Monday, 30 November 2020

Biram Dev Sonigara chauhan VS Allauddin Khilji And One Sided Love Story of his Daughter Firoza


Many of us are well-acquainted with the story of Queen Padmavati of Chittor (Because of Padmavat Movie)  who committed jauhar to save herself from being disgraced by the Alauddin Khilji. 

My father always tells me about Biram Dev ji Sonigara of Jalore, Whenever we visit Jalore.

                 Jalore fort 

So I thought of studying about him and I was surprised to know that Alauddin had one daughter who, too, was obsessed with the longing to marry a Rajput prince.

                    Alauddin Khilji 
Khilji had annexed few small and big kingdoms into his empire. But he could not annex Jalore though it was a small kingdom. 

Jalore:

It was also known as suvarnagiri, was ruled by different dynasties over time. 
Gurjaras-pratiharas in the 8th-9th centuries. 
Paramars in 10th century followed by Rajput Chauhans.
Songara Rajput prince kirtipal (The youngest son of Alhana, the chahamana ruler of nadol) captured jalore from the parmar's in 1181.
After two more successive generations, kanhadadev became king of jalore. 
His sons Biram dev and maldev helped him in the administrative affairs of jalore. 
 

Furthermore, Alauddin khilji planned a military expedition to Gujarat to attack,to loot and plunder the state and destroy temples. 
He sent envoys to various kingdoms to facilitate safe passage for his army enroute from Delhi to Gujarat. 
All the kings agreed for the safe passage, except kanhadadev, the king of Jalore.
According to padmanabha's kanhadadev prabandha,kanhadadev did not trust khilji. 
He felt khilji's army, while moving through his kingdom, might involve in destroying the villages, enslaving women, looting, killing people and torturing cows. 

 As a political stratagem, Alahuddin Khilji sent invite to Kanhadadev, the Raja of Jalore to Delhi. 
However, Kanhadadev sent his son Biram Dev instead who was renowned for his beauty, expert in wrestling, and had incredible strength of character.

                      Biram Dev chouhan 

 Khilji had planned to get Biram Dev killed in the hands of his invincible wrestler Punju during the match. But, it happened the other way round and Biram Dev ended up killing Punju. 

Alauddin Khilji had a love child from his maid Asamani Khavas, who he named Firoza.
                    Princess Firoza 
Princess Firoza, who was present during the match, was floored by Biram Dev’s manliness and lost her heart to him.
After the game was over, She approached Biram Dev and proposed him for marriage. 
Biram Dev refused the proposal .Firoza then approached her father.
 She pleaded Khilji to get her married to Biram Dev and pledged that she would commit suicide if her wish was not fulfilled.

Although reluctant initially, Khilji agreed to his daughter’s wish understanding well the political gains he would get by forming an alliance with the kingdom of Jalore.

Khilji Sent the marriage proposal of Biram dev and firoza  to jalore king kanhadadev along with his condition that Biram dev have to convert to Islam after marriage. 

 As soon as it was read in the kanhadadev's court, Biram dev stood with red face ( so much of anger) before all the rajputs and said 

Seeing Biram dev's response kanhadadev and all other Rajput's felt proud of him and clapped. 
Biram Dev denounced khilji's marriage proposal which made him(khilji) irritated and insulted. 

