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{{Short description|Ruler of Hindu Shahi dynasty}}
{{use dmy dates|date=October 2016}}
{{use dmy dates|date=October 2016}}
{{use Indian English|date=October 2016}}
{{use Indian English|date=October 2016}}
{{Infobox royalty
{{Infobox royalty
| name = Jayapala
| name = Jayapala
| title = Parama Bhattaraka Maharajadhiraja
| title = [[Maharajadhiraja]]
| image = Mahmud of Ghazni first success.jpg
| image = Mahmud of Ghazni first success.jpg
| caption = Disaster of Jayapala Army against [[Mahmud of Ghazni]], due to a snowstorm.<ref>{{cite book |title=Hutchinson's story of the nations, containing the Egyptians, the Chinese, India, the Babylonian nation, the Hittites, the Assyrians, the Phoenicians and the Carthaginians, the Phrygians, the Lydians, and other nations of Asia Minor |publisher=London, Hutchinson |page=150 |url=https://archive.org/details/hutchinsonsstory00londuoft/page/150/mode/1up}}</ref>
| caption = Disaster of Jayapala Army against [[Mahmud of Ghazni]], due to a snowstorm.<ref>{{cite book |title=Hutchinson's story of the nations, containing the Egyptians, the Chinese, India, the Babylonian nation, the Hittites, the Assyrians, the Phoenicians and the Carthaginians, the Phrygians, the Lydians, and other nations of Asia Minor |publisher=London, Hutchinson |page=150 |url=https://archive.org/details/hutchinsonsstory00londuoft/page/150/mode/1up}}</ref>
| succession = [[Maharaja]] of [[Hindu Shahis]]
| reign = 964 – 1001 CE
| reign = 964 – 1001 CE
| successor = [[Anandapala]]
| predecessor = Hutpal
| full name =
| full name =
| birth_date = Unknown
| birth_place =
| death_date = 1002
| regnal name = Parama Bhattaraka Maharajadhiraja Sri Jayapaladeva
| father = Hutpala
| father = Hutpala
| dynasty = [[Hindu Shahi]]
| dynasty = [[Hindu Shahi]]
| religion = [[Hinduism]]
| religion = [[Hinduism]]
{{Infobox military person
| successor = [[Anandapala]]
| embed = yes
| predecessor = [[Hutpal]]
| battles =
*[[First Battle of Laghman]]
*[[Second Battle of Laghman]]}}
}}
}}


'''Jayapala''' was a ruler of the [[Hindu Shahi]] dynasty from 964 to 1001 CE. He ruled over the area which stretched from [[Laghman Province|Laghman]] in the west, to [[Kashmir]] in the east and from [[Sirhind-Fategarh|Sirhind]] to [[Multan]].<ref name="Ferishta">{{cite web |title=Ameer Nasir-ood-Deen Subooktugeen |url=http://persian.packhum.org/persian/pf?file=06901021&ct=12 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131029194724/http://persian.packhum.org/persian/pf?file=06901021&ct=12 |archive-date=29 October 2013 |access-date=2012-12-30 |work=[[Ferishta]], History of the Rise of Mohammedan Power in India, Volume 1: Section 15 |publisher=Packard Humanities Institute}}</ref> He was the son of Hutpal and the father of [[Anandapala]].<ref name="Ferishta" /> Epithets from the [[Barikot|Bari Kot]] inscriptions record his full title as "Parama Bhattaraka Maharajadhiraja Sri Jayapaladeva".<ref name="Sailendra Nath Sen">{{cite book |author=Sailendra Nath Sen |url=https://books.google.com/books?isbn=8122411983 |title=Ancient Indian History and Civilization |publisher=New Age International |page=342 |access-date=25 January 2014}}</ref>
'''Jayapala''' or '''Jaipal''' was a [[Janjua]] ruler of the [[Hindu Shahi]] dynasty from 964 to 1001 CE.

