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  2. History of Maharashtra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Maharashtra

    The Rashtrakuta dynasty ruled Maharashtra from the 8th to the 10th century. [20] The Arab traveler Sulaiman [who?] called Amoghavarsha, the ruler of the Rashtrakuta Dynasty, "one of the four great kings of the world". [21] The Chalukya dynasty and Rashtrakuta dynasty had their capitals in modern-day Karnataka and used Kannada and Sanskrit as ...

  3. List of Maratha dynasties and states - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Maratha_dynasties...

    This is a list of Maratha dynasties and Maratha princely states. Maratha States. The Maratha Salute state and Head of State by precedence. Baroda, title Maharaja ...

  4. List of Maratha rulers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Maratha_Rulers

    Assassinated by Gardi guards. Raghunath Rao was in favor of just kidnapping him and accordingly he used the code "DHARA". But Anandi Bai (wife of Raghunath Rao) changed the code to "MAARA". Narayan Rao was assassinated in Shanivar Wada. Nowadays, it is considered one of the haunted place in Maharashtra. Raghunath-Rao: 1773–1774

  5. Maratha Confederacy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maratha_Confederacy

    The Battle of Palkhed was a land battle that took place on 28 February 1728 at the village of Palkhed, near the city of Nashik, Maharashtra, India between Baji Rao I and Qamar-ud-din Khan, Asaf Jah I of Hyderabad. The Marathas defeated the Nizam. The battle is considered an example of the brilliant execution of military strategy. [53]

  6. Marathi people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marathi_people

    The Rashtrakuta dynasty ruled Maharashtra from the 8th to the 10th century. [20] The Persian merchant and traveller, Sulaiman al-Tajir, who wrote of his many voyages to India and China in the mid-9th century CE, called the ruler of the Rashtrakuta dynasty, Amoghavarsha, "one of the four great kings of the world". [21]

  7. Abhira dynasty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abhira_dynasty

    The Abhira dynasty was a dynasty that ruled over the western Deccan, where it perhaps succeeded the Satavahana dynasty. From 203 to roughly 270 or 370, this dynasty formed a vast kingdom. The Abhiras had an extensive empire comprising modern-day Maharashtra, Konkan, Gujarat and parts of southern Madhya Pradesh. [3]

  8. Middle kingdoms of India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_kingdoms_of_India

    The Seuna, Sevuna or Yadava dynasty (Marathi: देवगिरीचे यादव, Kannada: ಸೇವುಣರು) (c. 850–1334 CE) was an Indian dynasty, which at its peak ruled a kingdom stretching from the Tungabhadra to the Narmada rivers, including present-day Maharashtra, north Karnataka and parts of Madhya Pradesh, from its ...

  9. Rashtrakuta Empire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rashtrakuta_empire

    The origin of the Rashtrakuta dynasty has been a controversial topic of Indian history. These issues pertain to the origin of the earliest ancestors of the Rashtrakutas during the time of Emperor Ashoka in the 2nd century BCE, [4] and the connection between the several Rashtrakuta dynasties that ruled small kingdoms in northern and central India and the Deccan between the 6th and 7th centuries.