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This remained unnoticed by me even after having a regular check at the article that it mentions legendary queen Naiki Devi participation in the battle, although I checked all cited sources from A.K Majumdar (looks least creadible among these), Dasharatha Sharma, R.B Singh, Satish Chandra, Rima Hooja, Ram Vallabh Somani and none mentions about her participation in the battle. It simply mentions that young Mularaja II defeated Mu'izz ud-din here, further it's disputed whether Mularaja was actually ruling Gujarat at the time or not as this is well established fact that he died in 1178 CE himself and Bhima II succeded him who ruled for nearly 50 odd years.
The Young Rai of Narahwala defeated the army of Islam near Abu
PS:- To me, Naiki Devi part seems nothing more than folk tale. I am happy to be disabused on this by being provided a WP:HIST reference for her participation. Packer&Tracker «Talk» 07:48, 13 June 2022 (UTC)
In AD 1175, he
attacked and captured Multan. This considerably weakened the hold of the Ismailis in the region. Another target was upper Sindh, (which had reverted into Ismaili hands since the time of the early Ghaznavides), and Muhammad of Ghor soon led expeditions against both upper and lower Sindh. After occupying Uchchh in 1175 and annexing adjoining parts of Sindh, Muhammad of Ghor advanced against Gujarat in AD 1178, which was then ruled by the Chalukyan ruler Bhima II (?Mularaj II?). The bravery and spirited fight put up by him and his allies (among them Kelhan of Nadol, his younger brother, Kirtipal Chauhan,
founder of the Jalore line, and the Parmar ruler of Abu, King Dharavarsha), forced the enemy back from the vicinity of Abu, in Rajasthan. According to the Sundha Inscription, this decisive battle took place at Kasahrada, near Abu
Rima Hooja: A History of Rajasthan page:-261 Packer&Tracker «Talk» 08:02, 13 June 2022 (UTC)
This article is rated B-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
This remained unnoticed by me even after having a regular check at the article that it mentions legendary queen Naiki Devi participation in the battle, although I checked all cited sources from A.K Majumdar (looks least creadible among these), Dasharatha Sharma, R.B Singh, Satish Chandra, Rima Hooja, Ram Vallabh Somani and none mentions about her participation in the battle. It simply mentions that young Mularaja II defeated Mu'izz ud-din here, further it's disputed whether Mularaja was actually ruling Gujarat at the time or not as this is well established fact that he died in 1178 CE himself and Bhima II succeded him who ruled for nearly 50 odd years.
The Young Rai of Narahwala defeated the army of Islam near Abu
PS:- To me, Naiki Devi part seems nothing more than folk tale. I am happy to be disabused on this by being provided a WP:HIST reference for her participation. Packer&Tracker «Talk» 07:48, 13 June 2022 (UTC)
In AD 1175, he
attacked and captured Multan. This considerably weakened the hold of the Ismailis in the region. Another target was upper Sindh, (which had reverted into Ismaili hands since the time of the early Ghaznavides), and Muhammad of Ghor soon led expeditions against both upper and lower Sindh. After occupying Uchchh in 1175 and annexing adjoining parts of Sindh, Muhammad of Ghor advanced against Gujarat in AD 1178, which was then ruled by the Chalukyan ruler Bhima II (?Mularaj II?). The bravery and spirited fight put up by him and his allies (among them Kelhan of Nadol, his younger brother, Kirtipal Chauhan,
founder of the Jalore line, and the Parmar ruler of Abu, King Dharavarsha), forced the enemy back from the vicinity of Abu, in Rajasthan. According to the Sundha Inscription, this decisive battle took place at Kasahrada, near Abu
Rima Hooja: A History of Rajasthan page:-261 Packer&Tracker «Talk» 08:02, 13 June 2022 (UTC)