📌 Did you know? Chatrasal Bundela took inspiration from Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaja to revolt against the Mughals.
✍🏻 Let us explore how a Bundela, a product of Mughal servitude, drew inspiration from the Marathas.
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Who are the Bundelas? If we ignore their fabricated genealogies, they were generations of loyal servants to the Mughals, starting from the time of Jahangir.
Chatrasal Bundela was a Mughal Mansabdar who, in 1665, came with Mirza Jai Singh to destroy the Hindu empire of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaja. However, he deserted the Mughals in 1670 and met Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaja in the Deccan.
Mirza Jai Singh, the slave of Aurangzeb, requested him to grant Chatrasal Bundela a mansab of 300 zats/150 sawar.
Mirza Jai Singh explicitly calls himself a slave, and as you can see, Chatrasal Bundela was nothing but a low-ranking mansabdar under Aurangzeb.
The meeting between Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaja and Chatrasal Bundela is documented in 'Chatraprakash,' a court poem commissioned by Chatrasal himself. Therefore, it serves as a firsthand and irrefutable source for this historical event.
In 'Chatraprakash,' the 11th chapter is dedicated to the meeting between Chatrasal Bundela and Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaja. Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaja was Chatrasal's revered hero, and he demanded the right to serve under him!
According to 'Chatraprakash,' Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaja instructed Chatrasal to fight against Muslim rulers in his native land, safeguarding cows, the Vēdas, and Brāhmaṇas.
Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaja gifted Chatrasal a sword and sent him back to fulfill his mission.
Bhimsen Saxena, in his 'Tarik-i-Dilkasha,' accused Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaja of not placing full confidence in Chatrasal and sending him back.
However, a firsthand poem commissioned by Chatrasal himself makes no such accusations.
Quite the contrary, according to 'Chatraprakash,' none of the Bundelas assisted Chatrasal in his mission.
Instead, Chatrasal's brother Ratan Shah and other prominent Bundela chiefs, such as Subhkaran and Sujan Singh, advised him to surrender to the Mughal emperor.
Chatrasal got inspired by Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaja and became a minor rebel in the small territory of Bundelkhand.
Chatrasal turned out to be a coward; he started this rebellion, only to be suppressed easily.
During Aurangzeb's reign, he managed to secure a 4k Mansabdari, but under Farrukhsiyar, his sense of entitlement led him to receive an increased but still paltry 6k Mansabdari.
Our Bundel Kesari Chatrasal was enjoying his Mansabdari and Mughal service until Muhammad Bangash invaded Bundelkhand.
In 1729, Chatrasal had to beg for help from the Maratha Pradhan Bajirao to save his precarious existence.
The historical appeal to save the honor of Bundeli Hindus showed that Chatrasal knew only the Marathas could save him.
This is the poetic letter sent by the once insignificant Chatrasal Bundela to Bajirao Ballal Bhatt, the Pradhan of the Maratha Empire.
This letter shows that the Marathas were not just expansion-hungry; instead, it was the weak Rajputs in the north who invited the Marathas to save them from the Mughals because they could not do so themselves.
Bajirao helped Chatrasal and defeated Bangash's army. In return, Chatrasal promised Bajirao one-third of the territory for selfish reasons, so that after his death, Bajirao and his descendants would safeguard his lineage.
What happened next will shock you. This is the ultimate example of why no one should ever trust a Rajput.
Even though Chatrasal promised one-third of his territory to Bajirao, in reality, he never intended to give it to Bajirao and provided a false estimation of the land holdings.
Chatrasal advised his son Harde Sah to avoid giving away any one-third share of the territory. Whenever anyone comes asking for their share, just give them a small sum to shut them up.
Some Rajput chauvinists might call it a diplomatic move, but how can that justify promising something in return for saving the honor of your land and then secretly not fulfilling that promise? This is nothing but pure treachery!
Key points of this thread :-
1. Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaja was the inspiration for the insignificant Chatrasal Bundela. 2. Chatrasal Bundela was advised by Chhatrapati Shivaji to keep fighting for the Hindu faith but miserably failed, eventually surrendering to the Mughals.
3. Chatrasal Bundela enjoyed Mughal royal favors until Muhammad Bangash's invasion. 4. Chatrasal had to beg for help from the mighty Marathas; Rajputs were the ones who used to beg for Maratha assistance. 5. Bajirao was the true lord and savior of Bundelkhand.
