History of Rajput Kingdoms in
Bikaner, Rajasthan, which was built by the
Rathore Rajput rulers (see
Rajput architecture). in Jodhpur (see
Rajput painting) Scholars stage emergence of Rajput clans as early as seventh century AD. when they start to make themselves lords of various localities and dominate region in current day
Northern India. These dynasties were the
Gurjara-Pratiharas, Chahamanas (of
Shakambhari,
Nadol and
Jalor), the
Tomaras of Delhi, the
Chaulukyas, the
Paramaras, the
Gahadavalas,
Chandela,
Sisodias,
Guhilas etc. However, term "Rajput" has been used as an
anachronistic designation for leading martial lineages of 11th and 12th centuries that confronted the
Ghaznavid and
Ghurid invaders, although the Rajput identity for a lineage did not exist at this time, these lineages were classified as aristocratic Rajput clans in the later times. The Rajput ruled kingdoms repelled early invasions of Arab commanders after
Muhammad ibn Qasim conquered Sindh and executed last Hindu king of the kingdom,
Raja Dahir.
Rajput family of Mewar under
Bappa Rawal and later under Khoman fought off invasions by Arab generals and restricted them only until the border of Rajasthan but failed to recapture Sindh. By the first quarter of 11th century, Turkic conqueror
Mahmud Ghaznavi launched several successful military expeditions in the territories of Rajputs, defeating them everytime and by 1025 A.D, he demolished and looted the famous
Somnath Temple and its Rajput ruler Bhimdev Solanki fled his capital. Rajput rulers at Gwalior and Kalinjar were able to hold off assaults by Maḥmūd, although the two cities did pay him heavy tribute. By last quarter of 12th century,
Muhammad of Ghor expelled the
Ghaznawids from their last bastion in
Lahore in 1186, thereby securing the strategic route of
Khyber Pass. After capturing the northwest frontier, he invaded Rajput domain. In 1191,
Prithviraj Chauhan of
Ajmer led a coalition of Rajput kings and
defeated Ghori near
Taraori. However, he returned a year later with an army of
mounted archers and crushed Rajput forces on the
same battlefield of Taraori, Prithviraj fled the battlefield but was caught near Sirsa and was executed by Ghurids. Following the battle, the Delhi Sultanate became prominent in the Delhi region. The Rajputs fought against Sultans of Delhi from Rajasthan and other adjoining areas. By first quarter of 14th century,
Alauddin Khalji sacked key Rajput fortresses of
Chittor (1303),
Ranthambor (1301) and other Rajput ruled kingdoms like
Siwana and
Jalore. However, Rajputs resurgence took place under
Rana Hammir who defeated
Tughlaq army of
Muhammad bin Tughluq in
Singoli in 1336 CE and recaptured Rajasthan from Delhi sultanate. In the 15th century, the Muslim sultans of
Malwa and
Gujarat put a joint effort to overcome the Mewar ruler
Rana Kumbha but both the sultans were defeated. Kumbha's grandson renowned
Rana Sanga inherited a troubling kingdom after death of his brothers but through his capable rule turned traditional kingdom of Mewar into one of the greatest power in northern India during the early 16th century. Sanga defeated Sultans of
Gujarat,
Malwa and
Delhi several times in various battles and expanded his kingdom. Sanga led a grand alliance of Rajput rulers and defeated the Mughal forces of
Babur in
early combat but was defeated at
Khanwa through Mughal's use of Gunpowder which was unknown in Northern India at the time. His fierce rival Babur in his autobiography acknowledged him as the greatest Hindu king of that time along with
Krishnadevaraya. After a few years
Maldev Rathore of
Marwar rose in power controlling almost whole portion of western and eastern
Rajasthan. From 1200 CE, many Rajput groups moved eastwards towards the
Eastern Gangetic plains forming their own chieftaincies. These minor Rajput kingdoms were dotted all over the Gangetic plains in modern-day Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. During this process, petty clashes occurred with the local population and in some cases, alliances were formed. and the
taluks of
Awadh. The immigration of Rajput clan chiefs into these parts of the Gangetic plains also contributed the agricultural appropriation of previously forested areas, especially in South Bihar. Some have linked this eastwards expansion with the onset of
Ghurid invasion in the West. The
Rajput kingdoms were disparate: loyalty to a clan was more important than allegiance to the wider Rajput social grouping, meaning that one clan would fight another. This and the internecine jostling for position that took place when a clan leader (raja) died meant that Rajput politics were fluid and prevented the formation of a coherent Rajput empire.