His kingdom stretched from [[Laghman Province|Laghman]] to [[Kashmir]] and [[Sirhind]] to [[Multan]], with [[Peshawar]] being in the center.<ref name="Ferishta">{{cite web |work=[[Ferishta]], History of the Rise of Mohammedan Power in India, Volume 1: Section 15 |url=http://persian.packhum.org/persian/pf?file=06901021&ct=12 |title=Ameer Nasir-ood-Deen Subooktugeen |publisher=Packard Humanities Institute |access-date=2012-12-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131029194724/http://persian.packhum.org/persian/pf?file=06901021&ct=12 |archive-date=29 October 2013 |url-status=dead }}</ref> He was the son of Hutpal and the father of [[Anandapala]].<ref name="Ferishta"/> Epithets from the Bari Kot inscriptions record his full title as "Parama Bhattaraka Maharajadhiraja Sri Jayapaladeva".<ref name="Sailendra Nath Sen">{{cite book|author=Sailendra Nath Sen|title=Ancient Indian History and Civilization|url=https://books.google.com/books?isbn=8122411983|access-date=25 January 2014|publisher=New Age International|page=342}}</ref>


== History ==
== History ==
{{See also|First Battle of Laghman|Second Battle of Laghman}}
After three centuries of unremitting effort, the Arab/Turkic dominion in India at the end of 950 was limited to two states, [[Multan]] and [[Mansura, Sindh|Mansura]].<ref> | Mishra | Indian Resistance to Muslim Invaders upto 1206 AD | 21 </ref>
The city of [[Kabul]] was under the command of [[Sabuktigin]], however, the Hindu Shahi rulers stationed at [[Hund, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa|Udabhandapur]] had been making continuous effort for regaining control of Kabul.


In 986–987, Jayapala marched towards [[Ghazni]] and met with Sabuktigin's forces at Ghuzak.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=135}}{{efn|The name of the place is also spelt as Baghurak and Ghurak in some Muslim histories.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=12, 135}}}} The war remained largely inconclusive for days before the tide turned against the Shahis: Jayapala was forced to propose a peace treaty.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=135-136}}{{Efn|The circumstances that led to this sudden development are described peculiarly by Utbi: a fountain of supernatural powers was intentionally polluted by Sabuktegin to raise a snowstorm of hellish proportions that blinded Jayapala's men.{{sfn|Anooshahr|2005|p=278-279}} Positivist historians understood this to refer to a cataclysmic storm.{{sfn|Anooshahr|2005|p=279}} However, Ali Anooshahr notes the tale of the storm to reflect the description of Lake Frazdan (modern-day [[Godzareh Depression|Gaud-i Zira]]) situated about the same area and its source ocean [[Fraxkard]] from the ''[[Bundahishn|Greater Bundahishn]]'' — that Utbi's description of the eastern frontiers was based on letters received by the Court, he proposes that the [[Zoroastrian]] myth was still believed by the locals during the conflict and Sabuktegin had it leveraged to increase his stature before the would-be subjects.{{sfn|Anooshahr|2005|p=289-290}}}} [[Mahmud of Ghazni|Mahmud]], son of Sabuktigin and a battle commander, wished to inflict a decisive defeat, but had to concede when Jayapala threatened to incinerate all valuables.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=136}}{{Efn|al-Utbi [[Tarikh Yamini|notes]] Sabuktigin to have consented to the proposal "on account of the mercy he felt towards those who were his allied lords". The precise meaning is unclear.}} A war indemnity of one million Shahi dirhams and fifty war elephants was agreed upon and some frontier forts were ceded to the [[Ghaznavids]].{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=136}} Accordingly, Jaypala made his way back with a few Ghaznavi commanders who were to take charge of the ceded forts, while some of his relatives and officials were left with Sabuktigin as hostages.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=136}} Once Jayapala reached his own territories, he called off the treaty and threw the commanders into prison, probably hoping to force Sabuktigin into exchanging hostages.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=136}}
Jayapala fought against the [[Ghaznavids]] in the [[Gandhara]] region of [[Ancient India]], which is now in modern-day north-eastern [[Afghanistan]] and north-western [[Pakistan]], until finally being defeated in Peshawar by superior forces of the latter. Jayapala attacked the Ghaznavids and invaded their capital city of [[Ghazni]] both in the reign of [[Sebuktigin]] and that of his son [[Mahmud of Ghazni|Mahmud]], which initiated the [[Muslim]] Ghaznavid and [[Hindu]] Shahi struggles.<ref name="Lewis">{{Citation | title=The Cambridge history of Islam |editor=P. M. Holt |editor2=Ann K. S. Lambton |editor3=Bernard Lewis |editor3-link=Bernard Lewis | year=1977 | publisher=Cambridge University Press | isbn=0-521-29137-2 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5ccI0u5XDR0C | page=3 | quote=''... Maharaja Jayapala of Waihind saw danger in the consolidation of the kingdom of Ghazna and decided to destroy it. He therefore invaded Ghazna many times, but was finally defeated...''}}</ref> Jayapala, however, was defeated, and he was forced to pay an indemnity to Sebuktigin.<ref name="Lewis" /> Maharaja Jayapala stopped paying tribute and took to the battlefield once more.<ref name="Lewis" /> Maharaja Jayapala, however, lost the battle and control of the entire region between the [[Kabul|Kabul Valley]] and [[Khyber Pass]].<ref name="Ferishta" />


