LOCATION: West-Central India
GOTRA: Vashishta
VED: Yajurved
CAPITAL: Dhar Nagar
KULDEVI: Sachiyay Mata, Durga or Kali
DYNASTY: Parmar, Ponwar, Pawar, Puar, Paramara
VANSH: Agnivansha
RELIGION: Hindu - Shaivism
HEAD OF HOUSE:
The Head of the Ujjainia Parmar Clan is the Raja Saheb of Dumraon
STATES and ESTATES:
Chitor till 714, Dhar, Ujjain, Abu and Chandrawvati, as well as Agra Barkhera, Ajraoda, Baghal, Baghat, Balsan, Beri, Bhatkhera, Chhatarpur, Danta, Dewas, Dhar, Gangpur, Hapa, Jambugodha, Muli, Narsinghgarh, Pal Lahara, etc.
Akhnoor, Amargarh, Amarkot, Bakhtgarh, Bambori, Bhensola, Bijolian, Chaugain, Dhuwankheri, Dumraon, Jaitsisar, Jhadol (Kishangarh), Naharsar, Ranasar, Sonpalsar, etc.
The Ponwar, Panwar, Pawar or Puar clan of the Marathas, who ruled the state of Surgana near Nasik, and Dewas Snr, Dewas Jnr, Dhar and Rajgarh in Malwa and Chhatarpur in Bundelkhand from the 18th century to the mid-twentieth century, claimed the same descent as the Paramaras.
Rai Shankar, a descendant of Rao Jaggadeva, and some other Paramaras migrated to Punjab via Rajputana as a result of this invasion. Rai Shankar had three sons: Gheo (the ancestor of Ghebas), Teo or Tenu (the ancestor of Tiwanas) and Seo (the ancestor of Sials). Teo's descendants established the Mataur village in present-day Haryana, from where the Tiwanas migrated to other places. Some of them converted from Hinduism to Sikhism and Islam in the later centuries.
BRANCHES:
The Parmar Rajputs have 35 Sakha (branches), including Arjunvarma, Baharia, Barad, Bharsuria, Bholpuria, Chawda, Doda, Jaivarma, Mephawat, Pawar, Sounthia, Sumda, Umath or Umet, Yashoverma, etc.
Mori (Maurya): to which belonged Emperor Chandragupta, and the rulers of Chittor prior to the Guhilot dynasty of Vallabhi.
Sodha: the rulers of Dhat in the Indian desert. (see Amarkot)
Sankhla: Chiefs of Pungal (prior to Bhati dynasty), and also found in Marwar.
Khair: its capital was Khairalu.
Umra and Sumra: originally found in the desert, some became Muslim converts.
Vihal, or Bihal: Rulers of Chandravati (aka Abu), lost to the Chahamanas of Deora clan (see Sirohi)
Mahipawat: of the ancient stock of Dhar.
Balhar: found in the Northern desert.
Kaba: celebrated in Saurashtra in ancient times, a few still found in Sirohi.
Ujjainia:
Umata: Rajas of Umatwara in Malwa, for twelve generations.
Rehwar: petty chiefs in Malwa.
Dhunda: petty chiefs in Malwa.
Sorathia: petty chiefs in Malwa.
Harer: petty chiefs in Malwa.
Gandhawaria: chiefs of Mithila
The remaining branches, are either extinct, unknown, Muslim converts or are found beyond the Indus. They are as follows:- Chaonda, Khejar, Sagra, Barkota, Puni, Sampal, Bhiba, Kalpusar, Kalmoh, Kohila, Papa, Kahoria, Dhand, Deba, Barhar, Jipra, Posra, Dhunta, Rikamva, Taik etc.
ORIGINS: There are three schools of thought regarding the origin of the Parmar Rajput Dynasty.
1. They are said to be one of the four agni kula clans of the Rajputs, along with the Chauhans, Parihars (Pratihars) and Solankis (Chalukyas).
2. They are thought to be a tribe of Central India that rose to political prominence as feudatories of the Rashtrakuta rulers.
