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In univ, a senior was a mohyal.. he claimed they were Rajputs...
^^^ Stop all this Bullshit
Hindu Shahi dynasty had been established by Kallar the Brahmin but later, in 964 AD, Raja Jyapala Janjua wrestled it from the descendants of Kallar. Sabaktagin, with the help of his Khalj and Afghan armies, defeated Jyapala at some point in Laghman driving him out of Kabul Valley and decisive battle between Mahmud and Jayapala occured somewhere near Peshawar.
Famed ethnologists and Indo researchers Sir Alexander Cunningham, Elliot and Dowson and Sachau led research into the origins of the Pala Hindu Shahi, the second dynasty that succeeded the initial Brahmin Dev Shahi. Through independent research they concluded that the origins of Emperor Jayapala Shah was in fact in the Janjua Rajput. In 1973's Al-Biruni International Congress in Pakistan, Dr Hussain Khan presented a paper in called "An Interpretation of Al-Biruni's Account of the Hindu Shahiyas of Kabul" which also confirmed the same findings. Finally, the Janjuas own genealogy records the names of the Janjua Shahi Jayapala as well as the continued descendants of his House. There are plenty of forts i.e Nandana, malot fort in salt range region of Punjab built by the successor of Hindu shahi king Jayapala Janjua
Don't worry once more area till Amu would come under control of people of Madra Kingdom.Hindu Shahi kingdom from 850 AD to 900 AD (after that till 1001 AD they were limited to the eastern bank of the Indus) This was the independent Rajput Kingdom in Punjab
According to the Arab chronicler al-Biruni (973–1048 CE), the last Turk Shahi in the throne of Kabul was a certain Lagaturman, who was deposed by his Brahman minister Kallar in the middle of the 9th century CE. With the establishment of the Abbasid caliphate in 750 CE the situation had dramatically worsened for the still largely independent kingdoms in Zabul and Kabulistan. In 814/815 CE the Kabul Shah suffered a critical defeat against the troops of the Abbasid caliph al-Ma'mun (813–833 CE) (No. 13) and was forced to convert to Islam. Ma'mun's troops had even pushed into Gandhara on the Indus River. The annual tribute that the Kabul Shah subsequently had to pay the Abbasid governor of Khorasan entailed 1,500,000 dirhams and 2,000 slaves per year. The Turkic dynasty of kings, which had ruled Kabulistan and Gandhara for nearly 200 years, came to an end under these politically and economically tense circumstances. Under the new ruling dynasty, called the Hindu Shahis by al-Biruni, the political center of the kingdom successively moved from Kabul to Udabhandapura in Gandhara (present-day Hund, Pakistan), which offered more security from Arab attack.
And they did not have to wait for long: Yaqub bin Laith al-Saffar rose to be the most powerful man in East Iran around 861 CE; his first goal was Zabulistan, which he finally defeated in several campaigns in 870/871 CE. In the same year he continued on to Kabul, where the Kabul Shah was taken prisoner and the holy temple plundered. 50 standing statues of gods made of gold and silver are said to have fallen into his hands and were sent to the caliph in Baghdad. At his death Yaqub had transferred the government affairs to a vicegerent, but it seems that the Hindu Shahs managed to regain Kabul in 879 CE. The Samanid ruler Isma'il I (892–907 CE) ultimately drove out the Hindu Shahis around 900 CE (No. 3), but the dynasty remained in power in Gandhara and the Punjab until the beginning of the 11th century.
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The coins of the Hindu Shahis display in the obverse a left-facing bull, the companion of the Hindu god Shiva; on the reverse is a rider carrying a lance with a flag (Nos. 1, 2). The inscriptions, composed in Brahmi, record various titles such as "Spalapati" (military commander) or "Samanta". The individual names of the specific rulers, as are known from written sources, are not given on the coins, making their attribution to the various kings nearly impossible. Kabul and Udabhandrapura in Gandhara are possible mints. The exceedingly rich silver coinage of the Hindu Shahis was most likely enabled largely from the silver mines of the Panjshir Valley (150 km north of Kabul). With the loss of Kabul to the Saffarids, Islamic coinage is documented there beginning in 872 to 883 CE. The first Samanid dirhams from the Panjshir valley are dated 293 AH (= 905 CE). The incorporation of Afghanistan in the Islamic world was thus completed fully and permanently. Nevertheless, the small kingdom in the Hindu Kush had successfully defended itself against Arab expansion for 250 years.
