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House of Bhonsle

The House of Bhonsle (or Bhonsale, Bhosale, Bhosle)[3] are a prominent Indian Marathi royal house. They claimed descent from the Rajput Sisodia Dynasty, but were likely Kunbi Marathas.[4][5]

House of Bhonsle
Rajmudra (Royal Seal) of Shivaji I
Bhagwa Dhwaj, the flag of the Maratha Empire
Parent houseSisodia Dynasty (claimed)
Country
(present-day India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh)
Place of originPune district, Maharashtra, India
Founded1576; 447 years ago (1576)
FounderMaloji Bhosale, a predominant general of Malik Ambar
Current headUdayanraje Bhosale (Satara branch)
Shahu II (Kolhapur branch)
Khem Sawant VI Bhonsle Bahadur (Sawantwadi branch)
Sumitrabai Raje Bhonsle (Akkalkot branch)
Shivaji Rajah Bhosle (Thanjavur branch)[1]
Raje Mudhoji Bhosale III (Nagpur branch)[2]
Final ruler
Titles
List
Style(s)Chhatrapati
Raja
Jagirdar
Patil
Motto
हर हर महादेव
"Har Har Mahadev"

("Praises to Mahadev (Shiva)")
Estate(s)
List
Deposition
List
Cadet branches

They served as the Chhatrapati or Emperor of the Maratha Empire from 1674 to 1818, where they gained imperial dominance of the Indian Subcontinent. They also ruled several states such as Satara, Kolhapur, Thanjavur, Nagpur, [6]Akkalkot,[7] Sawantwadi[8] and Barshi.[9]

The House of Bhonsle was founded in 1577 by Maloji Bhosale, a predominant general or sardar of Malik Ambar of the Ahmadnagar Sultanate.[10] In 1595 or 1599, Maloji was given the title of raja by Bahadur Nizam Shah, the ruler of the Ahmadnagar Sultanate.[11] He was later granted was given the jagir of Pune, Elur (Verul), Derhadi, Kannarad and Supe. He was also given control over the first of the Shivneri and Chakan. These positions were inherited by his sons Shahaji and Sharifji, who were named after a Muslim Sufi Shah Sharif

Origins

The origins of the Bhonsles in unclear. According to Jadunath Sarkar and other scholars, Bhonsles were predominantly Deccani tiller-plainsmen from the Shudra caste; they were part of the Marathas/Kunbis, an amorphous class-group.[12][5][13][14][a] Scholars have however disagreed about the agricultural status of Bhosles.[15] Rosalind O'Hanlon notes that the historical evolution of castes grouped under the Maratha-Kunbis is sketchy.[16] Ananya Vajpeyi rejects the designation of Shudra, since the category has remained in a state of flux across centuries; she instead notes them to be a Marathi lineage, who enjoyed "reasonably high" social status as landholders and warlords, being in the service of Deccan Sultanate or Mughals.[15][b]

According to R. C. Dhere's interpretation of local oral history and ethnography, Bhonsles descend from the Hoysalas and Yadavas of Devagiri, who were cow-herding Gavli sovereigns.[15][17][c][d] In early thirteenth century, "Baliyeppa Gopati Sirsat", a Hoysala cousin of Simhana migrated from Gadag to Satara along with his pastoral herd and kul-devta; the Sambhu Mahadev was thus installed at a hill-top in Singhnapur.[15][e][f] Historical records indicate that this shrine received extensive patronage from Maloji onwards.[15][g] Further, there exists a branch of the Bhosles named "Sirsat Bhosles" and Bhosle (or "Bhosale") is linguistically similar to "Hoysala".[15] M. K. Dhavalikar found the work to convincingly explain the foundation of the Bhosle clan (as well as Sambhu Mahadev cult).[18] Vajpeyi too advocates that Dhere's theory be probed in greater detail — "[f]rom pastoralist big men to warlords on horseback, is not an impossible distance to cover in two to three centuries."[15]

Accuracy

Vajpeyi notes the "veridical status" of Chitnis' finds to be not determinable to "historical certainty" — the links were tenuous at best and inventive at worst.[15] Shivaji was not a Rajput and the sole purpose of the lineage was to guarantee Shivaji's consecration as a Kshatriya, in a tactic that had clear parallels to Rajputisation.[15][h] Jadunath Sarkar deemed that the genealogy was cleverly fabricated by Balaji Awji and after some reluctance accepted by Gaga Bhatt, who in turn was "rewarded with a huge fee". V. K. Rajwade, Dhere, Allison Busch, John Keay and Audrey Truschke also agree with Sarkar about the fabrication.[14][19][20][21][22] G. S. Sardesai notes that the descent is "not authentically proved".[23][i] Stewart N. Gordon does not pass any judgement but notes Bhatt to be a "creative Brahmin".[15][24][j] André Wink deems that the Sisodia genealogical claim is destined to remain disputed forever.[25][k]

Establishment

Ahmadnagar Sultanate

The earliest accepted members of the Bhonsles are Mudhoji Bhonsle and his kin Rupaji Bhonsle, who were the village headman (pāṭīl) of Hingani — this branch has been since known as Hinganikar Bhonsles.[26] A branch seem to have split soon, who went on to claim an ancestral right to the post of district steward (deśmukhī) of Kadewalit: Suryaji Bhonsle during the reign of Ahmad Nizam Shah I (early 1490s), and his son Sharafji Bhonsle during the conquest of the region by Daniyal Mirza (1599).[26][l][m] This branch has been since known as Kadewalit Bhonsles.[26]

The next significant Bhonsle was probably Maloji Bhosale from the Hinganikar branch. He was the great-grandson of one Kheloji (c. 1490).

The House of Bhonsle was officially founded by Maloji Bhosale who initially served as a patil (chief) of the Hingni Berdi and Devalgaon villages around Pune.[27][28] Later, along with his brother Vithoji, he migrated to Sindkhed and served as a Horseman.[29]

In 1577, they joined the service of the Ahmadnagar Sultanate, under Sultan Murtaza Nizam Shah I. Maloji became a trusted General of the Peshwa Malik Amber fighting against rival powers such as the Mughals and Bijapur Sultanate[30] the parganas (administrative units) of Elur (Verul), Derhadi and Kannarad.[31] In 1595 or 1599, Maloji was given the title of raja by Bahadur Nizam Shah, officially establishing the House of Bhonsle. [32] On the recommendation of Malik Ambar, he was given the jagir of Pune and Supe parganas, along with the control of the Shivneri and Chakan forts. Maloji carried out the restoration of the Grishneshwar temple near Verul, and also constructed a large tank at the Shambhu Mahadev temple in Shikhar Shingnapur.[33] Maloji and his wife Uma Bai had 2 sons: Shahaji and Sharifji, named Sufi Pir Hazrat Shah Sharif.[34]

According to Shivabharata, composed by Shivaji's court poet Paramananda, Maloji's wife Umabai prayed to the Sufi Pir Shah Sharif of Ahmadnagar to bless her with a son. She gave birth to two sons, who were named Shahaji and Sharifji after the Pir.[35]

Shivaji's Coronation

By 1670s, Shivaji had acquired extensive territory and wealth from his campaigns.[5][24] But, lacking a formal crown, he had no operational legitimacy to rule his de facto domain and technically, remained subject to his Mughal (or Deccan Sultanate) overlords; in the hierarchy of power, Shivaji's position remained similar to fellow Maratha chieftains.[5][15][24][n] Also, he was often opposed by the orthodox Brahmin community of Maharashtra.[15] A coronation sanctioned by the Brahmins was thus planned, in a bid to proclaim sovereignty and legitimize his rule.[5][24][37]

On proposing the Brahmins of his court to have him proclaimed as the rightful king, a controversy erupted: the regnal status was reserved for those belonging to the kshatriya varna.[38][21] Not only was there a fundamental dispute among scholars on whether any true Kshatriya survived in the Kali Yuga,[o] having been all destroyed by Parashurama but also Shivaji's grandfather was a tiller-headman, Shivaji did not wear the sacred thread, and his marriage was not in accordance with the Kshatriya customs.[24][37][39] Thus, the Brahmins had him categorised as a shudra.[24][37]

Compelled to postpone his coronation, Shivaji had his secretary Balaji Avji Chitnis sent to the Sisodiyas of Mewar for inspection of the royal genealogies; Avji returned with a favorable finding — Shahji turned out to be a descendant of Chacho Sisodiya, a half-Rajput uncle of Mokal Singh.[15][p] Gaga Bhatt, a famed Brahmin of Banaras,[q] was then hired to ratify Chitnis' find, and the Bhonsles were now permitted to stake a claim to Kshatriya caste.[25][15][21][r] The coronation would be re-executed in June 1674 but only after going through a long list of preludes.[15][s]

Led by Bhatt, who employed traditional Hindu imagery in an unprecedented scale, the first phase had Shivaji penance for having lived as a Maratha despite being a Kshatriya.[15][24][20] Then came the sacred thread ceremony ('maunjibandhanam') followed by remarriage according to Kshatriya customs ('mantra-vivah') and a sequence of Vedic rituals before the eventual coronation ('abhisheka') — a public spectacle of enormous expense that heralded the rebirth of Shivaji as a Kshatriya king.[15][t] Panegyrics composed by court-poets during these spans (and afterward) reinforced onto the public memory that Shivaji (and the Bhonsles) indeed belonged from the Sisodiyas.[15][21]

However, the Kshatriyization was not unanimous; a section of Brahmins continued to deny the Kshatriya status.[42] Brahmins of the Peshwa period rejected Bhatt's acceptance of Shivaji's claims and blamed the non-dharmic coronation for all ills that plagued Shivaji and his heirs—in tune with the general Brahminical sentiment to categorize all Marathas as Shudras, carte-blanche; there have been even claims that Bhatt was excommunicated by Maratha Brahmins for his role in the coronation of Shivaji![39] Interestingly, all claims to Rajput ancestry had largely vanished from the family's subsequent projections of identity.[15]

Maratha Empire

 
Portrait of Shivaji Bhonsle, later known as Shivaji I, the first Chhatrapati of the Maratha Empire.
 
