Pratihar (parihar) Kshatriya Dynasty

Pratihar ( parihar) Kshatriya Dynasty



Pratihar ( parihar) Kshatriya Dynasty

JAI EKLINGNATH KI

History of Pratihara Kshatriya Dynasty #Pratihara__Rajput is a dynasty whose origins were researched by many historians, some of whom were British and due to their limited mental capacities and not understanding the structure of Indian society, there are many contradictions on the origin of this dynasty. They were created. Pratihara is a pure Kshatriya dynasty who drove out Gujjars from Gurjaradesh and became the lord of Gurjaradesh. And he got the title of Gurjarnaresh, he has been inexplicably associated with the present Gujar caste.
While the Pratiharas have never written of the Gujara caste. Rather, the inscription of Nagabhatta I's commander Gallak, which was discovered by Dr. Shanta Rani Sharma ji, is described in full in his book "Society and culture Rajasthan c. AD. 700 - 900. The throwing of Basti has been reported and the Pratiharas have been told to dislike the Gujars. In Manusmriti, the words Pratihara, Parihara, and Padihar have been used. Tahar is synonymous with the word Kshatriya in a way. The original men of this branch of the Kshatriya dynasty are Lakshman ji, brother of Lord Rama. His descendant Pratihara, being Lakshman's surname, Pratihara, is called Parihar in due course. They are Kshatriyas of the Suryavanshi clan. Harkeli drama, Lalit Vigraha drama, Hammir epic festival, Kakuk Pratihara inscription, Bauk Pratihara inscription, Nagabhatta Prasasti, Vatsaraja Pratihara Ilalek, Gwalior citation of Mihirbhoj, etc.
Suryavanshi avoidance seed in many important inscriptions and texts and clear - clear red g descendants
It is said that Laxman's son Angad, who was the ruler of Karapath (Rajasthan and Punjab), is his descendant Pratihara. In the 126th generation of this dynasty, there is mention of King Harishchandra Pratihara (about 590 AD). He had four sons from his second wife Bhadra, who, by organizing some Dhanasanchaya and an army, conquered his ancestral kingdom Madavipur and created the kingdom of Mandore, which was made by Raja Razil Pratihara.
His grandson was Nagabhatta Pratihara, an indomitable adventurer, ambitious and extraordinary warrior. Later in this dynasty, the Kakukka king, whose kingdom emerged strongly in western India, emerged. But the first notable king in this dynasty is Nagabhatta I, whose reign is believed to be 730 to 760. He laid the foundation of a powerful avoidance kingdom, making Jalore the capital. At this time the Arabs conquered Sindh province and invaded the states of Malwa and Gurjaraatra.
Nagabhatta did not stop him only, he freed the states of Sandhan, Saurashtra, Ujjain, Malwa Bharoch, etc. from his hands. In 750, the Arabs regrouped and attacked India, and created a quarrel on the western border of India. But Nagabhatta went in a tizzy and killed over three thousand dacoits, so the country breathed a sigh of relief. If the credit for ending the Arab power in India is trampled to any Kshatriya dynasty, it is only Parihar who fought the Arabs for 300 years and protected the Vedic Sanatan Dharma, hence every citizen of India will always be indebted to them. The grandson Vatsaraja (775 to 800) is notable, who expanded the Pratihara empire. Ujjain's ruler Bhandi was defeated and made it the capital of the Parihar empire.
At that time, three superpowers existed in India. 1 Pratihara Empire- Ujjain, King Vatsaraja
2 Pal Empire - Bengal, King Dharmapala 3 Rashtrakuta Empire- South India, King Dhruva finally attacked Dharmapala of Palavansha and defeated him in a terrible war, and forced him to accept his subjugation. But in 800 AD, the combined forces of Dhruva and Dharmapala defeated Vatsaraja, and Ujjain and his subdivision Kannauj were ruled by the Palas, but his son Nagabhatta II resettled Ujjain. He attacked Kannauj and took it from the Palas and made Kannauj his main capital. He fought ten frightful wars from 820 to 825–826 and took over northern India. It did not allow the Yavanas, and Turks to gain a foothold in India. The time of Nagabhatta II is famous for good governance. It built 120 reservoirs - built long roads.
