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According to the Rajprashasti genealogy, one of these – Rana Samar – married Prithi, the sister of Prithviraj Chauhan. His grandson Rahapa adopted the title Rana (monarch). Rahapa's descendants spent some time at a place called Sisoda, and therefore, came to be known as "Sisodia". [9] [10] The Sisodia coat of arms after Udaipur city was built
2 Rao Satal: Died from wounds after saving 140 women from Afghan raiders. 6 April 1489 March 1492 3 Rao Suja: March 1492 2 October 1515 4 Rao Biram Singh: Son of Bagha 2 October 1515 8 November 1515 5 Rao Ganga: Assisted Rana Sanga in his campaigns against the Sultans of India. 8 November 1515 9 May 1532 6 Rao Maldeo
2 Rao Satal: 6 April 1489 March 1492 3 Rao Suja: March 1492 2 October 1515 4 Rao Biram Singh: 2 October 1515 8 November 1515 5 Rao Ganga: 8 November 1515 9 May 1532 6 Rao Maldeo: 9 May 1532 7 November 1562 7 Rao Chandra Sen: 7 November 1562 1581 8 Raja Udai Singh: 4 August 1583 11 July 1595 9 Sawai Raja Suraj-Mal: 11 July 1595 7 September 1619 10
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]
Maharana Sangram Singh II (24 March 1690 – 11 January 1734) was the Sisodia Rajput ruler of Kingdom of Mewar. [1] He reigned from 1710 to 1734. [2] He was succeeded by his eldest son Jagat Singh II. Maharana Sangram Singh II was a noted political figure of his time.
An Indonesian woman who felt duped into joining the Islamic State’s ”caliphate“ in Syria tells TIME of the challenges of returning home—and what it means to be granted a second chance.
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.
Fourteen members of a small religious sect in Australia have been found guilty of the manslaughter of an 8-year-old girl, who died after they withheld insulin needed to treat her diabetes because ...