3. They are thought to have been agnatically related to the Rashtrakutas and at an early date they became a separate Rajput clan distinct from the Rashtrakutas.
PREDECESSORS AND SHORT HISTORY: The Paramara / Puar / Panwar dynasty was an early medieval Indian royal Rajput house that originated in the Mount Abu region of Rajasthan and later ruled over the Malwa region in central India, where they established themselves as the rulers in the ninth century, ruling from their capital at Dhārānagara, the present day Dhar city in Madhya Pradesh. The Paramara rulers were appointed as governors by the Kings of the Rashtrakuta dynasty when Malwa was conquered by the south Indian Emperor Govinda III. The Paramara kingdom was established by the Rashtrakuta dynasty of southern India as governors of Malwa when the south Indian Emperor Govinda III of the Rashtrakuta Dynasty conquered Malwa. Malwa was an Indo-Aryan kingdom in west-central India - the tableland to the north of the Vindhya Range, ruled by the Parmar Rajputs.
King Bhoj, who ruled from about 1010 to 1060, was a great polymath and philosopher king of medieval India; his extensive writings cover philosophy, poetry, medicine, veterinary science, phonetics, yoga, and archery. Under his rule, Malwa became an intellectual centre of India. Bhoj also founded the city of Bhopal to secure the eastern part of his kingdom. In the early fourteenth century (1305) Allaudin Khalji overran Malwa, although an inscription from Udaipur indicates that the Paramara dynasty survived until 1310, at least in the north-eastern part of Malwa. A later inscription shows that the area had been captured by the Delhi Sultanate by 1338.
Around this time, the Ujjainia Rajputs migrated to the east and settled at different places in Bihar-Dawa, Matila, Bhojpur and Jagdishpur (all in Shahabad district). They were locally known as Ujjainya Rajputs because of the place of their origin. By the early 16th century the Ujjainia rajputs had split into mutually hostile and warring groups. Out of this fratricidal struggle, Bhojpur was divided into three parts, namely, Jagdishpur, Dumraon and Chaugain, the latter falling to Kanwar Pratap Singh, who became the first independent Raja of Chaugain.
Not one remnant of independence exists to mark the greatness of the Paramaras, ruins are the sole records of their power. Today, they are mainly found in Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh and are one of the Thirty-Six Royal Races.
Maharaja Krishnaraja UPENDRA, 1st Raja of Malwa ca800/ca818 or 791/818, 14th in descent from Raja Aditya Panwar, ruler of Mount Abu in the 5th century; married and had issue.
Raja Vairisimha I (qv)
Raja Dambarasimha, Raja of Vagada at Amaravati, his descendants ruled at Arthuna as feudatories of the Paramaras of Malwa; married and had issue.
generation
Raja Dhanika, Raja of Vagada
Rao (name unknown), married and had issue.
Raja Chacha, Raja of Vagada, married and had issue.
Raja Chandapa, Raja of Vagada, married and had issue.
Raja Satyaraja, Raja of Vagada, married and had issue.
Raja Limbaraja, Raja of Vagada
Raja Mandalika, Raja of Vagada, married and had issue. fl.1059
Raja Chamundaraja, Raja of Vagada, married and had issue. fl.1079-1100
>> Raja Vijayaraja, Raja of Vagada fl.1108-1109
Raja VAIRISIMHA I, 2nd Raja of Malwa ca818/ca843, married and had issue. [NOTE: Some authors consider him and his successor as fictional, rather than historical.]
Raja Siyaka I (qv)
Raja SIYAKA I, 3rd Raja of Malwa ca843/ca893, married and had issue.
Raja Vakpati I [aka Vappairaja or Bappiraja or Krishnaraja] (qv)
Raja VAKPATI I, 4th Raja of Malwa ca893/ca918, married and had issue.
Raja Vairisimha II [aka Vajrata](qv)
Raja VAIRISIMHA II, 5th Raja of Malwa ca918/ca948, married and had issue.
