Shivaji

   

Image:Shivaji.jpg

Shivaji Bhosale (February 19, 1630 - April 3, 1680) or Chhatrapati Shri Shivaji Maharaj , as he is known with his titles in India, was a Hindu Maratha ruler of Maharashtra between 1645 and 1680. He was the creator of the Maratha Empire, argued by some to be the beginning of his alleged vision of a Hindu Swarajya, or Sovereign Hindu State.

See History of Maharashtra

He was born at the Shivneri Fort. His father's name was Shahaji Bhosale and mother's name was Jijabai. With the constant mixture of popular lore and genuine history, the understanding of who Shivaji's influences, mentors and friends were is often uncertain. It is said by many that he was guided in warfare tactics by one Dadoji Konddev up to age 8. But the greatest influence on him was of his mother Jijabai, both spiritually and worldly ways. His father Shahaji was also a role model to him, since he tried twice to achieve what Shivaji achieved ultimately. It is also said by many that Samarth Ramdas Swamy, a famous saint of those day, was Shivaji's spiritual Guru. He wrote the following about Shivaji:

Nishchayacha MahaMeru
Bahuta Janansi Aadharu
Janata Raja ...

The above translated from Marathi language means:

[Shivaji is] someone who achieves what he decides
[Shivaji is] someone who is fair and understands and supports his subjects
[Shivaji is] a wise and knowledgable king...

Because of these qualities, he was able to ignite a revolution in people's minds about opposing the oppressive Mughal rule. As a result, even after his death, Western Maharashtra fought against Aurangzeb for 27 years without stable leadership or authority structure to retain and expand the kingdom which Shivaji founded.

At the time, India was dominated by four major Muslim powers:

  1. The Mughals at Delhi, since 1193,
  2. the Adilshah dynasty of Bijapur, established in the year of 1489,
  3. the Nizam Shahi dynasty of Ahmadnagar, established in the year of 1490
  4. and the Qutub Shahi dynasty of Golconda, established 1512.

Shahaji Bhosle was a loyal servant to the Bijapur Sultanate and had a small Jahagir near Pune given by the Sultan. Shahaji bequeathed his jahagir (fiefdom) of Pune and Supa, which was practically independent, to his son, Shivaji, who founded the Maratha Rajya sometimes also referred to as Hindavi Swaraj. He united the Maratha Chiefs from Maval, Konkan and Desh regions for a higher purpose—the promotion of Maharashtra Dharma—and carved out a small kingdom. Shivaji became an inspirational leader to his people and took the onus of leadership of the Marathas. 100 years after the demise of the great Hindu kingdom of Vijayanagara, when the Muslims ruled supreme in all of India, the rebellious Shivaji provided an impetus to the Marathas and other Hindus with martial tactics, which the Marathas effectively used against the sultans of the peninsula as well as the Mughals.

Some of Shivaji's close associates were also his primary army chieftains:
Tanaji Malusare
Bajiprabhu Deshpande
Firangoji Narsala
Murarbaji Deshpande
Prataprao Gujar
Kanhoji Jedhe
Kondaji Farjand
Balaji Avaji Chitanis
Netaji Palkar
Lay Patil Koli

Guerilla warfare and success in Mughal times

Shivaji and his fast forces made it a habit of attacking and occupying various forts in the Western Ghats and the Konkan coast. The Bijapur Sultans were unable to handle the crafty Maratha king and sued for peace, when an agreement was reached between Afzal Khan, a general of the sultans of Bijapur and Shivaji.

Afzal Khan and Shivaji met as previously arranged in an open area sans any weapons or attendants. However, both men had secretly armed themselves, as there was no trust between them. Afzal Khan, pretending to be friendly, attempted to embrace Shiavaji with the motive of strangulating him. Afzal Khan had a giant body and was almost 6 feet in height. Shivaji immediately whipped out his famous finger grip weapon, four curving razor-hooks called tiger-claws, and gutted the general right then and there on the spot. Upon Shivaji’s signal, his fighters appeared from the hills to empty the general’s camp of supplies and recruited many of his soldiers to Shivaji’s forces.

By now Aurangzeb was the emperor in Delhi. He was watching Shivaji’s adventures and successes with consternation. He sent his trusted uncle, Shaista Khan (Mumtaz Mahal’s brother), with a large army to handle Shivaji in Deccan. Within three years in 1663, Shivaji had lost most of his conquests to a relentless attack by a well-trained Mughal army.

