Born : 1168
Died:1192
Father: Someshwar Chauhan
Mother: Kamladevi
Maternal
Grand Father: Anangpal
Made King : 1179
Ruled : Ajmer Delhi
Wife: Samyukta
Historical Preface
Bottom of Form
Around
1300 A.D. there was a King called Anangpal,
a Tunvar Rajput who ruled over Delhi. He had two daughters Kamladevi and
Roopsundari. Kamladevi was married to the King of Ajmer called Someshwar Chauhan. King Someshwar had a
son called Prithviraj Chauhan.
Roopsundari was married to King Vijaypal of Kanoj. He also had a son named
Jaychand. Since King Anangpal had no sons, he adopted Prithviraj Chauhan and
declared him to be the successor to the throne of Delhi. King Anangpal gave to
his other relations the towns under his jurisdiction. He also gave away Pokran
and Phaloji and the surrounding four Jojan land to Dheersinh Tunvar who was a
close relation to King Anangpal.
Prithviraj Chauhan(1168-1192) was a king of the Rajput Chauhan ruler who ruled a large
area of northern india.
He was born in 1168 to king Someshwara Chauhan and his
wife Kamladevi.
He was made king in 1179 at the age of just 11
He ruled in Ajmer and Delhi.
His elopement with Samyukta, the daughter of Jai Chandra,
the Gahadvala
king of Kannauj,
is a popular romantic tale in India, and is one of the subjects of the PrithvirajRaso, an epic poem composed by Prithviraj's court poet, ChandBardai. The Chauhan succession had been rather confused since the death of
Vigraha-raja in 1165; Prithviraj reconsolidated control of the Chauhan kingdom
and conquered several neighboring kingdoms, which made his state the leading Hindu
kingdom in northern India. Delhi was captured from the Tomara Rajputs
during the early years of his reign, and was renamed Qila
Rai Pithora. He campaigned against the Chandela
Rajputs of Bundelkhand. His kingdom included much of the present-day
Indian states of Rajasthan and Haryana, and parts of Uttar
Pradesh and Punjab. To this day, Prithviraj is considered to be a
legendary hero and martyr by Hindus, and his lineage appears quite spread out
covering vast tracts of Uttar Pradesh, Harayana, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh,
Gujarat, Uttaranchal, Punjab and Himanchal Pradesh.
Battles of gadha
The Muslim Ghaznavid
Empire, which bordered Prithviraj's kingdom to the north, was
conquered by the Afghan Muhammad
of Ghor towards the end of the
12th century. A dispute over a fortre on the border of 3 kingdoms (thought to
be either Sirhind or Bathinda in the Punjab) brought the armies of the 3 kingdoms into
conlict at the First
Battle of Tarain in 1191. In
the First Battle of Taraori in 1191 Prithvi Raj Chauhan defeated Muhammad
Ghouri, when he met Ghauri in a personal combat and injured Ghauri. Later both
armies attacked each other and Ghauri's army was defeated. Ghauri retreated to
Afghanistan. Prithviraj, following the tenets of Rajput warfare of forgiveness,
allowed his foe to escape as he was forbidden by Kshatriya rules to attack a
retreating enemy. Ghori is said to have vowed not to sleep on a bed or take a
bath until he had defetaed Prithviraj. Due to internecine quarrels, Ghori was
encouraged and abetted to wage another war on Prithvi Raj Chauhan by petty
kingdoms, in which Prithviraj was defeated.
Captivity, revenge and death
As a prisoner in Ghor (Afghanistan), Prithviraj was
brought in chains before Mahmud Ghori. He haughtily looked Ghori straight into
the eye. Ghori ordered him to lower his eyes, whereupon a defiant Prithviraj
scornfully reminded him of how he had treated Ghori when the latter was his
prisoner. He declared that the eyelids of a Rajput are lowered only in death.
On hearing this, Ghori flew into a rage and ordered that Prithviraj's eyes be
burnt with red hot iron rods. The blind Prithviraj was then regularly brought
to the presence of the barbaric warlord to be taunted by Ghori and his
courtiers.
Prithviraj's former courtier and friend Chand Bardai, who
was later to compose the Prithviraj Raso, a ballad-biography of Pritiviraj, came to Ghor to be
near Prithviraj in his misery. Chand Bardai came in disguise and secured
himself a place in Mahmud's court as a composer of ballads and poems and thus
could get access to his friend - Prithvi Raj Chauhan and planned with him on
how to seek the revenge.
Killing of Mahmud:
The two got an opportunity when Ghori announced an
archery competition. Chand Bardai told Ghori that Prithviraj was so skilled an
archer, that he could take aim based only on sound, and did not even need to
look at his target. Ghori refused to to believe this; the courtiers taunted Chand Bardai, asking how a blind man could possibly shoot arrows and hit a
target. In the spirit of their usual barbaric mockery, they brought the blind
and hapless Prithviraj out to the field. Pressing a bow and arrows into his
hand, they taunted him to take aim.
Chand Bardai told Ghori that these orders and requests
coming from courtiers would be of no avail, for Prithviraj would never follow
orders of lowly courtiers. He said that Prithviraj, as an anointed king, would
not accept orders from anyone other than Ghori, the king. His ego thus
massaged, and in the spirit of the occasion, Mahmud Ghori agreed to personally
give Prithviraj the order to shoot. Thus, Chand Bardai ensured Prithviraj of a
signal in the form of the voice of Ghori as he was to give the orders to shoot
an arrow. To reconfirm the site and distance of the target (Ghori), ChandBardai gave Prithviraj one further and final clue by composing a couplet on the
spot and reciting the same to Prithviraj. This couplet, composed in a language
understood only by Prithviraj went thus:
"Char bans, chaubis gaj, angul ashta praman, Taa ke
upar sultaan hai, mut chooke Chauhan."
(Ten measures ahead of you and twenty four feet away, is
seated the Sultan. Do not miss him now, Chauhan).
As Ghori himself ordered Prithviraj to shoot, Prithviraj
aimed directly at Ghori having located the origin of the voice and was helped
immensely by the Chand Bardai's couplet. His arrow was so well aimed that it
went through Ghori's throat killing him on the spot. The friends, Prithvi Raj Chauhan and Chand Bardai, had planned to end their lives themselves rather being
subjugated to toture by the enemy, once their king was killed. Thus having
avenged the defeat and humiliation, the friends took out their 'Kataars'
(hunting knife), and as per the plan, inflicted fatal blow to one another
simultaneously. Thus ended the story of the brave and chivalrous PrithvirajChauhan, the last Hindu ruler of Delhi. Since the Indian history was never
documented in writing, but was passed down by the word of mouth, this folklore
is still prevalent and instils great amount of pride as well as a sense of
bereavement.
It is also said that Kayam Singh, a brother of Prithvi
Raj Chauhan, was forcibly converted to Islam after Prithvi Raj was defeated and
taken a prisoner. The progeny of Kayam Singh are said to be the followers of
Islam and are called 'Kayamkhani Muslims'.
A different version, propogated by Muslim historians,
says that after defeating Prithviraj, Ghauri killed him and gained control of
his kingdom and went on to control northern Rajasthan and the northern part of
the Ganges-Yamuna Doab.
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