Raja Siyaka II [aka Harsha or Simhadantabhatta] (qv)
Raja SIYAKA II, 6th Raja of Malwa ca948/972, he took Ujjain from the Pratiharas; married and had issue.
Parama-bhattakara Maharajadhiraja Pramaesvara Vakpati II Amoghavarsha, Srivallabha, Prithvivallabha [aka Munja / Vakpatirajadeva / Amoghavarsha] (qv)
Raja Sindhuraja (qv)
Parama-bhattakara Maharajadhiraja Pramaesvara VAKPATI II Amoghavarsha, Srivallabha, Prithvivallabha, 7th Raja of Malwa 972/ca995, early in his reign, he defeated the forces of the Guhilas of Mewar and plundered their capital Aghata, as a result of this victory, the Paramaras gained control of the eastern part of Mewar, including Chittorgarh, he also defeated the ruler of Gurjara, an ally of the Guhilas; he was attacked by the Chahaman Rajas initially but he was able to drive them back; he also defeated Raja Yuvaraja II, the Kalachuri ruler of Tripuri (aka Chedi), but gained little by his victory; married Rani Kusumavati, and had issue. He died about 995 in the Deccan.
Raja Aranyaraja, he was the founder of the Abu branch (see below)
Raja Chandana, he was the founder of the Jalore branch (see below)
Raja SINDHURAJA, 8th Raja of Malwa ca995/ca1010, married Rani Sasiprabha, a Nagar princess, daughter of Raja Sankhapala, and had issue.
Raja Bhojadeva (qv)
Parama-bhattaraka Maharajadhiraja Parameshvara Udayaditya (qv)
Rao Mang, married and had issue.
Rao Mahap, married and had issue, the Mahipawat Rajput clan.
Rao Jalap, married and had issue, the Jalpawat Rajput clan.
Raja BHOJADEVA, 9th Raja of Malwa 1010/1055, he was a great polymath and philosopher king of medieval India. His extensive writings cover philosophy, poetry, medicine, veterinary science, phonetics, yoga and archery. Under his rule, Malwa became an intellectual centre of India. Bhoj also founded the city of Bhopal to secure the eastern part of his kingdom; married and had issue.
Parama-bhattaraka Maharajadhiraja Parameshvara Jayasimhadeva I (qv)
Parama-bhattaraka Maharajadhiraja Parameshvara JAYASIMHADEVA I, 10th Raja of Malwa ca1055/ca1060, soon after his succession, a confederacy of the Kalachuri king Karna and the Chalukya king Bhima I had attacked Malwa; he was dethroned by the Western Chalukya Raja Someshwara I.
Parama-bhattaraka Maharajadhiraja Parameshvara UDAYADITYA, 11th Raja of Malwa ca1060/ca1087, he was able to gain control of the Paramara throne with help of the Chahamanas of Shakambhari; he liberated Dhar and Malwa from the yoke of oppressors; he was a patron of literature and art, and is said to have brought up his sons as scholars; married (amongst others), (a), Rani Vagheliji, married (b), Rani Solankiji, and had issue.
Raja Lakshmandeva (qv)
Raja Naravarman (qv)
Rao Jaggadeva (by Rani Solankiji), he was appointed the Governor of Berar and of a part of the Deccan by Raja Vikramaditya VI of Kalyani, married 1stly, Rani Virmati, daughter of the Chavda ruler of Tuktoda, and his wife, a daughter of Raja Karandev, Raja of Gujarat 1064/1093, married 2ndly, a daughter of Raja Siddhraja Jaisinh I, Solanki Raja of Patan, and had issue, the families of Muli and Akhnoor, and allegedly, the Ghebas, Tiwanas and Sials.
Rao Rindhawal (by Rani Vagheliji) aka Raja Ramdhawal Dev, 1st Raja of Dharanagar 1097/-, married and had issue.
Raja Roop Mahal, married and had issue, the Rajas of Dhalbhum, Raos of Bijolian, Maharajas of Dhar and Dewas, and others.
