That
a dynasty with an unbroken line of 1400 years would have experienced many
triumphs and tribulations is stating the obvious. The germination - which
really was the resurrection - of the Guhilots or the Gohil Rajput dynasty was
itself in the face of a massive defeat and the destruction of their ancient
kingdom of Vallabhi.
They were also known as Guhilputra, the name derived from ‘guhu’, which means cave. The founder of the Gohil clan, Muhideosur Gohadit (Guhil) was born in a cave in 542 A.D. after the fall of Vallabhi, and so the dynasty came to be known as Gohil. His father, the King of Vallabhi, along with the rest of the kinsmen had been killed in the bloody battle. After giving birth, his mother handed over the baby to a Brahmin lady, and then committed sati.
They were also known as Guhilputra, the name derived from ‘guhu’, which means cave. The founder of the Gohil clan, Muhideosur Gohadit (Guhil) was born in a cave in 542 A.D. after the fall of Vallabhi, and so the dynasty came to be known as Gohil. His father, the King of Vallabhi, along with the rest of the kinsmen had been killed in the bloody battle. After giving birth, his mother handed over the baby to a Brahmin lady, and then committed sati.
From
such traumatic circumstances sprung the mighty Gohil clan that gave rise to
several lines of kings and rulers across Gujarat, Rajputana, Saurashtra, Madhya
Bharat, Maharashtra and even the Deccan and Nepal.
Young
Guhil became chief of a hilly tract of forests near modern Idar in north
Gujarat in 556 A.D., and held sway till he died around 603 A.D. The clan
consolidated and expanded its kingdom over the next two centuries.
It
was in 735 A.D. that his descendant Bappa Rawal, or Kalbhoj, captured Chittor
Fort and founded the kingdom of Mewar that survived the vicissitudes of
history until the middle of the 20th century.
Long
before that, however, Salivahan, son of Narvahan, King of Mewar, and
11th in descent to Bappa Rawal, migrated with part of the Gohil clan from
Mewar in 973 A.D., leaving behind his son Shakti Kumar with the rest of his
people. They settled at Juna Khergarh, which they made their capital on the
Luni River (present-day Bhalotra near Jodhpur) in Marwar. There is still a
village there called ‘Gohilon ki Dhani’. For two and a quarter centuries, the Gohil
dynasty thus ruled Mewar as well as Marwar.
The
Gohils reigned in Marwar for 20 generations till the early years of the
13th century. They were displaced by the Rathores, who were driven out of
Kannauj (in modern Uttar Pradesh) following the invasion of Muhammad Ghori and
the establishment of the Slave dynasty. In 1211, the Rathores founded the
kingdom of Marwar, which later came to be known as Jodhpur.
Under
their chief Mohodas, the Gohil clan then marched back to Saurashtra after
nearly five hundred years, to the court of the great Chalukya ruler Sidhraj
Singh. They were granted a jagir in modern Gohilwar, thus becoming
governors of the Chalukyas.
Meanwhile
the Gohils of Mewar were attacked by Ala-ud-din Khilji’s army in 1303 in which
all the women committed Jauhar and the men were killed in battle. Thereafter
Hamir Singh Gohil, a descendant 13 generations apart, was brought from Mount
Sisoda where he lived, and installed in Chittor. The Gohils of Mewar then
assumed the name Sisodia. They shifted their capital to Udaipur in 1559.
To
the Gohils were born valiant warriors like Maharana Sanga and Maharana Pratap,
the rulers of Mewar who by then had assumed the name Sisodia, and the legendary
Maratha King Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, all of whom refused to bow to the
might of the Mughals. The kingdoms that stemmed from the Sisodias of Mewar were
Dungarpur, Banswara, Pratapgarh and Shahpura in Rajasthan, and Barwani in
Madhya Pradesh. A branch of the Sisodias also migrated north and became
the powerful Rana prime ministers of Nepal. In Maharashtra the Gohils
assumed the name Bhonsle and founded kingdoms like Satara, Kolhapur,
Nagpur, and Sawantwadi. In the south they founded the kingdom of
Thanjavur.