After driving Shivaji from Pune, Shaista Khan had taken residence in a house there, which was well guarded. No Maratha was allowed in the city of Pune. One day a wedding party had obtained special permission and it was the same day a group of Maratha prisoners were being brought to Pune. In the cover of the night, the bridegroom’s party and the prisoners met at a prearranged site and quietly entered the general’s house. After disposing of the guards they broke into the house by breaking a wall and killed all the residents. Shaista Khan lost only his thumb and consciousness but was taken to a safe place by the servant maids. The attackers mistook another man as the general and killed him. There was no looting and they left as quietly as they had come in.

This incident infuriated the emperor and he sent a full force of Mughal army to subdue Shivaji, after Shivaji crafted an attack on the fort at Surat. The famed Jai Singh was sent with an army of fifteen thousand to Deccan to confront Shivaji. Shivaji’s forces were outnumbered and he was forced to surrender twenty forts and a considerable indemnity as well as a personal submission to Jai Singh under strict security precautions. The Mughals had learnt well from their past experiences with the wily Shivaji.

Shivaji had still maintained a small force and several forts. During Aurangzeb’s attack on the Bijapur sultanate in 1666, Maratha defections prompted Aurangzeb to demand that Shivaji should visit Delhi. Shivaji agreed and went with much pomp. He was not well received by the emperor and was retained in Delhi under house arrest. This called for another miraculous escape on the part of Shivaji. He hid in a basket of confectionaries which was meant to be sent to religious persons of the city and was carried outside the city gates, from where he made his way to Maharashtra, undetected. Following this the reputation of Shivaji soared and that of Aurangzeb soured.

Coronation, Death

In 1674, Shivaji elevated himself to kingship and in an elaborate ceremony in Hindu tradition (coronation) and proclaimed himself as a true Kshatriya.

The 300th anniversary of his coronation in 1974 was marked by major celebrations by the state government of Maharashtra (India).

Chatrapathi Shivaji Maharaj, as he was called, he conducted a digvijaya by attacking Mughal encampments in Berar and Kandesh. As an independent sovereignty, he set his sights south. With his Maratha forces he defeated and captured the forts at Vellore and Jinji in Madras. Shivaji died in 1680 at Raigad, at the age of fifty from a bout of dysentery. He left behind an ill-defined, non- contiguous region as his kingdom. His premature death at the age of 50 (April 5, 1680) created a vacuum, though his place in Indian history has been documented, recognised and remembered.

Quality of rule

He stabilised the state with effective civil and military administration and adopted a policy of religious tolerance to accommodate all religions and sects in his state. He was the first Maratha Chhatrapati (ruler) to start the Raj Shaka (royal era) and issue the gold coin, shivarai hon - on the occasion of his coronation (1674).

Shivaji made it a policy never to desecrate a mosque or seize women. This made it possible for Muslim men to serve in his army. With the help of this larger force Shivaji conquered more land along the coast, between Mumbai and Goa. Whenever the enemy forces were close on his heels and it appeared as though he would surely be captured, crafty Shivaji would miraculously escape. This added to his stories of bravery and legendary status as a king, who could not be defeated.

He also created a government with democratic structure, where 12 ministers were elected by the public. The chief of ministers (prime minister) was chosen by the public.

He was the second only king in Indian history to have his own navy.

Maratha Rajya after his death

After his death, two of his sons competed for the kingdom and Sambhaji was the victor. He continued to antagonize Aurangzeb and remained a thorn on his side. Prince Akbar, who was rebelling against his father, was sheltered by Sambahaji. As fate would have it Aurangzeb was drawn back to Deccan to give chase to his errant son. The emperor and his entourage moved to Deccan in the 1682 never to return to Delhi until his death twenty-five years later.

