The Resistance Chronicle: Difference between revisions
Bbnanawati (talk | contribs) Hub rebuilt: four ages as the spine, About linked at top, tab-chips under each age (live pages + red invitations) |
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<div class="ind-chips"><span>[[Mahmud of Ghazni — The Raider and the Resistance|Ghazni — the raider's ledger]]</span><span>[[The Caliphate and India — A Timeline (636–1030)|The Caliphate timeline 636–1030]]</span><span>[[Mewar — The House of Eklingji|Mewar — Bappa's age]]</span><span>[[Hindu Shahis|The Shahis of Kabul]]</span><span>[[Raja Dahir|Dahir — the gate of Sindh]]</span><span>[[Lohara dynasty|Kashmir — Lohkot holds]]</span></div> | <div class="ind-chips"><span>[[Mahmud of Ghazni — The Raider and the Resistance|Ghazni — the raider's ledger]]</span><span>[[The Caliphate and India — A Timeline (636–1030)|The Caliphate timeline 636–1030]]</span><span>[[Mewar — The House of Eklingji|Mewar — Bappa's age]]</span><span>[[Hindu Shahis|The Shahis of Kabul]]</span><span>[[Raja Dahir|Dahir — the gate of Sindh]]</span><span>[[Lohara dynasty|Kashmir — Lohkot holds]]</span></div> | ||
''The campaigns, page by page:'' | |||
<div class="ind-chips"><span>[[Battle of Peshawar (1001)|Peshawar 1001]]</span><span>[[Battle of Waihind (1008)|Waihind 1008]]</span><span>[[Sieges of Lohkot (1015 and 1021)|Lohkot 1015 & 1021]]</span><span>[[Kalinjar Campaign (1019–1023)|Kalinjar 1019–23]]</span><span>[[Somnath Campaign (1025–1026)|Somnath 1025–26]]</span><span>[[Jat War (1027)|The Jat war 1027]]</span></div> | |||
=== II. The Watershed · 1175–1206 === | === II. The Watershed · 1175–1206 === | ||
Revision as of 15:15, 12 June 2026

The Resistance Chronicle is Indopedia's wing on the centuries when the gates of India were under assault — told for once as one continuous story, by the defender's clock. Its rules are three: the full ledger (every campaign with its outcome, the invader's failures beside his victories); verdict and meaning (each battle marked victory or defeat, with what it meant for the India of that time); and sources labelled — stone, contemporary chronicle, or late tradition, never blurred.
Start here → About the Resistance Chronicle — the idea of the wing, and the four ages of resistance: history arranged not by who held Delhi, but by the answer India gave.
The Four Ages — and the tabs of each
I. The Frontier Age · 636–1030
Four centuries beyond the Indus — Kabul, Zabul, Sindh, the passes. The gates held; the age ends with Ghazni: raids, not rule.
The campaigns, page by page:
II. The Watershed · 1175–1206
Ghor: raid becomes conquest, and the fight shifts from frontier India to the north-west of India proper. Won at Kasahrada, won then lost at Tarain — and closed by the Khokhar rising, with the conqueror dead on the Jhelum road.
III. The Long Contest · 1206–1526
Three centuries of push and recoil inside India. Every expansion answered: Konark raised in victory, Warangal retaken, Vijayanagara founded, Chittor recovered — the age ends with the Sultanate a rump and Sanga supreme.
IV. The Reversal · 1526–1761
Resistance matures into replacement. Mewar will not sign; the Ahoms hold seventeen times; the Khalsa rises; the Marathas outlast Aurangzeb and carry the flag to Attock. The age — and this portal's present frontier — closes at Panipat III.
Age V — resistance to the European powers (1757–1857) — waits beyond the portal's frontier at Panipat III; its tabs will open when the chronicle advances. Tabs in red are invitations: pages planned, to be written under the founder's direction.
While India fought, India built — the map

An original Indopedia schematic. While the Shahis bled at the gates and Lohkot held, the rest of India stood at a creative zenith: Bhoja wrote at Dhara, the Kandariya Mahadeva rose at Khajuraho, Mahipala renewed the Pala world of Nalanda — and in 1025, the year before Somnath fell, Rajendra Chola's fleet crossed the ocean to Srivijaya. Pressure at one gate; power at every other. Historical zones c. 1000–1025; coastline schematic; no modern boundaries depicted.
The houses themselves — the famous and the forgotten — are chronicled at Dynasties of India; the shrines they kept rebuilding, at Jyotirlingas.