The ‘Ruling Princes and Chiefs of India’ published by The Times of India in 1930 noted that: “No single portion of the vast and vulnerable land of Ind is wrapt deeper in the fascinating glamour of immemorial legend, tradition and romance than is Kathiawar, the ancient territory of the Vallabhi kings. To Kathiawar journeyed the mighty Gohils, that historic Rajput tribe whose very name signifies ‘the strength of the earth’, centuries before Norman William fought Saxon Harold at Senlac. Originally, as it would seem, vassals of the Vallabhi kings, the Gohils, by degrees conquered the greater portion of Kathiawar, until they permanently rooted themselves in the soil of Saurashtra. They were fighters ever, these men – warriors to the bone and marrow. Sejakji – Ranoji – Mokhdaji – what memories of raid and foray, of pitched battle, of fierce siege do these names not recall! It was Mokhdaji, it may be remembered, who took Ghogha from its Mohamedan defenders and made of Perim a royal capital. Mighty in physical stature as he was in deeds of derring do, he died fighting against Muhammad Tughlaq on Ghogha soil, leaving behind him a name never to be forgotten in the annals of Saurashtra.”
Sejakji
(Sahajigji) was twenty-third in descent to Salivahan. He was chief of the Gohil
clan from 1240, governor, commanding officer of King Kumarpal’s army and
right-hand man of the Solankis, a branch of the Chalukyas. Sejakji befriended
Rah (Rao) Mahipal, King of Saurashtra, whose capital was Junagarh, and married
his daughter Valumkunverba (Amarkunvari) to Khengar (Kawat), the heir apparent (Jayamal)
of Saurashtra. Sejakji received Shahpur along with 24 villages in jagir,
in the midst of which he founded a capital in 1250, naming it Sejakpur after
himself. He added 40 villages by force of arms, before his death in 1254.
Somraj succeded
as chief after the death of Sejakji, whose other two sons Shahji and Sarangji
received jagirs in Mandvi and Arthilla, which later became the kingdoms of
Palitana and Lathi. Part of folklore is the stirring tale of Hamirji Gohil, a
16-year-old and newly-married chieftain of Lathi, who sacrificed his life in
1401 defending the Somnath temple from the attack of Muzaffar Shah. Hamirji
Gohil’s cenotaph still stands at the entrance to the temple.
Mulraj,
brother of Somraj, was governor of Sorath. He died in 1290, by when had also
carved out an independent principality Ghogha, with capital at Piram (or
Pirambet), an island in the Gulf of Cambay, near present day Bhavnagar.
Ranoji
became Gohil chief in 1290. He established a new Gohil capital at Ranpur but
was expelled from there and slain by Muslim invaders in 1309.
Mokhdaji
succeeded his father Ranoji and conquered Umrala from the Kolis, and wrested
back Piram (Ghogha) from the Muslims. A master of naval warfare, he controlled
the sea trade, to the ire of the Delhi Sultanate. Eventually, he succumbed
to sword wounds inflicted in battle by the army of Sultan
Muhammad bin Tughlaq in 1347, a legend never to be forgotten in the folklore of
Gohilwar.
Mokhdaji
had married a Sarviya princess of Hathasani in Kathiawar. Their son Dungarsinhji
succeeded as chief, and later his descendant Bhavsinhji founded the capital
city of Bhavnagar in 1723. His second wife was a Parmar princess of Rajpipla,
daughter of Chokrana, ruler of Junaraj (Old Rajpipla) in the western Satpuras,
which was earlier part of the Imperial kingdom of Ujjain. The son of Mokhdaji
Gohil and the Parmar princess, Samarsinhji, succeeded to the gadi of Rajpipla
on the death of his maternal grandfather Chokrana, who had no male issue.
Samarsinhji assumed the name of Arjunsinhji.
Arjunsinhji thus
became the first Gohil Rajput ruler of Rajpipla State around the middle of the
14th century. The Gohils of Rajpipla continued to worship the deity of the
Parmars, Shri Harsiddhi Mataji.