Shivaji's son, Sambhaji (1657-1689), during his short reign of nine years, in addition to domestic feuds, was confronted with the Siddis, the Portuguese and the Mughals. His cold-blooded murder (1689) by the Mughals inspired a wave of patriotism in the Maratha region, and the Marathas, under the leadership of his brother, Rajaram (1670-1700), waged a War of Independence against the imperial army of Aurangzeb who, until his death (1707), struggled in vain to eradicate Maratha power. Tarabai, Rajaram's widow, declared her son, Shivaji II (1700), Chhatrapati. But when Sambhaji's son, Shahu was released (1707) from Mughal captivity and gained support from the Maratha elite, a civil war ensued in Maharashtra, and Tarabai set up a separate gadi (throne) at Panhala (Kolhapur). A palace revolution (1714), removed Shivaji II and Tarabai declared Sambhaji (1698-1760), second son of Rajaram, the Chhatrapati of Kolhapur, which the Shahu finally recognised by the Treaty of Warna (1731).

Remembering Shivaji

While most Indians remember Shivaji with admiration, certainly in his putative homeland of Maharashtra (Both the Chatrapati Shivaji International Airport and the Chatrapati Shivaji Terminus, each located in Mumbai, are named after him.), there have always been groups, though small in comparison, who questioned and still question the unassaailability of Shivaji's alleged cause and his means of effecting said cause. Of course, the Mughal rulers against whom he fought utilizing guerilla tactics and sly means of escape from captor situations, termed him an annoying mountain rat. A few contemporary historians have argued against the valorizing of Shivaji as the lone "Hindu king" fighting for a Hindu kingdom in a land dominated by Muslims. This is in response to the contention by many modern Indian historians that he was truly fighting for universal Hindu self-governance. The critics point to his numerous expedient alliances with Muslim Nizams (rulers) and failure to continue fighting against 'foreign rule' after consolidation of a considerable state as proof of not living up to this alleged goal.

Some would say that neither camp, the former asserting his Hindu self-governant dreams, the latter averring his power-driven hypocrisy to the ostensible 'Hindu' cause, is correct, and indeed both do Shivaji great injustice. The third view would hold that Shivaji's intention in creating an empire was just that, to create an empire, and his requisitioning of a Varanasi brahmin to establish him in the Rajput (kshatriya) class (some say he was originally low-caste, others of a clerk status) was merely a very self-conscious move to consolidate royal power in a caste-conscious age, not an attempt to galvanize an anti-Muslim movement on a pan-Indian level.

In reality, it is improbable that definitive answers regarding Shivaji's own feelings on his quest for a kingdom will ever truly surface, being that in both his lifetime and decades, even centuries after his death, the famous eulogizing bards of the Hindu tradition had already spent years writing fantastic odes to his bravery and dharma, making conscious analogies to the birth of the Hindu god Krishna as savior or attempting to establish his close connection to Hindu saints of the era and as a devout follower of Shiva. Unfortunately, much of what we know of Shivaji is third-hand, and to filter the legend from fact, much less his true motivations in empire-building, is a difficult task. Essentially, it is a possibility that Shivaji himself never claimed to be fighting for all Hindus everywhere, and that this responsibility was foisted posthumously on him by future generations with their own agendas in propagating such ideas. It is also a possibility that the preceding statement is entirely false.

Today, in the face of Hindutva forces against whom allegations of unrealistically pro-Hindu revisions of History and counter-arguments about anti-Hindu bigots proclaiming 'secularism' exist, the only voice that rings loudest is that of the majority. Whether rightly or wrongly, Shivaji's image in the larger public eye has remained relatively untainted by charges of opportunism and betrayal of the apparent Hindu cause he had undertaken. For now, the general image of the leader, fiery no doubt, is perhaps best summarized in the words of a great Bengali historian, R. Majumdar, who had these well-known words of praise for Shivaji:

"Shivaji was not only the maker of the Maratha empire, but also the greatest constructive genius of medieval India. States fall, empires break up, dynasties become extinct, but the memory of a true 'hero as King' like Shivaji remains an imperishable historical legacy for an entire human race. The Pillar of people's hopes. The Centre of a World's desire to animate the heart, to kindle the imagination and to inspire the brain of succeeding ages to the highest endeavour".

It would be pertinent to also quote what another historian, Bamber Gascoigne, wrote about the significance of the advent and enterprise of Shivaji:

"He (Shivaji) taught the modern Hindus to rise to the full stature of their growth. So, when viewed with hindsight through twentieth century glasses, Aurangzeb on the one side and Shivaji on the other come to be seen as key figures in the development of India. What Shivaji began Gandhi could complete … and what Aurangzeb stood for would lead to the establishment of the separate state of Pakistan." (The Great Moghuls, London: Constable)


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