Raja Dharma Dev, married and had issue.
Raja Sarang Dev, married and had issue.
Raja Tarang Dev, married and had issue.
Raja Bhopal Dev, married and had issue.
Raja Amar Dev, married and had issue.
Raja Ajai Dev, Chief Minister for Maharaja Jaitugideva of Malwa, 1st Raja of Baghal, he arrived in the area of Baghal around 1260 and by 1265 had established his authority, married and had issue, the Rajas of Arki (see Baghal).
Raja Vijai Dev, married and had issue, the Rajas of Baghat.
Rao Madhan Dev, he became a hermit.
Rao Mahdev
Rao Hun
Rao Hamir, married and had issue.
Rao Sanwat
Rao Bard, married and had issue, the Barad Rajput clan.
generations
Raja Rudra Shah of Deogarh or Dharanagar in Gwalior, married and had issue.
Rao Deoridh Rai [aka Deo Rudh Rai], the eighth son, he is said to have settled in Lucknow pargana in about the 14th century; a large square stone is held in great reverence and is said to be the title deed of the family, brought from Delhi by their ancestors, who entered the services of the kings of Delhi and held important posts under them; married and had issue, the Rajas of Itaunja.
Kunwar Ram Singh
Kumari (name unknown), married Solanki Raja Jaipal.
Kumari (name unknown), married Bhati Rawal Bijairaj, son of Rawal Dusaj, Rawal of Ludarva
Kumari (name unknown), married the Sisodia Rana of Chittor.
NOTE: all three daughters were married at the same time.
Rao Mahapdhawal, married and had issue.
Rao Sankhal, married and had issue, the Sankhla Rajputs, including the two branches of Runecha (of Run) and Jangalwa (of Janglu from 1292).
Rao Sidhdhawal, married and had issue. He lived around 1100. [NOTE: A different source states that Rao Mang Rao, married twelve Ranis who between them gave birth to thirty-five sons, who gave rise to the 35 sakhas of the Parmar Rajputs.]
Rao Sumra, married and had issue. He ruled around 1053 (sic!)
Rao Sodh, married and had issue, the Sodha Rajput clan.
Rao Umar [aka Rana Umaji], married and had issue, the Umat Rajput clan, his descendants were defeated by their cousins, the Sodhis in around 1226.
generations
Rawat Sarangsen, Chief of the Umat Rajputs 1345/1375, the Parmar Rajputs were driven out of their home by the Sammas in around 1347 (1334 according to others), they then first settled at Dhar, their old home, subsequently he acquired land in the Doab between the Sind and Parbati rivers in about 1351 and obtained the title of Rawat from the Rana of Chittor, married and had issue. He died 1375.
Rawat Jasrajji, Chief of the Umat Rajputs 1375/1397, married and had issue.
Rawat Khemkaranji, Chief of the Umat Rajputs 1397/1437, married and had issue.
Rawat Haluji, Chief of the Umat Rajputs 1437/1447, married and had issue.
Rawat Karam Singh [aka Karamji], Chief of the Umat Rajputs 1447/1489, he was 4th in descent from Sarangsen, Governor of Ujjain around 1489, he received a sanad for 22 districts in the part of Malwa later known as Umatwara; married and had issue (see Rajgarh for further descendants). He died after 1489.
Rao Mangrao [NOTE: see family tree at the end.]
Rani Shyamala Devi, married Maharajadhiraja Vijay Singh of Nagda (see Udaipur), and had issue.
Rani Alhana Devi, she married Raja Gayakarnadeva, the Kalachuri Raja of Chedi. She died after 1155.
Raja LAKSHMANADEVA, 12th Raja of Malwa ca1087/ca1097, he is said to have defeated the Kalachuri (Yadava) Raja of Tripuri.
Raja NARAVARMAN, 13th Raja of Malwa ca1097/ca1134 or 1097/1111, he is believed to have been the author of more than one Prashasti, married and had issue.
Raja Yashovarman (qv)
Raja YASHOVARMAN, 14th Raja of Malwa ca1134/ca1142, married and had issue.
