Rajaram had occupied the fort at Jinji from 11 November 1689, but left before it fell in 1698. Rajaram then set up his court at
Satara Fort. Rajaram then set his objectives on rallying the Maratha army to drive out the Mughal invaders. In 1691, as a direct taunt to Mughal encroachment in the Deccan and to show off the undaunted morale of the Marathas, Rajaram issued contemptible bounties which were deliberately small to his generals for capturing Mughal cities. One such challenge was as follows: "Having clearly grasped your readiness to quit the Mughal service and return to the Chhatrapati's for defending the Maharashtra Dharma, we are assigning to you for your own personal expenses and those of your troops, an annuity...". Hanmantrao Ghorpade was entitled to receive, 62,500 hons after the capture of
Raigad, 62,500 hons after the capture of
Bijapur, 62,500 hons after the capture of
Bhaganagar, 62,500 hons after the capture of
Aurangabad, and 2,50,000 hons after the capture of
Delhi itself. Similarly, Krishnaji Ghorpade was entitled to receive 12,500 hons after the conquest of
Raigad territory, 12,500 hons after the conquest of
Bijapur, 12,500 hons after the conquest of
Bhaganagar, 12,500 hons after the conquest of
Aurangabad and 50,000 hons after the conquest of
Delhi. Rajaram also aimed to capture Delhi, though he was unsuccessful. Animated by a desire to avenge their wrongs, the Maratha bands spread over the vast territories from
Khandesh to the south coast, over
Gujarat,
Baglan,
Gondwana, and the
Karnataka, devastating Mughal stations, destroying their armies, exacting tribute, plundering Mughal treasures, animals and stocks of camp equipage. == Death ==