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Rajaram soon showed even greater audacity. The renowned
Turanni warrior Aghar Khan was going from Kabul to the Emperor's camp at Bijapur. Near Dholpur, as his troops were marching carelessly and without order, a large party of Jats suddenly fell on his baggage and carried off some carts, horses and
234:
In his second campaign against the Jats, Nawab Khan-e-Jahan besieged Ram Chahar's fortress in Sogar. The Nawab successfully captured the fortress and casualties on the Jat side included Ram Chahar. Nawab next targeted
Sinsini, but he had to retreat to Mathura after Rajaram defeated him in a battle
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women. The Khan, without making any proper arrangement or concerted plan, impetuously galloped in pursuit of the raiders, at the head of a small force, and overtook them five miles off. Here the Jats turned at bay and killed Aghar Khan and his son-in-law with 80 of their followers.
216:(petition), historian R. P. Rana states that this was the period when the Jats living around Agra and Delhi appear to have revolted. It was the active support of these Jats that made Rajaram victorious. The Jats also ousted imperial revenue officials and the
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between Delhi and Agra. The
Mughals lost control of the region, and after an unsuccessful campaign lasting a month, Khan-e-Jahan retreated to
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who were fighting on the side of the
Mughals. This victory made the Jats even more assertive, and they set up their
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joined him. But the three combined forces were defeated by the Jats under the leadership of
Rajaram. The
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came under the control of Jats after this defeat of the
Mughals. Based on a contemporary
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121:. Before Rajaram the Jats were organised by different village heads dotted around
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near
Sinsini. This battle also resulted in the killing of many prominent
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Rebels to Rulers: The Rise of Jat Power in
Medieval India c. 1665–1735
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tomb and dragged Akbar's bones and burned them with the help of the
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351:"Social and economic background of the rise of Bharatpur kingdom"
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and son Fateh Singh continued the struggle against
Aurangzeb.
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247:(police posts) after removing those of the Mughals in Ao,
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Jadunath Sarkar, A History of Jaipur: C. 1503-1938 pg.152
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167:In the first of the two military campaigns of
284:The Peacock Throne: The Drama of Mogul India
113:leader, who organised a rebellion against
175:Khan-i-Jahan Bahadur Zafar Jang Kokaltash
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281:Hansen, Waldemar (1 September 1986).
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287:. Motilal Banarsidass. p. 454.
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16:17th century chieftain of Sinsini
163:Mughal campaigns against Rajaram
109:(reign 1670–1688) was the first
155:. After his death, his brother
403:People from Bharatpur district
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133:river. To avenge the death of
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349:Rana, RP (31 December 2013).
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259:Campaign Against Aghar Khan
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117:. He was the chieftain of
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328:. Manohar. p. 145.
408:Violent deaths in India
255:, Sahar, and Sonkhar.
373:"History of Aurngjeb"
90:Bhajja/Bhagwant Singh
81:Sinsinwar Jat Dynasty
322:Rana, R. P. (2006).
181:, the armies of the
177:against the Jats of
371:Sarkar, Jadunath.
24:Rajaram of Sinsini
335:978-81-7304-605-6
294:978-8-12080-225-4
208:, Kuthumbar, and
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393:1688 deaths
183:Amber state
70:4 July 1688
47:Predecessor
398:Jat rulers
387:Categories
358:Shodhganga
268:References
185:ruler and
137:, Rajaram
219:jagirdars
149:Zamindars
139:destroyed
115:Aurangzeb
57:Successor
249:Bhusawar
225:parganas
214:arzdasht
197:parganas
157:Churaman
129:and the
107:Raja Ram
99:Hinduism
95:Religion
61:Churaman
229:Mathura
191:faujdar
187:Mathura
179:Sinsini
142:Akbar's
127:Mathura
119:Sinsini
76:Dynasty
32:Sinsini
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253:Khohri
245:thanas
237:Rajput
210:Palwal
169:Mughal
135:Gokula
131:Yamuna
87:Father
51:Gokula
354:(PDF)
241:Amber
206:Hodal
202:Bhuma
172:Nawab
39:Reign
330:ISBN
289:ISBN
153:Braj
123:Agra
67:Died
200:of
151:of
146:Jat
111:Jat
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356:.
314:^
251:,
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204:,
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360:.
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221:'
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