Jauhar
Jauhar (sometimes spelt jowhar) was originally the voluntary death on a funeral pyre of the queens and royal womenfolk of defeated Rajput castles in order to avoid capture and consequent molestation. The term is extended to describe the occasional practice of mass suicide carried out in medieval times by Rajput women, or by entire Rajput communities, when the fall of a besieged city was certain.
Related Topics:
Funeral - Rajput
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The practice is often described in terms of the women alone, but should correctly be understood as including the death of the men on the battlefield. As generally described, Jauhar involved:
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- A defending Rajput army being besieged inside a fortification;
- The realization by the defenders that defeat was certain;
- The immolation, en masse, of women, children and the elderly, to avoid molestation at the hands of the victorious invading army;
- The riding out, into open battle and certain death, of the menfolk, there to die on the field of war
There is extensive glorification of the practice in the local ballads and folk-histories of Rajasthan; however, the accuracy of these accounts is almost a cipher. Accounts of the invaders finding a deserted city with no living residents are not historically accurate; the extent to which members of the Rajput community avoided death, for instance by hiding among the remaining population of the city, is not usually described in the laudatory ballads that are the main source of our information on these events.
Related Topics:
Rajasthan - Rajput
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Jauhar was limited to the Kshatriya caste named Rajputs, who formed the upper and ruling classes and castes of Rajasthan. The Rajputs were the fighting warrior caste of this area. The remainder of the people, who were generally Brahmins and the lower castes, did not participate in the practice. In some cases, such as with Chittaurgarh in 1568 the victorious invaders put the entire remaining population to death.
Related Topics:
Kshatriya - Rajput - Rajasthan - Brahmin - Chittaurgarh - 1568
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Despite occasional confusion, this practice is not directly related to the widow-burning practice of sati, another feature once common among the Rajputs. It is related to high premium set on the honour of womenfolk in Rajput society. Both practices have been most common historically in the territory of modern Rajasthan.
Related Topics:
Sati - Rajput - Rajasthan
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The best known cases of Jauhar are the three occurrences at the fort of Chittaur (Chittaurgarh, Chittorgarh), in Rajasthan, in 1303, in 1535, and 1568.
Related Topics:
Chittaur - 1303 - 1535 - 1568
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