Pratihara
The
Pratiharas were an
Indian dynasty who ruled kingdoms in Gurjar region of
Rajasthan and northern India from the
6th to the
11th centuries. They are called
Gurjara-Pratiharas in one late inscription that indicates the region of their origin. The Arab chronicles mention they were the rulers of the Jurz (i.e. Gurajara) region.
A widely held belief among the historians was that they were connected with the Khazars and descendants of the
Gurjara tribe that arrived with the Hunas at the end of the 5th century. Most historians now believe that they were of indigenous origin.
The Pratiharas were one of the
Agnikula clans of
Rajputs, according to a legend given in later manuscripts of
Prithviraj Raso. The legend is not mentioned in the 1585 CE Udaipur manuscript.
Harichandra is said to have laid the foundation of this dynasty in the 6th century.The Harichandra line of Pratiharas established the state of
Marwar, based at
Mandore near modern
Jodhpur, which grew to dominate Rajasthan. The Pratihara kings of Marwar also built the temple-city of
Osian.
Nagabhata I (
730-
756) extended his control east and south from Mandor, conquering
Malwa as far as
Gwalior and the port of
Bharuch in
Gujarat. He established his capital at
Ujjain in Malwa, and checked the expansion of the
Arabs, who had established themselves in
Sind.
Nagabhata I was followed by two weak successors, who were in turn succeeded by
Vatsaraja (
775-
805). Vatsaraja sought to capture
Kannauj, which had been the capital of the seventh-century empire of
Harsha. His ambitions brought the Pratiharas into conflict with the
Pala dynasty of
Bengal and the
Rashtrakutas of the northern
Deccan, with whom they would contest for primacy in northern India for the next two centuries. Vatsaraja unsuccessfully challenged the Pala ruler Dharmapala (c.
775-
810) for control of Kannauj. In about
786 the Rashtrakuta ruler Dhruva (c.
780-
793) crossed the
Narmada River into Malwa, and from there tried to capture Kannauj. Vatsaraja was defeated by Dhruva around
800, and died in
805.
Vatsraja was succeeded by
Nagabhata II (
805-
833).
Nagabhata II was initially defeated by the Rashtrakuta king Govinda III (
793-
814), but later recovered Malwa from the Rashtrakutas, conquered Kannauj and the Ganges plain as far as
Bihar from the Palas, and again checked the
Muslims in the west. He rebuilt the great
Shiva temple at
Somnath in
Gujarat, which had been demolished in an Arab raid from Sind. Kannauj became the center of the Pratihara state, which covered much of northern India during the peak of their power, c.
836-
910.
Rambhadra (
833-c.
836) briefly succeeded Nagabhata II.
Bhoja I or Mihirbhoj (c.
836-
886) suffered some initial defeats by the Pala king Devapala (
810-
850), but recovered to expand the Pratihara dominions west to the border of Sind, east to
Magadha, and south to the
Narmada. His son
Mahendrapala I (
885-
910) expanded further eastwards in Magadha, Bengal, and
Assam.
Bhoja II (
910-
912) was overthrown by
Mahipala (
912-
914). Several feudatories of the empire took advantage of the temporary weakness of the Pratiharas to declare their independence, notably the
Paramaras of
Malwa, the
Chandelas of
Bundelkhand, and the
Kalachuris of
Mahakoshal. The Rashtrakuta king Indra III (c.
914-
928) briefly captured Kannauj in
916, and although the Pratiharas regained the city, their position continued to weaken in the 10th century, partly as a result of the drain of simultaneously fighting off
Turkic attacks from the west and the Pala advances in the east. The Pratiharas lost control of Rajasthan to other
Rajput clans, and the
Chandelas captured the strategic fortress of
Gwalior in central India, c.
950. By the end of the tenth century the Pratihara domains had dwindled to a small kingdom centered on Kannauj.
Mahmud of Ghazni sacked Kannauj in
1018, and the Pratihara king
Rajapala fled. The Chandela ruler Gauda captured and killed Rajapala, placing Rajapala's son
Trilochanpala on the throne as a proxy.
Jasapala, the last Pratihara king of Kanauj, died in
1036.
The Pariharas of Marwar lost control of the region in the
13th century to the
Rathor clan of Rajputs. In
1395, Shri Chundaji Rathore married a Parihar princess named Mohil. The Parihar raja Dhara Singh established the state of
Nagod in
1344, and his descendants ruled there until
1950.
It can be understood from many Arabic sources that the muslim invaders greatly feared the Prathiharas.
*Dadda I (c. 650-?) established at Nandipur (Nandol).
*Dadda II
*Dadda III (?-750) wrestled
Broach from the
Maitrakas of
Gujarat.
*Nag Bhatta I (750?-780)
*Vatsraj (780-800)
*ParamBhattarak Parmeshwar Nag Bhatta II (800-833)
*Rambhadra (833-835)
*Samrat Mihir Bhoj Mahan or The Great Bhoja (835-890)
*Mahenderpal I (890-910)
*Bhoj II (910-913)
*Samrat Mahipal (913-944)
*Mahenderpal II (944-948)
*Devpal (948-954)
*Vinaykpal (954-955)
*Mahipal II (955-956)
*Vijaypal II (956-960)
*Rajapala (960-1018)
*Trilochanpala (1018-1027)
*Jasapala (Yashpal) (1024-1036)
*Justice Kan Singh Parihar,[
1]