Public Section Preview
Key Points at a Glance
Prithviraj III (Chahamana/Chauhan)
- Won First Battle of Tarain (1191 CE) — defeated Muhammad Ghori
- Lost Second Battle of Tarain (1192 CE) — captured and killed
- His defeat ended Rajput supremacy in northern India
Rana Kumbha of Mewar (r. 1433–1468 CE)
- Built 32 forts including Kumbhalgarh
- Authored 4 Vedic commentaries and the Sangita-raja treatise
- Patronised the Vijay Stambha (1448 CE) at Chittorgarh
Rana Sanga (r. 1508–1528 CE)
- United a 100,000-strong pan-Rajput confederacy
- Lost the Battle of Khanwa (1527 CE) to Babur's Timurid artillery
- His defeat entrenched Mughal power permanently in India
Maharana Pratap (r. 1572–1597 CE)
- Fought Battle of Haldighati (18 June 1576 CE) against Akbar's forces led by Man Singh I
- Waged 25 years of guerrilla resistance from the Aravalli forests
- Never surrendered Mewar's independence
Rao Maldeo of Marwar (r. 1532–1562 CE)
- Expanded Jodhpur's territory to 80,000 sq km — largest Rajput state of his era
- Offered asylum to Humayun (1540 CE) then withdrew it at Khairwa (1542 CE)
- Resisted Sher Shah at Battle of Samel (1544 CE); his diplomacy shaped north Indian politics
Sawai Jai Singh II (r. 1699–1743 CE)
- Founded Jaipur city in 1727 CE on a 9-sector grid plan by architect Vidyadhar
- Built 5 Jantar Mantar observatories at Delhi, Jaipur, Ujjain, Varanasi, and Mathura
- Authored astronomical treatise Zij-i-Muhammad Shahi (1738 CE)
Man Singh I of Amber (r. 1589–1614 CE)
- Served as Akbar's commander with mansab 7,000 zat — highest for any Rajput noble
- Built Man Singh Palace at Amber (1592 CE) and funded Govinddev temple at Vrindavan
- His Mughal alliance set the template for Rajput-Mughal political accommodation
- Note: Man Mandir Palace at Gwalior was built by Man Singh Tomar (Tomar dynasty, c. 1486–1516 CE) — a different ruler
Ranthambhor Fort
- Occupied by Chauhans from c. 944 CE; controlled the vital Vindhya-Aravallis trade pass
- Contains 19 water reservoirs enabling long siege resistance
- 1301 CE jauhar under Hammiradeva against Alauddin Khalji became a symbol of Rajput honour
Meherangarh Fort (1459 CE)
- Founded by Rao Jodha on a 122-metre-high rock outcrop at Jodhpur
- Has 7 gates: Jayapol (1806 CE — victory over Jaipur-Bikaner) and Fatehpol (1707 CE — victory over Mughals) are the most significant
- Interior palaces include Moti Mahal, Phool Mahal, and Sheesh Mahal
Miniature Painting Schools of Rajasthan
- Five major schools: Mewar (earliest, c. 1260 CE), Marwar (Jodhpur/Nagaur), Amber-Jaipur, Bundi-Kota, and Bikaner
- Each school has distinct palette, themes, and stylistic identity
- Kishangarh school (c. 1720–1850 CE) produced the iconic Bani Thani portrait
Bappa Rawal (c. 728 CE) — Guhila Dynasty
- Defeated Arab forces that had penetrated Rajasthan after the conquest of Sindh (712 CE)
- Established Mewar's lasting sovereignty; received Chittorgarh fort
- Founded or substantially renovated the Eklingji temple at Kailashpuri (Udaipur) c. 734 CE
Din-i-Ilahi (1582 CE)
- Akbar's syncretic faith combining Islam, Hinduism, Zoroastrianism, and Christianity
- Only ~18 disciples accepted it; died with Akbar in 1605 CE
- Rajput allies like Man Singh I did not join despite their alliance with Akbar
Hada Rajputs of Bundi-Kota
- Established control of the Chambal valley by 1241 CE under Hara Deva
- Bundi school of painting (c. 1600–1750 CE) is known for indigo-emerald palette and lush landscapes
- Over 50 step-wells (baoris) built in Bundi; Raniji ki Baori (1699 CE) is the finest
Bhatis of Jaisalmer
- Founded Jaisalmer fort in 1156 CE by Rao Jaisal on a 250-feet-high Trikuta Hill
- Fort's Jain temples (12th–15th century CE) represent merchant-patron architecture at its peak
- Patwon ki Haveli (1805 CE onward) is the pinnacle of desert merchant architecture