Sabuktigin refused to believe the treaty had been breached, but once it was established beyond doubt, he plundered the frontier town of [[Lamghan]]: temples were demolished and houses burnt down.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=136-137}} In response, Jayapala secured troops from unidentified Rajahs,{{Efn|Contemporaneous Muslim sources note of Jayapala having received aid from neighboring Indian polities; [[Firishta]], writing over 600 years hence, would be the first chronicler to note their names: [[Delhi]], [[Ajmer|Ajmir]], [[Kalinjar|Kalunjur]], and [[Kannauj|Kanauj]].{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=335-336}} Rahman doubts Firishta's accuracy since neither extant literature nor extant inscriptions from these polities speak of such a grand political maneuver.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=336-337}}}} and met with the Ghaznavids near Kindi (modern day [[Kandibagh]] - ?).{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=14, 137}} The Ghaznavids breached the enemy lines repeatedly using light attacks and followed them with an all-out assault, routing the Shahis who had to flee beyond the [[Indus River|Indus]] despite their overwhelming numerical superiority.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=137-138}} The entire span of territory up to [[Peshawar]] was lost, and Sabuktigin installed his own tax-collectors; local tribes were ordained into Ghaznavid arms too.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=138}} A [[Ribat|''ribāṭ'']] was commissioned at Kindi to commemorate the victory.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=14}} However, Peshawar and adjacent regions returned to Shahis sometime soon, probably during what would be a long interlude in the Ghaznavid-Shahi conflict.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=138}}{{efn|Ferishta mentions that Mahmud had stationed a garrison at Peshawar; this must have been either withdrawn or expelled by Jayapala.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=138}}}}
Before his struggle began Jayapala had raised a small army of Punjabis. When Jayapala went to the [[Punjab region]], his army was raised of 10,000 horsemen and an smaller host of foot soldiers. According to [[Firishta]]: {{quote|The two armies having met on the confines of [[Laghman Province|Lumghan]], the Maharaja ascended a hill to view the forces of [[Sabuktigin]], which appeared in extent like the boundless ocean, and in numbers like the ants or the locusts of the wilderness. However, Jayapala considered himself as a wolf about to attack a flock of sheep: calling, therefore, his chiefs together, he encouraged them to glory, and issued to each his commands. His soldiers, though few in number, were divided into squadrons of five hundred men each, which were directed to attack successively, one particular point of the Mooslim line, so that it might continually have to encounter fresh troops.<ref name="Ferishta"/>}}


