Scholar
Wilfred Cantwell Smith interprets Shivaji's
Hindavi Swarajya to mean "Indian independence from foreign rule." Historian Pagadi also interprets it as "Indian rule." Religious studies scholar William Jackson, while agreeing that it means independence from foreign rule, thinks its literal meaning is "self-rule of Hindu people." Historian
Irfan Habib states that the term "Hindu" had acquired a religious sense by this time (though not with the present day meaning) and so, other terms such as
Hindi,
Hindustani and
Hindavi began to be employed to mean "Indian", spanning both Hindus and Muslims. According to Pagadi,
Hindavi had the sense of "the sons of the soil" in this context.
Swarajya (
IAST: svarājya) is a
Sanskrit term, whose meaning is "independent dominion or sovereignty" according to the
Monier Williams dictionary. Pagadi notes that Shivaji had referred to his
jagir in Pune as a
rajya. He takes
Swarajya to have meant a "homeland" and
Hindavi Swarajya a "state of the sons of the soil." ==References==