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17th-century portrait of Jagat Gosain. Born on 13 May 1573 as Manavati Bai, she was known popularly as Jodh Bai (the Jodhpur Princess). [18] [17] [19] [20] She belonged to the Rathore clan of Rajputs and was the daughter of Raja Udai Singh, [8] the ruler of Marwar (present-day Jodhpur). [21]
Udai Singh (Udai Singh Rathore; 13 January 1538 – 10 July 1595), often referred as the Mota Raja (Fat King) was the Rathore ruler (r. 1583 – 95) of Marwar , which was later known as Jodhpur (in the present-day Rajasthan state of India).
Udai Singh II (4 August 1522 – 28 February 1572) [7] was the 12th Maharana of the Kingdom of Mewar and the founder of the city of Udaipur in the present-day state of Rajasthan, India. [8] He was the fourth son of Rana Sanga [ 9 ] and Rani Karnavati , a princess of Bundi .
A matrimonial alliance was established between Mughals and Marwar in 1586 when Udai Singh's daughter Manvati bai was married to Jahangir. [81] In 1592, Akbar tasked Udai to take care of the administrative affairs of his capital Lahore while he led conquest in Kashmir. Udai Singh died in Lahore in 1595. [82] Udai was succeeded by his son Sur ...
Born on 23 September 1597, Luzzat was the youngest daughter of Prince Salim (later Jahangir), the eldest surviving son of Mughal Emperor Akbar. [1] [2] Her mother was the Rathore princess, Jagat Gosain (Bilqis Makani in official chronicles), the tenth daughter of Udai Singh Rathore, the Raja of Marwar.
Her mother was Karamsi Bai, the daughter of Raja Keshav Das of the Rathore family. [2] On the same day, Jagat Gosain, the daughter of Udai Singh of Marwar, gave birth to another daughter named Begum Sultan Begum. [3] She was the seventh child and fifth daughter born to her father, but the only child of her mother.
Vanvir Singh: 1536–1540 Usurper of the throne, defeated and expelled by his cousin Udai Singh II. [16] Udai Singh II: 1540–1572 Sanga's son. Defeated Vanvir. Fought against Mughals, and was defeated in the Siege of Chittorgarh. [17] [18] Maharana Pratap: 1572–1597 Udai's son. Notable for his military resistance against the Mughals. [19 ...
Udai Singh I, also known as Udaikaran, was the Sisodia Rajput ruler of Mewar Kingdom. He was the eldest son of Rana Kumbha whom he assassinated to gain the throne of Mewar. Biography