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English: Short biography of Samarth Ramdas मराठी: समर्थ रामदास यांचे संक्षिप्त चरित्र Language
Ramdas (c. 1608 – c. 1682), pronunciation ⓘ also known as Samarth Ramdas Swami or Ramdas Swami, was an Indian Hindu saint, philosopher, poet, writer and spiritual master. He was a devotee of the Hindu deities Rama and Hanuman .
Sambhaji and 25 of his advisors were captured by the Mughal forces of Muqarrab Khan in a skirmish at Sangameshwar in February 1689. Sambhaji's positions were spied upon by the Maratha officials close to him, who conveyed this information to Muqarrab Khan. Accounts of Sambhaji's confrontation with the Mughal ruler and his following torture and ...
Download as PDF; Printable version ... Gautamiputra Satakarni Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Chhatrapati Sambhaji Maharaj Tarabai Peshwa ... Samarth Ramdas; Changdev ...
With research of many years he wrote first full-proof biography of Sambhaji, son of Shivaji and second Chhatrapati of Maratha Empire. This book technically clarified the image of Sambhaji. He also searched the actual samādhi of Sambhaji which is located in Vadhu Budruk village in Pune District, Maharashtra. He wrote the book Sadhan Chikitsa in ...
The execution of Sambhaji was a significant event in 17th-century Deccan India, where the second Maratha King was put to death by order of the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb. The conflicts between the Mughals and the Deccan Sultanates , which resulted in the downfall of the Sultanates, paved the way for tensions between the Marathas and the Mughals.
Smārta (स्मार्त) is an adjective derived from Smriti (Sanskrit: स्मृति, Smrti, IPA: [s̪mr̩.t̪i]). [19] The smriti are a specific body of Hindu texts usually attributed to an author, traditionally written down but constantly revised, in contrast to Srutis (The Vedic Literature) considered authorless, that were transmitted verbally across the generations and fixed.
Shivaji was a contemporary of Samarth Ramdas. Historian Stewart Gordon concludes about their relationship: Older Maratha histories asserted that Shivaji was a close follower of Ramdas, a Brahmin teacher, who guided him in an orthodox Hindu path; recent research has shown that Shivaji did not meet or know Ramdas until late in his life.