Legend of Virmati and Jagadeva One legend about Jagadeva is mentioned in the
Ras-Mala, a collection of
Gujarati legends. It names Jagdev Parmar (Jagadeva) as the son of king Udayadit of Dhar (Udayaditya) and his
Solanki (Chaulukya) wife. The king's favourite son and the heir apparent was Rindhaval, his son by another wife from
Vagheli family. The
Chavda ruler of Tuktoda was impressed with Jagdev's merits, and married his daughter Virmati to the Paramara prince. Jagdev left his father's kingdom because of harassment from the Vagheli queen and reached Tuktoda. From there, he and Virmati marched to
Anhilvara (Patan), the capital of the Solanki king Sidh Raj Jesangh (
Jayasimha Siddharaja).
Navalram's play
Veermati (1869) is based on this legend.
Shree Nath Patankar made
Sati Veermata, an Indian silent film based on the legend, in 1923.
Other legends According to another bardic tradition, some tribes in the northern part of the Indian subcontinent are descended from "Jagdev Parmar", that is, Jagadeva. During the reign of Jagadeva's nephew
Yashovarman (r. c. 1133-1142 CE), the
Delhi Sultanate invaded Malwa. The bardic works state that Jagadeva's descendant Rai Shankar and some other Paramaras migrated to
Punjab via
Rajputana as a result of this invasion. Rai Shankar had three sons: Gheo (the ancestor of
Ghebas), Teo or Tenu (the ancestor of Tiwanas) and Seo (the ancestor of
Sials). Teo's descendants established the
Mataur village in present-day Haryana, from where the Tiwanas migrated to other places. Some of them converted from
Hinduism to
Sikhism and
Islam in the later centuries. The rulers of the
Muli princely state in present-day Gujarat also claimed descent from Jagdev Parmar. The Ambaraian rulers of the
Akhnoor principality in present-day
Jammu and Kashmir traced their ancestry to "Jagdev Singh" (Jagadeva), who had migrated from Dhar. == References ==