The
Gohil dynasty retained a tenuous hold on the hill tracts of the Satpuras with
the help of the Bhils, the local tribals, through diplomacy, grit, courage and,
at times, submission. Whenever the opportunity arose, the rulers allied
themselves with other Hindu chiefs to expand their territory. Through all the
turbulent years the Gohil kingdom of Rajpipla survived despite being hemmed in
by such powerful Muslim kingdoms as Gujarat, Malwa and Khandesh, and the
Bahamani Kingdom, and later the Gaekwars.
The
Gohils consolidated their rule over Rajpipla for a few decades under
Arjunsinhji and his son Bhansinhji. Adversity though came in 1413 just when
Gomelsinhji had succeed to the gadi. Rajpipla was overrun by Sultan Muhammad I
of Gujarat. Gomelsinhji was forced to flee his capital. In 1416, there was defeat
again at Modasa at the hands of Sultan Ahmad Shah I of Gujarat. Sultan Hoshang
Shah of Malwa had invaded Gujarat on the invitation of Rana Gomelsinhji, who
had allied himself with the rulers of Idar and Champaner against Ahmad Shah.
In
the midst of such hostility, and barely able to exercise control over his
territories, Gomelsinhji died in 1421. He was succeeded by Vijaypalji.
Again
in 1431, during the rule of Harisinhji, Rajpipla was attacked by Sultan Ahmad
Shah I of Gujarat. Rana Harisinhji was also forced to flee his capital, but he
was a brave ruler and he reconquered the State in 1443, in alliance with Sultan
Hoshang Shah of Malwa, despite being in exile for 12 years. This was at a time
when Sultan Ahmad Shah’s successor, Sultan Muhammad Shah II of Gujarat, was
occupied in fighting against Mewar and Champaner. Harisinhji died in 1463.
For
nearly a century-and-a-half after the reconquer of the territories, the
principality of Rajpipla held a very independent position. At this time the
territory seemed to have been confined to the wilder and more hilly parts of
Rajpipla and western Khandesh, Nandod (modern Rajpipla town), and probably
including districts along both sides of the Narmada, and south to near the
Tapti.
Maharana
Bhim Dev of Rajpipla helped Prince Latif Khan, half brother of Sultan Bahadur
Shah of Gujarat. In the ensuing battle in 1526, Bhim Dev was killed.
To
avenge the killing of his father, Maharana Raisinhji plundered Dahod. A
punitive expedition sent to Rajpipla ravaged the area for several months
without much success. The submission seems to have been token as
Rajpipla mercenaries (Bhil and Koli feudatories) attacked Bahadur Shah’s
troops, unaware that this army was taking Sultan Mahmud Shah Khilji of Malwa in
captivity to Champaner after the capture of Mandu on 25 May 1531. In this
attack, Sultan Mahmud Shah and his sons were also killed. The next year Bahadur
Shah himself led the field and secured Rajpipla’s submission. Raisinhji died in
1543.
After
the fall of Chittor in 1567, Maharana Udai Singh of Mewar sought and received
shelter in Rajpipla which was then ruled by its eleventh Gohil chieftain
Maharana Bhairavsinhji. Reference to this can be found in ‘Veer Vinod’.
Ironically,
the next ruler Maharana Pruthuraj ji gave refuge to the last Sultan of Gujarat,
Muzaffar Shah, incurring the wrath of Emperor Akbar. The Imperial troops led by
Mirza Khan Khas took Gujarat in 1584. Akbar then levied a tribute of Rs.35,556
on Rajpipla, along with a contingent of 1,000 men to be furnished to the Mughal
army. The district of Nandod was granted to Haider Kuli Khan. This arrangement
continued till the last years of Emperor Aurangzeb’s reign when the payments
not only became irregular but were altogether evaded when possible. Pruthuraj
ji died in 1593.
