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Chittorgarh is one of the most fiercely
contested seats of power in India.About 72 miles (115 km) east of
Udaipur, stands Chittor. With its formidable fortifications,Bappa
Rawal, the legendary founder of the Sisodia dynasty, received
Chittor in the middle of the eighth century, as part of the last
Solanki princess's dowry. It crowns a seven-mile- long hill,
covering 700 acres (280 hectares), with its fortifications, temples,
towers and palaces.
From the eighth to the 16th century,
Bappa Rawal's descendants ruled over an important kingdom called
Mewar stretching from Gujarat to Ajmer. But during these eight
centuries the seemingly impregnable Chittor was surrounded, overrun,
and sacked three times.
Sacks of Chittor: In 1303 Allauddin
khilji, Sultan of Delhi, intrigued by tales of the matchless beauty
of Padmini, Rani of Chittor, of her wit and charm, decided to verify
this himself. His armies surrounded Chittor, and the sultan sent a
message to Rana Rattan Singh, Padmini's husband, to say that he
would spare the city if he could meet its famous queen. The
compromise finally reached was that the sultan could look upon
Padmini's reflection if he came unarmed into the fort. Accordingly,
the sultan went up the hill and glimpsed a reflection of the
beautiful Padmini standing by a lotus pool. He thanked his host who
courteously escorted Allauddin down to the outer gate-where the
sultan's men waited in ambush to take the rana hostage.
There
was consternation in Chittor until Padmini devised a plan. A
messenger informed the sultan that the rani would come to him.
Dozens of curtained palanquins set off down the hill, each carried
by six humble bearers. Once inside the Sultan's camp, four
well-armed Rajput warriors leaped out of each palanquin and each
lowly palanquin bearer drew a sword.In the ensuing battle, Rana
Rattan Singh was rescued-but 7,000 Rajput warriors died. The sultan
now attacked Chittor with renewed vigor. Having lost 7,000 of its
best warriors, Chittor could not hold out. Surrender was
unthinkable. The rani and her entire entourage of women, the wives
of generals and soldiers, sent their children into hiding with loyal
retainers. They then dressed their wedding fine , slid their
farewells, and singing ancient hymns, boldly entered the mahal and
performed jauhar.
The men, watching with expressionless
faces, then donned saffron robes, smeared the holy ashes of their
women on their foreheads, flung open the gates of the fort and
thundered down the hill into the enemy ranks, to fight to the
death.The second sack or shake (sacrifice) of Chittor, by which
Rajputs still swear when pledging their word, occurred in 1535, when
Sultan Bahadur Shan Of Gujarat attacked the fort.
Rana
Kumbha: Rana Kumbha (1433-68) was a versatile man a brilliant, poet
and musician. He built mewar upto a position of assailable military
strength building a chain of thirty forts that girdled the kingdom
But, perhaps more important was a patron of the arts to rival
Lorenzo de Medici, and he made Chittorgarh a dazzling cultural
center whose fame spread right across Hindustan.
Rana Sanga:
Rana Sanga (reigned 1509-27) was a warrior and a man of great
chivalry and honor reign was marked by a series of continual
battles, in course of which he is said to have lost one arm and had
been crippled in one leg and received eighty-four wounds on his
body. The last of his battles was again Mughal invader, Babur, in
1527. Deserted by one ofgenerals, Rana Sanga was wounded in the
battle and shortly after.
Maharana Pratap: Over the next
half-century, most other Rajput rulers allowed themselves to be
wooed the Mughals; Mewar alone held out. In 1567 Emperor Akbar
decided to teach it a lesson: he attacked Chittorgarh razed it to
the ground. Five years later Maharana Pratap (reigned 1572-97) came
to rule Mewar - a king without a capital. He continued to defy
Akbar, and in 1576, confronted the imperial armies at Haldighati.The
battle ended in a stalemate and Maharana Pratap and his followers
withdrew to the craggy hills of Mewar, from where they continued to
harrass the Mughals through guerilla warfare for the next twenty
years. Maharana Pratap made his descendants vow that they would not
sleep on beds, nor live in palaces, nor eat off metal utensils,
until Chittorgarh had been regained.In fact, right into the 20th
century the maharanas of Mewar continued to place a leaf platter
under their regular utensils and a reed mat under their beds in
symbolic continuance of this vow.
When news of Maharana
Pratap's death reached Emperor Akbar in 1597, it is said that the
Emperor's eyes filled with tears, and he ordered his court poet to
compose a poem in honor of his gallant foe. |