During the same time, khilji's army was returning to Delhi from Gujarat. 
Ulugh Khan and Nusrat  Khan were commanding the army which plundered Gujarat, destroyed city's forts and temples. 
The Muslim invaders converted the city's temples into mosques. 
Ulugh Khan and his army sacked the Somnath temple. The priests and people who offered resistance were all killed. 
The invaders looted the treasury and started their journey to Delhi with shiv ling. 
They planned to smash the shiv ling in Delhi.They had also taken hundred's of thousands of Hindus as slaves from Gujarat. 
Though kanhadadev of jalore had refused passage of the army, the latter ignored the refusal. 
They entered jalore and camped for the night at a place called sakarana (present sankarna).
The king expressed displeasure over this act of Muslim army and also learnt how they sacked temples in Gujarat and had imprisoned Hindus. 
Kanhadadev sent a huge army to attack the Muslim army. 
Jalore army succeeded in defeating the enemy. They snatched the booty along with the shiv ling and set free the Hindu prisoner's. 
As a result, Alauddin khilji sent an army under the commandment of General Nahar Malik and Bhoja to attack jalore. 
They first laid an attack on sivana fort. The Rajput gave a stiff resistance and defeated the khilji's army, killing it's generals.
Khilji laid another attack on sivana fort bad he won this time. The brave Rajput died fighting in the battle field while the Rajput women inside the fort performed jauhar to save themselves from being caught and disgraced. 
Khilji sent a huge army under the commandment of kamaluddin gurg to besiege the fort of jalore. 
The jalore bravely resisted the attack and the battle continued for two years without fail. 
Kanhadadev and Biramdev breathe their last in the battle, defending jalore. 
Many Rajput women performed jauhar, following the king's death. It was the year 1311.Instead of getting dishonored at the hands of enemy, the brave Rajput women preferred to be burnt to ashes. 

Finally, Firoza also jumped into the river when she heard that Biram Dev is no longer alive.

According to some legends, Firoza jumped into the river with the decapitated head of Biram Dev in her hands.

Sunday, 29 November 2020

Women Rulers of Bhopal

When I read that Bhopal state was ruled by the powerful women rulers. I couldn't believe at it first. 

As I knew there were only two important and powerful women rulers highlighted by history.

They were Razia sultana who ruled over Delhi from 1236-1240 and Rudramadevi who ruled over Deccan from 1263-1289.      

When I came across the pictures and some of the  information on shahjehan Begum I got curious to know more about her. 

So my curiosity led me to explore the Bhopal state history and I came to know that it was ruled by four extraordinary women rulers for almost 107 years and each of the establishing a prosperous rule. 

I always feel proud whenever I get to Read about any women in higher position either  in past or present. 

Bhopal being an important state.. In Indian history.. These powerful women rulers of Bhopal were never highlighted in Indian history. 

Bhopal state was founded in 1707 by the pasthun soldier Dost Mohammed Khan. He was a soldier in the Mughal Army ,who became a mercenary after the emperor Aurangzeb death. 

The princely state of Bhopal had always been ruled by male Muslim rulers - The Nawabs of Bhopal. It had also long history of women rulers. 

Dost Muhammad’s wife, Fatah Bibi, defended their estate in Bhopal against attacks from warring Rajputs and Marathas.

 Some of Bhopal’s royal women, such as Asmat Begum, Zeenat Begum and Moti Begum, played a vital role in the politics of the state. 

The wife of a later Nawab, Mamola Bai, effectively administered Bhopal for nearly 50 years. 

The rulers of Bhopal would likely have continued to be men if it wasn’t for the death of the young Nawab Nazar Muhammad Khan and the bravery of his then 18-year-old wife, Qudsia.

1. Qudsia Begum (1819-37)



After the death of her husband Nawab Nazar Muhammad Khan, she came to power (as a regent to her daughter). 

She was just 18years old at the time of her husband's death.

She made her first  public appearance during the nawab's soyem (post death ritual)  and addressed the large gathering  by stating how the legacy of their family must be maintained, thus declaring her 15-month-old daughter Sikandar as the rightful heir. 

Qudsia was appointed as regent until her daughter was old enough.

 The assumption being that Sikandar would marry and her husband would become the Nawab of Bhopal.

Qudsia’s took off her veil before addressing the gathering,which was an unprecedented act for a Muslim women of that time.

Shaharyar M. Khan says in his account of the Begums of Bhopal, “Qudsia’s address to the family is one of the most poignant moments in Bhopal’s history. A girl not yet 20, brought up traditionally in purdah, had dared to take the congregation of elders, rival family contenders and senior state officials by the scruff of their necks”.

Qudsia took many clever steps to guarantee her position: 

1.she made deals with her rivals for power.

2. Approached a British agent to legitimize her status and

3.  Garnered support from religious authorities to combat the widely held belief by Muslims that women could not rule. 

The state Qazi (judge) and Mufti (jurisconsult) signed a document acknowledging women’s right to political power.

Qudsia Begum was the first woman in South Asia to successfully assert the right of Muslim women to legally be the ruler of a state. Being a devout Muslim herself, Qudsia showed that Islam does not exclude women from gaining political power. She commanded the army and would be at the forefront of battles.

