Dynasties of India: Difference between revisions
Bbnanawati (talk | contribs) New theme gateway: the ruling houses — frontier dynasties of Sindh, Kabul and Kashmir first, then great houses, Rajputs, Marathas |
Bbnanawati (talk | contribs) Frontier houses table added (Shahis, Rai, Kashmir lines); prose linked to the new campaign pages |
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== Why the frontier houses come first == | == Why the frontier houses come first == | ||
Between the first Arab expeditions against Kabul and Sindh and the last campaigns of Mahmud of Ghazni lie some three and a half centuries. For most of that time the gates of India were held — by dynasties whose names have nearly vanished from common memory, and whose wars are documented chiefly in the chronicles of their enemies and in Kalhana's ''Rajatarangini''. Indopedia records battles won ''and'' lost, in proper detail; these houses fought both, and earned their place at the head of this page. | Between the first Arab expeditions against Kabul and Sindh and the last campaigns of [[Mahmud of Ghazni — The Raider and the Resistance|Mahmud of Ghazni]] lie some three and a half centuries. For most of that time the gates of India were held — by dynasties whose names have nearly vanished from common memory, and whose wars are documented chiefly in the chronicles of their enemies and in Kalhana's ''Rajatarangini''. Indopedia records battles won ''and'' lost, in proper detail; these houses fought both, and earned their place at the head of this page. | ||
== The gate of Sindh — the Rai and Brahman houses (c. 489–724) == | == The gate of Sindh — the Rai and Brahman houses (c. 489–724) == | ||
The '''[[Rai dynasty of Sindh|Rai dynasty]]''' ruled from '''Aror''' on the Indus, a realm the ''Chachnama'' describes as reaching from Kashmir to the Makran coast; its line of five kings ended when '''Rai Sahasi II''' died and the chamberlain '''Chach''' took the throne, founding the Brahman house (c. 632). Arab expeditions probed the coast from the 640s, and more than once died on the Makran approaches; the commander Budail fell before Debal. In 711–12 the Umayyad governor al-Hajjaj sent his kinsman '''Muhammad bin Qasim''' with a siege train; Debal fell, and in June 712, at the '''[[Battle of Aror (712)|battle of Aror]]''', '''[[Raja Dahir]]''' — the last Hindu king of united Sindh — died fighting from his war-elephant. His queen held the fort of Rawar to the act of jauhar; his son '''Jaisiah''' fought on for years from the interior.<ref name="chach">''Chachnama'' (ʿAli Kufi's 13th-century Persian text, trans. Mirza Kalichbeg, 1900) — a conquest narrative compiled five centuries after the events, to be read with care; its romance episodes (such as the tale of Dahir's daughters) are later embellishment.</ref> What followed mattered as much as what fell: '''the Arab advance into India stopped, in substance, at Sindh for three hundred years''' — the caliphate's easternmost province became a frontier, not a doorway.<ref name="wink">Wink, André. ''Al-Hind: The Making of the Indo-Islamic World'', Vol. I. Brill, 1990.</ref> | The '''[[Rai dynasty of Sindh|Rai dynasty]]''' ruled from '''Aror''' on the Indus, a realm the ''Chachnama'' describes as reaching from Kashmir to the Makran coast; its line of five kings ended when '''Rai Sahasi II''' died and the chamberlain '''Chach''' took the throne, founding the Brahman house (c. 632). Arab expeditions probed the coast from the 640s, and more than once died on the Makran approaches; the commander Budail fell before Debal. In 711–12 the Umayyad governor al-Hajjaj sent his kinsman '''Muhammad bin Qasim''' with a siege train; Debal fell, and in June 712, at the '''[[Battle of Aror (712)|battle of Aror]]''', '''[[Raja Dahir]]''' — the last Hindu king of united Sindh — died fighting from his war-elephant. His queen held the fort of Rawar to the act of jauhar; his son '''Jaisiah''' fought on for years from the interior.