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The Sisodia was an Indian Rajput dynasty belonging to the clan that ruled over the Kingdom of Mewar, in the region of Mewar in Rajasthan. [1] The Sisodias were an off-shoot of the Guhila Dynasty and claim descent from the Suryavanshi dynasty. The name of this clan is also transliterated as Sesodia, Shishodia, Sishodia, Shishodya, Sisodya ...
The Sisodia dynasty junior branch of Guhilas re-occupied Mewar in 1326, ushering in a golden age characterized by military prowess and territorial expansion. [17] Under the reigns of Maharana Kumbha and his grandson Maharana Sanga , Mewar achieved victories against Islamic States of Malwa , Gujarat and Delhi particularly in Mewar-Malwa ...
The Sisodia clan of Mewar, also called the "House of Mewar", is a Rajput clan founded in 1325-1326 that ruled the Kingdom of Mewar, later called the Udaipur State under the British Raj. [1] The dynasty traces its ancestry back to Rahapa, a son of the Guhila king Ranasimha.
Vakpati-raja: 917–944 His younger son established the Naddula Chahamana branch in 950 CE. 15 Simha-raja: 944–971 He was the first independent ruler of dynasty. He had assume the title of Maharajadhiraja. 16 Vigraha-raja II: 971–998 He joined an alliance formed by the ruler of Lahore against the Ghaznavid ruler Sabuktigin. 17 Durlabha-raja ...
The desire of the nobles prevailed and Pratap ascended the throne as Maharana Pratap, the 54th ruler of Mewar in the line of the Sisodia Rajputs. [12] He was crowned in Gogunda on the auspicious day of Holi. Jagmal swore revenge and left for Ajmer, to join the armies of Emperor Akbar.
Sangram Singh I (12 April 1482 – 30 January 1528), commonly known as Rana Sanga, was the Rana of Mewar from 1508 to 1528 CE. A member of the Sisodia dynasty, he controlled parts of present-day Rajasthan, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh with his capital at Chittor. [4]
Amar Singh I was the eldest son of Maharana Pratap I.He was born in the old capital fortress of Chittor on 16 March 1559 to his father's chief queen Ajabde Punwar, who belonged to the Parmarji of Bijolia, a fiefdom under Mewar in the same year when foundation of the new capital city of Udaipur was laid by his grandfather, Udai Singh II. [1]
Prithviraj Chauhan, King of Ajmer Rana Sanga, king of Mewar Maharana Pratap of Mewar, by Raja Ravi Varma Durgadas Rathore, by Har Bilas Sarda. List of notable Rajputs during the pre-British era, ordered chronologically by reign. Bappa Rawal, one of the first major rulers of the Kingdom of Mewar, credited for rebelling the Arab invasion of India ...