The
26th Gohil ruler Maharana Verisalji I came to the gadi in 1705. With the
weakening of the Mughal Empire, Verisalji I asserted his independence and the
same year laid waste south Gujarat. A force sent by Aurangzeb was defeated in
alliance with Maratha Damaji Jadhav at Ratanpur. Verisalji I also brought an
incarnation of the Kul Devi or family deity of the Gohil clan Shri Harsiddhi
Mataji from Ujjain.
After
his death in1715, his son Maharana Jeetsinhji forged a treaty with Maharaja
Peelaji Rao Gaekwar and succeeded in wresting Nandod (New Rajpipla in the
plains on the banks of the river Karjan, now modern town of Rajpipla) in 1730
and transferred the capital there. He died at the Fort, Rajpipla in 1754.
Allies
now turned foes during the rule of his successor Maharana Pratapsinhji as the
Marathas under Damaji Rao Gaekwar overran Rajpipla and exacted tribute. Upon
his death in 1764, the mantle passed on to his son Raisinhji. In 1764, a neice
of young Maharana Raisinhji was espoused to Damaji Rao Gaekwar, who renounced
part of the tribute. Raisinhji died in 1786 without male issue, and was
succeeded by his younger brother Ajabsinhji.
It
was a trying time as Umed Vasava, the Bhil chief of Sagbara revolted in 1793,
and the Gaekwar raised the tribute. Internal power struggles led to
interference and arbitration by the Gaekwars. With the intervention of British
Agent Willoughby, Maharana Ajabsinhji’s third (and second surviving) son,
Naharsinhji was appointed Regent, also in 1793. Ajabsinhji died on
15th January 1803.
He
was succeeded by his second and eldest surviving son of Ramsinhji. Following
differences with his father, Maharana Ajabsinhji, he had moved to
Mandwa. Then with the help of the Chief of Mandwa had attacked Rajpipla but was
defeated. He fled to Mandwa. On a promise of pardon, Ramsinhji returned to
Rajpipla but was imprisoned at the Fort, while his younger brother Naharsinhji was
appointed Regent. On the death of Maharana Ajabsinhji, the soldiers refused to
accept as ruler the younger brother Naharsinhji. Ramsinhji ascended the
gadi on 30th January 1803 at Junaraj.
When
Maharana Ramsinhji died on 10th May 1810, Naharsinhji once again asserted
his claim. A period of family intrigue followed. Maharana Ramsinhji’s widow
Rani Surat Kunverba, daughter of the Chief of Mandwa, tried to place their
putative son Pratapsinhji on the gadi. Meanwhile Naharsinhji had
contracted smallpox in the epidemic of 1803, resulting in blindness and making
him ineligible to rule, according to ancient Rajput tradition. Seizing the
opportunity, Maharaja Gaekwar of Baroda raised the tribute payable by Rajpipla
and took over the administration of the State. The Gaekwar was in no hurry to
settle the dispute and his officers mismanaged the affairs of Rajpipla.
Ultimately the British authorities intervened again, and after a detailed
enquiry decided that Pratapsinhji was not Maharana Ramsinhji’s son. They ensured
that Naharsinhji’s son Verisalji succeeded to the gadi on 9th August
1821.
Barely
13 years of age, Verisalji II was installed as ruler on 15th November 1821
at Junaraj. He entered into an engagement with the British, binding himself and
his successors to act in conformity with the advice of the British government.
The Gaekwar gave up his claim. By 1825 a final settlement was reached
with the Gaekwar. It was decided that a sum of Rs.7,30,000 (₤ 73,000)
would be payable to the Gaekwar, and disbursed by 1833-34.
Verisalji
II inherited a troubled legacy. His rule began in the backdrop of the great
flood in the Narmada in September 1821. At the same time, a general uprising of
the Bhils took place under the Chieftain of Sagbara, Rai Sinh of Rahooba, and
Baiji Damia of Tilakwada. This was contained in 1823. Soon there was an
uprising in Khandesh, which was quelled.
Rajpipla
under Maharana Verisalji II rebelled against the British during the Mutiny of
1857. It is said that Tantia Tope was co-ordinating the revolt in the entire
area comprising Rajpipla, Godhra and Dahod. Rajpipla State was out of
control of the British for many months before the Mutiny was quelled.