<ref name="chach">''Chachnama'' (ʿAli Kufi's 13th-century Persian text, trans. Mirza Kalichbeg, 1900) — a conquest narrative compiled five centuries after the events, to be read with care; its romance episodes (such as the tale of Dahir's daughters) are later embellishment.</ref> What followed mattered as much as what fell: '''the Arab advance into India stopped, in substance, at Sindh for three hundred years''' — the caliphate's easternmost province became a frontier, not a doorway.<ref name="wink">Wink, André. ''Al-Hind: The Making of the Indo-Islamic World'', Vol. I. Brill, 1990.</ref> Qasim himself outlived his conquest by barely three years — recalled in the faction-purge that followed the deaths of his patrons, he died in the caliphate's prison about 715, aged about twenty; for what became of Arab Sindh, and how the Turks of Ghazni finally ended it, see [[Mahmud of Ghazni — The Raider and the Resistance]]. The whole four-century chain — from the first sea-raid of 636 to Mahmud’s death — is charted at [[The Caliphate and India — A Timeline (636–1030)]]. | ||
== The wall of Kabul — the Shahis (c. 665–1026) == | == The wall of Kabul — the Shahis (c. 665–1026) == | ||
For two centuries the '''Turk Shahis''' of Kabul and the allied '''Zunbils''' of Zabulistan blunted the armies of the caliphate's eastern governors — in 698–700 an Arab force remembered in Arabic tradition itself as the ''Jaysh al-Fanāʾ'', "the Army of Destruction", was destroyed in the Zunbil country. In the ninth century (the chronology is debated) the Brahmin minister '''Lalliya''' founded the '''[[Hindu Shahis|Hindu Shahi]]''' line, which moved its seat from Kabul to '''Udabhandapura''' (Hund) on the Indus and held the passes against the new power of Ghazni. '''[[Jayapala]]''' (r. c. 964–1001) fought Sabuktigin and then Mahmud; defeated at Peshawar in November 1001, he abdicated and burned himself on a pyre rather than outlive the defeat. '''Anandapala''' raised a northern confederacy for the battle of '''Chach (Waihind, 1008)''' — Firishta, writing four centuries later, says contingents came from Ujjain, Gwalior, Kalinjar, Kannauj, Delhi and Ajmer, and that women sold their ornaments to fund the army; the day turned when Anandapala's elephant fled the field. '''Trilochanapala''' (d. 1021) fought on from the Salt Range with Kashmiri aid; with the death of '''Bhimapala''' the line ended — '''in 1026, the very year Somnath fell''' (see [[Somnath Temple — The Shrine Eternal]]).<ref name="shahi">Mishra, Yogendra. ''The Hindu Sahis of Afghanistan and the Punjab, A.D. 865–1026''. 1972; Rehman, Abdur. ''The Last Two Dynasties of the Śāhis''. 1979; al-ʿUtbī, ''Tārīkh al-Yamīnī''; Firishta (trans. Briggs) on the Waihind confederacy.</ref> | For two centuries the '''Turk Shahis''' of Kabul and the allied '''Zunbils''' of Zabulistan blunted the armies of the caliphate's eastern governors — in 698–700 an Arab force remembered in Arabic tradition itself as the ''Jaysh al-Fanāʾ'', "the Army of Destruction", was destroyed in the Zunbil country. In the ninth century (the chronology is debated) the Brahmin minister '''Lalliya''' founded the '''[[Hindu Shahis|Hindu Shahi]]''' line, which moved its seat from Kabul to '''Udabhandapura''' (Hund) on the Indus and held the passes against the new power of Ghazni. '''[[Jayapala]]''' (r. c. 964–1001) fought Sabuktigin and then [[Mahmud of Ghazni — The Raider and the Resistance|Mahmud]]; defeated at [[Battle of Peshawar (1001)|Peshawar in November 1001]], he abdicated and burned himself on a pyre rather than outlive the defeat. '''Anandapala''' raised a northern confederacy for the [[Battle of Waihind (1008)|battle of '''Chach (Waihind, 1008)''']] — Firishta, writing four centuries later, says contingents came from Ujjain, Gwalior, Kalinjar, Kannauj, Delhi and Ajmer, and that women sold their ornaments to fund the army; the day turned when Anandapala's elephant fled the field. '''Trilochanapala''' (d. 1021) fought on from the Salt Range with Kashmiri aid; with the death of '''Bhimapala''' the line ended — '''in 1026, the very year Somnath fell''' (see [[Somnath Temple — The Shrine Eternal]]).<ref name="shahi">Mishra, Yogendra. ''The Hindu Sahis of Afghanistan and the Punjab, A.D. 865–1026''. 1972; Rehman, Abdur. ''The Last Two Dynasties of the Śāhis''. 1979; al-ʿUtbī, ''Tārīkh al-Yamīnī''; Firishta (trans. Briggs) on the Waihind confederacy.</ref> | ||