Circa 990–991, Mahmud would be imprisoned by his father Sabuktigin on grounds of fomenting a rebellion.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=138}} Jayapala probably tried to leverage the rift in his favor by promising to rescue Mahmud, marry off his daughter to him, and further, allot sufficient wealth and troops.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=138-139}} Mahmud did not respond favorably and noting the Shahi to be a doggy infidel, proclaimed his absolute devotion to Sabuktigin and pledged to attack Jayapala upon release.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=139}} Around the same time, Jayapala was challenged by Bharat, a Rajah of [[Lahore]] who wished to wrest control of [[Nandana]], Jailam and [[Takeshar]].{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=139}} Anandapala, then Governor of Punjab, was ordered to intercept Bharat's forces and in the ensuing battle, Bharat was imprisoned and Lahore annexed; however the nobility of Lahore pleaded on behalf of their old King, who was reinstated as a feudatory after payment of tributes.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=139-140}} About a year hence, Bharat's son Chandrak deposed him on the grounds of waging an ill-thought campaign against the Shahis, and became the new feudatory.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=140}} For reasons which are not clear, c. 998-999 (eight years after the usurpation), Jayapala declared war against Lahore on the pretext of protecting his suzerain Bharat and dispatched Anandapala.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=140}} Chandrak was ambushed and kidnapped around the battleground of Samutla, and Lahore was annexed by the Shahis.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=140-141}} Rahman speculates that the Shahis were trying to balance their losses against the Ghaznavids using any pretext.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=140}}
However, the army was hopeless in battle against the eastern forces, particularly against the Punjabis.<ref name="Ferishta"/> In the year 1001, soon after Sultan Mahmud came to power and was occupied with the [[Qarakhanid]]s north of the [[Hindu Kush]], Maharaja Jayapala [[Battle of Peshawar (1001)|attacked Ghazni]] once more and upon suffered his first defeat by the powerful numerous Ghaznavid forces, near present-day [[Peshawar]]. After the [[Battle of Peshawar (1001)|Battle of Peshawar]], Jayapala was captured, and although he was freed by a 50 elephant indemnity. He abdicated in favor of his son and committed suicide by funeral pyre.<ref name="Ferishta" /><ref name="Lewis" /><ref>{{Cite book|last=Keay|first=John|title=India: A History|publisher=Harper Collins|year=2000|isbn=978-0-8021-4558-1|location=Great Britain|pages=207}}</ref><ref>Ferishta (trans. Dow, A.), ''[https://dl.tufts.edu/concern/pdfs/9k41zr860 The History of Hindoostan]'', vol.1, p.57</ref>

In 998, Mahmud ascended the Ghaznavid throne at Ghazni, and went on an annexation spree.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=141}} Soon, Mahmud turned his eyes on the Shahis, allegedly resolving to invade their territories every year.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=141}} In what was the last battle of his life, Jayapala met with Mahmud at Peshawar on 27 September 1001; one Shahi governor of Bardari province named Adira Afghan is held to have switched sides and aided in the safe and quick passage of Mahmud's troops across Shahi provinces.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=141-142}} Mahmud saw through Jayapala's tactics of delaying the conflict in the hope of receiving reinforcements and declared war immediately.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=142}} Soon, the Shahis were in a state of disarray with Jayapala and fifteen of his relatives taken as prisoners.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=142}} About one million Shahi forces were taken as slaves.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=143}} The war-spoils awed contemporary chroniclers: the royal necklaces alone were valued at over six million Shahi dirhams.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=142-143}} Mahmud continued his raid as far as [[Hund (village)|Hund]], as his forces chased fleeing troops and decimated pockets of resistance.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=143}} Within a few months, the entire Shahi territory to the west of the Indus had submitted to Mahmud.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=143}}{{efn|It was probably around this time, that some mausoleum (or tomb) was commissioned at Zalamkot (near [[Chakdara]]) by Mahmud's commander Arslan Jadhib for the fallen, which would be eventually completed in 1011. See{{sfn|Rahman|2002b}} on the Zalamkot Bilingual Inscription.}} By April 1002, Mahmud was on his way back to Ghazni.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=143}}

Jayapala was eventually released but Muslim chroniclers differ about the specifics.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=143}} [[Unsuri]], a court-poet of Mahmud notes that he was sold in the slave market; [[Minhaj-i Siraj Juzjani|Minhaj ad-din]] and al-Malik Isami add a price of 80 dirhams/dinars.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=144-145}} Others like al-Ansab note that Mahmud had rejected his request for pardon but allowed him to be free in lieu of a payment of 2.5 million dirhams and 50 war-elephants around March 1002, which Rahman finds more likely.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=146}} Jayapala returned to Hund and immolated himself in a pyre after abdicating the throne in favor of Anandapala.{{sfn|Rehman|1976|p=146-147}}

The conquest between Hindu Shahi Kings and Ghazni kings stretched fifteen years before the latter finally succeeded in establishing rule in the region of Afghanistan and modern Pakistan including cities of Kabul.


