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Draft:Chauhan sept of Rajput-Sikh lineage

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Chauhan historically reassemble with Chahamana[1] is an surname found among the prestigious member of Rajput community[2][3][4] and hereditary subset belong to Individual of Jat lineage, However its considerable per-portion allegedly belong to the Sikh faith.[5][6][7] Correspondingly Some of the Jat clan  such as Dabas, Cheema and Chattha were closely affiliated as the buffer identity of Chauhan which simultaneously traces their direct origin from Legendary figure Prithviraj Chauhan.[8][9][10][11]

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References

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  1. ^ Shome, Ayan (2014-11-01). Dialogue & Daggers: Notion of Authority and Legitimacy in the Early Delhi Sultanate (1192 C.E. – 1316 C.E.). Vij Books India Pvt Ltd. ISBN 978-93-84318-46-8. All of these belong to the ready discussed category of the warrior herdsman or warrior pastoralist. elpful indications were ethnographies compiled during the era of the ritish Raj. For example it is reported that Chauhan (Chahamana) Rajputs and numerous settlements on the outskirts of Delhi by the early part of the ventieth century.' Also in large numbers were Tomar (Tomara) Rajputs, clan historically connected with the Chauhans.
  2. ^ Singh, Mian Goverdhan (1985). Social, Cultural, and Economic Survey of Himachal Pradesh. Minerva Book House. The people of Rajput tribes who migrated after the seventh and the eighth century from the Indian plains use their clan names like Rathore, Chauhan, Parmar, Tomars, etc.
  3. ^ Experts, EduGorilla Prep (2022-09-01). UGC NET History Paper II Chapter Wise Notebook | Complete Preparation Guide. EduGorilla. p. 315. The Chauhans were historically a powerful group in the region now known as Rajasthan. For around 400 years from the 7th century CE their strength in Sambhar was a threat to the power-base of the Guhilots in the south west of the area, as also was the strength of their fellow Agnivanshi clans. They suffered a set-back in 1192 when their leader, Prithviraj Chauhan, was defeated at the Second Battle of Tarain but this did not signify their demise. The kingdom broke into the Satyapura and Devda branches after the invasion of Qutbu I-Din Aibak in 1197. The earliest Chauhan inscription is a copper-plate inscription found at Hansot.
  4. ^ Naravane, M. S. (1999). The Rajputs of Rajputana: A Glimpse of Medieval Rajasthan. APH Publishing. ISBN 978-81-7648-118-2.
  5. ^ Hanks, Patrick, ed. (2003). Dictionary of American family names. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press. p. 525. ISBN 978-0-19-508137-4. Chauhan Indian (northern states): Hindu and Sikh name of great and ancient prestige but unknown meaning. There is a legend that the ancestor of this Rajput clan emerged from a sacrificial fire with four arms, and so it was associated with the Sanskrit word ... ...
  6. ^ Sahni, Bindu (2016-09-07). "Socio- Religious Dichotomy among the Gujjars of Himachal Pradesh". IRA-International Journal of Management & Social Sciences (ISSN 2455–2267). 4 (2): 389. doi:10.21013/jmss.v4.n2.p8. ISSN 2455-2267. S2CID 133067241. Out of these gotra Bhathis, Tomors, Chauhan overlap imilar Rajput and Jat lineages.
  7. ^ Baig, Murad Ali (2011-01-01). 80 Questions to Understand India. Jaico Publishing House. p. 36. ISBN 978-81-8495-285-8. These Jat tribes came in several waves. The oldest tribes were Virk, Dahiya and Kang but many others like Bains, Chauhan, Dhillon, Gill, Maan, Parmar, Rawat, Rathor, Sandhu, Siddhu, Tomar, Tur, etc., can be traced to places of their Caucasian origins as far back as 600 BC.
  8. ^ Shackle, C. (1984). The Sikhs. Atlantic Publishers & Distri. p. 43. Chima is one of the largest and most powerful Jat tribes of the Punjab, but comparatively few are Sikhs. They claim to be descendants from agnicular or 'fireborn' Rajputs through their ancestor Chima, who was a Chauhan
  9. ^ Bhindar, Imran (2018-03-10). FROM SIALKOT TO VANCOUVER. Lulu.com. p. 36. ISBN 978-1-64254-791-7. Cheema H.A. Rose writes that Chima, also spelled Cheema say that some 25 generations back their ancestor Chima, a Chauhan Jat, fled from Delhi after the defeat of Rai Tanura (Prithi Raj),
  10. ^ Chakravarty-Kaul, Minoti (n.d.). "Two Centuries on the Commons: The Punjab". The Punjab: 13. Their history is a substantial evidence for the general pattern we have drawn from the historical documents of the Bisagama. Kanjhawla dates from the time of Akbar and Lewis believes that the Dabas Jats of the cluster are descended from the grandon of Prithvi Raj Chauhan
  11. ^ Yanagisawa, Haruka (2015-08-14). Community, Commons and Natural Resource Management in Asia. NUS Press. p. 93. ISBN 978-9971-69-853-9. In our sample, Kanjhawala, the head village of the Bisagama2 was established by a Charter granted to Kajju Singh (hence its name), an employee of Akbar" around 1530. The 20 villages belonged to Dabas Jats, a "clan" said to have descended from Dabas, a grandson of the 12th-century Rajput ruler, Prithvi Raj Chauhan of Delhi.

