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According to one account, soon after Devaladevi's departure, Alp Khan defeated Karna in a battle. Karna fled towards Devagiri, pursued by the Delhi forces. [7] He was denied asylum at Devagiri, and ultimately, had to seek shelter from the Kakatiyas in Warangal. [8] Meanwhile, Bhillama's party was intercepted by a contingent of Alp Khan's army.
Alauddin married Ramachandra's daughter Jhatyapali, who became the mother of his son and successor Shihabuddin Omar and Qutbuddin Mubarak Shah. [15] Historian Kishori Saran Lal believes that Ramachandra gave his daughter to Alauddin after the 1296 raid, [ 16 ] but historian Satish Chandra states that this probably happened after the second ...
The Seuna, Sevuna, or Yadavas of Devagiri (IAST: Seuṇa, c. 1187 –1317) [5] was a medieval Indian dynasty, which at its peak ruled a realm stretching from the Narmada river in the north to the Tungabhadra river in the south, in the western part of the Deccan region.
The Delhi army resumed its march on 29 January 1311, and after crossing the Tapti River, reached the Yadava capital Devagiri on 3 February 1311. [2] The Yadava ruler Ramachandra had decorated the city to welcome the army, and had made arrangements to facilitate their onward march.
Alauddin's wives included Jalaluddin's daughter, who held the title Malika-i-Jahan, and Alp Khan's sister Mahru. [7] He also married Jhatyapali, the daughter of Hindu king Ramachandra of Devagiri, probably after the 1296 Devagiri raid, [126] or after his 1308 conquest of Devagiri. [127]
Back to Part 1 > Continue to Part 3 > STOREFRONTS-LONG STICK-Inventory Item From the main scene of the stores,outside of the General Store,click on the billboard that is on the left side of the ...
When Alauddin was a governor of Kara, Nusrat Khan accompanied him during his 1296 raid on Devagiri. Alauddin led an 8,000-strong cavalry, [6] but spread a rumor that his army was only the vanguard of a bigger 20,000-strong cavalry that would reach Devagiri shortly after his arrival. [7]
The hill of Devagiri, the capital of Yadavas, the dynasty to which Jhatyapali belonged. In a bid to fulfil his desire of territorial expansion, Alauddin first raided Deogiri in 1296. The Deogiri at the time of his raid was ruled by Rai Ramchandra, the Yadava ruler, with his son Simhana as the supreme commander of the Yadava army.