Video Summary
Video Summary

Data

Name: Conquests of Simhana II

Type: Event

Start: 1207 AD

End: 1233 AD

All Statistics: All Statistics

Icon Conquests of Simhana II

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Expansion during the rule of Simhana II of the Seuna.

Chronology


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  • January 1207: A 1206 inscription shows that by that year the Yadavas had conquered a part of the present-day Bijapur district.
  • January 1213: By 1212, the Seuna Yadavas had expanded their territory into present-day Anantpur, Bellary, Chitradurga, and Shimoga districts. The Seuna Yadavas were a dynasty that ruled parts of present-day Maharashtra and Karnataka in India during the 12th and 13th centuries.
  • January 1216: The Shilahara Dynasty was ruled by King Gandaraditya II, who reigned from 940 to 1215. The territory of the dynasty eventually went to the Seuna Dynasty. The modern districts of Kolhapur, Satara, and Belgaum were under their rule during this time.
  • January 1217: Around 1216, Simhana defeated the Kohalpur Shilahara king Bhoja II, a former feudatory, who had asserted his sovereignty. The Shilahara kingdom, including its capital Kolhapur, was annexed to the Yadava kingdom as a result of this victory.
  • January 1221: By 1220, Seuna Dynasty ruler Simhana had completed his conquest of the area to the north of the Tungabhadra River.
  • January 1233: The Chaulukya-Yadava conflict in Khambat ended in c. 1232 with a peace treaty between the two dynasties. The territory of Khambat was then ceded to the Seuna dynasty.

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