Mughal period Rajputs played an important role in the
Mughal history. From Akbar's rule, Rajput leaders were integrated into the Mughal ruling elite through court appointments and matrimonial alliances. Mughal emperors like
Jahangir and
Shah Jahan were born from Rajput mothers. Due to the presence of princes born to Rajput mothers in the Mughal harem as well as Rajput officers serving in the Mughal army, the Rajput values got diffused into the Mughal imperial system.
Babur's period The defeat of a Rajput coalition by
Babur in the
Battle of Khanwa is considered a turning point in the history of North India.
Humayun's period Rajput ruler Rana Prasad of
Amarkot gave refuge to Humayun and his pregnant wife when they were fleeing from India, and, it was in his fortress that young
Akbar was born. After returning to India, Humayun tried to make good relations with zamindars, both Hindu as well as Muslim. His attempts to foster positive connections with the Rajputs are viewed as a strategy aimed at engaging the local ruling classes of the country.
Akbar's period , the Rana of
Mewar, was popularly known for his role in battles against the Mughal Empire , an important Rajput official of
Akbar. After the mid-16th century, many Rajput rulers formed close relationships with the
Mughal emperors and served them in different capacities. It was due to the support of the Rajputs that Akbar was able to lay the foundations of the Mughal empire in India. For example,
Akbar accomplished 40 marriages for himself, his sons and grandsons, out of which 17 were Rajput-Mughal alliances. Akbar's successors as Mughal emperors, his son
Jahangir and grandson
Shah Jahan had Rajput mothers. Although Rajput rulers provided the brides to the Mughals, neither Akbar nor his successors provided brides to the Rajput rulers. For example, Akbar got his sisters and daughters married to
Timurids and prominent Muslims from central and west Asia. Historian
Michael Fisher states that the bards and poets patronized by the Rajput rulers who served Akbar raised Akbar to a "semi-divine" status and gives an example of Akbar being projected as a "divine master" in the "Hindu cosmic order". The writer also finds correlation between the increasing numbers of Hindu Rajput wives in Akbar's household and Hindu Rajputs as well as non-Rajput Hindus in his administration to the religious and political policy followed by him towards non-Muslims which included ending the prohibition on the construction of new temples of non -Muslim faiths like Hindu, Jain etc. In 1564 AD, Akbar had also stopped collection of
jaziya from non-Muslims, a tax considered as discriminatory by several non-Muslims which also consisted of his Hindu Rajput officials. The ruling
Sisodia Rajput family of
Mewar made it a point of honour not to engage in matrimonial relationships with Mughals and thus claimed to stand apart from those Rajput clans who did so.
Rana Pratap is renowned as a "Rajput icon" for firmly fighting with Akbar's forces for the cause of Mewar's freedom. Once Mewar had submitted and alliance of Rajputs reached a measure of stability, matrimonial between leading Rajput states and Mughals became rare.
Shah Jahan's period Under Shah Jahan, the Bundela Rajputs were embroiled in internal strife and imperial intervention.
