The Marathas The tale of the Marathas' rise to power and their eventual   fall contains all  the elements of a thriller: adventure, intrigue, and   romanticism. Maratha  chieftains were originally in the service of   Bijapur sultans in the western  Deccan, which was under siege by the   Mughals. Shivaji Bhonsle (1627-80), a  tenacious and fierce fighter   recognized as the "father of the Maratha nation,"  took advantage of   this conflict and carved out his own principality near Pune,  which   later became the Maratha capital. Adopting guerrilla tactics, he waylaid    caravans in order to sustain and expand his army, which soon had   money, arms,  and horses.  Maratha Rulers : Shivaji led a series of   successful assaults in the 1660s against Mughal  strongholds, including   the major port of Surat. In 1674 he assumed the title of  "Lord of the   Universe" at his elaborate coronation, which signaled his   determination  to challenge the Mughal forces as well as to reestablish a  Hindu   kingdom in Maharashtra, the land of his origin. Shivaji's  battle cries  were  swaraj (translated variously as freedom, self-rule, independence),  swadharma (religious freedom), and goraksha   (cow protection).  Aurangzeb relentlessly pursued Shivaji's successors   between 1681 and 1705 but  eventually retreated to the north as his   treasury  became depleted and as  thousands of lives  had been lost either on the  battlefield or to natural  calamities. In  1717 a Mughal emissary  signed a treaty with the Marathas  confirming  their claims to rule in  the Deccan in return for acknowledging the   fictional Mughal suzerainty  and remission of annual taxes. Yet the  Marathas soon  captured Malwa  from Mughal control and later moved east  into Orrisa and Bengal;   southern India also came under their domain.  Recognition of their  political  power finally came when the Mughal  emperor invited them to  act as auxiliaries in  the internal affairs of  the empire and still  later to help the emperor in  driving the Afghans  out of Punjab.
The Maratha rulers, despite their military prowess and leadership, were not equipped to administer the state or to undertake socioeconomic reform. Pursuing a policy characterized by plunder and indiscriminate raids, they antagonized the peasants. They were primarily suited for stirring the Maharashtrian regional pride rather than for attracting loyalty to an all-India confederacy. They were left virtually alone before the invading Afghan forces, headed by Ahmad Shah Abdali (later called Ahmad Shah Durrani), who routed them on the blood-drenched battlefield at Panipat in 1761. The shock of defeat hastened the break-up of their loosely knit confederacy into five independent states and extinguished the hope of Maratha dominance in India.
The Maratha rulers, despite their military prowess and leadership, were not equipped to administer the state or to undertake socioeconomic reform. Pursuing a policy characterized by plunder and indiscriminate raids, they antagonized the peasants. They were primarily suited for stirring the Maharashtrian regional pride rather than for attracting loyalty to an all-India confederacy. They were left virtually alone before the invading Afghan forces, headed by Ahmad Shah Abdali (later called Ahmad Shah Durrani), who routed them on the blood-drenched battlefield at Panipat in 1761. The shock of defeat hastened the break-up of their loosely knit confederacy into five independent states and extinguished the hope of Maratha dominance in India.
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment