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Raja Jagat Chand (reigned c. 1708-1720) was the Chand king of Kumaon Kingdom.He ascended throne of Kumaon in 1708 CE after his father King Gyan Chand's death. In 1715 CE during Battle of Moradabad he defeated the unite forces of Sikh and Garhwal Kingdom.He Ended The Invasion of Banda Singh Bahadur and He captured Srinagar, the capital of Garhwal.
Khan Sahib Khan Bahadur Khan, Regent (1764–1766) Khan Sahib Umar Khan, Nawab (1766–1780) Khan Sahib Asadullah Khan, Nawab (1780–1784) Khan Ataullah Khan, Nawab (1784–1809) Mandi (complete list) – Sidhi Sen, Raja (1684–1727 or 1678–1719) Tikka Shiv Jawala Sen, Raja (1703 or 1722) Shamsher Sen, Raja (1727–1781) Surma Sen, Raja ...
The tradition states that Som Chand was an immigrant from Jhusi, a relative of the king of Kannauj, and a contemporary of the last Katyuri king Brahma Deva. [9] Based on this, historian Krishna Pal Singh theorizes that Som Chand may have migrated to Kumaon amid the political upheaval resulting from the Ghaznavid invasion of the Kannauj kingdom ...
In 1688, Udyot Chand, erected several temples at Almora, including Tripur Sundari, Udyot Chandeshwar and Parbateshwar, to mark his victory over Garhwal and Doti. The Parbateshwar temple was renamed twice, to become the present Nanda Devi Temple. Gyan Chand, the King of Kumaon ascended the throne in 1698.
Jagat Seth was a wealthy merchant, banker and money lender family from Murshidabad in Bengal [2] during the time of the Nawabs of Bengal. [3] [4]Though not at the same scale, but the influence exercised by this family in the finances of the Mughal Empire during the 17th and 18th century would be akin to that exercised by the Rothschild family in Europe.
Abul Fazl's Ain-i-Akbari (Bikaner manuscript, edited by Syed Ahmad Khan) names 19 Tomara kings. It places the first Tomara king in 372 CE (429 Vikram Samvat). It might be possible that the era mentioned in the original source used by Abul Fazl was Gupta era, which starts from 318 to 319 CE; Abul Fazl might have mistaken this era to be Vikrama ...
This is a list of state leaders in the 17th century (1601–1700) AD, of South Asia.These polities are generally sovereign states, but excludes minor dependent territories, whose leaders can be found listed under territorial governors in the 17th century.
Jagat Singh I: 1628–1652 Karan's son, attempted to restore fort of Chittor but Shah Jahan blocked his attempt. Raj Singh I: 1652–1680 Jagat's son, fought and defeated Mughals many times. Regained territory and increased the wealth of the kingdom. Fought against Aurangzeb. Eventually poisoned by Aurangzeb's loyalists. [22] [23] [24] Jai ...