Jhujhar Singh, son of the Bundela leader
Vir Singh Deo, rebelled in 1627-28 and again in 1635. Shah Jahan skilfully exploited the divisions within the Bundela clan by deploying loyal Bundela chiefs such as Bhagwan Das, Bharat Shah, and Pahar Singh to suppress the rebellion. Although the first uprising concluded with a pardon, the second prompted a response led by Aurangzeb with support from Bundela nobles like Debi Singh, who was rewarded with the title of Raja of Orchha. However, Champat Rai Bundela, a staunch supporter of Jhujhar Singh’s surviving son, Prithviraj, opposed Debi Singh's appointment. The resulting unrest undermined Debi Singh’s authority, leading to his removal in 1637. Shah Jahan then placed Orchha under direct Mughal administration before appointing Pahar Singh, descendant of Vir Singh Deo, as ruler in 1642, a move which helped diminish Champat Rai’s local support. Throughout Shah Jahan’s reign, the Mughal court repeatedly capitalised on Bundela feuds to assert control over Bundelkhand, the Bundela Rajputs' ancestral land.
Aurangzeb's period Aurangzeb had banned all Hindus from carrying weapons and riding horses but exempted the Rajputs. Akbar's diplomatic policy regarding the Rajputs was later damaged by the intolerant rules introduced by his great-grandson
Aurangzeb. A prominent example of these rules included the re-imposition of
Jaziya, which had been abolished by Akbar. The Rajputs then revolted against the Mughal empire. Aurangzeb's conflicts with them, which commenced in the early 1680s, henceforth became a contributing factor towards the downfall of the Mughal empire.
Under Maratha influence Historian Lynn Zastoupil states that the Mughal Emperors had manipulated the appointment of the successor of the Rajput rulers earlier. However, in the early 18th century, when the Mughal power declined, Rajput states enjoyed a brief period of independence. But soon the
Maratha Empire started collecting tribute from and harassing some Rajput states. The internal governance and political structures of the various Rajput kingdoms were weakened as a result of Maratha interference in dynastic succession disputes. Some Rajput states, in 1800s, appealed to the British
East India Company for assistance against the Marathas but their requests for assistance were denied at the time.
British colonial period In the late eighteenth century, despite the request from two Rajput rulers for British support, the British East India company initially refused to support the Rajput states in Rajputana region as they had the policy of non-interference and considered the Rajput states to be weak. In the early nineteenth century, British administrator
Warren Hastings realised how alliance with the Rajputs had benefited the Mughals and believed that a similar alliance may give the East India company political advantage in India. In his journal, in January 1815, he noted that Rajput states -
Jaipur,
Jodhpur and
Udaipur had been "devastated" by the
Scindia,
Holkars,
Pindari,
Ameer Khan and Muhammad Shah Khan and that the Rajput rulers made multiple petitions to him requesting British protection. Moreover, the Rajput rulers had argued that "British had replaced the Mughal Empire as the supreme power of India and therefore had the responsibility to protect weaker states from aggressive ones".
Charles Metcalfe agreed with this reasoning. One by one, many Rajput states in Rajputana came under British protection and became their allies -
Kota,
Udaipur,
Bundi,
Kishangarh,
Bikaner,
Jaipur,
Pratapgarh,
Banswara,
Dungarpur,
Jaisalmer by 1817-18 and
Sirohi by 1823. The British promised to protect the Rajput states from their adversaries and not interfere in internal affairs in exchange for tribute. However,
David Ochterlony, who was in charge of the Rajput states broke the promise to not interfere as in his view interferences would save the states from "ruin". In 1820, the British removed him from his position and replaced him with Charles Metcalfe. For several decades, "non-interference" in internal affairs remained the official policy. However, according to the historian Lynn Zastoupil, the "British never found it possible or desirable to completely withdraw from interference in Rajput affairs". Although the group venerate him to this day, he is viewed by many historians since the late nineteenth century as being a not particularly reliable commentator. Jason Freitag, his only significant biographer, has said that Tod is "manifestly biased". As per the historian
Thomas R. Metcalf, Rajput Taluqdars in
Oudh provided a large numbers of leaders to the revolt of 1857 in that region.