6. Chatrasal Bundela promised Bajirao one-third share of Bundelkhand but secretly had no intention of sharing it. 7. 'Namak-Haram' Chatrasal Bundela is not worthy of any respect from any honorable Individual.
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The Maratha Ascendancy Explained Through Contemporary Evidence: How Mughal Power Was Absorbed, Redirected, and Exercised by a New Ruling Elite.
Examined Strictly Through Contemporary Primary Sources.
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From the reign of Chhatrapati Shahu, the son of Dharmaveer Chhatrapati Shambhuji Maharaja, the Marāṭhās secured a firm hold in the Deccan and initiated systematic expansion into North and East India. The northern advance was conducted chiefly under the leadership of the Dabhade, Pawar, and Gaikwad houses. This movement took decisive shape during the Peshwaship of Balaji Vishwanath, the father of Bajirao Ballal. Upon Bajirao’s elevation to the office of Peshwa, he, together with the Shinde and Holkar chiefs, wrested Malwa from Mughal control and incorporated it into the Swarajya. Contemporary Portuguese records refer to Chhatrapati Shahu as the lord of the whole of Hindostan, that is, North India.
After the death of Bajirao in 1740, Balaji Bajirao, known as Nanasaheb, succeeded him as Peshwa. Following the death of Chhatrapati Shahu in 1749, Shahu’s adopted son Ramraja ascended the throne as Chhatrapati in 1750.
According to a document dated 31 August 1743, the subhas of Malwa, Ajmer, Agra, and Prayagraj were paying revenue to the Marāṭhās. What remained necessary, however, was formal recognition from the Mughal government, since in theory the Mughal emperor was still regarded as the sovereign of North India.
When the Afghans came to sack Mathura, it was the Marathas and Jats who fiercely resisted the tenfold Afghan army while the Rajputs were sitting at home, doing nothing but watching. Where were the Rajputs when the Afghans invaded Mathura?
The Afghan forces sacked Mathura, and who took revenge for this blasphemy against a sacred Hindu place? It was the Marathas.
Meanwhile, what were the Rajputs doing? They were busy smoking opium in their palaces, built from serving the Mughals. Pathetic!
These are the documents cited by the author; these documents indeed mention that Shivaji the Great was a protector of Islam, but unfortunately, it's Mughal-drafted formalities. Shivaji the Great was known for humiliating Muslims in his kingdom.
The Jesuit priest who was an eyewitness to the humiliation of Muslims at the hands of the Marathas under Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaja clearly states that Muslims were banished from the kingdom of Shivaji the Great.
Even before that, the Maratha source Shivbharat, commissioned by Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaja himself, wrote about how the mosques of Kalyan and Bhiwandi were completely demolished by Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaja.
"When the emperor himself goes to the mosque for prayers, he first establishes checkpoints due to Shivaji's fear, and then proceeds."
- Parkaldas Letter to Kalyandas on 7th June, 1666.
"Shivaji could jump 14-15 feet from the ground and walk 40-50 kos in one breath. Shivaji is a great warrior. If the Badshah fails to kill him, I will leave my mansab and become a fakir."
- Jaswant Singh Rathore
Here is the full contemporary and original letter from Parkaldas dated 7th June, 1666.
👑 Reign of Fire - Key Facts of Dharamveer Chhatrapati Sambhaji Maharaja and his Holy War against Mughals.
🔸All narrated from primary sources hostile to him.
Maratha Inferno Shambhurajavarman waged a Holy War against the Mughals to fulfill his Father's vision. 🌞
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Mughals had destroyed 172 temples in Udaipur alone, 63 in Chittor fort alone, 66 in Amber area alone.
Immediately after this in January to February Maratha Chattrapati Sambhaji Maharaja ravaged Mughal Jaziya base Burhanpur's suburbs Bahadurpura & 17 other suburbs like Hasanpura!
Aurangzeb's son Akbar understood Maratha power by this manly display, wrote a letter to the Dharamveer telling him of anarchy in North India.
Akbar offered whole Mughal government to Maratha Emperor, if he just had him seated.
"The Throne will be mine, the State will be Yours."
📌 Total Destruction of False Propaganda Against Dharmaveer Chhatrapati Shambhuji Maharaja !
Feel free to quote this post to shut the mouths of those pathetic Anti-Marathas.
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You must have heard rumors and so-called contemporary sources that tell us that Chhatrapati Shambhuji Maharaja violated a Brahmin girl, or that he was a drunkard and womanizer.
But if you are intelligent enough, then you will also understand how a supposedly characterless man like him could sacrifice his life for Dharma?