==Succession==
==Succession==
Jayapala was succeeded by his son [[Anandapala]],<ref name="Lewis"/> who along with other succeeding generations of the Shahiya dynasty took part in various campaigns against the advancing Ghaznavids for decades successfully keeping them from crossing the Indus.<ref name="Ferishta"/>
Jayapala was succeeded by his son [[Anandapala]],<ref name="Lewis2">{{Citation |title=The Cambridge history of Islam |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5ccI0u5XDR0C |page=3 |year=1977 |editor=P. M. Holt |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=0-521-29137-2 |quote=''... Maharaja Jayapala of Waihind saw danger in the consolidation of the kingdom of Ghazna and decided to destroy it. He therefore invaded Ghazna many times, but was finally defeated...'' |editor2=Ann K. S. Lambton |editor3=Bernard Lewis |editor3-link=Bernard Lewis}}</ref> who along with other succeeding generations of the Shahi dynasty took part in various campaigns against the advancing Ghaznavids for decades successfully keeping them from crossing the Indus.<ref name="Ferishta"/>


==See also==
==See also==
{{Wikiquote}}
*[[Gandhara]]
*[[Gandhara]]
*[[List of rulers of Lahore]]
*[[List of rulers of Lahore]]

{{Wikiquote}}
==Notes==
{{reflist|group=lower-alpha}}


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

===Works cited===
{{refbegin|2}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Anooshahr |first=Ali |date=2005 |title='Utbi and the Ghaznavids at the Foot of the Mountain |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/4311725 |journal=Iranian Studies |volume=38 |issue=2 |pages=271–291 |doi=10.1080/00210860500096337 |jstor=4311725 |s2cid=161342122 |issn=0021-0862}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Rahman |first=Abdul |date=August 2002b |title=Arslan Jadhib, Governor of Tiis: the First Muslim Conqueror of Swat |url=http://ojs.uop.edu.pk/ancientpakistan/article/download/225/205 |journal=Ancient Pakistan |volume=XV |pages=11–14}}
* {{Cite thesis |last=Rehman |first=Abdur |title=The Last Two Dynasties of the Sahis: An analysis of their history, archaeology, coinage and palaeography |url=https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/11229 |publisher=Australian National University |date=January 1976 |language=en}}
{{refend}}


[[Category:1001 deaths]]
[[Category:1001 deaths]]
[[Category:Year of birth unknown]]
[[Category:Year of birth unknown]]
[[Category:10th-century Indian monarchs]]
[[Category:10th-century Indian monarchs]]
[[Category:Ancient Indian monarchs]]
[[Category:Ancient peoples]]
[[Category:Ancient Hinduism]]
[[Category:History of Punjab]]
[[Category:Indus Valley civilisation]]
[[Category:Prehistoric India]]
[[Category:Prehistoric Pakistan]]

Revision as of 13:47, 9 May 2024

Jayapala
Maharajadhiraja
Disaster of Jayapala Army against Mahmud of Ghazni, due to a snowstorm.[1]
Maharaja of Hindu Shahis
Reign964 – 1001 CE
PredecessorHutpal
SuccessorAnandapala
BornUnknown
Died1002
Regnal name
Parama Bhattaraka Maharajadhiraja Sri Jayapaladeva
DynastyHindu Shahi
FatherHutpala
ReligionHinduism
Military career
Battles/wars

Jayapala was a ruler of the Hindu Shahi dynasty from 964 to 1001 CE. He ruled over the area which stretched from Laghman in the west, to Kashmir in the east and from Sirhind to Multan.[2] He was the son of Hutpal and the father of Anandapala.[2] Epithets from the Bari Kot inscriptions record his full title as "Parama Bhattaraka Maharajadhiraja Sri Jayapaladeva".[3]

History

After three centuries of unremitting effort, the Arab/Turkic dominion in India at the end of 950 was limited to two states, Multan and Mansura.[4] The city of Kabul was under the command of Sabuktigin, however, the Hindu Shahi rulers stationed at Udabhandapur had been making continuous effort for regaining control of Kabul.

