Modern Rajasthan (18th-20th Century)
Key facts
- After Aurangzeb's death in 1707, Maratha tribute pressure and Pindari raids weakened Rajputana's revenue and security systems.
- The Battle of Tunga on 28 July 1787 saw Jaipur and Marwar jointly check Mahadji Scindia near Lalsot.
- The 1817-1818 treaty cycle placed Rajput states under British paramountcy while preserving dynastic continuity.
- Kota signed the first treaty in the 1817-1818 Rajputana sequence on 26 December 1817 through Zalim Singh Jhala.
- The Bijolia peasant movement developed between 1897 and 1941 against excessive cesses and jagirdari exactions.
Key Points at a Glance
- 1
After Aurangzeb's death in 1707, Maratha tribute pressure and Pindari raids weakened Rajputana's revenue and security systems.
- 2
The Battle of Tunga on 28 July 1787 saw Jaipur and Marwar jointly check Mahadji Scindia near Lalsot.
- 3
The 1817-1818 treaty cycle placed Rajput states under British paramountcy while preserving dynastic continuity.
- 4
Kota signed the first treaty in the 1817-1818 Rajputana sequence on 26 December 1817 through Zalim Singh Jhala.
- 5
Maharaja Ganga Singh of Bikaner linked princely diplomacy with state modernisation through the Chamber of Princes and the Ganga Canal.
- 6
The Bijolia peasant movement developed between 1897 and 1941 against excessive cesses and jagirdari exactions.
- 7
The Bhagat and Eki movements mobilised southern Rajasthan's tribal communities around reform, unity, and resistance to oppressive dues.
- 8
Rajasthan's political integration moved in stages from the Matsya Union of 18 March 1948 to State Reorganisation in 1956.
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What destabilised late-eighteenth-century Rajputana before British paramountcy?
Late-eighteenth-century Rajputana was destabilised by Mughal decline, Maratha fiscal pressure, Pindari raiding, and Rajput succession rivalries before British paramountcy.
The Resident Commissioner, Government of Rajasthan, records Rajasthan's area as 342,239 square kilometres, which helps explain why routes, tribute corridors and mobile raiding mattered so much in Rajputana politics.
Late-eighteenth-century Rajputana moved from Mughal control into mobile fiscal warfare, Maratha pressure, and Pindari insecurity.
Mughal decline and Maratha pressure
- Aurangzeb's death in 1707 loosened the last effective Mughal hold over Rajputana and opened the field to mobile fiscal warfare.
- By the middle decades of the century, Maratha power pressed northward through tribute demands.
- Scindia and Holkar turned Jaipur, Marwar, Mewar, and Kota into a zone of repeated negotiation, coercion, and revenue extraction.
- Ajmer and the routes around it became especially sensitive because control over them shaped access to eastern Rajasthan.
Marwar under Vijai Singh
- Maharaja Vijai Singh of Marwar, who ruled from 1752 to 1793, spent much of his reign trying to protect Marwar's income lines while also coping with factional pressures inside the Rathore state.
- Chauth demands, military passage, and forced exactions deepened the strain.
- Under Mahadji Scindia of Gwalior and Tukoji Holkar of Indore, Rajput rulers faced not one uniform Maratha policy but overlapping spheres of pressure, with Holkar-linked irregulars adding a second layer of insecurity in the countryside.
Pindari menace
- The Pindaris were mounted raiders, often moving under Holkar protection or under the shadow of larger Maratha operations.
- They attacked:
- villages,
- grain routes,
- lightly defended settlements across Mewar, Marwar, and Hadoti.
- Their method was destructive because it targeted revenue before it targeted forts.
- When the countryside became unsafe, rulers could neither pay tribute reliably nor maintain cavalry.
- This is why Maratha leverage in Rajputana often worked through fear as much as through battlefield success.
- The late-eighteenth-century crisis was therefore political, military, and agrarian at once.
Battle of Tunga, 28 July 1787
| Element | Detail |
|---|---|
| Date | 28 July 1787 |
| Rajput side | Sawai Pratap Singh of Jaipur, who ruled from 1778 to 1803, formed an alliance with Maharaja Vijai Singh of Marwar |
| Opponent | Mahadji Scindia and the French-trained commander Benoit de Boigne |
| Location | Near Tunga village close to Lalsot in modern Dausa district |
| Rajput force | A combined Rajput force described in contemporary tradition as about 70,000 |
| Result | Met Scindia's army and inflicted a tactical defeat |
| Historical effect | It did not destroy Maratha power, but it checked immediate southward consolidation and briefly restored Rajput confidence |
- Why the battle matters: it marks the moment when Jaipur and Marwar still showed that joint resistance was possible.
- Exam trap: Students often confuse this engagement with Patan 1790 or Merta 1790, where de Boigne later reversed the setback; Tunga belongs specifically to 1787.
Sawai Pratap Singh's cultural legacy
- Sawai Pratap Singh of Jaipur was not only a war ruler.
- His court supported the Galta school of painting.
- His best-known architectural legacy is Hawa Mahal, completed in 1799 and designed by Lal Chand Ustad.
- That monument, rising inside the walled city, belongs to the same late-eighteenth-century moment as the military crisis.
- Jaipur under Pratap Singh tried to project cultural refinement even while frontier pressure continued between 1788 and 1803.
- The coexistence of artistic revival and political danger is one of the clearest features of modern Rajasthan's transition from Mughal-era hierarchy to competitive regional statecraft.
After 1793: succession, rivalry and exhaustion
- After Vijai Singh's death in 1793 and the wider turmoil that culminated in 1803, Marwar passed into the reign of Maharaja Man Singh of Marwar, who ruled from 1803 to 1843.
- Succession disputes and court rivalry reduced the scope for united Rajput action.
- The Krishna Kumari episode 1810 exposed that weakness dramatically: a Mewar princess became the centre of a marriage struggle between Jaipur and Jodhpur, and her poisoning showed how interstate rivalry had turned diplomacy into tragedy.
- Pindari raids 1808-1817 intensified across Mewar, Marwar, and the Hadoti tract.
- By 1817, many Rajput rulers were ready to accept British arbitration because the Maratha-Pindari cycle had exhausted older balances of power.
- The next section takes up the 1817-1818 treaties that ended this era and placed Rajputana under British paramountcy.
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