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According to the Hindu Mythology, the Rajputs of Rajasthan were the descendants
of the Kshatriyas or warriors of Vedic India. The emergence of the Rajput
warrior clans was in the 6th and 7th centuries. Rajputs ancestry can be divided
into two: the "solar" or suryavanshi-those descended from Rama, the hero of the
epic Ramayana, and the "lunar" or chandravanshi, who claimed descent from
Krishana, the hero of the epic Mahabharata. Later a third clan was added, the
agnikula or fire-born, said to have emerged from the flames of a sacrificial
fire on Mt Abu.It has been accepted that the Rajputs were divided into
thirty-six races and twenty-one kingdoms. The Rajput clans gave rise to
dynasties like Sisodias of Mewar (Udaipur), the Kachwahas of Amber (Jaipur), the
Rathors of Marwar (Jodhpur & Bikaner), the Harsa of Kota & Bundi, the Bhattis of
Jaisalmer and the Chauhans of Ajmer
Early History
Rajasthan is the north-western region of India, and has remain independent from
the great empires. Buddhism failed to make substantial inroad here; the Mauryan
empire (321-184 BC), whose most renowned emperor, Ashoka, Converted to Buddhism
in 261 BC, had minimal impact in Rajasthan, However, there are Buddhist caves
and stupas (Buddhist Shrines) at Jhalawar, in Southern Rajasthan.Ancient Hindu
scriptural epics make reference to sites in present-day Rajasthan. The Holy
Pilgrimage site of Pushkar is mentioned in both the Mahabharata and Ramayana.
Emergence of the Rajputs
The fall of the Gupta Empire, which held dominance in northern India for nearly
300 years until the early 5th Century, was followed by a period of instability
as various local chieftains sought to gain supremacy. Power rose and fell in
northern India. Stability was only restored with the emergence of the Gurjara
Partiharas, the earliest of the Rajput (from 'Rajputra', or Sons of Princes)
dynasties which were later to hold the balance of power throughout Rajasthan.
The Rajput clans gave rise to dynasties such as the Chauhans, Sisodias,
Kachhwahas and Rathores. Chauhans of the Agnikula Race emerged in the 12th
century and were renowned for their valour. Their territories included the
Sapadalksha kingdom, which encompassed a vast area including present- day Jaipur,
Ranthambhore, part of Mewar, the western portion of Bundi district, Ajmer
Kishangarh and even, at one time, Delhi. Branches of the Chauhans also ruled
territories know as Ananta (in present-day Shekhawati) and Saptasatabhumi.
The Sisodias of the Suryavansa Race, Originally from Gujarat, migrated to
Rajasthan in the mid-7th Century and reigned over Mewar, which encompassed
Udaipur and Chittorgarh.
The Kachhwahas, originally from Gwalior in Madhya Pradesh, travelled west in the
12th century. They built the massive fort at Amber, and later shifted the
capital to Jaipur. Like the Sisodias, they belonged to the Suryavansa Race. Also
belonging to the Suryavansa Race, the Rathore (earlier known as Rastrakutas)
traveled from Kanauj, in Uttar Pradesh. Initially they settled in Pali, south of
present-day Jodhpur, but later moved to Mandore in 1381 and ruled over Marwar
(Jodhpur). Later they started building the stunning Meherangarh (fort) at
Jodhpur.
The Bhattis, who belong to the Induvansa Race, driven from their homeland in the
Punjab by the Turks, installed themselves at Jaisalmer in 1156. They remained
more of less entrenched in their desert Kingdom untill they were integrated into
the state of Rajasthan following Independence.
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