Annals & Antiquities of Rajasthan
By James Tod and E. Jaiwant Paul
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Annals & Antiquities of Rajasthan - James Tod
INTRODUCTION
In his classic historical work Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan , first published in 1829, James Tod has immortalized the history, legends, and social customs of the Rajpoots. It is a massive work of original research and remains even today rich source material for detailed studies, despite some factual inaccuracies. Tod has captured the essence of Rajasthan and introduced into this work the delight of a romance and powerful human interest. It is touched with emotion on every page. Despite this, however, the Annals could never gain popularity because going through hundreds of pages of closely written and heavy matter demands concentration and time. The author’s style although rich and vivid, is at times confusing and meandering. I have seen the big book on many household shelves but it is never read and perhaps only occasionally referred to. It is for this reason I have attempted to present selections from this historical work in a concise and more readable form, so that it does not remain obscure and forgotten. I have also tried to retell Tod’s story in his own language and have used his spellings of names and places in order to retain some of the original ambience.
Tod’s classic is based on a variety of sources. He began with obscure genealogies contained in the Puranas, examined the Mahabharata and studied the historical poems of Chund or Chand Bardai and other bards. As he says, ‘Bards may be regarded as the historians of mankind.’ He then delved into the chronicles of Mewar, Marwar, Jessulmer, Kotah and Boondi. He took into account the more recent compilations of the famous Raja Jey Sing of Amber. He had a learned Jain scholar translate this mass of material into the more familiar Hindi dialects, which Tod had mastered. For his further research he sat amidst the ruins of ancient cities and picked the brains of knowledgeable people regarding their historical tradition through their poems, tales and religion. Being a cautious man, he further confirmed his facts. Tod studied architectural relics, monuments and inscriptions. He spent ten years absorbing the soul-stirring history of Rajpoot chivalry – their sacrifices and triumphs. He read of their final disasters brought about by the fact that they were divided by feudality while their enemies, though perhaps less brave, were united nations. Toward the end of his labours, Tod was probably more a Rajpoot than a Scotsman and the bleak northern country in which he had spent his boyhood was nothing more than a dream. It has been said that Tod’s involvement with Rajasthan was a love story, and the Annals the declaration of that love.
On occasion Tod narrates events in the language of the poetic bards of Rajasthan. These animated chronicles are dramatic and he feels they cannot always be reduced to the severe style of history. But the bards’ flowery language is convoluted and tangled. Too many events are crowded together and the chronological order of happenings is sometimes confusing. In the present selection and abridgement much simplification and condensation was necessary, but to retain the drama and romance, the original text of the bards is also brought in when required.
One drawback of these bardic histories is that they are confined almost exclusively to the martial exploits of their heroes. The authors tend to disregard civil matters and the arts; love and war are their favourite themes. For the Rajpoot the ideal of the warrior-hero is inculcated from childhood and death on the battlefield is the only worthwhile goal.
Another problem I have had with the Annals is that Tod has stressed the divisions between Hindus and Muslims. There is enough material in the Annals to colour history and personal relations. This was in line with the British policy of divide and rule.
Interestingly, Tod tried to establish ‘the common origin of the tribes of Rajasthan and those of ancient Europe’. He claimed that the Scythic tribes were the common link between the two. This was a variation of the Indo-Aryan hypothesis advanced by various authorities.
I have to the best of my ability, included short notes where necessary, which may clarify or elaborate Tod’s narrative and question or authenticate the historicity of some of the events stated. Several sources have been used for this purpose.
But what of the man James Tod himself? Who was he – of what parentage – what was his early life and education? One is compelled to confess one’s ignorance. Once he joined the East India Company we have more details. He was born in Scotland, about 1782. When he was only eighteen years old, in 1800, he came to India with a commission in the Bengal European regiment. Unlike many of his brother officers, Tod did not have the family influence to help him get early promotions and so he volunteered for the Molucca Isles and was transferred to the marine service. Afterwards, he ‘ran the gauntlet from Calcutta to Hardwar’, which was hazardous as in the early 1800s the British controlled only portions of eastern and southern India. This move set James Tod on a new and better career. In 1805 when he was nothing more than a subaltern in the British force at Gwalior, he commanded an escort attached to the embassy sent to Maharaja Sindia, who at that time was encamped at Mewar. Thus, the still-independent states of Rajasthan became his ‘home of adoption’ and he spent the best part of his life there. Tod, only twenty-four years old, resolved to be more than a mere political resident and became, successively, a geographer, historian and archaeologist. He started with the geography of Rajasthan. So far in the maps of India, this part of the country was a blank and Tod did a survey and produced a detailed and accurate map of Rajasthan, which he presented to the Marquis of Hastings in 1815. This proved very useful to the British in their subsequent operations. In between Tod also led an expedition against the Pindaris. He then moved on to become a historian.