2. Sikandar Begum (1847-68)


Sikandar Begum ruled as regent for the first 13 years of her reign, standing in for her nine-year-old daughter Shahjehan and then as a fully-fledged ruler for the last eight years.

Her reign began after the death of her husband, Nawab Jahangir Muhammad Khan Bahadur, who was able to rule for six years. 

It appears as if fate was on the side of the Begums as Sikandar brought Bhopal’s rule in the hands of women once again.

Since childhood, Sikandar had been raised in a way so that she could survive being a woman of power in a man’s world. She was trained in martial arts and, like her mother, never observed purdah as she believed it was a voluntary act. Before her reign, she had already suffered at the hands of men, with her husband having planned a murderous plot against her. As a ruler, she was a wise and tough woman.

Sikandar set out to prove she was just as capable as any male ruler by aggressively asserting her presence in public life.

 She played polo, went hunting and was a swordswoman, archer and lancer as well. She would personally go to villages to look over the welfare of people and the state of her agrarian reforms.

She also commanded the army and would inspect district offices, the courts and the treasury herself to make sure that the state was running smoothly. Moreover, Sikandar founded the Victoria School so that girls in Bhopal would receive technical training in trades such as handicrafts and acquire knowledge on basic academics. 

3. Shahjehan Begum (1868-1901)


17 days after her mother Sikandar Begum’s death, Shahjehan became the next Begum of Bhopal and her then ten-year-old daughter, Sultan Jahan, became the heir. This was considered a surprising move as Shahjehan was 30 and could still produce male heirs in the future.

However, Sikandar had secured a promise from the British government to have her granddaughter’s right to be a ruler protected. 

According to Shaharyar M. Khan, the British wanted to keep the Bhopal dynasty within Dost Muhammad Khan’s lineage.

Unlike her mother and grandmother, Shahjehan was distinctly feminine. 

She did not train in traditionally masculine arts as a fighter or hunter and instead, wanted to be a poetess. 

She encouraged the development of the arts in Bhopal and under her rule, the state became a cultural and literary centre. 

She even patronized a number of female poets and tasked a male poet in her court to form an anthology comprising the writings of female poets.

Like her mother, however, Shahjehan was a strong administrator as well. She improved the tax system, built many palaces, mosques and monuments and made notable contributions to housing, education, health, technology and women’s upliftment. Although her eventual marriage to Syed Siddiq Hassan led Shahjehan to retreat behind her husband’s decisions, her contributions cannot be disregarded.

Shahjehan also wrote a reformist manual for women titled Tahzib un-Niswan wa Tarbiyat ul-Insan (The Reform of Women and the Cultivation of Humanity). It is considered the first women’s encyclopedia in India and contained topics on women’s work and their status in Islam.

In this regard, it is similar to Ashraf Ali Thanawi’s reformist women’s manual Bihishti Zewar. Unlike Thanawi’s writing, however, Shahjehan’s manual did not focus on women’s subordination but tried to teach them control over their own lives.

4. Sultan Jahan Begum (1901-26)



At 43-years-old, Sultan Jahan was the oldest Begum of Bhopal. Her years as the heir were spent in immense difficulty due to the tension between her and her mother. By the time of her reign, the court was divided in loyalty between Sultan Jahan and her mother. Even during such a time, Sultan Jahan was able to establish a successful administration under her rule.

Inspired by her predecessors, Sultan Jahan became a reformer and established many educational institutions, focusing on public instruction and female education. She is the founding and (till today) only female chancellor of Aligarh Muslim University. Apart from education, she also reformed taxation, the police, the army, the judiciary, agriculture, health and sanitation. In 1914, she became the president of the All-India Muslim Ladies’ Association.

The legacy of her 25-year rule entailed a cosmopolitan court and a largely merit-based bureaucracy. She was a smart negotiator with the British government, ensuring her family’s interests.

The reign of the Begums of Bhopal ended when Sultan Jahan’s son took the crown. 

However, their dynasty is memorable for their achievements as women, particularly Muslim women in colonial India, and inspirational for women today as we continue to struggle in a male-dominated world.