Rajput: Parihar
This article was written in 1916 when conditions were different. Even in Readers will be able to edit existing articles and post new articles directly |
From The Tribes And Castes Of The Central Provinces Of India
By R. V. Russell
Of The Indian Civil Service
Superintendent Of Ethnography, Central Provinces
Assisted By Rai Bahadur Hira Lal, Extra Assistant Commissioner
Macmillan And Co., Limited, London, 1916.
NOTE 1: The 'Central Provinces' have since been renamed Madhya Pradesh.
NOTE 2: While reading please keep in mind that all articles in this series have been scanned from a book. During scanning some errors are bound to occur. Some letters get garbled. Footnotes get inserted into the main text of the article, interrupting the flow. Readers who spot errors might like to correct them, and shift footnotes gone astray to their rightful place.
Rajput: Parihar
This clan was one of the four Agnikulas or fire-born. Their founder was the first to issue from the fire-fountain, but he had not a warrior's mien. The Brahmans placed him as guardian of the gate, and hence his name, Prithi-ha-dwdra^ of which Parihar is supposed to be a corruption." Like the Chauhans and Solankis the Parihar clan is held to have originated from the Gurjara or Gujar invaders who came with the white Huns in the ^ Eastern India, ii. p. 919. ^ Rdjasthan, i. p. 86.
fifth and sixth centuries, and they were one of the first of
the Gujar Rajput clans to emerge into prominence. They
were dominant in Bundelkhand before the Chandels, their
last chieftain having been overthrown by a Chandel prince
in A.D. 831/ A Parihar-Gujar chieftain, whose capital was
at Bhinmal in Rajputana, conquered the king of Kanauj, the
ruler of what remained of the dominions of the great Harsha
Vardhana, and established himself there about A.D. 816.^
Kanauj was then held by Gujar-Parihar kings till about
1090, when it was seized by Chandradeva of the Gaharwar
RajpiJt clan.
The Parihar rulers were thus subverted by the Gaharwars and Chandels, both of whom are thought to be derived from the Bhars or other aboriginal tribes, and these events appear to have been in the nature of a rising of the aristocratic section of the indigenous residents against the Gujar rulers, by whom they had been conquered and perhaps taught the trade of arms. After this period the Parihars are of little importance.
They appear to have retired to Rajputana, as Colonel Tod states that Mundore, five miles north of Jodhpur, was their headquarters until it was taken by the Rahtors. The walls of the ruined fortress of Mundore are built of enormous square masses of stone without cement, and attest both its antiquity and its former strength.^
The Parihars are scattered over Rajputana, and a colony of them on the Chambal was characterised as the most notorious body of thieves in the annals of Thug history.* Similarly in Etawah they are said to be a peculiarly lawless and desperate community.'^ The Parihar Rajputs rank with the leading clans and intermarry with them. In the Central Provinces they are found principally in Saugor, Damoh and Jubbulpore.