No tribute to them equals their enemy's own. Al-Biruni, who came to India in Mahmud's train, wrote: | No tribute to them equals their enemy's own. Al-Biruni, who came to India in Mahmud's train, wrote: | ||
| Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
== The mountain throne — Karkota, Utpala and Lohara Kashmir (625–1339) == | == The mountain throne — Karkota, Utpala and Lohara Kashmir (625–1339) == | ||
Kashmir is the one region of ancient India with a continuous dynastic chronicle: Kalhana's '''''Rajatarangini''''' ("River of Kings", 1148–50), a verse history that names its sources and weighs them — and through it these houses speak. The '''[[Karkota dynasty]]''' (from c. 625) reached its height under '''[[Lalitaditya Muktapida]]''' (c. 724–760): an embassy to the Tang court is on record in the 730s, Kalhana credits him with the defeat of Yashovarman of Kannauj and campaigns against the Tibetans and the Turks of the passes, and he raised the '''Martand sun temple''', whose ruins still command the valley. Under the Utpalas, '''Avantivarman''' (855–883) turned from war to water: his engineer '''Suyya''' regulated the Vitasta and drained the valley floor — and Kalhana, remarkably, records the fall in the price of rice that followed. The '''[[Lohara dynasty]]''' produced Queen '''[[Didda]]''' (r. 980–1003 in her own name), granddaughter of the Shahi king Bhima; her successor '''Samgramaraja''' sent the general '''Tunga''' across the mountains to stand with Trilochanapala against Mahmud. Mahmud answered by turning on Kashmir itself — and '''twice, in 1015 and 1021, his army failed before the fortress of Lohkot''' in the Pir Panjal: among the very few walls that stopped him outright. The Hindu line of Kashmir ended only in 1339, with Queen '''Kota Rani'''.<ref name="rt">Kalhana, ''Rājataraṅgiṇī'', trans. M. A. Stein, 2 vols. (1900) — Bks. IV (Lalitaditya), V (Avantivarman and Suyya), VI (Didda), VII (Tunga, the Tausī campaign, and the Lohkot sieges).</ref> | Kashmir is the one region of ancient India with a continuous dynastic chronicle: Kalhana's '''''Rajatarangini''''' ("River of Kings", 1148–50), a verse history that names its sources and weighs them — and through it these houses speak. The '''[[Karkota dynasty]]''' (from c. 625) reached its height under '''[[Lalitaditya Muktapida]]''' (c. 724–760): an embassy to the Tang court is on record in the 730s, Kalhana credits him with the defeat of Yashovarman of Kannauj and campaigns against the Tibetans and the Turks of the passes, and he raised the '''Martand sun temple''', whose ruins still command the valley. Under the Utpalas, '''Avantivarman''' (855–883) turned from war to water: his engineer '''Suyya''' regulated the Vitasta and drained the valley floor — and Kalhana, remarkably, records the fall in the price of rice that followed. The '''[[Lohara dynasty]]''' produced Queen '''[[Didda]]''' (r. 980–1003 in her own name), granddaughter of the Shahi king Bhima; her successor '''Samgramaraja''' sent the general '''Tunga''' across the mountains to stand with Trilochanapala against Mahmud. Mahmud answered by turning on Kashmir itself — and '''twice, in 1015 and 1021, [[Mahmud of Ghazni — The Raider and the Resistance|his army failed]] before the fortress of [[Sieges of Lohkot (1015 and 1021)|Lohkot]]''' in the Pir Panjal: among the very few walls that stopped him outright. The Hindu line of Kashmir ended only in 1339, with Queen '''Kota Rani'''.<ref name="rt">Kalhana, ''Rājataraṅgiṇī'', trans. M. A. Stein, 2 vols. (1900) — Bks. IV (Lalitaditya), V (Avantivarman and Suyya), VI (Didda), VII (Tunga, the Tausī campaign, and the Lohkot sieges).</ref> | ||
== The eighth-century repulse — when the west was held == | == The eighth-century repulse — when the west was held == | ||
