πŸ“° Today's Current AffairsRead Now →
📷 Follow on Instagram

Rise of Rajput Kingdoms








πŸ“Œ Chapter 07 Β· Early Medieval India & Rajputs Β· Complete Notes

Early Medieval India & Rajputs β€” Complete Notes

Rise of Rajput kingdoms, Arab invasion of Sindh, Tripartite struggle, Mahmud of Ghazni, Muhammad Ghori β€” complete notes for UPSC & PSC exams.

βš”οΈ Rise of Rajput Kingdoms

After Harsha’s death (647 CE), North India fragmented into small kingdoms. The Rajputs emerged as the dominant political force in North India from the 7th to 12th centuries CE.

Origin of Rajputs β€” Theories:

  • Foreign origin theory: Descended from Central Asian invaders (Hunas, Kushanas) who were absorbed into Hindu society
  • Agnikula theory: Four Rajput clans (Pratiharas, Paramaras, Chahamanas, Chalukyas) emerged from a sacred fire pit (agnikunda) at Mount Abu β€” mythological
  • Kshatriya origin: Descended from ancient Kshatriya clans

Major Rajput Clans:

ClanRegionCapitalKey Ruler
Pratihara (Gurjara-Pratihara)Rajasthan, UPKanaujBhoja (Mihira Bhoja) β€” greatest Pratihara king
PalaBengal, BiharMonghyrDharmapala β€” patronised Buddhism; Vikramashila University
RashtrakutaDeccanManyakhetaAmoghavarsha β€” greatest Rashtrakuta king; Jain
Chahamana (Chauhan)RajasthanAjmerPrithviraj Chauhan III β€” last great Rajput king
ChandellaBundelkhandKhajurahoDhanga β€” built Khajuraho temples
ParamaraMalwaDharaBhoja (Raja Bhoja) β€” scholar-king; built Bhojpur lake

πŸ•Œ Arab Invasion of Sindh (712 CE)

  • Muhammad bin Qasim (Umayyad general) invaded Sindh in 712 CE
  • Defeated and killed Dahir (Hindu king of Sindh)
  • Conquered Sindh and southern Punjab
  • Source: Chach Nama (Arabic account of the conquest)
  • Impact: First permanent Muslim foothold in India; introduced Islam to Sindh
  • Arab advance was stopped by Pratiharas and Rashtrakutas β€” prevented further expansion
⭐ Key Fact: The Arab conquest of Sindh (712 CE) was limited to Sindh and did not penetrate deeper into India. The Pratiharas and Rashtrakutas successfully resisted Arab expansion. It was only with the Ghaznavid and Ghurid invasions (10th–12th centuries) that Muslim power expanded significantly into India.

βš”οΈ Tripartite Struggle (8th–10th centuries)

Three powerful dynasties β€” Pratiharas, Palas, and Rashtrakutas β€” fought for control of Kanauj (the most prestigious city in North India) for about 200 years:

  • Pratiharas (North India) β€” wanted Kanauj for prestige and control of Gangetic plains
  • Palas (Bengal/Bihar) β€” wanted Kanauj to extend westward
  • Rashtrakutas (Deccan) β€” wanted Kanauj to assert pan-Indian supremacy
  • No single dynasty could hold Kanauj permanently β€” exhausted all three
  • Outcome: All three dynasties weakened; made India vulnerable to Ghaznavid invasions

βš”οΈ Mahmud of Ghazni (971–1030 CE)

  • Sultan of Ghazni (Afghanistan); son of Sabuktigin
  • Made 17 invasions of India between 1000–1027 CE
  • Primary motive: Plunder β€” looted temples and cities
  • Most famous raid: Somnath Temple (Gujarat) in 1025 CE β€” looted enormous wealth
  • Defeated Jaipal (Shahi king of Punjab) in 1001 CE
  • Court historian: Al-Biruni β€” wrote Kitab-ul-Hind
  • Court poet: Firdausi β€” wrote Shahnama
  • Mahmud did not establish a permanent empire in India β€” only Punjab was annexed

βš”οΈ Muhammad Ghori & Conquest of India

  • Sultan of Ghor (Afghanistan); unlike Mahmud, wanted to establish a permanent empire
  • First Battle of Tarain (1191 CE): Defeated by Prithviraj Chauhan III
  • Second Battle of Tarain (1192 CE): Defeated Prithviraj Chauhan; decisive victory; opened North India to Muslim rule
  • Conquered Delhi, Ajmer, Varanasi, Bihar
  • Left his general Qutb-ud-din Aibak in charge of India
  • Assassinated in 1206 CE; Qutb-ud-din Aibak founded the Delhi Sultanate
πŸ“ Exam Tip:
β€’ Arab invasion of Sindh = 712 CE = Muhammad bin Qasim = Chach Nama
β€’ Tripartite struggle = Pratiharas + Palas + Rashtrakutas = for Kanauj
β€’ Mahmud of Ghazni = 17 invasions = Somnath (1025 CE) = Al-Biruni
β€’ First Battle of Tarain = 1191 CE = Prithviraj won
β€’ Second Battle of Tarain = 1192 CE = Muhammad Ghori won = Delhi Sultanate begins

πŸ›οΈ Rajput Society & Culture

  • Feudal system β€” king at top; samanta (vassal lords) below; peasants at bottom
  • Rajput code of honour β€” bravery, loyalty, protection of women
  • Jauhar β€” mass self-immolation by Rajput women when defeat was imminent
  • Saka β€” Rajput warriors fighting to death rather than surrender
  • Khajuraho temples (Chandella) β€” finest Rajput architecture; erotic sculptures
  • Dilwara temples (Mount Abu) β€” Jain temples; finest marble work

βœ… Chapter 07 Revision Checklist

βœ… Rajput origin: Agnikula theory (mythological); foreign origin theory; Kshatriya theory
βœ… Pratiharas: Kanauj; Bhoja (Mihira Bhoja) = greatest king
βœ… Palas: Bengal/Bihar; Dharmapala = patronised Buddhism; Vikramashila University
βœ… Rashtrakutas: Deccan; Amoghavarsha = greatest king; Jain
βœ… Arab invasion of Sindh: 712 CE; Muhammad bin Qasim; defeated Dahir; Chach Nama
βœ… Tripartite struggle: Pratiharas + Palas + Rashtrakutas = for Kanauj
βœ… Mahmud of Ghazni: 17 invasions; Somnath (1025 CE); Al-Biruni; Firdausi
βœ… First Battle of Tarain: 1191 CE; Prithviraj Chauhan won
βœ… Second Battle of Tarain: 1192 CE; Muhammad Ghori won; Delhi Sultanate begins
βœ… Prithviraj Chauhan III: Last great Rajput king; Chahamana clan; Ajmer
βœ… Khajuraho temples: Chandella dynasty; Bundelkhand; erotic sculptures
βœ… Jauhar: Mass self-immolation by Rajput women
βœ… Qutb-ud-din Aibak: Muhammad Ghori’s general; founded Delhi Sultanate (1206 CE)