词条 | Jaimal Rathore |
释义 |
| image = | caption = Rajput warriors Rao Jaimal & Patta (Rajasthan) statues in Nyatapola temple, Bhaktapur Nepal | succession = Ruler of Merta | reign = 1540s-1562 | predecessor = Rao Veeram Dev | birth_date = | death_date = 22 February 1568 | father = | issue = Ramdas Rathore }} Jaimal Rathore (1507–1568) was the ruler of Merta. He was the half-brother of Meera[1] and became the ruler of Merta after the death of his brother, Rao Veeram Dev. His brother was perceived as the strongest king of the east in his time.[1] The Amar Kavya records that Udai Singh II granted Badnoor along with 1000 villages to Rao Jaimal.[2] In 1553, Jaimal resisted falling under the chakri (service relationship) of Maldeo of Marwar.[3] The Siege of ChittorgarhIn 1567, when Akbar encamped outside Chittorgarh, in hopes of conquering the fortress, the ruler of Mewar, Udai Singh II, fled with his family to Gogunda, and left the fortress in charge of 8,000 soldiers and 1,000 musketeers, who were in command of Jaimal and Patta. Jaimal died in Chittorgarh on 22 February 1568 by a musket shot fired by Akbar himself.[4] This turned the tide of battle in the Siege of Chittorgarh and the Rajputs' morale decreased.[5] Jaimal's name is commonly mentioned with the brave leader Patta. These two were given the command of the army when Udai Singh, along with the royal family, left the fort and retired to Gogunda. Their bravery was such that Akbar himself ordered the construction of their statues outside his fort in Agra to honour their bravery and courage. "At this time H.M.(Akbar) perceived that a person clothed in a cuirass known as the hazār mīkhī (thousand nails) which is a mark of chieftainship among them, came to the breach and superintended the proceedings. It was not known who he was. H.M. took his gun Sangrām, which is one of the special guns, and aimed it at him..... And in fact on the morning when the breeze of victory and dominion arose, it was ascertained that the Shāhinshāh's musket had reached Jaimal, the governor of the fort, and had at once destroyed both him and the fort."~ The death of Jaimal, Akbarnama by Abu'l Fazl[6] His son, Ramdas Rathore went on to fight in the Battle of Haldighati, where he was slain by Jagannath Kachhwa.[7] References1. ^1 {{cite book|title=Language of Love|url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=YfMVU0gBANoC|page=54}} |publisher=Sarup & Sons |year=2001 |first=Ambika Prasad |last=Sharma |page=54 |isbn=9788176252461}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Jaimal, Rao}}{{India-royal-stub}}2. ^{{cite journal | author =G. D. Sharma |authorlink= | year =1977 | title =Some Aspects of the Mewar Polity at the Time of Maharana Pratap's Accession | journal =Proceedings of the Indian History Congress | volume =38 | issue = | pages =263 | publisher =Indian History Congress | location = | issn = | pmid = | doi = | bibcode = | oclc = | id = | jstor =44139080 }} 3. ^{{cite book |author=Tanuja Kothiyal |authorlink= |title=Nomadic Narratives: A History of Mobility and Identity in the Great Indian Desert |year=2016 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location= |pages=91 |quote= | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=be-7CwAAQBAJ&pg=PA91 |isbn=9781107080317 }} 4. ^Akbarnama by Abu'l Fazl 5. ^{{cite book|first1=Anil |last1=Relia|first2= Ratan |last2=Parimoo|title=The Indian Portrait - 5: Colonial influence on Raja Ravi Varma and his Contemporaries|url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=W06OBQAAQBAJ|page=82}}|date=18 November 2014|publisher=Archer Art Gallery|pages=82|id=GGKEY:CKAH1ERUGDU}} 6. ^http://persian.packhum.org/persian/main?url=pf%3Ffile%3D00701022%26ct%3D118 7. ^[https://persian.packhum.org/persian/main?url=pf%3Ffile%3D00701023%26ct%3D67< Akbarnama by Abu'l Fazl] "Rām Dās, son of Jaimal, went to the sorry abode of annihilation from a stroke by the hand of Jagannāth." 3 : 1507 births|1568 deaths|Rajasthani people |
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