Kafur took Ramachandra and his family to Delhi to personally acknowledge Alauddin's suzerainty. In Delhi, Alauddin treated Ramachandra well, and honoured him with the title
Rai Rayan. According to Barani, Alauddin gave him 100,000 gold
tankas (coins), and the principality of
Navsari in Gujarat. According to Haji-ud-dabir, Alauddin chided Malik Kafur for misbehaving with Ramachandra, and the Yadava king had voluntarily submitted to Alauddin. According to Isami, Ramachandra also gave his daughter Jhatyapali in marriage to Alauddin. The 14th century Persian historian
Wassaf, in his
Tajziyat al-amsar, also mentions that the ruler of Devagiri gave his daughter to Alauddin to save his life. Historian
Kishori Saran Lal believes that Ramachandra gave his daughter to Alauddin after the
1296 raid, but historian
Satish Chandra states that this probably happened after the second expedition. This daughter is alternatively called Chhitai, Jhitai, Jethapali or Kshetrapali in various historical texts. Isami states that she was the mother of Alauddin's son and successor
Shihab-ud-din Omar. The 16th century historian
Firishta claims that after Alauddin's death, his viceroy
Malik Kafur married Ramachandra's daughter.
Chhitai Varta (c. 1440), a Hindi poem by Narayan-das, narrates her legend. Ramachandra stayed at Delhi for six months. By the end of 1308, he came back to Devagiri, where he ruled as a vassal of Alauddin. He remained loyal to Alauddin till his death, and helped his army carry out the subsequent southern campaigns of
Warangal and
Dwarasamudra. Ramachandra appears to have died sometime in 1311, although the exact date of his death is not certain. The Nala inscription, his last extant inscription, is dated 1311 CE (1233
Shaka). ==1313 invasion==