Raigad Fort served as the initial capital of the Bhonsles.

The Maratha Empire was established by Shivaji I the grandson of Maloji in 1674. This was established to invasions from the Mughal Empire and the Bijapur Sultanate. Shivaji's forces initially occupied the Fort of Torna in 1642. He had expanded his kingdom to Raigad by 1674.[citation needed] he crowned himself He was crowned as Chhatrapati, meaning emperor.

Shivaji wanted to establish his government based on his Philosophy of Hindavi Swarajya. (The Rule of the People) This advocated for more representation of the people and less power of the elites. He later established the Ashta Pradhan, (Modern council of ministers) an institution of a council of eight ministers to guide the administration of his nascent state. Each of the ministers was placed in charge of an administrative department; thus, the council heralded the birth of a bureaucracy. Shivaji appointed Moropant Trimbak Pingle as the Peshwa, the leader of the council. [43]

Shivaji was succeeded by his son Sambhaji I. In early 1689, Sambhaji and his commanders met at Sangameshwar. Mughal forces, under Emperor Aurangzeb attacked Sangameshwar when Sambhaji was accompanied by just a few men. Sambhaji captured by the Mughal troops on 1 February 1689. Aurangzeb had charged Sambhaji with attacks by Maratha forces on Burhanpur.[citation needed] He and his advisor, Kavi Kalash, were taken to Bahadurgad by the imperial army, where they were executed by the Mughals on 21 March 1689.[citation needed]

After the execution of Sambhaji, Rajaram I was crowned at Raigad on 12 March 1689. During the Mughal started siege on Raigad on 25 March 1689, the widow of Sambhaji (Maharani Yesubai) and Peshwa Ramchandra Pant Amatya sent young Rajaram to the stronghold of Pratapgad through Kavlya ghat.[citation needed] Rajaram to escape through Kavlya ghat to the fort of Jinji through the Pratapgad and Vishalgad forts, Rajaram reached Keladi in disguise and pursued assistance from Keladi Chennamma - who kept the Mughal attack in check to ensure safe passage and escape of Rajaram to Jinji where he reached after a month and a half on 1 November 1689.[citation needed]

Aurangzeb sent Uzbek general Ghazi-ud-din Firoze Jung against the Marathas in the Deccan. He then sent Zulfiqar Khan Nusrat Jung to capture the Jingi Fort. He laid siege to it in September, 1690. After three failed attempts, it was finally captured after seven years on 8 January 1698. Rajaram, however, escaped and fled first to Vellore and later to Vishalgad. Rajaram returned to jinji and occupied the fort 11 November 1689, but left before it fell in 1698, setting up his court at fort Satara. Then, Maratha commanders, Santaji Ghorpade and Dhanaji Jadhav, defeated the Mughal forces, therefore cutting off their lines of communication in Jingi.[citation needed]

Kolhapur Branch

In 1707, Mughal Emperor Muhammad Azam Shah released Shahu Bhosale, the son of Sambhaji. However, his mother was kept as a hostage of the Mughals, in order to ensure that Shahu adhered to the release conditions. Immediately the Maratha throne was claimed his aunt Tarabai, claiming the throne for her son Shivaji II. After his victory at the Battle of Khed, Shahu established himself at Satara, forcing her to retire with her son to Kolhapur. This resulted in the creation of the Kolhapur branch in 1709 under Tarabai, splitting from the main Satara branch under Shahu.. Shivaji II and Tarabai were soon deposed by Rajasbai, the other widow of Rajaram. She installed her own son, Sambhaji II as the new ruler of Kolhapur.[44] Sambhaji then made alliance with the Nizam.[45] The defeat of the Nizam by Bajirao I in the Battle of Palkhed in 1728 led to the former ending his support for Sambhaji.[46] Sambhaji II signed the Treaty of Warna in 1731 with his cousin Shahuji to formalize the two separate seats of Bhonsle family.[45][47]

Maratha Confederacy

Confederacy era

 
Map of the Maratha Confederacy at its greatest extent.
 
Emblem depicting Chatrapati Shahu I of the Maratha Confederacy.

Shahu appointed Balaji Vishwanath a member of the Bhat Family as his Peshwa. The Peshwa was instrumental in securing Mughal recognition of Shahu as the rightful heir of Shivaji and the Chhatrapati of the Marathas. Balaji also gained the release of Shahu's mother, Yesubai, from Mughal captivity in 1719.

The Peshwas later became de facto rulers of the Maratha Empire. Under the Peshwas, Chhatrapati was limited to simply a monarchial figurehead. Maratha Empire dominated most of the Indian subcontinent.

Under the Peshwas the Marathas expanded to their greatest extent. 1737, Under Bajirao I invaded Delhi in a blitzkrieg manner at the Battle of Delhi (1737).[48][49] The Nizam set out from the Deccan to rescue the Mughals from the invasion of the Marathas, but was defeated decisively in the Battle of Bhopal.[50] The Marathas extracted a large tribute from the Mughals and signed a treaty which ceded Malwa to the Marathas.[citation needed] The Battle of Vasai was fought between the Marathas and the Portuguese in Vasai, a village lying on the northern shore of Vasai creek. (Part of modern day Mumbai)[51]

After Shahu's death, he was succeeded by Rajaram II When Peshwa Balaji Baji Rao left for the Mughal frontier, Tarabai urged Rajaram II to remove him from the post of Peshwa. When Rajaram refused, she imprisoned him in a dungeon at Satara, on 24 November 1750. She claimed that he was an imposter from Gondhali caste and she had falsely presented him as her grandson to Shahu.[52] His health deteriorated considerably during this imprisonment. On 14 September 1752, Tarabai and Balaji Rao took an oath at Khandoba temple in Jejuri, promising mutual peace.[53] Nevertheless, the Peshwa retained Rajaram II as the titular Chhatrapati and a powerless figurehead.[citation needed]

Peshwa Bajirao and his three chiefs, Pawar (Dhar), Holkar (Indore), and Scindia (Gwalior), expanded it northwards up to Peshawar. He also expanded it up to Kaveri river.[citation needed]

Nagpur Branch

 
Raghuji I, the first ruler of Nagpur, expanded the state to its greatest extent.

After the death of Chand Sultan, the Gond ruler of Deogarh, in 1739,[54] there were quarrels over the succession, leading to the throne being usurped by Wali Shah,[55][56][57] an illegitimate son of Bakht Buland Shah. [55][58] Chand Sultan's widow Ratan Kunwar invoked the aid of the Maratha leader Raghoji Bhonsle of Berar in the interest of her sons Akbar Shah and Burhan Shah. Wali Shah was put to death and the rightful heirs placed on the throne. Raghoji I Bhonsle was sent back to Berar with a plentiful bounty for his aid.[59] Raghoji then declared himself the King of Nagpur and the 'protector' of the Gond king. Thus in 1743, Burhan Shah was practically made a state pensionary, with real power being in the hands of the Maratha ruler. After this event the history of the Gond kingdom of Deogarh is not recorded.[60]

During Shahu's reign, Raghoji Bhosale of Nagpur expanded the empire Eastwards, reaching present-day Bengal. Khanderao Dabhade and later his son, Triambakrao, expanded it Westwards into Gujarat.[citation needed] In the Battle of Damalcherry in 1740, which was a major confrontation with the Nawab of the Carnatic, Dost Ali Khan . Raghoji was victorious and increased Maratha Influence in the Carnatic. [61][62][63]

after the successful campaign in Carnatic at the Battle of Trichinopolly. Raghoji invaded Bengal. Raghoji was able to annex Orissa and parts of Bengal permanently as he successfully exploited the chaotic conditions prevailing in the region after the death of their Governor Murshid Quli Khan in 1727.[64] Nawab of Bengal ceded territory up to the river Suvarnarekha to the Marathas, and agreeing to pay Rs. 20 lacs as chauth for Bengal (includes both West Bengal and Bangladesh) and 12 lacs for Bihar (including Jharkhand), thus Bengal becoming a tributary to the Marathas.[65]

 
the Kingdom of Nagpur at its greatest extent in 1751.