Following the death of the prophet Mohammad in 632 CE, the Arabs, carried by their new religion Islam, set out to conquer Byzantine Syria, Palestina, Egypt and North Africa, which they accomplished within a few years. The conquest of the Persian empire of the Sasanians, who had ruled Iran for over 400 years, was essentially completed in 651 CE. The last Sasanian king, Yazdgerd III (632–651 CE), was killed in Merv as the royal family fled into exile at the Chinese court.
The first Muslim ruling dynasty, the Umayyads (651–750 CE) belonged to the same tribe as the prophet Mohammad (Nos. 11, 12), and they established the capital of the Caliphate in Damascus. In 750 CE the Umayyads were ousted by the Abbasids, and the capital of the Islamic empire was moved to Baghdad in 762 CE (No. 13).
Early Islamic coinage was modeled on the existing monetary structures found in the conquered regions: in former Byzantine Syria and Palestine copper coinage was struck following the Byzantine model (No. 5). In the year 74 AH (693/694 CE) a remarkable new type of coin began to be struck with an image of the standing caliph on the obverse; he wears a belt and sword and is represented in the pose of a prayer leader (No. 6).
In the former Sasanian empire, Mesopotamia and Iran, the Sasanian silver drachm of Khusro II (r. 590-628 CE) served as the model for the coinage of the Arab governors. While the images matched the Sasanian prototype, an Arabic inscription, "In the Name of God", was added to the border and the name of the Sasanian king was replaced by that of the caliph or governor (Nos. 7–10). However, the Sasanian blessing in Middle Persian remained.
This kind of fragmented coinage inspired by ideas foreign to Islam was no lasting solution for the young Muslim empire. Thus in 77 AH (696/697 CE) caliph 'Abd al-Malik (685–705 CE) instituted a comprehensive reform that gave the new coins an unmistakably Islamic appearance (Nos. 11–13). Religious inscriptions with citations from the Koran replaced images and were complemented by administrative information such as the mint and year of issue (AH). Even the name of the ruler was left out, since the coins were struck "In the Name of God". Only under the Abbasids did including the name of the caliph and other state functionaries become standard
16. THE HINDU SHAHIS IN KABULISTAN AND GANDHARA AND THE ARAB CONQUEST
Do you have any info on the rule of the guptas in Afghanistan.
regards
Don't worry once more area till Amu would come under control of people of Madra Kingdom.
Guptas ruled till Chenab and no more
guptas did indeed rule afghanistan, i was asking whether you knew anything about it, i didnt say whether they ruled or not.
regards
Old habits die hard.Once rebellious tribes of West would be sorted out area till Irrawaddy must come under rule of Islamic Kingdom of Mahabharat.Just don't train your arrows on us when you do ascend
Nope I donot..but if you have any info regarding that..I would be happy to read it
Area beyond Indus inherently is difficult with low vegetation,water and high altitude coupled with cold winters and hot summers.Nope I donot..but if you have any info regarding that..I would be happy to read it...I read somewhere that Guptas were a bit like the Han Empire...that is they led expeditions beyond their administrative regions into nomadic badlands to carry out punitive action...there is one slide on the Historical Atlas of South Asia which shows Guptas teaming up with Kushan Shahs to go against the Sassanid-Hepthalities in a region well beyond the Indus
Fun fact - All reputed historians accept the fact that All Rajputs Except Agnikula(Chauhans, Chalukyas, Parmaras and Pratiharas ) are basically originated from Local Dravidian tribes like Gond, Bhars etc.
"Thus, the Kshatriya or Rajput group of castes at present essentially an occupational group composed of all clans, following the Hindu ritual, who actually undertook the work of Government; consequently, people of most of the great Rajput clans now in existence in spite of their hoary pedigrees are descended either from foreign immigrants or from indigenous races such as the Gonds and Bhars." [Mahajan, p. 552]
Old habits die hard.Once rebellious tribes of West would be sorted out area till Irrawaddy must come under rule of Islamic Kingdom of Mahabharat.
That would be new Golden Vedic era a true rise of Vedic civilisation from ashes