In 986–987, Jayapala marched towards Ghazni and met with Sabuktigin's forces at Ghuzak.[5][a] The war remained largely inconclusive for days before the tide turned against the Shahis: Jayapala was forced to propose a peace treaty.[7][b] Mahmud, son of Sabuktigin and a battle commander, wished to inflict a decisive defeat, but had to concede when Jayapala threatened to incinerate all valuables.[11][c] A war indemnity of one million Shahi dirhams and fifty war elephants was agreed upon and some frontier forts were ceded to the Ghaznavids.[11] Accordingly, Jaypala made his way back with a few Ghaznavi commanders who were to take charge of the ceded forts, while some of his relatives and officials were left with Sabuktigin as hostages.[11] Once Jayapala reached his own territories, he called off the treaty and threw the commanders into prison, probably hoping to force Sabuktigin into exchanging hostages.[11]

Sabuktigin refused to believe the treaty had been breached, but once it was established beyond doubt, he plundered the frontier town of Lamghan: temples were demolished and houses burnt down.[12] In response, Jayapala secured troops from unidentified Rajahs,[d] and met with the Ghaznavids near Kindi (modern day Kandibagh - ?).[15] The Ghaznavids breached the enemy lines repeatedly using light attacks and followed them with an all-out assault, routing the Shahis who had to flee beyond the Indus despite their overwhelming numerical superiority.[16] The entire span of territory up to Peshawar was lost, and Sabuktigin installed his own tax-collectors; local tribes were ordained into Ghaznavid arms too.[17] A ribāṭ was commissioned at Kindi to commemorate the victory.[18] However, Peshawar and adjacent regions returned to Shahis sometime soon, probably during what would be a long interlude in the Ghaznavid-Shahi conflict.[17][e]

Circa 990–991, Mahmud would be imprisoned by his father Sabuktigin on grounds of fomenting a rebellion.[17] Jayapala probably tried to leverage the rift in his favor by promising to rescue Mahmud, marry off his daughter to him, and further, allot sufficient wealth and troops.[19] Mahmud did not respond favorably and noting the Shahi to be a doggy infidel, proclaimed his absolute devotion to Sabuktigin and pledged to attack Jayapala upon release.[20] Around the same time, Jayapala was challenged by Bharat, a Rajah of Lahore who wished to wrest control of Nandana, Jailam and Takeshar.[20] Anandapala, then Governor of Punjab, was ordered to intercept Bharat's forces and in the ensuing battle, Bharat was imprisoned and Lahore annexed; however the nobility of Lahore pleaded on behalf of their old King, who was reinstated as a feudatory after payment of tributes.[21] About a year hence, Bharat's son Chandrak deposed him on the grounds of waging an ill-thought campaign against the Shahis, and became the new feudatory.[22] For reasons which are not clear, c. 998-999 (eight years after the usurpation), Jayapala declared war against Lahore on the pretext of protecting his suzerain Bharat and dispatched Anandapala.[22] Chandrak was ambushed and kidnapped around the battleground of Samutla, and Lahore was annexed by the Shahis.[23] Rahman speculates that the Shahis were trying to balance their losses against the Ghaznavids using any pretext.[22]