After Raghoji's death, he was succeeded by his son Janoji Bhonsle. Janoji was involved in wars between the Peshwa and the Nizam of Hyderabad. The nizam united against him and sacked and burnt Nagpur in 1765. On Janoji's death on 21 May 1772, the Battle of Panchgaon was fought over succession, until Mudhoji Bhonsle was victorious. In 1785 Mandla and the upper Narmada valley were added to the Nagpur dominions by treaty with the Peshwa. Mudhoji also had close ties with the British East India Company. Mudhoji was succeeded by Raghoji II. he who acquired Hoshangabad and the lower Narmada valley. In 1803 he united with Daulat Rao Sindhia of Gwalior against the British, and their alliance with Nizam Ali Khan of Hyderabad. The British and the Nizam were victorias at the battles of Assaye and Argaon, and signed the Treaty of Deogaon of that year Raghoji ceded Cuttack, southern Berar, and Sambalpur to the British, although Sambalpur was reconquered by 1806 by Raghoji. Raghoji II was deprived of a third of his territories, and he attempted to make up the loss of revenue from the remainder. The villages were mercilessly rack-rented, and many new taxes imposed. At the same time the raids of the Pindaris commenced. In 1811 they advanced to Nagpur and burnt the suburbs. Raghoji rebuilt many of the damaged village and forts. On the death of Raghoji II in 1816, his son Parsoji was supplanted and murdered by Mudhoji II Bhonsle, In 1817. A treaty of alliance providing for the maintenance of a subsidiary force by the British was signed in this year, a British resident having been appointed to the Nagpur court since 1799. In 1817, on the outbreak of war between the British and the Peshwa, Appa Sahib threw off his cloak of friendship, and accepted an embassy and a title from the Peshwa. His troops attacked the British, and were defeated in the action at Sitabuldi, and a second time close to Nagpur city. The remaining portion of Berar and the territories in the Narmada valley were ceded to the British. After the Third Anglo-Maratha War, Nagpur was under a under a subsidiary alliance with the British. Appa Sahib was reinstated to the throne, but shortly afterwards was discovered to be again conspiring, and was deposed and sent to Allahabad in custody. Raghoji II was succeeded by Raghoji III. he ruled Nagpur under a with the British resident Richard Jenkins. Raghoji died on 11 December 1853 without a male heir. Nagpur was annexed by the British under the doctrine of lapse. The former kingdom was administered as Nagpur Province, under a commissioner appointed by then Governor-General of India, James Broun-Ramsay.[citation needed]

Thanjavur Branch

The Bhonsoles were also influential in the Carnatic Region. In 1675, the Sultan of Bijapur sent a force commanded by the Maratha general Venkoji a half-brother of the Shivaji, to Capture the city of Thanjavur and Established the Thanjavur Maratha Kingdom. Venkoji defeated Alagiri, and occupied Thanjavur. He did not, however, place his protege on the throne as instructed by the Bijapur Sultan, but seized the kingdom and made himself king. Thus began the rule of the Marathas over Thanjavur. Vyankoji also allied with Chokkanatha of Madurai to repulse an invasion from Mysore.

Shivaji Maharaj also invaded Gingee and Thanjavur in 1676–1677 and made his brother Santaji the ruler of all lands to the north of the Coleroon.

Princely States

Satara State, Kolhapur State, Thanjavur State, Nagpur State, [6]Akkalkot State,[7] Sawantwadi State[8] and Barshi[9] were amongst the prominent states ruled by the Bhonsles.

List of Members

Maratha Empire

Image Name Birth Reign Death Notes
  Shivaji I 19 February 1630[66] 1674–1680 3 April 1680
  Sambhaji I 14 May 1657 16 January 1681 – 11 March 1689 11 March 1689
  Rajaram I 24 February 1670 11 March 1689 – 3 March 1700 3 March 1700
Shivaji II 9 June 1696 1700 – 1707, 1710 – 1714 (Kolhapur State) 14 March 1726
  Shahu I 18 May 1682 12 January 1707 – November 16, 1713 15 December 1749

Maratha Confederacy

Image Name Birth Reign Death Notes
  Shahu I 18 May 1682 November 16, 1713 – 15 December 1749 15 December 1749 During his reign, he made the postion of his Peshwa (prime minister) heraditary, and allowed them to become the de facto rulers.
  Rajaram II June 1726 15 December 1749 – 11 December 1777 11 December 1777 Became a Puppet ruler under Balaji Bajirao in 1749
Shahu II 1763 11 December 1777 – 3 May 1808 3 May 1808 A ceremonial ruler with the actual power resting with the leaders of Maratha confederacy around India.
  Pratapsingh 18 January 1793 3 May 1808 – 3 June 1818 14 October 1847 Last Chhatrapati of the Maratha Confederacy

Satara State

Image Name Birth Reign Death Notes
  Pratapsingh 18 January 1793 3 June 1818 – 5 September 1839 14 October 1847 Became Raja of the Satara state. He was deposed by the East india company in 1839.
  Shahaji 1802 5 September 1839 – 5 April 1848 5 April 1848 Satara state abolished after the death of Appasaheb by the East india Company under the policy of Doctrine of lapse

Kolhapur State

Image Name Birth Reign Death Notes
  Tarabai 1675 1709 – 1710 (Unofficial) 1761 Established the Branch of Kolhapur.
Shivaji I 9 June 1696 1710 – 1714 14 March 1726 First Official Raja of kolhapur.Deposed by his stepmother, Rajasbai in favour of her own son, Sambhaji II
  Sambhaji II 1698 1714–1760 18 December 1760 Signed treaty of Varna with Shahu I to formalize the existence of two seats of the House of Bhonsle at Satara and Kolhapur respectively.[67]
  Shivaji III 1756 22 September 1762 – 24 April 1813 24 April 1813
Sambhaji III 1801 24 April 1813 – 2 July 1821 2 July 1821
Shivaji IV 1816 July 2, 1821 – Jan 03 1822 January 3, 1822
Shahaji I 22 January 1802 3 January 1822 – 29 November 1838 29 November 1838
  Shivaji V 26 December 1830 1838–1866 4 August 1866
  Rajaram II April 13, 1850 August 18, 1866 – November 30, 1870 November 30, 1870
  Shivaji VI April 5, 1863 1871–1883 December 25, 1883
  Shahu IV (overall)Shahu I of Kolhapur 26 June 1874 2 April 1894 – 6 May 1922 6 May 1922
  Rajaram III 31 July 1897 1922–1940 26 November 1940
  Shivaji VII 22 November 1941 31 December 1941 – 28 September 1946 28 September 1946
  Shahaji II 4 April 1910 1947–1971 9 May 1983

Nagpur state

Image Name Birth Reign Death Notes
  Raghoji I 1695 1739 – 14 February 1755 14 February 1755 First Bhonsle ruler of Nagpur.
  Janoji 14 February 1755 – 21 May 1772 21 May 1772
  Mudhoji I 21 May 1772 – 19 May 1788 19 May 1788
  Raghoji II 19 May 1788 – 22 March 1816 22 March 1816
Parsoji 1788 22 March 1816 – 2 Feb 1817 2 Feb 1817
  Mudhoji II 1796 2 Feb 1817 – 15 Mar 1818 15 Mar 1818
  Raghuji III 1808 15 Mar 1818 – 11 Dec 1853 11 Dec 1853 Last Bhonsle ruler of Nagpur.

Family tree

Family tree of Maratha Chhatrapatis
  Biological Child
  Adopted Child
Maloji
Bhosale
Shahaji
Bhosale
Shivaji I
Chhatrapati
(1)
r. 1674-1680
Vyankoji I
Raja of
Thanjavur

r. 1675-1684
Thanjavur
Branch
Sambhaji I
Chhatrapati
(2)
r. 1681-1689
TarabaiRajaram I
Chhatrapati
(3)
r. 1689-1700
Shahu I
Chhatrapati
(5)
r. 1707-1749
Shivaji II
Chhatrapati
(4)
r. 1700-1707
Raja of
Kolhapur

r. 1710-1714
Sambhaji II
Raja of
Kolhapur

r. 1714-1760
?Kolhapur
Branch
Rajaram II
Chhatrapati
(6)
r. 1749-1777
Shahu II
Chhatrapati
(7)
r. 1777-1808
Pratap
Singh

