The biggest lesson from Shivaji Maharaj's life is the imposition of cost.
1. Shaiste Khan looted Pune. Chhatrapati Shivaji did not stop at merely driving him out, but looted Surat
2.Portuguese passed an anti-Hindu law. Chhatrapati Shivaji beheaded 4 Padres who passed the law
Slaying Afzal Khan would have confirmed Chhatrapati Shivaji's greatness.
Instead, he opened a campaign that doubled his own territory !
All this meant two things :
1. His adversaries would think ten times before attempting an adventure.
2.Compelled to pour resources in.
In the first example we have Adil Shah, who did not try a Afzal Khan type adventure again.
In the second we have the Mughals.. sending ever higher ranking mansabdar till finally Aurangzeb himself took the field against the Marathas.
Shivji Maharaj did not merely retake forts lost in the Treaty of Purandar, but expanded his conquests into the Nashik region..something the Mughals had held since when Chhatrapati Shivaji was a small child.
There you go.
The ability (and more importantly) will to inflict a net negative outcome on his adversaries was a great quality.
Else we can recall Prof Narhar Kurundkar
"There was a defining trait of Hindu powers - Annihilation in defeat and status quo in victory"
Another inspirational quality, was of taking the maximum personal risk himself.
When confronting Afzal Khan
When attacking Shaiste Khan in the middle of the night.
Either episode could have killed him.
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The book covers pivotal battles from the days of Chhatrapati Shivaji to the last Peshwa, Bajirao II. Pratapgad, Salher, Palkhed, Bhopal, Vasai, Rakshasbhuvan, Wadgaon, Delhi, Laswari and more...
Hinduism faced a calamity due to Khilji invasion. Temples were broken, pilgrimage centres rendered desolate. The Bhakti movement, with its focus on simplicity kept people within the Hindu fold.
Swami Vivekanand sailed on this ship - The S.S Empress of India for his famous 11th September Chicago speech.
It continued to ply the far East - Canada route till 1914.
That year, it was purchased by the Maharaja of Gwalior and converted into a hospital ship for the war.
It was renamed S.S Loyalty.
The refitting and renaming was done by Jan 1915.
My own great grandfather was probably associated with this Hospital ship Loyalty. He was Civil Surgeon Gwalior and also an Officer in the Medical Corps (3rd Gwalior Imperial Service Infantry)
There is a history written in the books, on letters on stones etc..
There is another, of tales and fables. It won't stand empirical scrutiny, but that is not the point.
These tales tell us more about why a person is adulated than any number of letters can.
" Maharana Pratap killed tigers with bare hands"
Mostly improbable. But what we need to understand is why Maharana was associated with such superhuman power. Any random person isn't spoken about in the same terms.
So what created this respect in the PEOPLE'S mind ?