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  2. Bhatner fort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhatner_fort

    Bhatner was wrested by Timur by defeating Bhatti King Rai Dul Chand. A mention has been made in "Tuzuk-e-Timuri" (Autobiography of Timur) about this fort and he stated this fort one of the strongest and secured fort of India. [8] Timur invaded India in 1398, when he held a vast empire in the Middle East and Central Asia.

  3. Hanumangarh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanumangarh

    The city was once called Bhatner (alternatively spelled Bhatnair) because it was founded by king Bhupat in 255 AD. It remained in the control of the Rajputs of Bhati clan and faced a historic siege by Timur in 1391, during which the Bhati Raput king Dulachand lost the fort for a short time. [4] The fort was later occupied by Rao Jetsa of ...

  4. Timurid conquests and invasions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timurid_conquests_and...

    Pir Muhammad then joined Timur. The governor of the Bhatner fort was defeated, and Timur destroyed the fort and the city In the Siege of Bhatner also known as Sack of Bhatner Fort (1398). [12] He also faced resistance by Khap militias in Meerut but he was still able to approach Delhi, arrived in 1398. In this way, he already defeated all ...

  5. Bhati - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhati

    He suffered tough resistance in India only from the Bhati ruler, Rai Dul Chand of Bhatner. Rajputs and Muslims fought together against Timur under him but the Bhatner fort was ultimately sacked with the city burnt and laid waste. [16] [17] The Rathores, the Balochs, the Dehli Sultans, and eventually the Mughals had all clashed with the Bhati ...

  6. Hanumangarh district - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanumangarh_district

    The district is located in the extreme north of Rajasthan. It has an area of 12,645 km 2, a population of 1,774,692 (2011 census) and a population density of 184 persons/km 2.

  7. History of Jaisalmer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Jaisalmer

    [8] [9] The fort was initially known as Dera Rawal, and later referred to as Dera Rawar, which with the passage of time came to be pronounced Derawar, its present name. [9] Derawar Fort built by Bhati ruler Rai Jajja Bhati in 9th century. The state of Jaisalmer had its foundations in what remains of the Empire ruled by the Bhati dynasty.

  8. Forts in India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forts_in_India

    All fortifications whether European or Indian were termed forts. Thereafter this became the common usage in India. In local languages, the fort names are suffixed by local word for fort thus usage of the Sanskrit word durga, or Urdu word qila or the Hindi word garh or gad in Rajasthan, and Maharashtra is common. [1]

  9. Anchuthengu Fort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anchuthengu_Fort

    Anchuthengu fort Anjengo Fort Anchuthengu Fort. The fort was the East India Company's first permanent post on the Malabar Coast.In November 1693, John Brabourne was sent by the British East India Company (EIC) to Attingal, where he obtained from Rani Ashure a grant of a site for a fort on the sandy spit of Anchuthengu (then known as Anjengo), together with the monopoly of the pepper trade of ...