Chhatrapati
(8)
r. 1808-1818
Raja of
Satara

r. 1818-1839
Shahaji
Raja of
Satara

r. 1839-1848

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Susan Bayly and Eraly however emphasize that the Marathas were located outside the peripheries of Brahminism and people thereof did not form any rigid caste.[5][13]
  2. ^ Vajpeyi however notes that the Bhonsles almost-certainly never featured in the traditional list of 96 families, which allegedly composed the Maratha identity.
  3. ^ This was published in "Sikhar Singanapurca Sri Sambhu Mahadev" (2002) for the first time.
  4. ^ The caste-status of these Yadavas and whether they were a part of Bahminical hiearchy is disputed.
  5. ^ The Hoysalas as well as the Yadavas were competing feudatories of the Chalukyas with battles being as much common as matrimonial alliances.[15] The migration was prob. motivated by pervasive droughts in the region and an opportunity to seek out some independence for himself.[15]
  6. ^ The shrine continues to serve as one of the most significant Shaivite shrine in modern Maharashtra.[17]
  7. ^ Texts produced under patronage of Shahaji make explicit connection between the Bhosales and Balip. Also, the "samadhi" (memorial) of Sambhaji, Shivaji, and Shahuji neighbor the shrine.
    However, for a span of about 250 years — from Balip to Kheloji — the history of the shrine is not clear.
  8. ^ She however cautions that the summary rejection of Shivaji's ancestry claims in contemporary historiographical literature often stemmed from a Brahminical anti-Maratha perspective, imbibed from the Peshwas.[15]
  9. ^ Sardesai noted that the claims were supported by some 'firman's in possession of the Raja of Mudhol but many scholars [unidentified] considered them to be forged.
  10. ^ Gordon however points out that Shivaji might have "thought of himself as a Rajput" since long back. He evidences a letter (1656) sent by Shahji to Adil Shah II where they had boasted of Rajput pride and another letter (18 July 1666) from Parkaldas (an officer under Jai Singh) to Kalyandas, where three Rajput chieftains are noted to be admiring of Shivaji as a great Rajput with all the "characteristic qualities."
    Vajpeyi interprets the former use to signify an exalted royal status rather than any connection with the Rajput clans. A. Sievler deems the latter translation to be dubious; Mehendale comments that "Rajput" simply meant a Kshatriya in the context. In another contemporary source—a letter from Jai Singh himself to his Prime Minister—, we see Shivaji being regarded to belong from a low caste (and pedigree), who was not even fit for inter-dining with Rajputs.
  11. ^ In a footnote, Wink mentions of two letters before the coronation ceremony, where Shivaji had referred to himself as a Rajput.
  12. ^ The precise familial relation between Mudhoji/Rupali and Suryaji is unclear.
  13. ^ Stewart Gordon and other scholars deem the "deśmukhī" to have served as a 'hinge' between the local populace and the imperial authority which frequently changed. Without their loyalty, commanding authority in newly conquered territories was difficult.
  14. ^ Most of the great Maratha Jahagirdar families in the service of Adilshahi strongly opposed Shivaji in his early years. These included families such as the Ghadge, More, Mohite, Ghorpade, Shirke, and Nimbalkar.[36]
  15. ^ Madhav Deshpande notes that one of the oldest texts in support of such a viewpoint was drafted by Kamalakara Bhatta, a paternal uncle of Gaga Bhatta.
    However, he was hardly a radical (unlike Nagesbhatta, to whom even the Rajputs were Shudras) and allowed expiatory rites for the rare "fallen" Kshatriya-Shudras, provided he did not exceed the upanayana age-limit of 22 years. In his judgement, he was following his father Ramkrsna Bhatta as well as grandfather Narayana Bhatta.
  16. ^ Chacho was born of a Khati concubine and in contemporary times, was pejoratively referred to as a khātanvālā.[40] People like Chacho were categorized into separate caste-groups at the lower end of the hierarchy—even unfit for inter-dining with—, and excluded from Rajput ganayats.[40]
  17. ^ Gaga Bhatt was a preeminent legal scholar, whose scholarship focused on the relative status of different varnas across different regions. Shivaji was already in contact with him since 1664, when he was asked to adjudicate upon whether the Saraswat Brahmins (then, Syenavis) were indeed Brahmins.[39] It is very plausible that the idea of coronation was Bhatt's suggestion — during the previous encounter, he had already proclaimed Shivaji to have born into a "pure royal family."[39]
  18. ^ Susan Bayly views the episode to reflect fluidity in the caste system.[25]
  19. ^ Contemporary Dutch East India Company archives[41] indicate that even then, Shivaji's upgradation of status was only accepted by Brahmins after he had promised them to not rule tyrannically anymore.[25]
  20. ^ The expense was huge enough to impose a coronation tax on his subjects for the next few years.