Chauhan historically reassemble with Chahamana[1] is an surname found among the prestigious member of Rajput community[2][3][4] and hereditary subset belong to Individual of Jat lineage, However its considerable per-portion allegedly belong to the Sikh faith.[5][6][7] Correspondingly Some of the Jat clan  such as Dabas, Cheema and Chattha were closely affiliated as the buffer identity of Chauhan which simultaneously traces their direct origin from Legendary figure Prithviraj Chauhan.[8][9][10]

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Shome, Ayan (2014-11-01). Dialogue & Daggers: Notion of Authority and Legitimacy in the Early Delhi Sultanate (1192 C.E. – 1316 C.E.). Vij Books India Pvt Ltd. ISBN 978-93-84318-46-8. All of these belong to the ready discussed category of the warrior herdsman or warrior pastoralist. elpful indications were ethnographies compiled during the era of the ritish Raj. For example it is reported that Chauhan (Chahamana) Rajputs and numerous settlements on the outskirts of Delhi by the early part of the ventieth century.' Also in large numbers were Tomar (Tomara) Rajputs, clan historically connected with the Chauhans.
  2. ^ Singh, Mian Goverdhan (1985). Social, Cultural, and Economic Survey of Himachal Pradesh. Minerva Book House. The people of Rajput tribes who migrated after the seventh and the eighth century from the Indian plains use their clan names like Rathore, Chauhan, Parmar, Tomars, etc.
  3. ^ Experts, EduGorilla Prep (2022-09-01). UGC NET History Paper II Chapter Wise Notebook | Complete Preparation Guide. EduGorilla. p. 315. The Chauhans were historically a powerful group in the region now known as Rajasthan. For around 400 years from the 7th century CE their strength in Sambhar was a threat to the power-base of the Guhilots in the south west of the area, as also was the strength of their fellow Agnivanshi clans. They suffered a set-back in 1192 when their leader, Prithviraj Chauhan, was defeated at the Second Battle of Tarain but this did not signify their demise. The kingdom broke into the Satyapura and Devda branches after the invasion of Qutbu I-Din Aibak in 1197. The earliest Chauhan inscription is a copper-plate inscription found at Hansot.
  4. ^ Naravane, M. S. (1999). The Rajputs of Rajputana: A Glimpse of Medieval Rajasthan. APH Publishing. ISBN 978-81-7648-118-2.
  5. ^ Hanks, Patrick, ed. (2003). Dictionary of American family names. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press. p. 525. ISBN 978-0-19-508137-4. Chauhan Indian (northern states): Hindu and Sikh name of great and ancient prestige but unknown meaning. There is a legend that the ancestor of this Rajput clan emerged from a sacrificial fire with four arms, and so it was associated with the Sanskrit word ... ...
  6. ^ Sahni, Bindu (2016-09-07). "Socio- Religious Dichotomy among the Gujjars of Himachal Pradesh". IRA-International Journal of Management & Social Sciences (ISSN 2455–2267). 4 (2): 389. doi:10.21013/jmss.v4.n2.p8. ISSN 2455-2267. S2CID 133067241. Out of these gotra Bhathis, Tomors, Chauhan overlap imilar Rajput and Jat lineages.
  7. ^ Baig, Murad Ali (2011-01-01). 80 Questions to Understand India. Jaico Publishing House. p. 36. ISBN 978-81-8495-285-8. These Jat tribes came in several waves. The oldest tribes were Virk, Dahiya and Kang but many others like Bains, Chauhan, Dhillon, Gill, Maan, Parmar, Rawat, Rathor, Sandhu, Siddhu, Tomar, Tur, etc., can be traced to places of their Caucasian origins as far back as 600 BC.
  8. ^ Shackle, C. (1984). The Sikhs. Atlantic Publishers & Distri. p. 43. Chima is one of the largest and most powerful Jat tribes of the Punjab, but comparatively few are Sikhs. They claim to be descendants from agnicular or 'fireborn' Rajputs through their ancestor Chima, who was a Chauhan
  9. ^ Chakravarty-Kaul, Minoti (n.d.). "Two Centuries on the Commons: The Punjab". The Punjab: 13. Their history is a substantial evidence for the general pattern we have drawn from the historical documents of the Bisagama. Kanjhawla dates from the time of Akbar and Lewis believes that the Dabas Jats of the cluster are descended from the grandon of Prithvi Raj Chauhan
  10. ^ Yanagisawa, Haruka (2015-08-14). Community, Commons and Natural Resource Management in Asia. NUS Press. p. 93. ISBN 978-9971-69-853-9. In our sample, Kanjhawala, the head village of the Bisagama2 was established by a Charter granted to Kajju Singh (hence its name), an employee of Akbar" around 1530. The 20 villages belonged to Dabas Jats, a "clan" said to have descended from Dabas, a grandson of the 12th-century Rajput ruler, Prithvi Raj Chauhan of Delhi.