The Jats - Their Role in the Mughal Empire/Note by Wiki editor

From Jatland Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Digitized & Wikified by: Laxman Burdak IFS (R)

Go to Index of the Book

The Jats - Their Role in the Mughal Empire
The book by Dr Girish Chandra Dwivedi, Edited by Dr Vir Singh 2003.

Note by Wiki editor

Dr. G.C. Dwivedi has assembled some of the rarest evidence available about Jat history and presented facts in a very analytical and positive way. He is the second most reliable authority on Jat history after K.R. Qanungo.

Notes on Wiki Format

  • Paging has been done on the top left corner of each page.
  • In this online edition the footnates which were running to next page have been confined to first page only where it is mentioned.
  • Subtitles in each chapter have been added as per requirement of the text for better understanding.
  • Images, except front cover, are not part of the original book but have been added in online edition from Jatland Wiki gallery to make content interesting and for better understanding of the text.

Outstanding contribution by Dr. G.C. Dwivedi

Their Role in the Mughal Empire by Professor Girish Chandra Dwivedi, is a renowned publication about Jat history and role of Jats during the Mughal Empire. Content from the some chapters of this book is provided here for the study and research on Jat history. The study proves that Paradoxical though it might appear and strange though it might seem, the Jat uprising of 1669 under Gokula occurred at a time when the Mughal government was by no means weak or imbecile. In fact this period of Aurangzeb’s reign witnessed the climax of the Mughal Empire.

Though many erudite scholars like Prof. Jadunath Sarkar, Prof. Kalika Ranjan Qanungo, Prof. Satish Chandra, Prof. Irfan Habib have written extensively on the history of the Jats, there is a feeling that there are many gaps in these studies that come in the way of truly appraising the contributions of the Jats to the emergence of national ethos. The contribution of Dr. G.C. Dwivedi in this respect is outstanding.

A detailed description of the various phases of the Jat rebellion is offered by Sh. Girish Chandra Dwivedi in this book. After thirteen years of its first publication in 1989, the Surajmal Memorial Education Society has updated this work in year 2003 edited by Dr Vir Singh.

About the Book

For an in depth understanding of the history of the Mughal Empire an intensive study of different indigenous powers is essential. The role of powers viz the Marathas and the Rajputs has received careful study from historians. But no serious studies have been undertaken in the case of the Jats of this period.

This study shows that in the Post-Aurangzeb period, the powerful elements at the court found it expedient to conciliate the Jats in order to retain power and to rejuvenate the declining Empire. As the most powerful Indian potentate, Jat Maharaja Suraj Mal occupied a key-position in the evolution of contemporary affairs in the Post-Panipat period. This constitutes a fascinating phase in the annals of the medieval India.

The author, Dr. G.C. Dwivedi has high-lighted the historic role of the Jats in the history of this period. He has assembled some of the rarest evidence available,especially the unpublished Persian manuscripts preserved in the British Museum, London, which the author has telescoped into a knowledgeable and inspiringly readable historical analysis. Perhaps he the second historian after Kanungo,who has spiritedly come out vindicatind the position of the Jats.

In the present corrected and updated edition twenty annotations have been added for clarifying and describing certain facts, names and places based on recent findings.

Dr Girish Chandra Dwivedi has cleared the controversies about the paternity and death of Maharaja Suraj Mal created by some biased historians.

About the Author

Late Professor Girish Chandra Dwivedi born on 24th December 1938, did his Post Graduation from Department of Medieval Modern History, University of Allahabad. He completed his Ph.D. under the supervision of Late Prof. Ishwari Prasad, from Agra University. He was appointed as Lecturer in Kashi Vidyapeeth, Varansi, in 1962.

Professor Dwivedi died on 27th May 1979 as Professor and Head of Department of History and Dean of Students Welfare Kashi Vidyapeeth. Dr. Dwivedi’s research articles have been published in several Journals.Of special interest is his research paper published in Journal of Indian History, 1970, p.377 ff.


Go to Index of the Book