Raja Jayavarman I (qv)
Raja JAYAVARMAN I, 15th Raja of Malwa ca1142/ca1160
INTERREGNUM 1144/1174, an usurper named Ballala captured power in Malwa, but was defeated by the Chalukya rulers of Gujarat, who remained in control.
Raja VINDHYAVARMAN, 16th Raja of Malwa ca1160/ca1193
Raja SUBHATAVARMAN, 17th Raja of Malwa ca1193/ca1210
Raja ARJUNAVARMAN I, 18th Raja of Malwa ca1210/ca1218, married and had issue.
Mahakumara Harishchandra, married and had issue.
Raja Devapala I (qv)
Raja DEVAPALA, 19th Raja of Malwa ca1218/ca1239, married and had issue.
Raja Jaitugideva (qv)
Raja Jayavarman II (qv)
Raja JAITUGIDEVA, 20th Raja of Malwa ca1239/ca1256, during his reign, Paramara power greatly declined because of invasions from the Yadava Raja, the Sultan of Delhi, and the Vaghela Raja Visala-deva of Gujarat.
Raja JAYAVARMAN II, 21st Raja of Malwa ca1256/ca1269, he also faced attacks from the same powers as his brother had faced and most likely he moved the Paramara capital from Dhara to the hilly Mandapa-Durga (present-day Mandu), which offered a better defensive position.
Raja JAYASIMHA II, 22nd Raja of Malwa ca1269/ca1274, married and had issue.
Raja Arjunavarman II (qv)
Raja ARJUNAVARMAN II, 23rd Raja of Malwa ca1274/ca1283, he proved to be a weak ruler and faced rebellion from his minister, as well as an invasion by the Yadava Raja Ramachandra and the Chauhan Raja Hamir Dev of Ranthambhor; married and had issue.
Raja Bhoja II (qv)
Raja BHOJA II, 24th Raja of Malwa ca1283/-, he was probably under the control of his minister and also faced an invasion from Raja Hamir Dev of Ranthambhor; married and had issue.
Raja Mulkh Dev [Mahlakadeva] (qv)
Raja Jagat Dev, he migrated away from Jagner near Dholpur and established the Parmar rule in the Khatra region of Bengal around early 1300's after winning over the local ruler of Supur Raj, Chintamani Dhoba; he was a devotee of Lord Shiva and later assumed the title of "Dhabal Dev" (Dhabal or Dhawal - Pure White a synonym for Lord Shiva); married and had issue (see Dhalbhum).
Raja Bhojraj, Raja of Shahbad 1320/1333, migrated to Shahabad around 1320, married and had issue. He died 1333.
Raja Devraj [Santan Singh], married and had issue, ancestor of the Rajas of Bhojpur, later of Jagdishpur, Dumraon and Chaugain.
Raja MAHLAKADEVA, 25th and last Raja of Malwa -/ca1305, he was defeated and killed by the army of Alauddin Khilji; married and had issue. He died 1305.
Rao Sahasbal, died 1333.
Jalore and Siwana, were betrayed into Chauhan Rao Kirtipala's hands by their own servants, the Dahiyas.
Raja Vakpati II, 7th Raja of Malwa ca974/ca995, married and had issue.
Raja Chandana (qv)
Raja Chandana, Paramara Raja of Jalore, married and had issue.
Raja Devaraja (qv)
Raja Devaraja, Paramara Raja of Jalore, married and had issue.
Raja Aparajata (qv)
Raja Aparajata, Paramara Raja of Jalore, married and had issue.
Raja Vijjala (qv)
Raja Vijjala, Paramara Raja of Jalore, married and had issue.
Raja Dharavarsha (qv)
Raja Dharavarsha, Paramara Raja of Jalore, married and had issue.
Raja Visala (qv)
Raja Visala, last Paramara Raja of Jalore bef1117/1174,
......
Raja Kuntapala, Raja of Siwana, probably a descendant of Raja Visala, he was likely a feudatory of the Chalukyas.
