|
Royal House of Mewar: Legend has it that the
Sisodias of Mewar are descended from Lord Rama whose life story is
told in India's great epic, the Ramayana. They came from the borders
of Kashmir and by the second Century B.C. they had moved south to
what is now Gujarat, founding, as they went, several cities along
the coast, one of which was called Vallabhai.
The chronicles of the bards tell us that in the
sixth century Vallabhai was sacked by strangers from the west. The
Queen of Vallabhai, Pushpavati, who was on a pilgrimage offering
prayers for her unborn child, heard of the destruction of Vallabhai
and the death of her husband while traveling through the Aravalli
hills in the north. Despairing, she took refuge in a cave, and there
gave birth to a son whom she called Guhil, or "cave born." Then,
entrust her child to a maidservant, the queen ordered a funeral pyre
lit, and walked into it to join her dead husband's soul. Guhil, or
Guhadatta, was befriended by the Bhils, tribal aborigines who had
lived in the Aravalli hills since well before 2000 B.C. Amongst the
Bhils, Guhadatta grew in power, and became a chieftain. His progeny
came to be known as Guhilols.
In the seventh century the
Guhil moved north, and down to the plains of Mewar, changing their
name to Sisodia, after a village they encountered on the way. The
descendants of Guhadatia were the great Ranas, Rawals and Maharanas
of Mewar, builders of forts and palaces, whose exploits in peace and
war are unmatched in valor and chivalry.By the time of India's
independence, the royal line of Mewar had ruled for 75 generations,
1,400 years; the oldest of Rajasthan's ancient dynasties.
The
Founding of Udaipur: In 1 567, the capital of Mewar, Chittor, was
sacked for the third time by the armies of the Mughal Emperor Akbar;
Rana Udai Singh 11 withdrew into the hills and ravines of the
Aravalli. One morning, the rana was out by Lake Pichola hunting.
While mounted and on the move he performed the difficult feat of
spearing a fast-moving rabbit. Then, a short distance away, he saw a
sage meditating. The Rana dutifully paid full respects to the holy
man. "Where, 0 Revered One," the rana asked the sage, having
recounted the fall of Chittor, "should 1 build my next capital
city?"And the sage answered, as sages will, "Why, right here of
course, where your destiny has brought you to ask such a
question."And that's what Udai Singh did.Surrounded by forests ,
lakes and the protective Aravalli range, the new capital of Mewar
was certainly less vulnerable location then Chittor.Maharaja Udai
Singh died in 1572 and was succeeded by his son, Pratap, who bravely
defended Udaipur from subsequent Mughal Attacks.
Rana Pratap
(ruled 1572-97) was palace one of the great warrior kings of right,
Mewar. He lived in troubled times.Emperor Akbar, the Great Mughal
,emblem was expanding his domains, irresistibly in and, across the
subcontinent. He had already sacked the Mewar stronghold,richly
Chittor, driving Pratap's father, Rana Udai Singh II, out towards a
new life in the new capital, Udaipur. Rana Pratap gallery was imbued
with stories of the lost em greatness of Mewar and obsessed with
pieces a desire to recover its territories, and the the the fort of
Chittor, the soul of Mewar. The indomitable Pratap threw him- is the
self against the might of the Mughal armies again and again, losing
the battle of Haldighati, losing every fort, including Kumbalgarh,
retreating to the hills and ravines of the Aravallis where sometimes
his family hadn't enough to cat. In these years of adversity, they
were sustained by loyal Bhil tribesmen, whose ancestors had,
centuries earlier, supported the rana's ancestor,
Guhadatta.
Rana Pratap was one of the two Rajput kings who
refused to accept Mughal suzerainty or compromise with Akbar: no
daughter of Mewar was ever given to a Mughal emperor or prince in
marriage. The other Rajput ruler similarly to hold out against the
Mughals was the king of Bundi. Akbar allowed both states to survive
and the next generation of rulers had to accept reality and sign
treaties with the Mughals.eventually, Pratap freed Udaipur and much
of Mewar from the Mughals Niwas, grip but he failed to win his
heart's part of the desire: Chittor.
After struggling against
the Mughals, Udaipur was later attacked by the Marathas.
An
end to the bloody battles and instability came with British
Intervention in the early 1900 century, when a treaty was signed
which pledged to protect Udaipur from invaders. Along with all other
Princely states, Udaipur surrendered its Sovereignty and became a
part of a United India. |