References

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house, bhonsle, this, article, factual, accuracy, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, help, ensure, that, disputed, statements, reliably, sourced, november, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, bhosle, bhosale, redirect, h. This article s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bhosle and Bhosale redirect here For other uses see Bhosle disambiguation Bhosale disambiguation and Bhonsle disambiguation The House of Bhonsle or Bhonsale Bhosale Bhosle 3 are a prominent Indian Marathi royal house They claimed descent from the Rajput Sisodia Dynasty but were likely Kunbi Marathas 4 5 House of BhonsleRajmudra Royal Seal of Shivaji IBhagwa Dhwaj the flag of the Maratha EmpireParent houseSisodia Dynasty claimed CountryMaratha Empire 1674 1818 Sawantwadi State 1729 1947 Thanjavur State 1674 1855 Kolhapur State 1710 1947 Nagpur State 1739 1853 Satara State 1818 1849 Akkalkot State 1840 1947 present day India Pakistan and Bangladesh Place of originPune district Maharashtra IndiaFounded1576 447 years ago 1576 FounderMaloji Bhosale a predominant general of Malik AmbarCurrent headUdayanraje Bhosale Satara branch Shahu II Kolhapur branch Khem Sawant VI Bhonsle Bahadur Sawantwadi branch Sumitrabai Raje Bhonsle Akkalkot branch Shivaji Rajah Bhosle Thanjavur branch 1 Raje Mudhoji Bhosale III Nagpur branch 2 Final rulerMaratha Empire Shahu I 1707 1713 Maratha Confederacy Pratap Singh 1808 1818 Satara State Shahaji 1839 1849 Nagpur State Raghuji Bhonsle III 1818 1853 Thanjavur State Shivaji II 1832 1855 Sawantwadi State Rani Parvati Bai Raje 1937 1947 Akkalkot State Vijayasinhrao 1923 1927 Kolhapur State Shahaji II 1947 1949 TitlesList Chhatrapati of the Maratha Empire 1674 1731 Chhatrapati of the Maratha Confederacy 1731 1818 Raja of Sawantwadi 1729 1947 Raja of Thanjavur 1674 1855 Raja of Kolhapur 1710 1947 Raja of Nagpur 1739 1853 Raja of Satara 1818 1849 Raja of Akkalkot 1840 1947 Raja of Verul Derhadi and Kannarad 1595 or 1599 1608 or 1620 Jagirdar of Supa 1599 1664 Jagirdar of Pune 1599 1664 Jagirdar of Bangalore 1538 1664 Patil of Hingni Berdi and DevalgaonStyle s Chhatrapati Raja Jagirdar PatilMottoहर हर मह द व Har Har Mahadev Praises to Mahadev Shiva Estate s List Jalmandir Palace Satara 1838 present Raigad Fort Maratha Empire 1656 1689 1707 1818 Gingee Fort Maratha Empire 1677 1698 Ajinkyatara Fort Maratha Empire 1706 1818 Red Fort Maratha Empire 1771 1803 Nagardhan Fort Nagpur 1740 1853 Aranmanai Palace Thanjavur 1674 present New Palace Kolhapur 1877 present DepositionList Maratha Empire 1713 Chatrapati Shahu I becomes a puppet of the Peshwas Bhat Family 1818 Third Anglo Maratha War leads to British East Indian Company control of Maratha territory and the creation of Satara State under British suzeraintyBhonsle States 1849 annexation of the Satara State by the East India Company 1853 annexation of the Nagpur State by the East India Company 1855 annexation of the Thanjavur State by the East India Company 1947 annexation of the Akkalkot State by the Dominion of India 1947 annexation of the Sawantwadi State by the Dominion of India 1949 annexation of the Kolhapur State by the Dominion of IndiaCadet branchesBhonsles of Nagpur Bhonsles of Sawantwadi Bhonsles of Satara Bhonsles of Kolhapur Bhonsles of Akkalkot Bhonsles of ThanjavurThey served as the Chhatrapati or Emperor of the Maratha Empire from 1674 to 1818 where they gained imperial dominance of the Indian Subcontinent They also ruled several states such as Satara Kolhapur Thanjavur Nagpur 6 Akkalkot 7 Sawantwadi 8 and Barshi 9 The House of Bhonsle was founded in 1577 by Maloji Bhosale a predominant general or sardar of Malik Ambar of the Ahmadnagar Sultanate 10 In 1595 or 1599 Maloji was given the title of raja by Bahadur Nizam Shah the ruler of the Ahmadnagar Sultanate 11 He was later granted was given the jagir of Pune Elur Verul Derhadi Kannarad and Supe He was also given control over the first of the Shivneri and Chakan These positions were inherited by his sons Shahaji and Sharifji who were named after a Muslim Sufi Shah Sharif Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Accuracy 2 Establishment 2 1 Ahmadnagar Sultanate 2 2 Shivaji s Coronation 2 3 Maratha Empire 2 4 Kolhapur Branch 3 Maratha Confederacy 3 1 Confederacy era 3 2 Nagpur Branch 3 3 Thanjavur Branch 3 4 Princely States 4 List of Members 4 1 Maratha Empire 4 2 Maratha Confederacy 4 3 Satara State 4 4 Kolhapur State 4 5 Nagpur state 5 Family tree 6 See also 7 Notes 8 ReferencesOriginsThe origins of the Bhonsles in unclear According to Jadunath Sarkar and other scholars Bhonsles were predominantly Deccani tiller plainsmen from the Shudra caste they were part of the Marathas Kunbis an amorphous class group 12 5 13 14 a Scholars have however disagreed about the agricultural status of Bhosles 15 Rosalind O Hanlon notes that the historical evolution of castes grouped under the Maratha Kunbis is sketchy 16 Ananya Vajpeyi rejects the designation of Shudra since the category has remained in a state of flux across centuries she instead notes them to be a Marathi lineage who enjoyed reasonably high social status as landholders and warlords being in the service of Deccan Sultanate or Mughals 15 b According to R C Dhere s interpretation of local oral history and ethnography Bhonsles descend from the Hoysalas and Yadavas of Devagiri who were cow herding Gavli sovereigns 15 17 c d In early thirteenth century Baliyeppa Gopati Sirsat a Hoysala cousin of Simhana migrated from Gadag to Satara along with his pastoral herd and kul devta the Sambhu Mahadev was thus installed at a hill top in Singhnapur 15 e f Historical records indicate that this shrine received extensive patronage from Maloji onwards 15 g Further there exists a branch of the Bhosles named Sirsat Bhosles and Bhosle or Bhosale is linguistically similar to Hoysala 15 M K Dhavalikar found the work to convincingly explain the foundation of the Bhosle clan as well as Sambhu Mahadev cult 18 Vajpeyi too advocates that Dhere s theory be probed in greater detail f rom pastoralist big men to warlords on horseback is not an impossible distance to cover in two to three centuries 15 Accuracy Vajpeyi notes the veridical status of Chitnis finds to be not determinable to historical certainty the links were tenuous at best and inventive at worst 15 Shivaji was not a Rajput and the sole purpose of the lineage was to guarantee Shivaji s consecration as a Kshatriya in a tactic that had clear parallels to Rajputisation 15 h Jadunath Sarkar deemed that the genealogy was cleverly fabricated by Balaji Awji and after some reluctance accepted by Gaga Bhatt who in turn was rewarded with a huge fee V K Rajwade Dhere Allison Busch John Keay and Audrey Truschke also agree with Sarkar about the fabrication 14 19 20 21 22 G S Sardesai notes that the descent is not authentically proved 23 i Stewart N Gordon does not pass any judgement but notes Bhatt to be a creative Brahmin 15 24 j Andre Wink deems that the Sisodia genealogical claim is destined to remain disputed forever 25 k EstablishmentAhmadnagar Sultanate The earliest accepted members of the Bhonsles are Mudhoji Bhonsle and his kin Rupaji Bhonsle who were the village headman paṭil of Hingani this branch has been since known as Hinganikar Bhonsles 26 A branch seem to have split soon who went on to claim an ancestral right to the post of district steward desmukhi of Kadewalit Suryaji Bhonsle during the reign of Ahmad Nizam Shah I early 1490s and his son Sharafji Bhonsle during the conquest of the region by Daniyal Mirza 1599 26 l m This branch has been since known as Kadewalit Bhonsles 26 The next significant Bhonsle was probably Maloji Bhosale from the Hinganikar branch He was the great grandson of one Kheloji c 1490 The House of Bhonsle was officially founded by Maloji Bhosale who initially served as a patil chief of the Hingni Berdi and Devalgaon villages around Pune 27 28 Later along with his brother Vithoji he migrated to Sindkhed and served as a Horseman 29 In 1577 they joined the service of the Ahmadnagar Sultanate under Sultan Murtaza Nizam Shah I Maloji became a trusted General of the Peshwa Malik Amber fighting against rival powers such as the Mughals and Bijapur Sultanate 30 the parganas administrative units of Elur Verul Derhadi and Kannarad 31 In 1595 or 1599 Maloji was given the title of raja by Bahadur Nizam Shah officially establishing the House of Bhonsle 32 On the recommendation of Malik Ambar he was given the jagir of Pune and Supe parganas along with the control of the Shivneri and Chakan forts Maloji carried out the restoration of the Grishneshwar temple near Verul and also constructed a large tank at the Shambhu Mahadev temple in Shikhar Shingnapur 33 Maloji and his wife Uma Bai had 2 sons Shahaji and Sharifji named Sufi Pir Hazrat Shah Sharif 34 According to Shivabharata composed by Shivaji s court poet Paramananda Maloji s wife Umabai prayed to the Sufi Pir Shah Sharif of Ahmadnagar to bless her with a son She gave birth to two sons who were named Shahaji and Sharifji after the Pir 35 Shivaji s Coronation By 1670s Shivaji had acquired extensive territory and wealth from his campaigns 5 24 But lacking a formal crown he had no operational legitimacy to rule his de facto domain and technically remained subject to his Mughal or Deccan Sultanate overlords in the hierarchy of power Shivaji s position remained similar to fellow Maratha chieftains 5 15 24 n Also he was often opposed by the orthodox Brahmin community of Maharashtra 15 A coronation sanctioned by the Brahmins was thus planned in a bid to proclaim sovereignty and legitimize his rule 5 24 37 On proposing the Brahmins of his court to have him proclaimed as the rightful king a controversy erupted the regnal status was reserved for those belonging to the kshatriya varna 38 21 Not only was there a fundamental dispute among scholars on whether any true Kshatriya survived in the Kali Yuga o having been all destroyed by Parashurama but also Shivaji s grandfather was a tiller headman Shivaji did not wear the sacred thread and his marriage was not in accordance with the Kshatriya customs 24 37 39 Thus the Brahmins had him categorised as a shudra 24 37 Compelled to postpone his coronation Shivaji had his secretary Balaji Avji Chitnis sent to the Sisodiyas of Mewar for inspection of the royal genealogies Avji returned with a favorable finding Shahji turned out to be a descendant of Chacho Sisodiya a half Rajput uncle of Mokal Singh 15 p Gaga Bhatt a famed Brahmin of Banaras q was then hired to ratify Chitnis find and the Bhonsles were now permitted to stake a claim to Kshatriya caste 25 15 21 r The coronation would be re executed in June 1674 but only after going through a long list of preludes 15 s Led by Bhatt who employed traditional Hindu imagery in an unprecedented