Wednesday, July 16, 2008

ACK-019:Chhatrasal

Budelkhand Kesri Maharaja Chhatrasal (4 May 1649 - 1731) along with Chatrapati Shivaji and Guru Gobind Singh formed a trinity of rebels who rose against Aurangzeb's rule in the 18th century. He fought under the Mughal army initially, but later took up cudgels against the Mughals in Bundelkhand and put an end to their rule in his territories.

He was born in Kachar Kachnai on 4th May, 1649, to Bundela chieftan Champat Rai and Lal Kunwar. Early in his childhood he was separated from his parents and then he had made up his mind to fight against the tyrannical rule of the Mughals. As advised by Shivaji- the Maratha warrior, he determined to fight for the independence of Bundelkhand and after his meeting with Swami Mahamati Prannath, Chhatrasal became strong and powerful. Just as Guru Ramdas showed the way to Shivaji so did Mahamati Prannath gave guidance and true knowledge to Maharaja Chhatrasal. It was with his blessings that he could establish the divine kingdom of Panna, as predicted in the scriptures as 'the heavenly kingdom on earth'. Prannath ji guided Chhatrasal in religious, social, political and economical matters. He also granted Maharaja Chhatrasal the boon to find diamonds in Panna. Chhatrasal raised the banner of revolt against the Mughals in Bundelkhand at the age of 22, with an army of 5 horsemen and 25 swordsmen, in 1671. In the first 10 years of his fight, (between 1671 and 1680) Chhatralsal met with enviable success. Within the first 10 years, he had conquered a large tract of land around the region between Chitrakoot and Panna in the east, up to Gwalior in the west, and from Kalpi in the north to Sagar, Garah Kota and Damoh in the south. Some of the reputed Mughal Generals who were defeated by him are Rohilla Khan, Kaliq, Munawwar Khan, Sadruddin, Sheikh Anwar, Sayyid Latif, Bahlol Khan and Abdus Ahmed.

Maharaja Chhatrasal captured Mahoba in 1680. Upon his death in 1732, Chhatrasal bequeathed Mahoba and the surrounding area to the Maratha Peshwa Baji Rao I in return for Baji Rao's assistance against the Mughals.

In the second phase of his struggle between 1681 and 1707, Chhatrasal suffered a few reverses, but because Aurangzeb had also to protect his southern territories which were continually under attack by the Marathas, he was able to resist the Mughals.

After Mahamati Prannath, the entire responsibility of promoting the faith fell on Chhatrasal. Like the Buddha's disciple Emperor Ashoka, Chhatrasal was a talented missionary. He endeavoured to promulgate the Krishna Pranami / Nijanand Sampradaya of Mahamati Prannath. As an organised team both abroad and at home, a learned group of enlightened souls continued propagating and practising the teachings of the Mahamati. By their works and verses drenched in the doctrine of love for the Lord they were the source of great strength for their followers. Their areas of work were sufficiently large and by the sheer fruity of their lives and simplicity of principles they could always get a responsive audience. Noble souls like Laldass, Mukund Dass, Braj Bhushan, Hans Raj, Gopal Dass, jugal Dass to mention a few, were successful in bringing several families on the fold of prananmi cult.

The major centres of this religion are Jam Nagar, Panna, Surat Allahabad, Haridwar, Delhi, Karnal, Jaipur, Kalimpong, Bhiwani, Sherpur etc. A large number of pilgrims flock to these places to take part in the annual congregations. In recent years many scholars have been attracted to this religion and researchers are doing a commendable job to unearth and publicize the main contribution of this religion.

There was a Postal Stamp issued in his honor by Indian Post.

Stamp Issue Date: 02/10/1987

Postage Stamp Denomination: 0.60 Rupee

Postal Stamp Serial Number: 1258

Postal Stamp Name: CHHATRASAL ON HORSE BACK

Number of stamps printed: 1000000



Download Comics (11.05 MB)

All thanks & credits go to "unknown 1".

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great effort,Prabhat.
Not only the post,i appreciate the literature also to go with it.
Keep it up.

PBC said...

chandan:Thanks.

Anonymous said...

thank you as usual you and the contributor are doing a great job, keep up the good work baby......
plz post some light hearted comics too..
thank you once again
ps: i loved the info you posted, THAT THE MOST UNIQUE THING ABOUT YOUR UPLOADS AND THIS BLOG !

PBC said...

ruchi:Welcome. I hope next post you will like.Keep visiting.

கோகுல் சத்தியமூர்த்தி said...

Thanks a lot for another quality release.

O.I.C. said...

good one.
[though looks like a library book]
{a tip: maybe u should crop & straighten the images and leave some margin also. }
and do continue posting..

PBC said...

கோகுல் சத்தியமூர்த்தி:Welcome friend.

O.I.C: Welcome.The history behind the scans: One friend found it in a USA library, with enthusiasm scanned it. I also think about it, but as some figures were already cropped, dropped the idea.

Dhaval said...

Great work again.. and the "side kick" info is too good.
I was not aware of this historic figure at all. Thanks to all who are contributing to this blog..

PBC said...

dm:Welcome.Keep visiting.

GamesBond Speaks said...

Hi Prabhat... Can you please check this link? I am not able to view the comic Chatrasal.

PBC said...

GamesBond Speaks: It's fixed. Try :)

pratapan said...

Hi Prabhat, thanks for the upload - but the link says its currently set to private - can you pls set that to public. - thank you

Vishal Bajpai said...

Hi Prabhat,

I just want to but these set of Amar Chitra Katha, Please let me know from where I can buy these. Mahamati Pranath is my favourite.

vikki said...

File is set to private can you change it please ? Thank you