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Rana Kumbha was born at Madariya, [6] in a Hindu Rajput family of Sisodia clan. [4] Kumbha was a son of Rana Mokal Singh of Mewar by his wife, Sobhagya Devi, a daughter of Jaitmal Sankhla, the Paramara fief-holder of Runkot in the state of Marwar. He was the 48th Rana of Mewar and succeeded Rana Mokal Singh in the year 1433 CE as the ruler of ...
Kumbha' son. Infamous for having assassinated his own father. He was defeated by his brother five years later. [9] Rana Raimal: 1473–1508 Son of Kumbha. Following the moral of the Bhagvad Geeta, he re-established Dharma-righteousness, and showed that every Adharmi (non righteous person)—even if he was a brother—deserved the strictest of ...
Mokal or Mokal Singh (15th century), was the Maharana of Mewar Kingdom. Henry Soszynski dates his reign to r. 1421–1433, and his lifespan to c. 1409 – c. 1433. [1] S. Devadas Pillai dates his reign to 1397–1433. [2] He was a son of Maharana Lakha Singh. Maharana Mokal has been described as a great builder, a trait which he had inherited ...
Maharana Kumbha: Mahmud Khalji: Mewar Victory Sarangpur, Hadoti and Gagron Captured. Sultan Mahmud was taken prisoner for six months. [11] Battle of Mandalgarh (1443) Maharana Kumbha: Mahmud Khalji: Inconclusive [14] Siege of Gagron (1444) Palan Singh and Dahir Singh Mahmud Khalji: Malwa Victory Gagron reaptured [14] Battle of Banas (1446 ...
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 conflicts and Mewar- Delhi conflicts. [8] [18] It also successfully fought off and vassalized neighboring Hindu kingdoms. At its zenith, it controlled large parts of ...
Rana Kumbha: 1433–1468 Mokal's son, he first attacked and killed his fathers assassins. Defeated the Sultans of Nagaur, Gujarat and Malwa. Mewar became the strongest kingdom in North India. Built multiple strong forts in Mewar. [8] Udai Singh I: 1468–1473 Kumbha' son, he assassinated his father and was then defeated by his brother. [9] Rana ...
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]
The most notable Sisodia rulers were Rana Hamir (r. 1326–64), Rana Kumbha (r. 1433–68), Rana Sanga (r.1508–1528) and Rana Pratap (r. 1572–97). The Bhonsle clan, to which the Maratha empire's founder Shivaji belonged, also claimed descent from a branch of the royal Sisodia family. [9]