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The Hindu Shahis, also referred to as the Kabul Shahis and Uḍi Śāhis, were a dynasty established between 843 CE and 1026 CE.They endured multiple waves of conquests for nearly two centuries and their core territory was described as having contained the regions of Eastern Afghanistan and Gandhara, encompassing the area up to the Sutlej river in modern day Punjab, expanding into the Kangra ...
India: Yadava Dynasty: 850 1334 Devagiri Kannada, Marathi, Sanskrit India: Utpala Dynasty: 855 1003 Avantipur: Sanskrit India Afghanistan Pakistan: Hindu Shahi Dynasty: 879 1026 Kabul: Sanskrit Pakistan Afghanistan India: Kingdom of Malwa 900 1305 Dhar: Prakrit, Sanskrit India: Bali Kingdom: 914 1908 Bedulu, Samprangan, Gelgel, Klungkung: Kawi ...
Jayapala was a ruler of the Hindu Shahi dynasty from 964 to 1001 CE. He ruled over the area which stretched from Laghman in the west, to Kashmir in the east and from Sirhind to Multan . [ 2 ] He was the son of Hutpal and the father of Anandapala . [ 2 ]
By 870, Ya'qub ibn al-Layth had built the Saffarid Empire and quickly expanded onto Ghazni, defeating the Zunbils. [3] His victory led to the first battle of Kabul, where he defeated Samanta, the Hindu Shahi king, and took him as a prisoner of war, as recorded in Rawżat aṣ-ṣafāʾ.
Parivrajaka Dynasty ruled parts of central India during the 5th and 6th centuries. The kings of this dynasty bore the title Maharaja, and probably ruled as feudatories of the Gupta Empire. The royal family came from a lineage of Brahmins of Bharadwaj Gotra. [10] Patwardhan Dynasty was an Indian dynasty established by the Chitpavan Brahmin ...
This began a struggle with the Hindu Shahi kingdom which extended from Laghman to Kashmir and from Sirhind to Multan. [3] [2] The Hindu Shahi ruler Jayapala attacked the Ghaznavids, but was defeated, then again later when his army of a reported size of over 100,000 was beaten. [4] The territories were annexed by the Ghaznavids.
Hindu Shahi dynasty; Nizam Shahi dynasty, ... Khatri (kshatri) and Sikh Jats found in Punjab region of Pakistan and India; Agha Shahi (1920–2006), ...
In 1001, the Ghaznavid forces, led by Mahmud of Ghazni, achieved victory over the Hindu Shahi forces, commanded by Jayapala, near Peshawar. Consequently, Mahmud incorporated Peshawar and Punjab into his empire. Jayapala, the Hindu Shahi ruler, was taken prisoner and, in the face of the humiliating defeat, immolated himself. [43]