scale the first phase had Shivaji penance for having lived as a Maratha despite being a Kshatriya 15 24 20 Then came the sacred thread ceremony maunjibandhanam followed by remarriage according to Kshatriya customs mantra vivah and a sequence of Vedic rituals before the eventual coronation abhisheka a public spectacle of enormous expense that heralded the rebirth of Shivaji as a Kshatriya king 15 t Panegyrics composed by court poets during these spans and afterward reinforced onto the public memory that Shivaji and the Bhonsles indeed belonged from the Sisodiyas 15 21 However the Kshatriyization was not unanimous a section of Brahmins continued to deny the Kshatriya status 42 Brahmins of the Peshwa period rejected Bhatt s acceptance of Shivaji s claims and blamed the non dharmic coronation for all ills that plagued Shivaji and his heirs in tune with the general Brahminical sentiment to categorize all Marathas as Shudras carte blanche there have been even claims that Bhatt was excommunicated by Maratha Brahmins for his role in the coronation of Shivaji 39 Interestingly all claims to Rajput ancestry had largely vanished from the family s subsequent projections of identity 15 Maratha Empire Portrait of Shivaji Bhonsle later known as Shivaji I the first Chhatrapati of the Maratha Empire Raigad Fort served as the initial capital of the Bhonsles Main article Mughal Maratha Wars The Maratha Empire was established by Shivaji I the grandson of Maloji in 1674 This was established to invasions from the Mughal Empire and the Bijapur Sultanate Shivaji s forces initially occupied the Fort of Torna in 1642 He had expanded his kingdom to Raigad by 1674 citation needed he crowned himself He was crowned as Chhatrapati meaning emperor Shivaji wanted to establish his government based on his Philosophy of Hindavi Swarajya The Rule of the People This advocated for more representation of the people and less power of the elites He later established the Ashta Pradhan Modern council of ministers an institution of a council of eight ministers to guide the administration of his nascent state Each of the ministers was placed in charge of an administrative department thus the council heralded the birth of a bureaucracy Shivaji appointed Moropant Trimbak Pingle as the Peshwa the leader of the council 43 Shivaji was succeeded by his son Sambhaji I In early 1689 Sambhaji and his commanders met at Sangameshwar Mughal forces under Emperor Aurangzeb attacked Sangameshwar when Sambhaji was accompanied by just a few men Sambhaji captured by the Mughal troops on 1 February 1689 Aurangzeb had charged Sambhaji with attacks by Maratha forces on Burhanpur citation needed He and his advisor Kavi Kalash were taken to Bahadurgad by the imperial army where they were executed by the Mughals on 21 March 1689 citation needed After the execution of Sambhaji Rajaram I was crowned at Raigad on 12 March 1689 During the Mughal started siege on Raigad on 25 March 1689 the widow of Sambhaji Maharani Yesubai and Peshwa Ramchandra Pant Amatya sent young Rajaram to the stronghold of Pratapgad through Kavlya ghat citation needed Rajaram to escape through Kavlya ghat to the fort of Jinji through the Pratapgad and Vishalgad forts Rajaram reached Keladi in disguise and pursued assistance from Keladi Chennamma who kept the Mughal attack in check to ensure safe passage and escape of Rajaram to Jinji where he reached after a month and a half on 1 November 1689 citation needed Aurangzeb sent Uzbek general Ghazi ud din Firoze Jung against the Marathas in the Deccan He then sent Zulfiqar Khan Nusrat Jung to capture the Jingi Fort He laid siege to it in September 1690 After three failed attempts it was finally captured after seven years on 8 January 1698 Rajaram however escaped and fled first to Vellore and later to Vishalgad Rajaram returned to jinji and occupied the fort 11 November 1689 but left before it fell in 1698 setting up his court at fort Satara Then Maratha commanders Santaji Ghorpade and Dhanaji Jadhav defeated the Mughal forces therefore cutting off their lines of communication in Jingi citation needed Kolhapur Branch Main article Kolhapur State In 1707 Mughal Emperor Muhammad Azam Shah released Shahu Bhosale the son of Sambhaji However his mother was kept as a hostage of the Mughals in order to ensure that Shahu adhered to the release conditions Immediately the Maratha throne was claimed his aunt Tarabai claiming the throne for her son Shivaji II After his victory at the Battle of Khed Shahu established himself at Satara forcing her to retire with her son to Kolhapur This resulted in the creation of the Kolhapur branch in 1709 under Tarabai splitting from the main Satara branch under Shahu Shivaji II and Tarabai were soon deposed by Rajasbai the other widow of Rajaram She installed her own son Sambhaji II as the new ruler of Kolhapur 44 Sambhaji then made alliance with the Nizam 45 The defeat of the Nizam by Bajirao I in the Battle of Palkhed in 1728 led to the former ending his support for Sambhaji 46 Sambhaji II signed the Treaty of Warna in 1731 with his cousin Shahuji to formalize the two separate seats of Bhonsle family 45 47 Maratha ConfederacyMain article Maratha Empire Confederacy era This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Map of the Maratha Confederacy at its greatest extent Emblem depicting Chatrapati Shahu I of the Maratha Confederacy Shahu appointed Balaji Vishwanath a member of the Bhat Family as his Peshwa The Peshwa was instrumental in securing Mughal recognition of Shahu as the rightful heir of Shivaji and the Chhatrapati of the Marathas Balaji also gained the release of Shahu s mother Yesubai from Mughal captivity in 1719 The Peshwas later became de facto rulers of the Maratha Empire Under the Peshwas Chhatrapati was limited to simply a monarchial figurehead Maratha Empire dominated most of the Indian subcontinent Under the Peshwas the Marathas expanded to their greatest extent 1737 Under Bajirao I invaded Delhi in a blitzkrieg manner at the Battle of Delhi 1737 48 49 The Nizam set out from the Deccan to rescue the Mughals from the invasion of the Marathas but was defeated decisively in the Battle of Bhopal 50 The Marathas extracted a large tribute from the Mughals and signed a treaty which ceded Malwa to the Marathas citation needed The Battle of Vasai was fought between the Marathas and the Portuguese in Vasai a village lying on the northern shore of Vasai creek Part of modern day Mumbai 51 After Shahu s death he was succeeded by Rajaram II When Peshwa Balaji Baji Rao left for the Mughal frontier Tarabai urged Rajaram II to remove him from the post of Peshwa When Rajaram refused she imprisoned him in a dungeon at Satara on 24 November 1750 She claimed that he was an imposter from Gondhali caste and she had falsely presented him as her grandson to Shahu 52 His health deteriorated considerably during this imprisonment On 14 September 1752 Tarabai and Balaji Rao took an oath at Khandoba temple in Jejuri promising mutual peace 53 Nevertheless the Peshwa retained Rajaram II as the titular Chhatrapati and a powerless figurehead citation needed Peshwa Bajirao and his three chiefs Pawar Dhar Holkar Indore and Scindia Gwalior expanded it northwards up to Peshawar He also expanded it up to Kaveri river citation needed Nagpur Branch Raghuji I the first ruler of Nagpur expanded the state to its greatest extent Main article Bhonsles of Nagpur After the death of Chand Sultan the Gond ruler of Deogarh in 1739 54 there were quarrels over the succession leading to the throne being usurped by Wali Shah 55 56 57 an illegitimate son of Bakht Buland Shah 55 58 Chand Sultan s widow Ratan Kunwar invoked the aid of the Maratha leader Raghoji Bhonsle of Berar in the interest of her sons Akbar Shah and Burhan Shah Wali Shah was put to death and the rightful heirs placed on the throne Raghoji I Bhonsle was sent back to Berar with a plentiful bounty for his aid 59 Raghoji then declared himself the King of Nagpur and the protector of the Gond king Thus in 1743 Burhan Shah was practically made a state pensionary with real power being in the hands of the Maratha ruler After this event the history of the Gond kingdom of Deogarh is not recorded 60 During Shahu s reign Raghoji Bhosale of Nagpur expanded the empire Eastwards reaching present day Bengal Khanderao Dabhade and later his son Triambakrao expanded it Westwards into Gujarat citation needed In the Battle of Damalcherry in 1740 which was a major confrontation with the Nawab of the Carnatic Dost Ali Khan Raghoji was victorious and increased Maratha Influence in the Carnatic 61 62 63 after the successful campaign in Carnatic at the Battle of Trichinopolly Raghoji invaded Bengal Raghoji was able to annex Orissa and parts of Bengal permanently as he successfully exploited the chaotic conditions prevailing in the region after the death of their Governor Murshid Quli Khan in 1727 64 Nawab of Bengal ceded territory up to the river Suvarnarekha to the Marathas and agreeing to pay Rs 20 lacs as chauth for Bengal includes both West Bengal and Bangladesh and 12 lacs for Bihar including Jharkhand thus Bengal becoming a tributary to the Marathas 65 the Kingdom of Nagpur at its greatest extent in 1751 After Raghoji s death he was succeeded by his son Janoji Bhonsle Janoji was involved in wars between the Peshwa and the Nizam of Hyderabad The nizam united against him and sacked and burnt Nagpur in 1765 On Janoji s death on 21 May 1772 the Battle of Panchgaon was fought over succession until Mudhoji Bhonsle was victorious In 1785 Mandla and the upper Narmada valley were added to the Nagpur dominions by treaty with the Peshwa Mudhoji also had close ties with the British East India Company Mudhoji was succeeded by Raghoji II he who acquired Hoshangabad and the lower Narmada valley In 1803 he united with Daulat Rao Sindhia of Gwalior against the British and their alliance with Nizam Ali Khan of Hyderabad The British and the Nizam were victorias at the battles of Assaye and Argaon and signed the Treaty of Deogaon of that year Raghoji ceded Cuttack southern Berar and Sambalpur to the British although Sambalpur was reconquered by 1806 by Raghoji Raghoji II was deprived of a third of his territories and he attempted to make up the loss of revenue from the remainder The villages were mercilessly rack rented and many new taxes imposed At the same time the raids of the Pindaris commenced In 1811 they advanced to Nagpur and burnt the suburbs Raghoji rebuilt many of the damaged village and forts On the death of Raghoji II in 1816 his son Parsoji was supplanted and murdered by Mudhoji II Bhonsle In 1817 A treaty of alliance providing for the maintenance of a subsidiary force by the British was signed in this year a British resident having been appointed to the Nagpur court since 1799 In 1817 on the outbreak of war between the British and the Peshwa