He remained engrossed with his research till 1817 when he was appointed political agent of an extensive area comprising five major states of Rajasthan: Mewar, Marwar, Jessulmer, Kotah and Boondi. This promotion, as well as the high regard Tod was held in by the princes of Rajasthan, caused jealousy and suspicion at British headquarters, but he soon refuted it by the excellence of his work. In 1818 Mewar signed a treaty with the British and Colonel Tod as political agent quickly realized that Oodipoor (Udaipur) was in such a state of anarchy that his role would need to be more than advisory and he set about reorganizing the state economy. Within two years he had doubled the revenues of the state.
He did much for the people of these states and endeared himself to them. In a letter to a friend he wrote, ‘Regarding Bhilwana, the work of my hands, in February 1818 there was not a dog in it, in 1822 I left 3,000 houses of which 1,200 were bankers and merchants: an entire street arcaded was built under my directions and with my means . . . Whatever I did was in the Rana’s name . . . The affection of these people a thousand times repaid my cares . . . How health and comfort were spurned in their behalf! I have lain on my pallet, with high fever, my spleen so enlarged as to be felt in every part of my ribs; fifty leeches at work . . . all the while half dead with inanition.’ A small town in Rajasthan, which I visited a few years ago, is named after him: Todgarh.
Tod’s association with India was to end soon. After twenty-two years’ residence, his health had broken down and he was released from his duties so he could return to Britain. Even after this he decided to travel in the Aravulli Mountains and Aboo and went on to Saurashtra visiting historical places. He finally returned to his homeland in 1823.
Once back he scrutinized the material he had so assiduously collected and researched over long years. The result was the Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan, which was produced in two volumes in 1829 and 1832. This book opened up new paths in the study of the history, philosophy and religion of India and was of great significance for subsequent scholars. Another book of value, Travels in Western India, was posthumously published in 1839.
Tod’s health problems, however, continued and a complaint in the chest forced him to live in Italy for a year. He returned to England in 1835 intending to retire to a property he had purchased, but died at the early age of fifty-three, on the sixteenth anniversary of his marriage.
As a postscript, a recent comment made to me by I.K. Gujral, the former prime minister of India, should be mentioned. He said that in the 1920s and 1930s, stories from the Annals of Rajasthan were a source of inspiration and helped kindle the national spirit in the struggle against colonialism. I am sure Tod would have been happy to hear this!
THE RAJPOOTS
The origin of the Rajpoots is a subject of much debate among historians. In his rather dramatic description Tod says that Rajpoots are of Scythic origin and the cradle of the race has been variously described as ‘amidst the hills of the Caucasus’ and the steppes of Central Asia. The period when they migrated into India cannot be stated with exactitude. James Tod differentiates them from other Hindus and characterizes the Rajpoot thus: He delights in blood: his offering to the god of battle are blood and wine. He slays buffaloes, hunts and eats the boar and deer; he worships his horse, his sword, and the sun, and attends more to the martial song of the bard than to the litany of the Brahmin. The worship of the sword, or the Kharga shapna, is performed during the festival of Dussehra. The most powerful oath of the Rajpoot is by his sovereign’s throne or by his arms: ‘By my sword and shield.’ The worship of the sword (asi) may divide with that of the horse (aswa) the honour of giving a name to the continent of Asia. The Rajpoot also deems the advice of a woman important in exigencies and appends to her name the epithet Devi (godlike). He has a passion for games of chance and is often attached to sensual pleasures and when aroused is reckless. Love of liquor is deep-rooted, it is called amrit, the ambrosial in which sparkles the ruby seed of the pomegranate and the glory of the race of the fearless.