Rao Jalamsinhji, a scion of the ruling Parmar Dynasty of Ujjain, who in either the 10th or 11th century, left the Mount Abu area and travelled to Gujarat in search of fortune. He founded the city of Jhalod and made it his capital.
.......
Rao Jalamsinhji II, Rao of Jalore -/1247, fifth in descent, he was killed by Muslim invaders in 1247, together with his family, with the exception of the youngest son and an uncle (or brother, Rao Limdevji, founder of Kadana), they remained landless till 1255; married and had issue.
Rao Santji, 1st Rana of Sant Rampur 1255/-, he founded the village of Sunth, much later a Second Class state in the Rewa Kantha agency till 1924, which he named after himself; married and had issue.
Rao Navghanji Santji (see Sant Rampur)
ABU: The ancient name of Mount Abu is Arbudaanchal. In the Puranas, the region has been referred to as Arbudaranya ("forest of Arbhuda") and 'Abu' is a diminutive of this ancient name. Abu was ruled by the Parmar rajputs from at least the 10th century, and continued in their possession till the conquest of Mount Abu in 1311 by Rao Lumba of the Deora-Chauhan dynasty brought to an end their reign there and marked the decline of Mount Abu. He shifted the capital city to Chandravati in the plains. After the destruction of Chandravati in 1405, Rao Shasmal made Sirohi his headquarters. The Arbuda Mountains (Abu Parvat ' Mount Abu) region is said to be the original abode of the Gurjars. These Gurjars (Gujars or Gujjars) migrated from the Arbuda mountain region. As early as sixth century, they set up one or more principalities in Rajasthan and Gujarat. Almost all or a larger part of Rajasthan and Gujarat had been known as Gurjaratra (country ruled or protected by the Gurjars) or Gurjarabhumi (land of the Gurjars) for centuries before the Mughal period.
CHANDRAWATI: Chandravati was the major city in past said to once been eighteen miles in circuit. Its prosperity seems to have lasted from the seventh to the beginning of the fifteenth century. Tradition gives it an earlier origin than Dhar, making it the metropolis of Western India, when the Parmara was paramount lord to whom the nine castles of the desert (Nokoti Maru) were the grand subordinate fiefs. In the seventh century, then subordinate to Dhar, it proved a place of refuge to Raja Bhoj, when, by some northern invader, he was forced to flee from his capital. From the Parmars it was wrested by the Chauhan chieftains of Sirohi, and, on the establishment of the Chalukya dynasty of Anhilwad Patan (942) the rulers of Chandravati became its vassals. The remains at Chandravati and on mount Abu seem to point to the eleventh and twelfth centuries as the time of greatest wealth and splendour. The materials recovered by excavation suggested that it was established around 7th century and expanded into a large settlement (about 50 hectare) around 10th or 11th century when it was a capital township. In 1024 AD, Chandravati was attacked and plundered by Mahmud Ghazni when he passed through Rajasthan to attack Anhilwad Patan. After defeating Prithviraj III in 1192 AD, the Muslim army also attacked Chandravati. In 1197, its rulers Prahladan and Dharavarsh, as feudatories to Bhimdev II (1178 - 1243) of Anhilwad, encamping near Abu, attempted to hold the entrance into Gujarat against Kutb-ud-din Aibak (1192 -1210). Notwithstanding their strong position they were attacked, defeated, and put to flight. Great wealth fell into the victor's hands, and, as he passed on and took Anhilvada, it is probable that, on his way, he plundered Chandravati. Kutb-ud-din's expedition was little more than a passing raid, and Dharavarsh's son succeeded him. He, or his successor, was about 1270 defeated and driven out by the Chauhans of Nadol.He, or his successor, was about 1270 defeated and driven out by the Chauhans of Nadol. In about 1315 AD Chandravati passed into the hands of Deora Chauhans. Then (1304) came Alauddin Khilji's final conquest of Gujarat, and Chandravati, with Anhilwad as the centre of Muslim power, lost almost all independence. Another hundred years completed its ruin. In the beginning of the fifteenth century, by the founding of Sirohi (1405), Chandravati ceased to be the seat of a Hindu chief, and, a few years later (1411 - 1412), its buildings and skilled craftsmen were carried off to enrich the new capital of Sultan Ahmed Shah I (1411 - 1443) of Gujarat Sultanate. Since then Chandravati has remained forsaken and desolate. Even its ruins, sold and carried off as building materials, have all but disappeared. Though some are more modern, most of the Chandravati remains belong to the eleventh and twelfth centuries, the best period of Abu architecture (1032-1247). Sahasamala Devada shifted his capital to Sirohi around 1450 AD, and from then on Chandravati lost its glory.