When the Arab governors of Sindh pushed east in the 720s–730s under Junaid, a ring of houses answered. The Navsari plates of the Chalukya prince '''Avanijanashraya Pulakeshin''' ('''739 CE''') record — in stone, not legend — the defeat of the "Tajika" (Arab) army that had struck at southern Gujarat; the Gwalior prashasti of the '''[[Gurjara-Pratiharas|Gurjara-Pratihara]]''' emperor Mihira Bhoja says his ancestor '''Nagabhata I''' crushed the army of the "mlechchha king"; and the tradition of Mewar sets '''[[Bappa Rawal]]''' of the Guhilas in the same fight. Popular histories remember these campaigns together as the "Battle of Rajasthan"; the name is modern, the repulse is documented.<ref name="navsari">Navsari plates of Avanijanāśraya Pulakeśin, Kalachuri year 490 (739 CE), ''Epigraphia Indica'' XXV; Gwalior praśasti of Mihira Bhoja, ''Epigraphia Indica'' XVIII.</ref> For the next two centuries the Pratihara empire stood as the wall of the west — the Arab traveller Al-Masudi, who saw its power in the 910s, wrote that among the princes of India there was '''"no greater foe"''' of the caliphate's faith than the Gurjara king, master of the finest cavalry in the land.<ref name="masudi">Al-Masʿūdī, ''Murūj adh-Dhahab'' (on the king of al-Juzr), in Elliot & Dowson, ''The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians'', Vol. I.</ref> When the wall finally broke, it was not the Arabs of Sindh who came through, but the Turks of Ghazni. | When the Arab governors of Sindh pushed east in the 720s–730s under Junaid, a ring of houses answered. The Navsari plates of the Chalukya prince '''Avanijanashraya Pulakeshin''' ('''739 CE''') record — in stone, not legend — the defeat of the "Tajika" (Arab) army that had struck at southern Gujarat; the Gwalior prashasti of the '''[[Gurjara-Pratiharas|Gurjara-Pratihara]]''' emperor Mihira Bhoja says his ancestor '''Nagabhata I''' crushed the army of the "mlechchha king"; and the tradition of Mewar sets '''[[Bappa Rawal]]''' of the Guhilas in the same fight. Popular histories remember these campaigns together as the "Battle of Rajasthan"; the name is modern, the repulse is documented.<ref name="navsari">Navsari plates of Avanijanāśraya Pulakeśin, Kalachuri year 490 (739 CE), ''Epigraphia Indica'' XXV; Gwalior praśasti of Mihira Bhoja, ''Epigraphia Indica'' XVIII.</ref> For the next two centuries the Pratihara empire stood as the wall of the west — the Arab traveller Al-Masudi, who saw its power in the 910s, wrote that among the princes of India there was '''"no greater foe"''' of the caliphate's faith than the Gurjara king, master of the finest cavalry in the land.<ref name="masudi">Al-Masʿūdī, ''Murūj adh-Dhahab'' (on the king of al-Juzr), in Elliot & Dowson, ''The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians'', Vol. I.</ref> When the wall finally broke, it was not the Arabs of Sindh who came through, but the Turks of Ghazni. | ||
== The frontier houses == | |||
The guardians of the gates, summarised — their full stories stand in the sections above and in [[The Resistance Chronicle]]: | |||
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%; font-size:95%" | |||
! House !! Seat !! Span !! Remembered for | |||
|- | |||
| [[Rai dynasty of Sindh|Rai dynasty]] || Aror || c. 489–632 || Five kings; a realm the ''Chachnama'' stretches from Kashmir to the Makran coast | |||
|- | |||
| [[Raja Dahir|Brahman dynasty of Chach]] || Aror || c. 632–712 || '''Raja Dahir''' — the last stand at [[Battle of Aror (712)|Aror]]; Jaisiah's long resistance after | |||
|- | |||
| Turk Shahis and the Zunbils || Kabul · Zabulistan || c. 665–843 || Two centuries holding the gates; the "Army of Destruction" annihilated (698) | |||
|- | |||
| [[Hindu Shahis]] || Kabul → Udabhandapura (Hund) || c. 843–1026 || Lalliya to Bhimapala — '''the wall of the Frontier Age'''; Jayapala's pyre ([[Battle of Peshawar (1001)|Peshawar 1001]]), the confederacy of [[Battle of Waihind (1008)|Waihind]], Al-Biruni's tribute · ''full genealogy, civilisation and remains at [[Battle of Peshawar (1001)]]'' | |||
|- | |||
| [[Karkota dynasty|Karkotas]] || Srinagar || c. 625–855 || '''Lalitaditya''' — Martand, the Tang embassy, the passes held | |||