In 998, Mahmud ascended the Ghaznavid throne at Ghazni, and went on an annexation spree.[24] Soon, Mahmud turned his eyes on the Shahis, allegedly resolving to invade their territories every year.[24] In what was the last battle of his life, Jayapala met with Mahmud at Peshawar on 27 September 1001; one Shahi governor of Bardari province named Adira Afghan is held to have switched sides and aided in the safe and quick passage of Mahmud's troops across Shahi provinces.[25] Mahmud saw through Jayapala's tactics of delaying the conflict in the hope of receiving reinforcements and declared war immediately.[26] Soon, the Shahis were in a state of disarray with Jayapala and fifteen of his relatives taken as prisoners.[26] About one million Shahi forces were taken as slaves.[27] The war-spoils awed contemporary chroniclers: the royal necklaces alone were valued at over six million Shahi dirhams.[28] Mahmud continued his raid as far as Hund, as his forces chased fleeing troops and decimated pockets of resistance.[27] Within a few months, the entire Shahi territory to the west of the Indus had submitted to Mahmud.[27][f] By April 1002, Mahmud was on his way back to Ghazni.[27]

Jayapala was eventually released but Muslim chroniclers differ about the specifics.[27] Unsuri, a court-poet of Mahmud notes that he was sold in the slave market; Minhaj ad-din and al-Malik Isami add a price of 80 dirhams/dinars.[30] Others like al-Ansab note that Mahmud had rejected his request for pardon but allowed him to be free in lieu of a payment of 2.5 million dirhams and 50 war-elephants around March 1002, which Rahman finds more likely.[31] Jayapala returned to Hund and immolated himself in a pyre after abdicating the throne in favor of Anandapala.[32]

The conquest between Hindu Shahi Kings and Ghazni kings stretched fifteen years before the latter finally succeeded in establishing rule in the region of Afghanistan and modern Pakistan including cities of Kabul.

Succession

Jayapala was succeeded by his son Anandapala,[33] who along with other succeeding generations of the Shahi dynasty took part in various campaigns against the advancing Ghaznavids for decades successfully keeping them from crossing the Indus.[2]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The name of the place is also spelt as Baghurak and Ghurak in some Muslim histories.[6]
  2. ^ The circumstances that led to this sudden development are described peculiarly by Utbi: a fountain of supernatural powers was intentionally polluted by Sabuktegin to raise a snowstorm of hellish proportions that blinded Jayapala's men.[8] Positivist historians understood this to refer to a cataclysmic storm.[9] However, Ali Anooshahr notes the tale of the storm to reflect the description of Lake Frazdan (modern-day Gaud-i Zira) situated about the same area and its source ocean Fraxkard from the Greater Bundahishn — that Utbi's description of the eastern frontiers was based on letters received by the Court, he proposes that the Zoroastrian myth was still believed by the locals during the conflict and Sabuktegin had it leveraged to increase his stature before the would-be subjects.[10]
  3. ^ al-Utbi notes Sabuktigin to have consented to the proposal "on account of the mercy he felt towards those who were his allied lords". The precise meaning is unclear.
  4. ^ Contemporaneous Muslim sources note of Jayapala having received aid from neighboring Indian polities; Firishta, writing over 600 years hence, would be the first chronicler to note their names: Delhi, Ajmir, Kalunjur, and Kanauj.[13] Rahman doubts Firishta's accuracy since neither extant literature nor extant inscriptions from these polities speak of such a grand political maneuver.[14]
  5. ^ Ferishta mentions that Mahmud had stationed a garrison at Peshawar; this must have been either withdrawn or expelled by Jayapala.[17]
  6. ^ It was probably around this time, that some mausoleum (or tomb) was commissioned at Zalamkot (near Chakdara) by Mahmud's commander Arslan Jadhib for the fallen, which would be eventually completed in 1011. See[29] on the Zalamkot Bilingual Inscription.

References

  1. ^ Hutchinson's story of the nations, containing the Egyptians, the Chinese, India, the Babylonian nation, the Hittites, the Assyrians, the Phoenicians and the Carthaginians, the Phrygians, the Lydians, and other nations of Asia Minor. London, Hutchinson. p. 150.
  2. ^ a b c "Ameer Nasir-ood-Deen Subooktugeen". Ferishta, History of the Rise of Mohammedan Power in India, Volume 1: Section 15. Packard Humanities Institute. Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
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  4. ^ | Mishra | Indian Resistance to Muslim Invaders upto 1206 AD | 21
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Works cited