Appa Sahib threw off his cloak of friendship and accepted an embassy and a title from the Peshwa His troops attacked the British and were defeated in the action at Sitabuldi and a second time close to Nagpur city The remaining portion of Berar and the territories in the Narmada valley were ceded to the British After the Third Anglo Maratha War Nagpur was under a under a subsidiary alliance with the British Appa Sahib was reinstated to the throne but shortly afterwards was discovered to be again conspiring and was deposed and sent to Allahabad in custody Raghoji II was succeeded by Raghoji III he ruled Nagpur under a with the British resident Richard Jenkins Raghoji died on 11 December 1853 without a male heir Nagpur was annexed by the British under the doctrine of lapse The former kingdom was administered as Nagpur Province under a commissioner appointed by then Governor General of India James Broun Ramsay citation needed Thanjavur Branch This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Thanjavur Maratha kingdom The Bhonsoles were also influential in the Carnatic Region In 1675 the Sultan of Bijapur sent a force commanded by the Maratha general Venkoji a half brother of the Shivaji to Capture the city of Thanjavur and Established the Thanjavur Maratha Kingdom Venkoji defeated Alagiri and occupied Thanjavur He did not however place his protege on the throne as instructed by the Bijapur Sultan but seized the kingdom and made himself king Thus began the rule of the Marathas over Thanjavur Vyankoji also allied with Chokkanatha of Madurai to repulse an invasion from Mysore Shivaji Maharaj also invaded Gingee and Thanjavur in 1676 1677 and made his brother Santaji the ruler of all lands to the north of the Coleroon Princely States Satara State Kolhapur State Thanjavur State Nagpur State 6 Akkalkot State 7 Sawantwadi State 8 and Barshi 9 were amongst the prominent states ruled by the Bhonsles List of MembersThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Maratha Empire Image Name Birth Reign Death Notes Shivaji I 19 February 1630 66 1674 1680 3 April 1680 Sambhaji I 14 May 1657 16 January 1681 11 March 1689 11 March 1689 Rajaram I 24 February 1670 11 March 1689 3 March 1700 3 March 1700Shivaji II 9 June 1696 1700 1707 1710 1714 Kolhapur State 14 March 1726 Shahu I 18 May 1682 12 January 1707 November 16 1713 15 December 1749Maratha Confederacy Image Name Birth Reign Death Notes Shahu I 18 May 1682 November 16 1713 15 December 1749 15 December 1749 During his reign he made the postion of his Peshwa prime minister heraditary and allowed them to become the de facto rulers Rajaram II June 1726 15 December 1749 11 December 1777 11 December 1777 Became a Puppet ruler under Balaji Bajirao in 1749Shahu II 1763 11 December 1777 3 May 1808 3 May 1808 A ceremonial ruler with the actual power resting with the leaders of Maratha confederacy around India Pratapsingh 18 January 1793 3 May 1808 3 June 1818 14 October 1847 Last Chhatrapati of the Maratha ConfederacySatara State Image Name Birth Reign Death Notes Pratapsingh 18 January 1793 3 June 1818 5 September 1839 14 October 1847 Became Raja of the Satara state He was deposed by the East india company in 1839 Shahaji 1802 5 September 1839 5 April 1848 5 April 1848 Satara state abolished after the death of Appasaheb by the East india Company under the policy of Doctrine of lapseKolhapur State Image Name Birth Reign Death Notes Tarabai 1675 1709 1710 Unofficial 1761 Established the Branch of Kolhapur Shivaji I 9 June 1696 1710 1714 14 March 1726 First Official Raja of kolhapur Deposed by his stepmother Rajasbai in favour of her own son Sambhaji II Sambhaji II 1698 1714 1760 18 December 1760 Signed treaty of Varna with Shahu I to formalize the existence of two seats of the House of Bhonsle at Satara and Kolhapur respectively 67 Shivaji III 1756 22 September 1762 24 April 1813 24 April 1813Sambhaji III 1801 24 April 1813 2 July 1821 2 July 1821Shivaji IV 1816 July 2 1821 Jan 03 1822 January 3 1822Shahaji I 22 January 1802 3 January 1822 29 November 1838 29 November 1838 Shivaji V 26 December 1830 1838 1866 4 August 1866 Rajaram II April 13 1850 August 18 1866 November 30 1870 November 30 1870 Shivaji VI April 5 1863 1871 1883 December 25 1883 Shahu IV overall Shahu I of Kolhapur 26 June 1874 2 April 1894 6 May 1922 6 May 1922 Rajaram III 31 July 1897 1922 1940 26 November 1940 Shivaji VII 22 November 1941 31 December 1941 28 September 1946 28 September 1946 Shahaji II 4 April 1910 1947 1971 9 May 1983Nagpur state Image Name Birth Reign Death Notes Raghoji I 1695 1739 14 February 1755 14 February 1755 First Bhonsle ruler of Nagpur Janoji 14 February 1755 21 May 1772 21 May 1772 Mudhoji I 21 May 1772 19 May 1788 19 May 1788 Raghoji II 19 May 1788 22 March 1816 22 March 1816Parsoji 1788 22 March 1816 2 Feb 1817 2 Feb 1817 Mudhoji II 1796 2 Feb 1817 15 Mar 1818 15 Mar 1818 Raghuji III 1808 15 Mar 1818 11 Dec 1853 11 Dec 1853 Last Bhonsle ruler of Nagpur Family treeFamily tree of Maratha Chhatrapatis Biological Child Adopted ChildMalojiBhosaleShahajiBhosaleShivaji IChhatrapati 1 r 1674 1680Vyankoji IRaja ofThanjavurr 1675 1684ThanjavurBranchSambhaji IChhatrapati 2 r 1681 1689TarabaiRajaram IChhatrapati 3 r 1689 1700Shahu IChhatrapati 5 r 1707 1749Shivaji IIChhatrapati 4 r 1700 1707Raja ofKolhapurr 1710 1714Sambhaji IIRaja ofKolhapurr 1714 1760 KolhapurBranchRajaram IIChhatrapati 6 r 1749 1777Shahu IIChhatrapati 7 r 1777 1808PratapSinghChhatrapati 8 r 1808 1818Raja ofSatarar 1818 1839ShahajiRaja ofSatarar 1839 1848See alsoList of Maratha dynasties and states List of people involved in the Maratha EmpireNotes Susan Bayly and Eraly however emphasize that the Marathas were located outside the peripheries of Brahminism and people thereof did not form any rigid caste 5 13 Vajpeyi however notes that the Bhonsles almost certainly never featured in the traditional list of 96 families which allegedly composed the Maratha identity This was published in Sikhar Singanapurca Sri Sambhu Mahadev 2002 for the first time The caste status of these Yadavas and whether they were a part of Bahminical hiearchy is disputed The Hoysalas as well as the Yadavas were competing feudatories of the Chalukyas with battles being as much common as matrimonial alliances 15 The migration was prob motivated by pervasive droughts in the region and an opportunity to seek out some independence for himself 15 The shrine continues to serve as one of the most significant Shaivite shrine in modern Maharashtra 17 Texts produced under patronage of Shahaji make explicit connection between the Bhosales and Balip Also the samadhi memorial of Sambhaji Shivaji and Shahuji neighbor the shrine However for a span of about 250 years from Balip to Kheloji the history of the shrine is not clear She however cautions that the summary rejection of Shivaji s ancestry claims in contemporary historiographical literature often stemmed from a Brahminical anti Maratha perspective imbibed from the Peshwas 15 Sardesai noted that the claims were supported by some firman s in possession of the Raja of Mudhol but many scholars unidentified considered them to be forged Gordon however points out that Shivaji might have thought of himself as a Rajput since long back He evidences a letter 1656 sent by Shahji to Adil Shah II where they had boasted of Rajput pride and another letter 18 July 1666 from Parkaldas an officer under Jai Singh to Kalyandas where three Rajput chieftains are noted to be admiring of Shivaji as a great Rajput with all the characteristic qualities Vajpeyi interprets the former use to signify an exalted royal status rather than any connection with the Rajput clans A Sievler deems the latter translation to be dubious Mehendale comments that Rajput simply meant a Kshatriya in the context In another contemporary source a letter from Jai Singh himself to his Prime Minister we see Shivaji being regarded to belong from a low caste and pedigree who was not even fit for inter dining with Rajputs In a footnote Wink mentions of two letters before the coronation ceremony where Shivaji had referred to himself as a Rajput The precise familial relation between Mudhoji Rupali and Suryaji is unclear Stewart Gordon and other scholars deem the desmukhi to have served as a hinge between the local populace and the imperial authority which frequently changed Without their loyalty commanding authority in newly conquered territories was difficult Most of the great Maratha Jahagirdar families in the service of Adilshahi strongly opposed Shivaji in his early years These included families such as the Ghadge More Mohite Ghorpade Shirke and Nimbalkar 36 Madhav Deshpande notes that one of the oldest texts in support of such a viewpoint was drafted by Kamalakara Bhatta a paternal uncle of Gaga Bhatta However he was hardly a radical unlike Nagesbhatta to whom even the Rajputs were Shudras and allowed expiatory rites for the rare fallen Kshatriya Shudras provided he did not exceed the upanayana age limit of 22 years In his judgement he was following his father Ramkrsna Bhatta as well as grandfather Narayana Bhatta Chacho was born of a Khati concubine and in contemporary times was pejoratively referred to as a khatanvala 40 People like Chacho were categorized into separate caste groups at the lower end of the hierarchy even unfit for inter dining with and excluded from Rajput ganayats 40 Gaga Bhatt was a preeminent legal scholar whose scholarship focused on the relative status of different varnas across different regions Shivaji was already in contact with him since 1664 when he was asked to adjudicate upon whether the Saraswat Brahmins then Syenavis were indeed Brahmins 39 It is very plausible that the idea of coronation was Bhatt s suggestion during the previous encounter he had already proclaimed Shivaji to have born into a pure royal family 39 Susan Bayly views the episode to reflect fluidity in the caste system 25 Contemporary Dutch East India Company archives 41 indicate that even then Shivaji s upgradation of status was only accepted by Brahmins after he had promised them to not rule tyrannically anymore 25 The expense was huge enough to impose a coronation tax on his subjects for the next few years References Maharajah Serfoji II Memorial Hall Museum Sadar Mahal Palace Thanjavur Tamilnadu India Raje Mudhoji Bhosale to write to CP against Ganga Jamuna closure The Times of India 29 August 2021 Kulkarni Prashant P 6 June 1990 Coinage of the Bhonsla Rajas of Nagpur Indian Coin Society Singh K S 1998 India s communities Oxford University Press p 2211 ISBN 978 0 19 563354 2 a b c d e f Bayly Susan 22 February 2001 Caste Society and Politics in India from the Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age Cambridge University Press pp 57 59 ISBN 9780521798426 a b Nicholas Patrick Wiseman 1836 The Dublin Review William Spooner Retrieved 11 January 2015 a b Kulkarni