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Rajputs, Cholas and Regional Powers (700–1200 CE)

Tripartite struggle, Rajput clans, Prithviraj Chauhan, Chola empire, Brihadeeswarar Temple, Nataraja.

Rajputs, Cholas and Regional Powers (700–1200 CE)

New Kings and Kingdoms (700–1200 CE)

What you'll learn

  • How new kingdoms emerged after the Gupta decline.
  • The Rajput clans — who they were and how they fought.
  • The Chola Empire — administration, art, temple-building.
  • How tripartite struggle shaped north India.
  • Land grants and how they changed society.

Key concepts

Political landscape after 700 CE

  • After Harsha (647 CE), no single power dominated north India for centuries.
  • Multiple regional kingdoms rose, competed, and fell.
  • Three major powers fought for control of the Gangetic plain:
    • Gurjara-Pratiharas (Rajasthan, western India)
    • Palas (Bengal, Bihar)
    • Rashtrakutas (Deccan)
  • This constant three-way struggle is called the Tripartite Struggle (8th–10th century).
  • None could win decisively → exhausted all three → made north India vulnerable to later invasions.

The Rajputs

  • Rajput = "son of a king" (raja-putra); clans claiming Kshatriya status.
  • Origins debated: some were foreign (Hunas, Gurjaras) who were absorbed into Hindu society; others were local chiefs.
  • Major Rajput clans and their base:
ClanRegionNotable ruler/fact
Pratiharas (Gurjara-Pratiharas)Rajasthan, Malwa, KannaujMihira Bhoja; briefly controlled Kannauj
ParamarasMalwa (MP)Raja Bhoja — patron of learning; built Bhojpur lake and temple
ChandellasBundelkhand (MP/UP)Built Khajuraho temples (950–1050 CE); UNESCO World Heritage Site
Chahamanas (Chauhans)Ajmer, DelhiPrithviraj Chauhan III — last great Rajput king; defeated Muhammad Ghori at First Battle of Tarain (1191); lost at Second Battle of Tarain (1192)
Solankis (Chaulukyas)GujaratBuilt Dilwara Jain temples (Mount Abu); Somnath temple patronage
RathorsMarwar (Rajasthan)Founded Jodhpur; still prominent

Rajput warfare and values

  • Warfare was central to Rajput identity; elaborate codes of chivalry:
    • Never attack an unarmed enemy.
    • Women and civilians not harmed.
    • Jauhar: when defeat was certain, Rajput women burned themselves rather than be captured — mass self-immolation.
    • Saka: Rajput men fought to the death after women performed jauhar.
  • Prashastis (praise poems) and bards (Charans) recorded Rajput glory — also exaggerated heroism.
  • Rajputs built strong forts (Chittorgarh, Mehrangarh, Amer) on hilltops → control of trade routes.

How kings legitimised power

  • Genealogies: Kings claimed descent from the Sun (Suryavanshi) or Moon (Chandravanshi) — divine origin.
  • Land grants (brahmadeya): kings gave land to Brahmins who performed rituals + gave legitimacy in return.
    • Grants recorded on copper plates → important historical source.
    • Brahmins brought peasants, artisans to cultivate → settlement expansion.
  • Temples: kings built grand temples to associate themselves with deities → divine kingship.

The Chola Empire (9th–13th century)

The Cholas of Tamil Nadu became the most powerful empire in south India and beyond.

Rise

  • Vijayalaya captured Tanjore (~850 CE); revived Chola power.
  • Aditya I defeated Pallavas (~897 CE) — Pallavas ended.

Peak — Rajaraja I and Rajendra I

RulerPeriodAchievement
Rajaraja Chola I985–1014 CEConquered Sri Lanka, Maldives, parts of Kerala; built Brihadeeswarar Temple (Thanjavur)
Rajendra Chola I1014–1044 CE"Gangaikonda" (one who took the Ganga); naval expedition to SE Asia (Srivijaya kingdom, Sumatra); moved capital to Gangaikondacholapuram

Chola administration

  • Nadu: smallest administrative unit (a cluster of villages).
  • Mandalam: province; governed by governor appointed by king.
  • Village assemblies (ur, sabha, nagaram): elected bodies managing local affairs — remarkably democratic for the period.
    • Sabha: assembly of Brahmin landowners.
    • Ur: assembly of all villagers.
    • Nagaram: assembly of merchants in towns.
  • Inscriptions at Uttaramerur (Tamil Nadu) describe detailed election procedures for village assemblies — one of earliest records of local democracy.

Chola art and architecture

  • Dravidian temple style at its peak: tall gopuram (gateway tower), large tank, pillared halls (mandapam).
  • Brihadeeswarar Temple, Thanjavur (1010 CE): UNESCO World Heritage Site; 66 m tall vimana (tower); built without mortar; 80-tonne granite capstone at top.
  • Bronze casting: Cholas pioneered lost-wax (cire-perdue) process for bronze statues.
    • Most famous: Nataraja (dancing Shiva) — symbol of cosmic creation and destruction; now India's most recognisable sculpture.

Decline of Rajput kingdoms

  • Internal quarrels between Rajput clans — couldn't unite against external threats.
  • Muhammad Ghori's defeat of Prithviraj Chauhan at Second Battle of Tarain (1192) opened north India to Delhi Sultanate.
  • Cholas declined by 13th century due to invasions by Pandyas and Hoysalas.

Quick check

  • What was the Tripartite Struggle? Who were the three powers involved?
  • Name four Rajput clans and their home regions.
  • What was jauhar? What values does it reflect?
  • Who built the Brihadeeswarar Temple? What is remarkable about it?
  • What were the three types of village assemblies under the Cholas?

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on New Kings & Kingdoms.

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What you'll learn
  • Key concepts
  • Quick check

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