Jaoli State Explained

Native Name:जावळी
Conventional Long Name:Jaoli State
Common Name:Jaoli
Nation:British India
Status Text:Jagir
Year Start:TBD
Event Start:16th century
Year End:17th century
Event End:Annexation by Maratha Empire
S1:India
Flag S1:Flag of the Maratha Empire.svg

Jaoli (or Jawali) principality was a Jagir of Maratha Morè (clan) which is located in the western part of the present day Maharashtra state. Jaoli was seen as a strategically important by Shivaji Maharaj as it is surrounded by dense forest with 13 forts.

History

See main article: Shivaji's Campaign of Javali. The state was centered on the valley surrounding Jaoli.[1] In the 1650s, it was ruled by More family, who were vassals of the Adil Shah of the Bijapur Sultanate. The ruler used the name Chandra Rao, who called himself the king of Konkan. He claimed to rule by the divine sanction of the god Mahabaleshwar (an aspect of Shiva), and had been formally recognized as the local Raje (king) by the Adil Shah.[2]

Around 1656, Shivaji Maharaj - Son of Shahaji Maharaj (another commander of Adil Shah) forcibly captured Jaoli in the Battle of Javali. Shivaji Maharaj, who had similarly captured other territories in the area, justified his action to the Adil Shah, arguing that he governed these territories better than the deposed rulers did. However, the Adil Shah doubted Shivaji Maharaj's loyalty, and sent his general Afzal Khan against Shivaji Maharaj. Shivaji Maharaj defeated Afzal Khan, and went on to establish an independent kingdom that evolved into the Maratha Empire.[2]

See also

References

17.99°N 74.42°W

Notes and References

  1. Battacharya, Sachchidananda. A Dictionary of Indian History (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1977) p. 516-517.
  2. Book: James W. Laine . Shivaji: Hindu King in Islamic India . 2003 . Oxford University Press . 978-0-19-566771-4 . 21 .