Sumitra 1995 The Satara Raj 1818 1848 A Study in History Administration and Culture Mittal Publications ISBN 9788170995814 a b Portuguese Studies Review International Conference Group on Portugal 6 June 2001 a b The Gazetteers Department akola nic in Chintaman Vinayak Vaidya 1931 Shivaji the founder of Maratha Swaraj C V Vaidya pp 10 15 Retrieved 8 October 2012 Joseph G Da Cunha 1900 Origin of Bombay Bombay Society s library etc etc Christophe Jaffrelot 2006 Dr Ambedkar and Untouchability Analysing and Fighting Caste Permanent Black p 39 ISBN 978 81 7824 156 2 Obviously Ambedkar had in mind the Brahmin s refusal to recognize Shivaji as a Kshatriya His theory which is based on scant historical evidence doubtless echoed this episode in Maharashtra s history whereas in fact Shivaji a Maratha Kunbi was a Shudra Nevertheless he had won power and so expected the Brahmins to confirm his new status by writing for him an adequate genealogy This process recalls that of Sanskritisation but sociologists refer to such emulation of Kshatriyas by Shudras as Kshatriyaisation and describe it as a variant of Sanskritisation a b Abraham Eraly 2000 Emperors of the Peacock Throne The Saga of the Great Mughals Penguin Books India p 435 ISBN 978 0 14 100143 2 a b Jadunath Sarkar 1992 Shivaji and His Times Orient Longman p 158 ISBN 978 81 250 1347 1 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Vajpeyi Ananya 2005 Excavating Identity through Tradition Who was Shivaji In Varma Supriya Saberwal Satish eds Traditions in Motion Religion and Society in History Oxford University Press pp 239 268 ISBN 9780195669152 Edited version of Ananya Vajpeyi August 2004 Making a Sudra King The Royal Consecration of Shivaji Politics of complicity poetics of contempt A history of the Sudra in Maharashtra 1650 1950 CE Thesis University of Chicago p 155 226 O Hanlon Rosalind ed 1985 Religion and society under early British rule Caste Conflict and Ideology Mahatma Jotirao Phule and Low Caste Protest in Nineteenth Century Western India Cambridge South Asian Studies Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 13 14 ISBN 978 0 521 52308 0 retrieved 12 July 2021 a b Feldhaus Anne 2003 Feldhaus Anne ed The Pilgrimage to Siṅgṇapur Connected Places Region Pilgrimage and Geographical Imagination in India Religion Culture Critique New York Palgrave Macmillan US pp 45 87 doi 10 1057 9781403981349 3 ISBN 978 1 4039 8134 9 Dhavalikar M K 2000 Review of SHIKHAR SHINGANAPURCHA SRI SHAMBHU MAHADEV In Marathi Bulletin of the Deccan College Research Institute 60 61 507 508 ISSN 0045 9801 JSTOR 42936646 Krshnaji Ananta Sabhasada Sen Surendra Nath 1920 Siva Chhatrapati being a translation of Sabhasad Bakhar with extracts from Chitnis and Sivadigvijya with notes Calcutta University of Calcutta pp 260 261 a b John Keay 12 April 2011 India A History Atlantic p 565 ISBN 978 0 8021 9550 0 a b c d Busch Allison 2011 Poetry of Kings The Classical Hindi Literature of Mughal India Oxford University Press pp 190 191 ISBN 978 0 19 976592 8 Truschke Audrey 2021 Rajput and Maratha Kingships The Language of History Sanskrit Narratives of Indo Muslim Rule Columbia University Press pp 183 184 ISBN 9780231551953 Sardesai G S 1946 Shahji The Rising Sun New History of the Marathas Vol 1 Phoenic Publications p 46 a b c d e f g Gordon Stewart 1993 Shivaji 1630 80 and the Maratha polity The Marathas 1600 1818 The New Cambridge History of India Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 86 87 ISBN 978 0 521 26883 7 retrieved 26 June 2021 a b c d Kruijtzer Gijs 2009 Xenophobia in Seventeenth century India Leiden University Press p 143 ISBN 9789087280680 a b c Vendell Dominic 2018 Scribes and the Vocation of Politics in the Maratha Empire 1708 1818 Thesis Columbia University Salma Ahmed Farooqui 2011 A Comprehensive History of Medieval India From Twelfth to the Mid Eighteenth Century Dorling Kindersley India pp 314 ISBN 978 81 317 3202 1 V B Kulkarni 1963 Shivaji The Portrait of a Patriot Orient Longman p 27 Satish Chandra 2005 Medieval India From Sultanat to the Mughals Har Anand p 316 ISBN 978 81 241 1066 9 Retrieved 8 October 2012 Farooqui Salma Ahmed Salma Ahmed Farooqui 2011 A Comprehensive History of Medieval India From Twelfth to the Mid Eighteenth Century Pearson Education India p 314 ISBN 978 81 317 3202 1 Retrieved 8 October 2012 Chintaman Vinayak Vaidya 1931 Shivaji the founder of Maratha Swaraj C V Vaidya pp 10 15 Retrieved 8 October 2012 Joseph G Da Cunha 1900 Origin of Bombay Bombay Society s library etc etc Govind Sakharam Sardesai 1957 New History of the Marathas Shivaji and his line 1600 1707 Phoenix Publications p 58 ISBN 9788121500654 Retrieved 8 October 2012 G H Khare 1974 Studies in Indology and Medieval History Joshi amp Lokhande p 176 James W Laine 2000 A Question of Maharashtrian Identity Hindu Self definition in the Tales of Shivaji In Meera Kosambi ed Intersections Socio cultural Trends in Maharashtra Orient Blackswan p 62 ISBN 9788125018780 Retrieved 15 November 2022 Daniel Jasper 2003 Commemorating the golden age of Shivaji in Maharashtra India and the development of Maharashtrian public politics Journal of Political and Military Sociology 31 2 215 230 JSTOR 45293740 S2CID 152003918 a b c Baviskar B S Attwood D W 30 October 2013 Caste Barriers to Initiative and Innovation Inside Outside Two Views of Social Change in Rural India SAGE Publications p 395 ISBN 978 81 321 1865 7 Rajmohan Gandhi 1999 Revenge and Reconciliation Penguin Books India pp 110 ISBN 978 0 14 029045 5 a b c d Deshpande Madhav M 2010 Kṣatriyas in the Kali Age Gagabhaṭṭa amp His Opponents Indo Iranian Journal 53 2 95 120 doi 10 1163 001972410X12686674794853 ISSN 0019 7246 JSTOR 24665176 a b Kothiyal Tanuja 14 March 2016 Nomadic Narratives A History of Mobility and Identity in the Great Indian Desert Cambridge University Press pp 103 104 ISBN 978 1 316 67389 8 Sen Surendra Nath 1958 Foreign Biographies of Shivaji 2 ed Calcutta K P Bagchi amp Company Indian Council of Historical Research pp 265 267 Rao Anupama 13 October 2009 Caste Radicalism And The Making Of A New Political Subject The Caste Question Dalits and the Politics of Modern India University of California Press p 42 doi 10 1525 9780520943377 006 ISBN 978 0 520 94337 7 S2CID 201912448 Shivaji the great Maratha Volume 2 H S Sardesai Genesis Publishing Pvt Ltd 2002 ISBN 81 7755 286 4 ISBN 978 81 7755 286 7 Sumit Sarkar 2000 Issues in Modern Indian History For Sumit Sarkar Popular Prakashan p 30 ISBN 978 81 7154 658 9 a b Stewart Gordon 1993 The Marathas 1600 1818 Cambridge University Press pp 120 131 ISBN 978 0 521 26883 7 P V Kate 1987 Marathwada Under the Nizams 1724 1948 Mittal Publications p 14 ISBN 978 81 7099 017 8 S R Bakshi S R Sharma S Gijrani eds 1998 Sharad Pawar The Maratha Legacy New Delhi APH Pub Corp p 28 ISBN 9788176480086 Tucker Spencer C 23 December 2009 A Global Chronology of Conflict From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East 6 volumes From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East ABC CLIO p 732 ISBN 978 1 85109 672 5 Bowman John 2000 Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture Columbia University Press p 285 ISBN 978 0 231 11004 4 An Advanced History of Modern India Jaques Tony 12 November 2017 Dictionary of Battles and Sieges A E Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780313335372 Retrieved 12 November 2017 via Google Books Charles Augustus Kincaid and Dattatray Balwant Parasnis 1918 A History of the Maratha People Volume 3 Oxford University Press pp 2 10 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Charles Augustus Kincaid and Dattatray Balwant Parasnis 1918 A History of the Maratha People Volume 3 Oxford University Press pp 2 10 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Kurup Ayyappan Madhava 1986 Continuity and Change in a Little Community Concept Publishing Company a b Society MANCHESTER Northern Central British India 1840 Proceedings of a Public Meeting for the formation of The Northern Central British India Society held in the Corn Exchange Manchester on Wednesday evening August 26th 1840 Northern Central British India Society Hunter William Wilson 1881 Naaf to Rangmagiri Trubner Thusu Kidar Nath 1980 Gond Kingdom of Chanda With Particular Reference to Its Political Structure Anthropological Survey of India Government of India Deogaonkar Shashishekhar Gopal 2007 The Gonds of Vidarbha Concept Publishing Company ISBN 978 81 8069 474 5 Thusu Kidar Nath 1980 Gond Kingdom of Chanda With Particular Reference to Its Political Structure Anthropological Survey of India Government of India Host Bibliographic Record for Boundwith Item Barcode 30112050248951 and Others 2013 Sil Jogendra Nath 1917 History of the Central Provinces and Berar J N Sil Pradesh India Madhya Krishnan V S 1995 Madhya Pradesh District Gazetteers Chhindwara Government Central Press Bulletin of the Anthropological Survey of India Director Anthropological Survey of India Indian Museum 1976 Bahadur Sarat Chandra Roy Rai 1979 Man in India A K Bose Maharashtra State Gazetteers Bhandara Director of Government Printing Stationery and Publications Maharashtra State 1979 Society MANCHESTER Northern Central British India 1840 Proceedings of a Public Meeting for the formation of The Northern Central British India Society held in the Corn Exchange Manchester on Wednesday evening August 26th 1840 Northern Central British India Society Naik C D 2010 Buddhism and Dalits Social Philosophy and Traditions Gyan Publishing House ISBN 978 81 7835 792 8 Kurup Ayyappan Madhava 1986 Continuity and Change in a Little Community Concept Publishing Company Hunter William Wilson 1881 Naaf to Rangmagiri Trubner Deogaonkar Shashishekhar Gopal 2007 The Gonds of Vidarbha Concept Publishing Company ISBN 978 81 8069 474 5 Indian Railways Railway Board 1997 Kurup Ayyappan Madhava 1986 Continuity and Change in a Little Community Concept Publishing Company Jeremy Black 2012 War in the Eighteenth Century World Palgrave Macmillan p 280 ISBN 9780230370005 Saswadkar P L 1965 Prohibition under the Peshwas in the latter half of the eighteenth century Proceedings of the Indian History Congress JSOR 27 326 328 JSTOR 44140671 Retrieved 13 December 2020 Brief history of Arcot PDF Tamil Nadu Govt Retrieved 13 December 2020 SNHM Vol II pp 209 224 Fall Of The Mughal Empire Volume 1 4Th Edn J N Sarka Indu Ramchandani ed 2000 Student s Britannica India Set of 7 Vols 39 Popular Prakashan p 8 ISBN 978 0 85229 760 5 Nayeem M A 1977 The Working of the Chauth and Sardeshmukhi System in the Mughal Provinces of the Deccan 1707 1803 A D The Indian Economic amp Social History Review 14 2 153 191 https doi org 10 1177 001946467701400201 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title House of Bhonsle amp oldid 1151082968, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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