In
1858, power passed from the East India Company to the British
Crown. The Bhils of Sagbara rebelled yet again in 1859, and were finally
suppressed in 1860. Verisalji II abdicated in favour of his son Gambhirsinhji
on 17th November 1860. Apparently, the abdication of Maharana Verisalji II
came about as a result of pressure from the British for the revolt during the
Mutiny. A heavier price was paid by the Dewan of Rajpipla who was executed
by the British. Maharana Verisalji II died at Nandod in
1868.
Under
the paramountcy of the British crown, the Indian rulers were relieved of the
threat of external aggression and could devote their energies to development
works and reforms. Maharana Gambhirsinhji, though, had an uneasy relationship
with the British. Having reigned under a Council of Superintendence until he
came of age, he was invested with full ruling powers in 1863. Unhappy with the
financial management, the British placed the State under the joint management
of its own officer along with State officials in 1884. A sole British
administrator assumed charge of affairs in 1887. Be that as it may, during
Maharana Gambhirsinhji's reign there was an improvement in the police, he built
schools, a dispensary and a jail, and spent Rs.2,00,000 (₤ 20,000) on a
road 34½ miles long from Nandod (New Rajpipla) to Ankleshwar railway station,
which is a major link even today. Rajpipla State had its own postal
system during his reign.
Maharana
Chhatrasinhji succeeded on the death of his father 10th January 1897. He
vowed never to allow his State to be taken over again and set about instituting
a programme of reform and development. Instrumental in saving thousands of
lives during the epic famines of 1899-1902, he granted famine relief during
this period amounting to Rupees 9,00,000. He built the 40-mile
Ankleshwar-Rajpipla railway line.
The
36th and last Gohil Rajput ruler of Rajpipla, Maharana Vijaysinhji, succeeded
to the gadi on 26th September 1915. He condolidated the work of his
grandfather and father, and has been hailed as the builder of modern Rajpipla.
Granted the hereditary title of Maharaja by the British, his
permanent salute was raised to 13-guns.
Maharaja
Vijaysinhji carried out extensive administrative, judicial, police, education,
health and agriculture reforms, and introduced numerous welfare schemes. He constructed
a large high school, a modern civil hospital, maternity home, five regional
dispensaries, and a veterinary hospital. A power house was set up to supply
electricity and water to Rajpipla town. He was planning to build a dam across
the Narmada to generate electricity, supply drinking water and for irrigation.
The State was merged before this dream could be realized. But it was a
precursor to the modern Sardar Sarovar Dam, which has become a lifeline for the
people of Gujarat and south Rajasthan.
He
extended the railway line from the old station to the new station right on the
edge of Rajpipla town by building an iron bridge over the River Karjan. He also
set up a 20-mile railway line between the Narmada bank near Jhagadia – on the
Rajpipla-Ankleshwar line – and Netrang,
increasing the network to 60 miles. He had a 19-mile steam railroad and a
tramway laid out connecting the towns along the river Narmada with villages in
the interior.
An
extensive network of good motorable roads was set up. He put up an airstrip on
which small planes landed as early as the 1930s, and had plans to convert it
into a 150-acre aerodrome.
The
introduction of town planning methods were evident in a
modern bazaar with a wide central avenue, town hall, public garden,
congregation centres for various communities and guest house that were built
during his reign of nearly 33 years.
Sports
were made compulsory for students in Rajpipla State. The dhaba ground hosted
several sports like cricket, football and hockey. The Maharaja built a club
with tennis and indoor badminton courts, facilities for billiards and table
tennis, and a polo ground.
When
the winds of change blew, Maharaja Vijaysinhji was one of the first rulers to
hand over his State to the forces of Indian democracy in 1948, thus bringing
down the curtain on the 600-year-old rule of the Gohil Rajput dynasty over the
principality of Rajpipla, and a 1400-year history of valour, strife and glory
of the clan.
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