The Rajpoots are divided into three groups. The Sooryavansa or the race of the sun is a descendant of Rama. The Induvansa or Chandravansa, the lunar group, is descended from Crishna. The progenitor of the Agniculas is fire, and they were created at the summit of Aboo by the Brahmins to fight their battles.
sometextAuthor’s Note: A modern interpretation would hold that the mythology conceals a more rational truth, namely that the first ancestor was as powerful as the sun or fire or as serene and luminous as the moon.
sometextThese three groups are further subdivided into chatees rajculas, thirty-six royal clans. To mention a few, Gehlotes of Mewar, commonly called Sesodias are Sooryavansi, as are the Rahtores. The Bhattis of Jessulmer and the Tuars are of the lunar race. The Cuchwahas of Amber are descended from Cush. The Chohans, or the four-handed warriors, are the most valiant not only of the Agniculas, but the whole Rajpoot race.
The Rajpoot does not have a high regard for Brahmins and merely shows them outward civility. In funeral ceremonies, the Rajpoot warrior is carried to his final abode fully armed, shield on his back and sword in hand. Mausoleums in his memory are built by the son. According to their martial mythology, the soldier who falls in battle is exempted from the pains of another birth. Female immolation, or sati, is a well-known rite and magnificent cenotaphs are raised on the spot. No Rajpoot can marry in his own clan or amongst the enemies of his sovereign.
Armorial emblems of the Rajpoots go back to ancient times. In Europe they only became popular during the Crusades, when they were copied from the Saracens. The banner of Mewar exhibits a golden sun on a crimson field. Amber displays the panchranga, or five-coloured flag, the lion rampant on an argent field represents the now extinct state of Chanderi. The peacock was always a favoured emblem among Rajpoots and the feathers often adorn a helmet.
sometextAuthor’s Note: Today, Rajpoots form approximately twelve per cent of the population of Rajasthan. The rest would include Jats, Brahmins, Gujjars and other castes and a good proportion of aboriginal Bhils.
sometextasometextANNALS OF MEWAR
The princes of Mewar are considered the first of the thirty-six royal tribes. With the exception of Jessulmer, Mewar is the only dynasty which has outlived eight centuries of foreign domination and the Rana still holds the same territory as when the invader from Gazni first crossed the Indus. The Rana’s family claim descent from Rama’s son Loh, who is stated to have built Lahore, the ancient Lohkot, and ruled the area. According to genealogical lists Keneksen, fifty-sixth in descent from the deified Rama, was the founder of the Mewar dynasty. He emigrated from northern India to Saurashtra in AD 145.
His descendants captured territory in Saurashtra from the Parmara race and established themselves in the region. The capital of the new domain was set up at Balabhipoora, which is close to the present city of Bhavnagar. Nine generations ruled from here but little is known about them. History meets us again in AD 524 when Balabhipoora was invaded by another branch of Scythians who were based around the Indus. The Sooryavansi heroes fell in the defence of Balabhipoora and the capital was left desolate.
The only person to survive this calamity was the favourite wife of the Rana. She was not in Balabhipoora at the time of the siege and had gone to a shrine to seek blessings for the child she was going to bear. On her return journey she got news of the calamity that had engulfed the capital. Grief-stricken, she sought refuge in a mountain cave and there delivered a son. Sometime later, she submitted the child to the care of a Brahmini and charged her to bring him up as a Brahmin, and to marry him to a Rajpoot princess. She then mounted the funeral pyre and joined her lord. The Brahmini brought up the child like her own. She named him Goha, or cave born, and hence his descendants came to be known as Gehlotes. The child was difficult and by the time he was eleven years old, he had become unmanageable. He spent his days in the forests in the company of Bhils whose way of life suited his daring nature far more than that of the gentle Brahmins. So completely did he win the love of this wild tribe by his strength and courage that they elected him as their prince of Edur (Idar), a fact mentioned by Abul Fazal. The mark of sovereignty was bestowed on Goha by the Bhil chieftain drawing blood from a cut on his thumb and placing a teeka on Goha’s