|- | |||
| Utpalas || Srinagar || 855 – c. 939 || Avantivarman — Suyya's waterworks, and the price of rice in Kalhana's record | |||
|- | |||
| [[Lohara dynasty|Loharas]] || Srinagar · Lohkot || 980 (Didda) – 1339 || '''Didda'''; Samgramaraja and Tunga; '''[[Sieges of Lohkot (1015 and 1021)|Lohkot — Mahmud defeated twice]]''' | |||
|} | |||
== The great houses == | == The great houses == | ||
| Line 105: | Line 126: | ||
== How this gateway grows == | == How this gateway grows == | ||
''Each house named above opens as its own page, in the manner of the [[Jyotirlingas|jyotirlinga shrines]] — chronology, capitals, the major reigns, battles won and lost (cross-indexed in [[:Category:Military History|Military History]]), architecture and coinage, and a full bibliography. The frontier sections will grow first.'' | ''Each house named above opens as its own page, in the manner of the [[Jyotirlingas|jyotirlinga shrines]] — chronology, capitals, the major reigns, battles won and lost (cross-indexed in [[:Category:Military History|Military History]]), architecture and coinage, and a full bibliography. The frontier sections will grow first. The map of India in the years of resistance — and the wing it belongs to — stands at [[The Resistance Chronicle]].'' | ||
== Sources and further reading == | == Sources and further reading == | ||
Latest revision as of 16:09, 12 June 2026

The dynasties of India are the spine on which the subcontinent's political history hangs — yet popular memory has been strangely selective. Every schoolbook carries the Mauryas, the Guptas and the adversaries of the Mughals; far fewer can name the houses that stood at the north-western gates for nearly four centuries — the Rai and Brahman kings of Sindh, the Shahis of Kabul and the Indus, the lines of Kashmir — absorbing and answering the first Arab and Turkic invasions from the 660s to 1026 CE. This gateway opens Indopedia's chronicle of the ruling houses, the famous and the forgotten together — and the forgotten first.
Why the frontier houses come first
Between the first Arab expeditions against Kabul and Sindh and the last campaigns of Mahmud of Ghazni lie some three and a half centuries. For most of that time the gates of India were held — by dynasties whose names have nearly vanished from common memory, and whose wars are documented chiefly in the chronicles of their enemies and in Kalhana's Rajatarangini. Indopedia records battles won and lost, in proper detail; these houses fought both, and earned their place at the head of this page.
The gate of Sindh — the Rai and Brahman houses (c. 489–724)
The Rai dynasty ruled from Aror on the Indus, a realm the Chachnama describes as reaching from Kashmir to the Makran coast; its line of five kings ended when Rai Sahasi II died and the chamberlain Chach took the throne, founding the Brahman house (c. 632). Arab expeditions probed the coast from the 640s, and more than once died on the Makran approaches; the commander Budail fell before Debal. In 711–12 the Umayyad governor al-Hajjaj sent his kinsman Muhammad bin Qasim with a siege train; Debal fell, and in June 712, at the battle of Aror, Raja Dahir — the last Hindu king of united Sindh — died fighting from his war-elephant. His queen held the fort of Rawar to the act of jauhar; his son Jaisiah fought on for years from the interior.[1] What followed mattered as much as what fell: the Arab advance into India stopped, in substance, at Sindh for three hundred years — the caliphate's easternmost province became a frontier, not a doorway.[2] Qasim himself outlived his conquest by barely three years — recalled in the faction-purge that followed the deaths of his patrons, he died in the caliphate's prison about 715, aged about twenty; for what became of Arab Sindh, and how the Turks of Ghazni finally ended it, see Mahmud of Ghazni — The Raider and the Resistance. The whole four-century chain — from the first sea-raid of 636 to Mahmud’s death — is charted at The Caliphate and India — A Timeline (636–1030).
