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Dheer Bai Bhattiyani Jagmal Singh was a sixteenth century Indian prince and court figure. He was the son of Maharana Udai Singh II and Rani Dheer Bai Bhattiyani .
Dheer Bai Bhattiyani, a princess of Jaisalmer, daughter of Rawal Lunkaran Bhatti and sister of Umade Bhattiyani, [11] was his favourite wife and was the mother of his sons, Jagmal Singh, Kunwar Agar Singh and Kunwar Pachyad Singh. Dheerbai also bore him two daughters. Rani Veer Bai Jhala was the mother of Kunwar Sagar Singh and Kunwar Rai Singh ...
After the death of Udai Singh in 1572, Rani Dheer Bai Bhatiyani wanted her son Jagmal to succeed him [11] but senior courtiers preferred Pratap, as the eldest son, to be their king. 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 ]
Krip Suri/Avinesh Rekhi as Jalal-ud-din Muhammad Akbar - Mughal emperor; Ruqaiya Sultan, Salima Sultan and Harka Bai's husband Sahil Deshmukh Khan / Arish Bhiwandiwala / Vishal Jethwa as young Akbar; Shakti Anand as Maharana Udai Singh II - Jaiwanta Bai, Dheer Bai, Sajja Bai and Veer Bai's husband; Pratap, Shakti, Vikram, Jagmal, Chand and Maan ...
Ajabde was born on 1 March 1542 in Bijolia, Bhilwara to Rao Mamrakh Punwar, the ruler of Bijolia and his queen Hansa Bai. [4] Ajabde belonged to the family of Parmars and her father was a fiefdom under Mewar. [5] HS Bhati, author of Yug Purush Maharana Pratap, describes her as the granddaughter of Rao Asarwan Punwar and daughter of Mamarkh. [6]
There are 3 campuses in the Houston area offering both on campus and online class options. [17] Houston Graduate School of Theology; North American University, established in 2007, is a private college offering bachelor's degree programs in three disciplines: computer science, business administration and education. [18]
Massey Business College was a chain of business colleges in the southern United States in the late 19th and 20th century. Richard W. Massey established the first Massey Business College in Birmingham, Alabama in 1887. [1] He served as president of the "Massey System" of colleges for fifty years, and died in Birmingham in 1949. [2]
Although the commerce-focused building featured 14 miles of floor space and could accommodate one-third of the city's population, the Great Depression in the United States stifled initial participation. The building was purchased by South Texas Junior College in the 1960s, which became the university of Houston–Downtown College in 1974.