The temple of Bateshwar which is in Morena (Madhya Pradesh) has also been constructed during this time, the lake of Ajmer is the work of the same, which is famous today as Pushkar Tirth. Even in earlier times, Kshatriya (Rajput) warriors used to go to war by worshiping Nagabhatta in the form of the heroic worship of Pushkar Sarovar. Nagabhatta II was titled "Param Bhattaraka Maharajadhiraj Parameshwara. Nagabhatta's son Rambhadra Pratihara protected the empire like his father. After this, his son history became the famous Sanatan Dharma protector Mihirbhoja Emperor, whose reign is believed to be 836 to 885. As soon as he ascended the throne, Mihirbhoja Pratihara first reformed the system of the Kannauj kingdom, harshly punishing the feudal lords and the bribe-eating workers who oppressed the subjects. Trade and agricultural work were provided with such facilities that the whole empire rose from wealth.
Mihirbhoja brought the Pratihara Empire to the climax with wealth, and splendor. Mihirbhoja received the title 'Emperor' during his height. In many poems and history, he is described with adjectives like Emperor Bhoj, Mihir, Prabhas, Bhojraj, Varahvatar, Param Bhattarak, Maharajadhiraja Parmeshwar, etc. The management of such a vast and vast empire was becoming tougher than remote Kannauj alone. Astu Mihirbhoja divided the empire into four parts and made four sub-capitals. Kannauj - The main capital, Ujjain and Mandore were made sub-capitals and Gwalior as its co-capital. The Pratiharas had a stately union since Nagabhatta I, which included many Kshatriya kings. But at the time of Mihirbhoj, the Chandals had taken possession of the Bundelkhand and Kalanjir divisions.
Mihirbhoj proposed that Chandel also become a member of the Union of States so that the whole of North Western India would stand as a huge rock and enemies of Yavan, Turks, Huns, Kushans, etc. could be completely prevented from entering India, but Chandel for this Not ready. Mihirbhoja eventually attacked Kalinjar and defeated the Chandels of the region. Mihirbhoja was a great patriot - he vowed that no foreign enemy would destroy the land of India. For this, he first attacked and healed the kings who would let the cowardly Yavans take refuge in their kingdom. Thus the credit for the creation of a powerful kingdom from Rajputana to Kannauj goes to Emperor Mihirbhoj. According to Ramashankar Tripathi's book History of Kannauj, the boundary of the Kannauj empire during the reign of Mihirbhoj, page no. In 246, it extended as far as the Sutlej River in the northwest, the Himalayan foothills in the north, Bengal in the east, Bundelkhand and Vatsa state in the southeast, Saurashtra and the greater part of the Rajputs in the southwest.
The Arab historian Suleman has written in Tawarikh Arabia, that among the Hindu Kshatriya kings, Mihirbhoja Pratihara is the biggest enemy of Arab and Islamic religions in India. Suleman further writes that Mihirbhoja was the only organized and largest army in India - thousands of elephants in it, There were thousands of horses and thousands of chariots. In Mihirbhoj's kingdom, gold and silver lay on the streets - but no one feared robbery. Mihirbhoj's third campaign was against the Pala kings. At this time, the ruler of the Pala dynasty in Bengal was Devpal. He was heroic and famous - he suddenly attacked Kalinjar and defeated Mihirbhoja's army stationed at Kalinjar and captured the fort. Mihirbhoj decided to teach Devpal a lesson as soon as he got the news. Both the Kannauj and Gwalior armies were ordered to assemble and attacked Devpal in Chaitra month 850 AD. With this, Devapal's army not only was defeated and ran badly but he was also killed. Mihirbhoj annexed the entire region including Bihar to Kannauj. Seeing Mihirbhoj entangled in the east, furor and conspiracies started again in western India. The benefit of this chaos by Arab dacoits
Raised and they started looting across Punjab from Sindh.
Mihirbhoj now traveled towards this. He first defeated Thakkiyak, ruling the northern part of Punjab, and seized his kingdom and 2000 horses. After this, the treacherous Sultan of Gujarawala was imprisoned - 3000 Turkish and Hun bandits who were under his protection were imprisoned and punished the vampires who were found guilty of the murderous murderous. Subsequently, defeating Shankaravarma of the Takka country made the whole of western India a part of the Kannauj empire. In the fourth expedition, Mihirbhoj paid attention to Mandor, the original seat of the Pratihara Kshatriya dynasty. The military force, consisting of the kings of Travan, Ball, and Mand attacked the Mandor.
At that time, King Bauk Pratihara of Mandore was about to be defeated and Mihirbhoj reached for military assistance. He took the three kings captive and annexed their kingdom to Kannauj. In this campaign, he also ended the kingdoms of Gurjratra, Lat, Parvat, etc., and became a part of the empire.