The wall of Kabul — the Shahis (c. 665–1026)
For two centuries the Turk Shahis of Kabul and the allied Zunbils of Zabulistan blunted the armies of the caliphate's eastern governors — in 698–700 an Arab force remembered in Arabic tradition itself as the Jaysh al-Fanāʾ, "the Army of Destruction", was destroyed in the Zunbil country. In the ninth century (the chronology is debated) the Brahmin minister Lalliya founded the Hindu Shahi line, which moved its seat from Kabul to Udabhandapura (Hund) on the Indus and held the passes against the new power of Ghazni. Jayapala (r. c. 964–1001) fought Sabuktigin and then Mahmud; defeated at Peshawar in November 1001, he abdicated and burned himself on a pyre rather than outlive the defeat. Anandapala raised a northern confederacy for the battle of Chach (Waihind, 1008) — Firishta, writing four centuries later, says contingents came from Ujjain, Gwalior, Kalinjar, Kannauj, Delhi and Ajmer, and that women sold their ornaments to fund the army; the day turned when Anandapala's elephant fled the field. Trilochanapala (d. 1021) fought on from the Salt Range with Kashmiri aid; with the death of Bhimapala the line ended — in 1026, the very year Somnath fell (see Somnath Temple — The Shrine Eternal).[3]
No tribute to them equals their enemy's own. Al-Biruni, who came to India in Mahmud's train, wrote:
"The Hindu Shahiya dynasty is now extinct, and of the whole house there is no longer the slightest remnant in existence. We must say that, in all their grandeur, they never slackened in the ardent desire of doing that which is good and right, that they were men of noble sentiment and noble bearing."[4]
A century later Kalhana could already write that "the very name of the splendour of the Shahi kings has vanished" — the lament of a chronicler watching memory fail. This page exists so that it does not.[5]
The mountain throne — Karkota, Utpala and Lohara Kashmir (625–1339)
Kashmir is the one region of ancient India with a continuous dynastic chronicle: Kalhana's Rajatarangini ("River of Kings", 1148–50), a verse history that names its sources and weighs them — and through it these houses speak. The Karkota dynasty (from c. 625) reached its height under Lalitaditya Muktapida (c. 724–760): an embassy to the Tang court is on record in the 730s, Kalhana credits him with the defeat of Yashovarman of Kannauj and campaigns against the Tibetans and the Turks of the passes, and he raised the Martand sun temple, whose ruins still command the valley. Under the Utpalas, Avantivarman (855–883) turned from war to water: his engineer Suyya regulated the Vitasta and drained the valley floor — and Kalhana, remarkably, records the fall in the price of rice that followed. The Lohara dynasty produced Queen Didda (r. 980–1003 in her own name), granddaughter of the Shahi king Bhima; her successor Samgramaraja sent the general Tunga across the mountains to stand with Trilochanapala against Mahmud. Mahmud answered by turning on Kashmir itself — and twice, in 1015 and 1021, his army failed before the fortress of Lohkot in the Pir Panjal: among the very few walls that stopped him outright. The Hindu line of Kashmir ended only in 1339, with Queen Kota Rani.[6]
The eighth-century repulse — when the west was held
When the Arab governors of Sindh pushed east in the 720s–730s under Junaid, a ring of houses answered. The Navsari plates of the Chalukya prince Avanijanashraya Pulakeshin (739 CE) record — in stone, not legend — the defeat of the "Tajika" (Arab) army that had struck at southern Gujarat; the Gwalior prashasti of the Gurjara-Pratihara emperor Mihira Bhoja says his ancestor Nagabhata I crushed the army of the "mlechchha king"; and the tradition of Mewar sets Bappa Rawal of the Guhilas in the same fight. Popular histories remember these campaigns together as the "Battle of Rajasthan"; the name is modern, the repulse is documented.[7] For the next two centuries the Pratihara empire stood as the wall of the west — the Arab traveller Al-Masudi, who saw its power in the 910s, wrote that among the princes of India there was "no greater foe" of the caliphate's faith than the Gurjara king, master of the finest cavalry in the land.[8] When the wall finally broke, it was not the Arabs of Sindh who came through, but the Turks of Ghazni.