Kunwar Singh, a Rajput Zamindar was an important leader in Bihar region in the
Indian Rebellion of 1857. Historian Robert Stern points out that in
Rajputana, although there were some revolts in the soldiers commanded by British officers the "Rajpur durbar muskeeters and feudal cavalrymen" did not participate in the 1857 revolt at all. But Crispin Bates is of the opinion that Rajput officers had soft corner for the rebels of 1857 fleeing Delhi who were entering into interior areas of then Rajasthan region. He gives examples of rebels who easily found safe havens in villages of Chittor without arrests. The Rajput practices of
female infanticide and
sati (widow immolation) were other matters of concern to the British. It was believed that the Rajputs were the primary adherents to these practices, which the British Raj considered savage and which provided the initial impetus for British
ethnographic studies of the subcontinent that eventually manifested itself as a much wider exercise in
social engineering. During the British rule their love for pork, i.e. wild boar, was also well known and the British identified them as a group based on this. The Rajputs were classified as one of the farming and landowning communities by the British in the 1931 census. Some unrelated communities tried to change their status to Rajput during the Colonial era.
William Rowe, discusses an example of a Shudra caste - the Noniyas (caste of salt makers)- from
Madhya Pradesh,
Uttar Pradesh and
Bihar. A large section of this caste that had "become" "Chauhan Rajputs" over three generations in the
British Raj era. The more wealthy or advanced Noniyas started by forming the
Sri Rajput Pacharni Sabha (Rajput Advancement Society) in 1898 and emulating the Rajput lifestyle. They also started wearing of
Sacred thread. Rowe states that at a historic meeting of the caste in 1936, every child in this Noniya section "knew" about their "Rajput heritage". Similarly, Donald Attwood and Baviskar give and example of a caste of shepherds who were formerly Shudras changed their status to Rajput in the Raj era and started wearing the Sacred thread. They are now known as
Sagar Rajputs. The scholars consider this example as a case among thousands.
Post Independence India On
India's independence in 1947, the princely states, including those of the Rajput, were given three options: join either India or Pakistan, or remain independent. Rajput rulers of the 22 princely states of
Rajputana acceded to newly independent India, amalgamated into the new state of Rajasthan in 1949–1950. Initially the maharajas were granted funding from the
Privy purse in exchange for their acquiescence, but a series of land reforms over the following decades weakened their power, and their privy purse was cut off during
Indira Gandhi's administration under the 1971
Constitution 26th Amendment Act. The estates, treasures, and practices of the old Rajput rulers now form a key part of Rajasthan's tourist trade and cultural memory. The Rajput
Dogra ruler of
Kashmir and Jammu acceded to India in 1947, while retaining his title until the monarchy was abolished in 1971 by the 26th amendment to the Constitution of India. Before the zamindari abolition, the Rajputs in
Oudh formed the major Taluqdars and had controlled over 50 percent of the land in the most districts of the region. Historian Thomas R. Metcalf explains that in the province of Uttar Pradesh, majority of the Taluqdars with moderate to large estates were composed of Rajput caste. He also mentions that Rajputs were only next to Brahmins in the ritual hierarchy and also gave the secular elite of the state. According to him, the community controlled most of the best agricultural land in the region and this also helped the Rajput Taluqdars who were usually the head of the local Rajput clan to gather support over non-Rajput rival in the electoral politics of the state.
Affirmative Action The Rajputs, in most of the states, are considered a
General caste (forward caste) in India's system of
positive discrimination. This means that they have no access to reservations. But they are classified as an
Other Backward Class by the
National Commission for Backward Classes in the state of
Karnataka. Some Rajputs in various states, as with other agricultural castes, demand reservations in Government jobs. In 2016, Sikh Rajputs were added under Backward Classes in
Punjab but after protest by the community, the government announced that they will be again put under General Category.
Pakistan In
West Punjab, the Muslim Rajputs, Jats and Arains are the three dominant agricultural castes, out of which, Rajputs are considered to be at the top of social hierarchy. In
Azad Kashmir, they are distributed across the territory and have higher presence in politics. They are among the largest components of Pakistan's army. ==Demographics==