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Data

Name: guhila

Type: Cluster

Start: 1037 AD

End: 1806 AD

Statistics

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Icon guhila

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The cluster includes all the forms of the country.

The cluster includes the following incarnations of the same nation:

  • Guhila Dynasty
  • Guhila Chitrakuta
  • Guhila Sisioda
  • Establishment


  • January 1037: The Guhilas assumed sovereignty after the decline of the Gurjara-Pratiharas in the 11th century.
  • Chronology


    Interactive Chronologies with maps are available in the section Changes Navigation

    1. Conquests of Akbar the Great


    Expansion during the rule of Akbar the Great in the Mughal Empire.

  • January 1568: The Mughal emperor Akbar conquered Guhila Sisioda in 1567.

  • 2. Further events (Unrelated to Any War)


  • January 1151: In the mid-12th century, the Guhila dynasty divided into two branches. The senior branch (whose rulers are called Rawal in the later medieval literature) ruled from Chitrakuta (modern Chittorgarh).

  • January 1151: The junior branch of he Guhila ruled from Sesoda with the title Rana, and gave rise to the Sisodia Rajput dynasty.

  • January 1207: In 1193 the Ghurid Sultan Muhammad conquered Delhi and left a slave lieutenant Qutab-ud-din Aybak, in charge when he returned to Afghanistan. When Muhammad was assassinated in 1206, Aybak declared independency and established the Mamluk Dynasty of the Sultanate of Delhi.

  • January 1221: Iltutmish of Delhi conquered Multan and Bengal from contesting Muslim rulers, as well as Ranthambore and Siwalik from Hindu rulers.

  • January 1227: Foundation of the Jodhpur Kingdom, also known as Kingdom of Marwar.

  • January 1243: Later the region was governed by Rao Deva, who took over Bundi from Jaita Meena in 1242, renaming the surrounding area as Haravati or Haroti. For the next two centuries, the Hadas of Bundi were the vassals of the Sisodias of Mewar and ruled by the title of Rao.

  • September 1303: Guhila Chitrakuta ended with Ratnasimha's defeat against the Delhi Sultanate at the 1303 Siege of Chittorgarh.

  • January 1616: In 1615, after four decades of skirmishing, Mewar and the Mughals entered into a treaty under which Mewar territory under the Mughals' possession was returned in exchange for the crown prince of Mewar attending the Mughal court and Mewar providing a force of 1,000 horsemen to the Mughals.

  • January 1632: In 1631, Kota state seceded from Bundi State under the rule of Rao Madho Singh.

  • January 1732: Gwalior state was a semi-autonomous Maratha state. It was centered in modern-day Madhya Pradesh, arising due to the rise of the Maratha Empire and fragmentation of the Mughal Empire.

  • January 1734: Sardargardh state Bantva was a princely state founded in 1733 by Khan Shri Sherzamankhanji Babi youngest son of Nawab Saheb Salabat Muhammadkhan Babi of Junagadh State, on the Kathiawar peninsula in Gujarat, India.

  • Disestablishment


  • January 1807: Nawab Muhammad Amir Khan (1769-1834), an adventurer and military leader of Pashtun descent, established the Tonk State. Amir Khan rose to be a military commander in the service of Yashwantrao Holkar of the Maratha Empire in 1798. In 1806, Khan received the state of Tonk from Yashwantrao Holkar.
  • Selected Sources


  • Middleton, J. (2005): World Monarchies and Dynasties, Volumes 1-3, Routledge, p. 644
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