2 Rudrangshu Mukherjee, A Begum and a Rani: Hazrat Mahal and
Lakshmibai in 1857 (New Delhi: Penguin Random House India, 2021),
pp. 147–51.
3 For more details, see the seminal work of historian Rosie Llewellyn-
Jones, ed., The Uprising of 1857 (Ahmedabad: Alkazi Collection of
Photography and Mapin, 2017).
4 https://www.livehistoryindia.com/story/people/begum-hazrat-mahal-a-
revolutionary-queen
5 Mukherjee, A Begum and a Rani, p. 14.
6 This is well-documented. In fact, legendary filmmaker Satyajit Ray
opened a window to the life of Nawab Wajid Ali Shah in Shatranj Ke
Khilari in a unique way. Please refer to ‘The making of a Queer Figure:
Satyajit Ray’s interpretation of Nawab Wajid Ali Shah in Shatranj Ke
Khilari’ by Madhuja Mukherjee in https://frontline.thehindu.com/cover-
story/the-making-of-a-queer-figure-satyajit-ray-interpretation-of-nawab-
wajid-ali-shah-in-shatranj-ke-khilari/article37090441.ece (accessed on 27
May 2022). Also, Rosie Llewellyn-Jones’s work The Last King in India:
Wajid Ali Shah (New Delhi: Penguin Random House India, 2014) offers a
fascinating account of the life, times and works of Wajid Ali Shah.
7 For more on Wajid Ali Shah’s contribution to music and dance, see Tahir
Hussain Ansari, ‘The Cultural and Literary Contribution of Nawab Wajid
Ali Shah’, International Journal of English Language, Literature and
Humanities, 3.3 (2014), pp. 181–89.
8 https://www.livehistoryindia.com/story/people/begum-hazrat-mahal-a-
revolutionary-queen
9 After the annexation of Awadh, the first revenue settlement system that
the British imposed was known as the Summary Settlement of 1856. This
further undermined the position and importance of the taluqdars. It
proceeded on the assumption that the taluqdars were interlopers with no
permanent claims on the land and that they had established their control
over the land fraudulently and through coercive means, and they lost their
land holdings en masse.
10 Iqbal Hussain, ‘Awadh Rebel Proclamations during 1857–58’ in
Proceedings of the Indian History Congress, 58 (1997), p. 487.
11 Ibid.
12 For his early life and antecedents, see Saiyid Zaheer Husain Jafri, ‘The
Profile of a Saintly Rebel: Maulavi Ahmadullah Shah’ Social Scientist
26.1 (Jan–April 1998), pp. 39–52.
13 Hussain, ‘Awadh Rebel Proclamations During 1857–58’, p. 482.
14 Jafri, ‘The Profile of a Saintly Rebel’, p. 44.
15 Ibid., p. 46.
16 Rudrangshu Mukherjee, Awadh in Revolt, 1857–58: A Study of Popular
Resistance (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1984), pp. 93–94.
17 W. Gordon-Alexander, Recollections of a Highland Subaltern: During
the Campaigns of the 93rd Highlanders in India, under Colin Campbell,
Lord Clyde in 1857, 1858 and 1859 (London: Edward Arnold, 1898), p.
104.
18 Raj Kumar Pasi, Pasi Samaj ka Swatantrata Sangram Mein Yogdan
(Lucknow: Pasi Shodh Evam Sanskritik Sansthan, 1998), pp. 7–20.
19 Mukherjee, A Begum and a Rani, p. 35.
20 Ibid., p. 38.
21 Ibid., p. 40.
22 Jafri, ‘The Profile of a Saintly Rebel’ p. 47.
23 Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, The Indian War of Independence, 1857
(London, 1909), p. 260.
Acknowledgements
Several people and institutions generously supported the research and the
writing of this book. I am grateful to the National Archives of India, New
Delhi; India Office of the British Library, London; the Arquivo Histórico
Ultramarino, Lisbon; the Tulu Sahitya Akademi, Mangaluru and the
Department of Historical and Antiquarian Studies, Guwahati, and their staff
for all the assistance in research and procuring of archival documents. Mr
T.V. Mohandas Pai has always been a generous source of support in all my
endeavours, and I am thankful to him for this. My grateful thanks to Smt.
Asha Jadeja Motwani and the Motwani Jadeja Foundation for reposing faith
in my work and supporting the research for this project. Dr Chinnappa
Gowda has been so magnanimous in his support and to him, I owe my
immense gratitude. I am indebted to several other people who have
contributed in various capacities to this project—Dr Prabhakara Joshi, Mr
Kuldeep Chowta, Mr Ashwin Kumar, Dr Ishwar Oza, Mr Chirayu Pandit,
Mr Sriram Sharma and Mr Yeshwant Holkar. I am extremely thankful to my
friends and well-wishers—Dr Rajendra Pratap Singh and Mr Rakesh
Naithani for being encouraging supporters of all my endeavours. I am
indebted to the following scholars who took the trouble of going through
the manuscript, suggested changes and also endorsed it for me—Dr Bibek
Debroy, Dr Meenakshi Jain and Mr Sanjeev Sanyal, to whom in particular I
owe my thanks for germinating the idea of this book in the first place. Mr
Sundeep Bhutoria, my friend and well-wisher, and the Prabha Khaitan
Foundation (especially Smt. Anindita Chatterjee) have always supported
my literary endeavours, and I am very grateful to them for this. I am
grateful to my family and friends for standing by me through thick and thin
and for putting up with my vagaries in the course of the research—my
father Mr Sampath Srinivasan for being so nurturing and supportive, my
aunt Roopa Madhusudan, Ranak Singh Mann, Pratibha Chopra, and to
Sandeep Singh Chauhan for always being there for me through my
tribulations. My respectful obeisances to my spiritual mentor Sadhguru
Sakshi Ram Kripal ji for his love, guidance and blessings. This book would
not have seen light of day but for my publisher Penguin Random House
India, Premanka Goswami, my dear friend and editor, Binita Roy, who
leads the copy editorial team, Shaoni Mukherjee, Priti Anand, and Gunjan
Ahlawat, who leads the design team—my heartfelt thanks to all of them for
enriching this work with their inputs and toil. Last but not the least, my
obeisance unto the Divine, without whose inspiration and grace, not a word
could have been written.
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