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Rao Amar Singh (30 December 1613 – 25 July 1644) was the eldest son and heir-apparent of Raja Gaj Singh I of the Rathore Kingdom of Marwar in seventeenth-century Rajputana. [ 1 ] After he was disinherited and exiled by his family, he entered into the imperial Mughal service.
Ratan Singh Rathore, founder of Ratlam kingdom. [35] Vir Singh Deo, King of Orchha, he assassinated Abul Fazl on the request of Jahangir [36] Jai Singh I, King of Amber, a state later known as Jaipur, and a senior general ("Mirza Raja") of the Mughal Empire [37] [38] Amar Singh Rathore, was a nobleman affiliated to Marwar who rebelled against ...
Rawal Sabal Singh (1651–1661), Sahal Singh assists Moghul Emperor Shah Jahan in his Peshawar campaign. He also extends his kingdom and comes into conflict with the Bikaner Rathors. Maharawals. Maharawal Amar Singh of Jaisalmer (1661–1702) Maharawal Jaswant Singh of Jaisalmer (1702–1708) Maharawal Budh Singh (1708–1722)
Ajit Singh, after Jaswant Singh's death, was taken care of by Durgadas Rathore and led a rebellion against the Mughals. Together, Maharana Amar Singh, Ajit Singh and Sawai Jai Singh marched upon Jodhpur in 1708 and expelled Mehrab Khan and placed Ajit Singh on the throne. [109]
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]
Jaswant Singh ki Chhatri Jaswant Singh ki Chhatri along the banks of Yamuna in Agra Location Rajwara, Balkeshwar, Agra, India Builder Jaswant Singh Rathore Type Chhatri Dedicated to Rani Hada, wife of Amar Singh Rathore Jaswant Singh ki chhatri (or Jaswant ki chatri) is a domed pillared pavilion -shaped cenotaph, common to Rajasthani architecture, built in c. 1644–58 AD by Jaswant Singh ...
In the first half of the 20th century, contemporary sentiment against British rule and feudal landlords found expression in Nautankis such as Sultana Daku, Jallianwala Bagh, and Amar Singh Rathore. In the last four decades, Pandit Ramdayal Sharma (a renowned Nautanki maestro) and later Dr. Devendra Sharma have co-authored many new Nautankis.
Lt Gen Sagat Singh from (Village Moda), Churu district the hero of 1971 Bangladesh War; Lt. General Nathu Singh Rathore (Gumanpura, Dungarpur) - 1st Lt. General of Indian Army; Colonel Saurabh Singh Shekhawat KC, SC, VSM, SM (21 Para Special Forces) Village: Dhani Daulat Singh, Alwar