Maratha Confederacy: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Image:India1760 1905.jpg|thumb|right|Extent of the Maratha Confederacy ca. 1760<br>(shown here in yellow)]] |
|||
The '''Maratha Empire''', (also spelled ''Mahratta''), also called the '''Maratha Confederacy''', was a state in central [[India]]. It was founded in [[1674]] by [[Shivaji]] and existed until [[1818]]. |
|||
⚫ | |||
The [[Hindu]] Marathas had long lived in the [[Desh]] region around [[Satara]] in the western portion of the [[Deccan]] plateau, where it meets the eastern slopes of the [[Western Ghats]], and had resisted incursions into the region by the [[Muslim]] [[Mughal]] rulers of northern India. Under their leader [[Shivaji]], the Maratha freed themselves from the [[Muslim]] sultans of [[Bijapur]] to the southeast, and became much more aggressive and began to frequently raid Mughal territory, sacking the Mughal port of [[Surat]] in 1664. Shivaji was proclaimed king in 1674. The Maratha spread and conquered much of central India by Shivaji's death in 1680, and raided north into the Mughal territory. After 1681, the Mughal emperor [[Aurangzeb]] turned his attention to on the south, leading an army deep into the Deccan in 1686-7, which conquered the sultanates of Bijapur and [[Golconda]]. While the Maratha army was defeated, they turned to [[guerilla warfare]] from the forests of the Ghats, and succeeded in resisting the Mughals. The long running war in the south began to severely drain Mughal finances. The battle with the Maratha also began to fray the religious tolerance that had characterized Mughal rule. This conflict eventually lead to the collapse of Mughal power in India. |
|||
Aurangzeb died in 1707, after spending the years since 1681 in the Deccan, trying to consolidate Mughal control. After a peace of several years concluded by Aurangzeb's successor, [[Bahadur Shah I|Bahadur Shah]], The Maratha resumed their attacks on the Mughal empire. In the 1720's, they succeeded in separating the former southern Mughal province of [[Hyderabad state|Hyderabad]] from the rest of the Mughal empire. [[Malwa]] was ceded to the Marathas by the Mughals in 1738, and shortly thereafter conquered [[Orissa]] in eastern India and attacked [[Bengal]]. It was during the period of great expansion that the decentralized structure of the confederacy developed. Shivaji's descendants, the Maharajas of Satara, were the nominal rulers of the Maratha state, but [[Brahmin]] officials called [[Peshwa]]s became the ''de facto'' leaders of the confederacy from their seat at Pune. Provincial Maratha leaders established considerable autonomy from the center, although acknowledging the nominal authority of the Maharaja and the Peshwa. After 1750, Maratha power was distributed among five centers: the Peshwa in Pune, the [[Gaekwar]] in [[Baroda]], who controlled much of [[Gujarat]]; the [[Bhonsle]] in [[Nagpur]], who controlled much of central India; and the [[Holkar]] and [[Sindhia]] families in [[Indore]] (Malwa) and [[Gwalior]], Zambre in Aurangabad, respectively. Maharajas of Shivaji's Bhonsle clan also ruled in [[Kolhapur]] in southern Maharashtra and [[Thanjavur]] (Tanjore) in [[Tamil Nadu]]. |
|||
Mughal power was collapsing in the 1750's, and in 1756-1757 [[Ahmad Shah|Ahmad Shah Abdali]] of [[Afghanistan]] sacked the Mughal capital, [[Delhi]]. The Peshwa sent an army to challenge the Afghans, and the Maratha army was decisively defeated on January 13, 1761 at the [[Third Battle of Panipat]]. The battle checked Maratha expansion, prevented the capture of Delhi, and encouraged the fragmentation of the empire. Even today the phrase 'meet your Panipat' in Marathi, has a similar meaning as the phrase, 'meet your Waterloo', in English. |
|||
After 1761, the confederacy dissolved into five autonomous Maratha states. In 1775 the [[British East India Company]], from its base in Bombay, intervened in a succession struggle in Pune, which became the [[First Anglo-Maratha War]], which ended in 1782 with a restoration of the pre-war status quo. In 1802, the British intervened in [[Baroda]] to support the heir to the throne against rival claimants, and signed a treaty with the new Maharaja recognizing his independence from the Maratha empire in return for his acknowledgement of British sovereignty. In the [[Second Anglo-Maratha War]] (1803-1805), the Maratha retained their independence, but lost [[Orissa]] and most of [[Gujarat]] to Britain. The [[Third Anglo-Maratha War]] (1817-1818) resulted in the loss of Maratha independence, and left Britain in control of most of India. The Maratha heartland of Desh, including Pune, came under direct British rule, with the exception of the states of [[Kolhapur]] and [[Satara]], which retained local Maratha rulers. The Maratha-ruled states of Gwalior, Indore, and Nagpur lost territory, and were integrated into the British Raj as [[princely states]] that retained local autonomy under British sovereignty. |
|||
The name of the empire is today preserved in the Indian [[states and territories of India|state]] of [[Maharashtra]], which was created in 1960 as a [[Marathi]]-speaking state. |
|||
==Marathas Rulers== |
|||
===[[Chhattrapati]]=== |
|||
*[[Shivaji]] ([[1630]]-[[1680]]) |
|||
*[[Sambhaji]] |
|||
*[[Rajaram]] |
|||
*[[Shahu]] |
|||
===[[Peshwa]]=== |
|||
*[[Balaji Vishwanath]] |
|||
*[[Bajirao]] |
|||
*[[Nanasaheb Peshwa|Balaji Bajirao]] |
|||
*[[Madhavrao Peshwa|Peshwa Madhavrao]] |
|||
See also: [[History of India]] |
|||
[[Category:Historical Indian empires]] |
|||
[[Category:Maharashtra]] |
|||
[[de:Marathen]] |
|||
[[fr:Empire marathe]] |
|||
[[he:האימפריה המרתית]] |
|||
⚫ |
Revision as of 06:47, 8 January 2005
[[sv:Indiens historia: Marathariket]