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The 'Golden City' of Jaisalmer was founded in
the year 1156 by a Bhatti Rajput prime Jaisala named the city from
the vulnerable former capital of Lodhruva, 15 kms to the south-east.
After he sought counsel of a hermit who lived in a cave near aspring
on top of a rocky hill. The sucession of Maharajas of Jaisalmer
trace their lineage back to the ruler of Bhatti Rajput Clan
Jailasimha. The History of Jaisalmer is as turbulant as the
character of its bandit chiefs would lead one to expect. Ferociously
independent, inordinately proud of a tenuous "divine" lineage;
brave, even foolhardy in battle and often treacherous as allies, the
Bhatti Rajputs were the most feared of all desert marauders. When
they were on the rampage, the gates of neighboring fortresses were
closed and the cowering citizens barred their doors and windows
against these "wolf-packs of the wastes." Their major opponents were
the powerful Rather clans of Jodhpur and Bikaner and endless
ding-dong battles were waged for the possession of a petty fort,or
meager waterhole. Cattle-stealing was a major pass time, along with
falconry and the hunt.The source of income was the forced levies on
the great caravans that traveled the ancient Spice Route on their
way to imperial Delhi.
With the coming of the Muslims in the
13th and 14th centuries, the nature of the conflicts changed. The
new enemy was not given to playing , if games according to a
chivalri if bizarre, a code of conduct. The outsiders were here to
found an empire and to propound Islam, a fanatically held faith.
However, since Jaisalmer was situated deep in the desert, it escaped
direct Muslim conquest. The Rawals, as the rulers were styled,
agreed to pay an annual tribute to the Delhi Sultans in order to
preserve a circumscribed independence.
Unfortunately, the
Bhatti rulers could not always control their unruly vassal chiefs.
The dire prophesy of Eesul, that the fort would be sacked, came
about by their own rash actions.
The sieges of Jaisalmer are
the subject of traditional ballads about Bhatti heroes. They are
still sung at fairs and festivals by the hereditary bards, the
bhaals and carans, and are the only record of the clan in medieval
times. Although elaborately embellished with fabulous deeds of
valor, they form the oral history of the period and have been an
inspiration to the people during difficult times.According to the
ballads, the first siege occurred during the reign of Allaud-din
Khilji (1295 A.D.-1315 A.D.), provoked by a foolhardy raid on the
royal baggage caravan. For seven long years, the besieging army
tried to starve out the defenders. Finally, the breached the
ramparts, and the Bhattis, yet facing certain defeat, proclaimed the
terrible rite of johar. Once the women and children had perished by
sword or fire, the men, clad in ceremonial saffron and
opium-intoxicated, opened the gates and rushed out to meet a heroic
death.
The second sack followed a daring raid on Sultan
Ferozeshah's camp at Anasagar Lake, near Ajmer. Jaisalmer was once
again overrun and the dread johar repeated.
The Jaisalmer
rulers lined their coffers with illicit games won through cattle
rustling and by more orthodox methods. religion and the fine arts
flourished the rulers of Jaisalmer, and altough professing, Hinduism
they were tolerent of Jainism, encouraging the construction of the
beautiful temples which now grace the old city within the fort
walls. Sculptural depictions of both Hindu and Jain deities and holy
men stand side by side on the walls of these fine e fices. The
visionary rulers commission scholars to copy precious sacred
manuscri and books of ancient learning which m otherwise have been
lost during Musli raids.
Jaisalmer's strategic position on
the ca train routes between India and central As brought it great
wealth. The merchants a townspeople built magnificent houses
mansions, all exquisitely carved from wo and from golden-yellow
sandstone. The havelis can be found elsewhere in Rajasth (notably in
Shekhawati), but nowhere they quite as exotic as in Jaisalmer. Even
t humblest of shops and houses displa something of the Rajput love
of the deco tive arts in its most whimsical form. It likely to
remain that way too, since the ci planners are keen to ensure that
all ne buildings blend in with the old.
The rise of shipping
trade and the port Bombay saw the decline of Jaisalmer.
Independence, partition and the cutting the trade routes through
Pakistan seeniingi sealed the city's fate, and water shortag could
have meant its death sentence. Ho ever, the 1965 and 1971
Indo-Pakistan war revealed Jaisalmer's strategic importance and the
Indira Gandhi Canal to the north is beginning to restore life to the
desert. |