The frontier houses
The guardians of the gates, summarised — their full stories stand in the sections above and in The Resistance Chronicle:
| House | Seat | Span | Remembered for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rai dynasty | Aror | c. 489–632 | Five kings; a realm the Chachnama stretches from Kashmir to the Makran coast |
| Brahman dynasty of Chach | Aror | c. 632–712 | Raja Dahir — the last stand at Aror; Jaisiah's long resistance after |
| Turk Shahis and the Zunbils | Kabul · Zabulistan | c. 665–843 | Two centuries holding the gates; the "Army of Destruction" annihilated (698) |
| Hindu Shahis | Kabul → Udabhandapura (Hund) | c. 843–1026 | Lalliya to Bhimapala — the wall of the Frontier Age; Jayapala's pyre (Peshawar 1001), the confederacy of Waihind, Al-Biruni's tribute · full genealogy, civilisation and remains at Battle of Peshawar (1001) |
| Karkotas | Srinagar | c. 625–855 | Lalitaditya — Martand, the Tang embassy, the passes held |
| Utpalas | Srinagar | 855 – c. 939 | Avantivarman — Suyya's waterworks, and the price of rice in Kalhana's record |
| Loharas | Srinagar · Lohkot | 980 (Didda) – 1339 | Didda; Samgramaraja and Tunga; Lohkot — Mahmud defeated twice |
The great houses
| House | Seat | Span | Remembered for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mauryas | Pataliputra | 321–185 BCE | The first subcontinental empire; Chanakya's Arthashastra; Ashoka and the edicts |
| Satavahanas | Pratishthana | c. 100 BCE – 225 CE | The Deccan's first empire; guardians of the trade with Rome |
| Guptas | Pataliputra | c. 320–550 | The classical efflorescence — Kalidasa, Aryabhata, Nalanda |
| Vakatakas | Vidarbha | c. 250–500 | Ajanta's painted caves; Prabhavatigupta's regency |
| Pallavas | Kanchipuram | c. 275–897 | Mamallapuram by the sea; Kanchi's schools; the long duel with the Chalukyas |
| Chalukyas of Badami | Vatapi | 543–753 | Pulakeshin II halted Harsha at the Narmada; Aihole and Pattadakal |
| Rashtrakutas | Manyakheta | 753–982 | The Kailasa of Ellora; ranked by Arab geographers among the four great kings of the world |
| Palas | Bengal–Bihar | c. 750–1161 | Patrons of Nalanda and Vikramashila; Dharmapala in the Kannauj triangle |
| Imperial Cholas | Thanjavur | 848–1279 | Rajaraja and Rajendra — the great temple, the fleet, the Ganga and overseas expeditions |
| Chalukyas of Kalyani | Kalyani | 973–1189 | Vikramaditya VI; the Mitakshara school of law |
| Hoysalas | Belur–Halebidu | c. 1026–1343 | The soapstone marvels; the south's shield in the Sultanate storms |
| Kakatiyas | Warangal | c. 1163–1323 | Rudrama Devi — a reigning queen on the Deccan throne, praised in Marco Polo's account |
| Eastern Gangas | Kalinga | 1078–1434 | Konark — Narasimhadeva I's sun temple, raised after his victories over the Bengal Sultanate |
| Vijayanagara (four houses) | Hampi | 1336–1646 | Sangama to Aravidu; Krishnadevaraya; the city travellers called without equal |
| Gajapatis | Cuttack | 1434–1541 | Kapilendra's surge from the Ganga to the Kaveri |
| Ahoms | Charaideo–Garhgaon | 1228–1826 | Held Assam through seventeen Mughal invasions; Lachit Borphukan at Saraighat (1671) |
The Rajput houses
| House | Seat | Span | Remembered for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gurjara-Pratiharas | Kannauj | c. 730–1036 | The wall of the west (above); Mihira Bhoja's empire |
| Chauhans | Ajmer–Delhi | c. 7th c. – 1192 | Prithviraj III — Tarain won (1191) and lost (1192); Hammira's last stand at Ranthambore (1301) |
| Tomaras | Dhillika | c. 736–1152 | The founders of Delhi |
| Chandelas | Khajuraho–Kalinjar | 9th–13th c. | Khajuraho; Vidyadhara's defiance — Mahmud left Kalinjar untaken |
| Paramaras | Dhara | 9th–14th c. | Bhoja — the philosopher-king of Malwa |
| Chaulukyas (Solankis) | Anahilavada | 940–1244 | Bhima I and Kumarapala — rebuilders of Somnath; the queen's stepwell at Patan |