Raja Sindhuraja, 1st (Paramara) Raja of Chandrawati, he founded Chandrawati in the early 10th century
......
Raja Purnapala fl.1045
Raja Dhandhavdeva, Raja of Abu, married and had issue. fl. ca1060
Rani Lavani De, she married Rao Pratap Dev of Patan, Gujarat, and had issue (see Solanki Dynasty)
......
Raja Yasodhavala fl.1150
Maharajadhiraja Mahamandeleshwara Dharavarsha, Raja of Abu fl.1163-1214, married Rani Sringara Devi, daughter of Mahararadhiraja Paramesvara Kelhana, Raja of Naddul (aka Nadol) fl.1193.
Raja Somasimha fl.1233
Raja Dhandhuka, Raja of Abu
Raja Pratapamalla or Pratapasimha fl.1286, Raja of Abu -/ca1288, he was defeated by Raja Vijada Chauhan from Jalore.
Raja Vikramasinha, Raja of Abu ca1288/ca1300
Raja Jaganasimha, maternal uncle of Alha and Udal of Mahowa, both Generals in the Chandela army, married Rani Jamuna Kanwar, and had issue.
The Parmar rulers of Bhinmal (also known as Kiradu), are a branch of the rulers of Chandrawati.
Raja Devaraja fl. 1002
Raja Krishnaraja fl.1060-1066
Raja Somesvara fl.1161
Raja Jayatasimha fl.1182
FAMILY TREES:
See Parmar Rajput Family Tree.
Continued from above:
Rao Mangrao
Rao Umarsi
Rana Kharsiji
Rana Paimji
Rana Devrajji
Rana Singhenji (qv)
Rana Singhenji
Rana Jitsinghji
Rana Bhimsinghji
Rana Dholji
Rana Bhumbiharji
Rana Vir Dhoulji (qv)
Rana Vir Dhoulji
Rana Singhanji
Rana Bajrangji
Rana Madhyarajji
Rana Gajrajji
Rana Lakhansiji (qv)
Rana Lakhansiji
Rana Jaspalji
Rana Rajpalji
Rana Moharsiji
Rana Amarsenji
Rana Patalsiji
Rana Gajvahji (qv)
Rana Gajvahji
Rana Bhausinghji
Rana Sheraji
Rawat Mojaji
Rawat Narsinghji
Rawat Udhoji
Rawat Dhiraji
Rawat Sarangsenji, Chief of the Umat Rajputs 1345/1375
Hand Book On Rajputs" by Captain A.H. Bingley. Asian Educational Services. New Delhi. 1986.
"The Growth Of The Paramara Power In Malwa" by Dr. K.N. Seth M.A., Ph.D., Progress Publishers, Bhopal; 1st Edn. 1978
Page 67, Mediaeval History of Rajasthan: Western Rajasthan, by Rajvi Amar Singh: Rana Amba of Janglu was killed by his younger brother Moonja who occupied the state of Janglu. Uda, the son of Moonja, also killed Gopal-de, the son of Amba. Mehraj, son of Gopal, took the revenge of his father and grand father's murder and killed both Moonja and Uda and threw them in the well of the village Dhingsari.
Sinchimaay or Sachi Goddess - Queen of all Gods and wife of Indra.