Note: The Pratihara (Parihara) of Mandore acted as the feudatories of the imperial Pratiharas of Kannauj. The descendants of the Pratiharas of Kannauj came from Mandore and made Kannauj the capital of India and ruled for 220 years and protected the Hindu Sanatana Dharma. Dynasty - Pratihara Dynasty Dynasty - Suryavanshi Gotra - Kaushik (Kaushal, Kashyap) Veda - Yajurveda Upved - Dhanurved Guru - Vasistha Kuldev - Shri Ramchandra ji, Lord Vishnu Kuldevi - Chamunda Devi, Gajan Mata River - Saraswati Pilgrimage - Pushkar Raj (Rajasthan) Mantra - Gayatri Flag - Saffron Scar - Red Sun Animal-Varaha Nagara - Ranjeet Horse - Sanjeev Worship - Block Worship Dussehra Adi Purush - Shri Laxman Adi Gaddi - Mandavya Puram (Mandore, Rajasthan) Jyeshtha Gaddi - State of Barmai Nagaud (Madhya Pradesh) == State of Pratihar / Parihar Kshatriyas in India which remained till 1950 == Nagaud State - Madhya Pradesh Alipura State - Madhya Pradesh State of Khanate - Himachal Pradesh Kumarsain State - Himachal Pradesh Miyagam State - Gujarat Umeta State - Gujarat Eklabara princely state - Gujarat == Current status of Pratihara / Parihar dynasty == Even though this vast Pratihara Kshatriya (Rajput) empire disintegrated into smaller states later in the 15th century, but the descendants of this dynasty still remain the same empire today. Let's meet in the periphery of. There were many states of the Pratihara Kshatriya dynasty in India before independence. Where even today it is in good numbers. Mandore, Rajasthan
Jalore, Rajasthan Lohianagarh, Rajasthan Badmer, Rajasthan Bhinmal, Rajasthan Mount Abu, Rajasthan Pali, Rajasthan Belasar, Rajasthan Shergarh, Rajasthan Churu, Rajasthan Kannauj, Uttar Pradesh Hamirpur Uttar Pradesh Pratapgarh, Uttar Pradesh Jhagarpur, Uttar Pradesh Orai, Uttar Pradesh Jalaun, Uttar Pradesh Etawah, Uttar Pradesh Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh Unnao, Uttar Pradesh Ujjain, Madhya Pradesh Chanderi, Madhya Pradesh Gwalior, Madhya Pradesh Jigani, Madhya Pradesh Neemuch, Madhya Pradesh Jhansi, Madhya Pradesh Alipura, Madhya Pradesh Nagaud, Madhya Pradesh Uchehra, Madhya Pradesh Damoh, Madhya Pradesh Singorgarh, Madhya Pradesh Eklabara, Gujarat Miyagam, Gujarat Curzon, Gujarat Kathiawar, Gujarat Umeta, Gujarat Dudhej, Gujarat Khaneti, Himachal Pradesh Kumarsain, Himachal Pradesh Khotkai, Himachal Pradesh Jammu, Jammu Kashmir Doda, Jammu Kashmir Bhaderweh, Jammu Kashmir Karnal, Haryana Khandesh, Maharashtra Jalgaon, Maharashtra Phagwara, Punjab Pariharpur, Bihar Ranchi, Jharkhand == Friends, now let us know about the branches of Pratihara / Parihar dynasty == There are many branches of Parihars in India which are still inhabited. According to the information which is still available, today the Pratihara / Parihar dynasty spread throughout India. Parihars reside in more than 1000 thousand villages in India. == Pratihara / Parihar branches of Kshatriya dynasty == (1) Inda Pratihara (2) Deval Pratihara (3) Madad Pratihara (4) Khadad Pratihara (5) Lulavat Pratihara (7) Ramawat Pratihar (8) Kalahansa Pratihara (9) Takhi Pratihar (Parahar) All these branches are in the name of Parihar kings or Parihar Thakurs. Let us now know about the great warrior rulers of Pratihara dynasty who were always sacrificed for their motherland, Sanatan Dharma, subjects and state. ** Pratihara / Parihara Great king of Kshatriya dynasty ** (1) King Harishchandra Pratihara (2) King Razzil Pratihara (3) Raja Narbhatt Pratihara (4) King Nagabhatta I (5) King Yashovardhana Pratihara (6) King Shiluk Pratihara (7) King Kakkuk Pratihara (8) Raja Bauk Pratihara (9) King Vatsaraja Pratihara (10) King Nagabhatta II (11) King Mihirbhoja Pratihara (12) King Mahendrapal Pratihara (13) King Mahipal Pratihara (14) Raja Vinayakpal Pratihara (15) King Mahendrapal II (16) King Vijayapala Pratihara (17) King Governor Pratihara (18) King Trilochanpal Pratihara (19) King Yashpal Pratihara (20) King Medinirai Pratihara (Chanderi State) (21) Raja Virarajdev Pratihara (founder of Nagaud kingdom) Pratihara Kshatriya dynasty has a very large history, they have always sacrificed for their motherland, and kept the Hindu Sanatana religion by becoming Pratihara i.e. protector as their name and Foreign invaders were sliced ​​like carrot radish, we are proud of such a Hindu Rajput dynasty who never believed in self-confidence in a difficult time Oya and to the last breath to defend Hinduism.
RAJA RAMCHANDRA KI JAI

Pratihar (parihar) Kshatriya Dynasty Pratihar (parihar) Kshatriya Dynasty Reviewed by Arnab Kumar Das on January 07, 2020 Rating: 5

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