| Guhilas–Sisodias of Mewar | Chittor–Udaipur | c. 728–1948 | Bappa Rawal, Hammir, Kumbha, Sanga, Pratap — the three sakas of Chittor; the one great house that made no marriage alliance with the Mughals |
| Rathores | Jodhpur | 1243–1948 | Rao Jodha's city; Durgadas and the thirty-year fight that restored Ajit Singh |
| Kachwahas | Amber–Jaipur | 11th c. – 1948 | Man Singh; Jai Singh II — the astronomer-king of the Jantar Mantars |
| Bundelas | Orchha–Panna | 16th–18th c. | Chhatrasal — Bundelkhand carved free, sealed by alliance with Bajirao |
The Maratha houses
| House | Seat | Span | Remembered for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bhosales (Chhatrapatis) | Raigad → Satara & Kolhapur | 1674–1848 | Shivaji's coronation (1674); Sambhaji; Tarabai and the war Aurangzeb could not win (1681–1707) |
| Peshwas (Bhat family) | Pune | 1713–1818 | Bajirao I — twenty years, no battle lost; the flag at Attock (1758); Madhavrao's recovery after Panipat |
| Scindias | Ujjain → Gwalior | 1731–1948 | Ranoji rebuilt Mahakaleshwar (1734); Mahadji — master of Delhi and protector of the emperor |
| Holkars | Indore–Maheshwar | 1728–1948 | Ahilyabai (r. 1767–95) — rebuilder of Kashi Vishwanath and Grishneshwar, builder of the new shrine at Somnath (1783) |
| Gaekwads | Baroda | 1721–1949 | The western anchor of the confederacy; Sayajirao III's model state |
| Bhosales of Nagpur | Nagpur | 1739–1853 | Raghuji's campaigns east to Bengal and Odisha |
| Angres (Sarkhel) | Konkan coast | 1698–1756 | Kanhoji — the admiral no European fleet could break in his lifetime |
How this gateway grows
Each house named above opens as its own page, in the manner of the jyotirlinga shrines — chronology, capitals, the major reigns, battles won and lost (cross-indexed in Military History), architecture and coinage, and a full bibliography. The frontier sections will grow first. The map of India in the years of resistance — and the wing it belongs to — stands at The Resistance Chronicle.
Sources and further reading
- Kalhana, Rājataraṅgiṇī, trans. M. A. Stein, 2 vols. (1900).
- Chachnama, trans. Mirza Kalichbeg (1900) — with the cautions noted above.
- Al-Biruni, Kitāb al-Hind, trans. E. C. Sachau (1910).
- Elliot & Dowson, The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians, Vol. I (Al-Masʿūdī and the Arab geographers).
- Mishra, Yogendra, The Hindu Sahis of Afghanistan and the Punjab (1972); Rehman, Abdur, The Last Two Dynasties of the Śāhis (1979).
- Majumdar, R. C. (ed.), The Age of Imperial Kanauj and The Struggle for Empire (Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan series).
- Ray, H. C., The Dynastic History of Northern India, 2 vols. (1931–36).
- Wink, André, Al-Hind: The Making of the Indo-Islamic World, Vol. I (1990).
- Sarkar, Jadunath, History of Aurangzib, Vol. V; Sardesai, G. S., New History of the Marathas (1946–48).
References
- ↑ Chachnama (ʿAli Kufi's 13th-century Persian text, trans. Mirza Kalichbeg, 1900) — a conquest narrative compiled five centuries after the events, to be read with care; its romance episodes (such as the tale of Dahir's daughters) are later embellishment.
- ↑ Wink, André. Al-Hind: The Making of the Indo-Islamic World, Vol. I. Brill, 1990.
- ↑ Mishra, Yogendra. The Hindu Sahis of Afghanistan and the Punjab, A.D. 865–1026. 1972; Rehman, Abdur. The Last Two Dynasties of the Śāhis. 1979; al-ʿUtbī, Tārīkh al-Yamīnī; Firishta (trans. Briggs) on the Waihind confederacy.
- ↑ Al-Biruni, Kitāb al-Hind, trans. E. C. Sachau, Alberuni's India (1910), Vol. II.
- ↑ Kalhana, Rājataraṅgiṇī VII.66–69, trans. M. A. Stein (1900).
- ↑ Kalhana, Rājataraṅgiṇī, trans. M. A. Stein, 2 vols. (1900) — Bks. IV (Lalitaditya), V (Avantivarman and Suyya), VI (Didda), VII (Tunga, the Tausī campaign, and the Lohkot sieges).
- ↑ Al-Masʿūdī, Murūj adh-Dhahab (on the king of al-Juzr), in Elliot & Dowson, The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians, Vol. I.