पृष्ठम्:हम्मीरमहाकाव्यम्.pdf/१४

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borne by the Chohán princes his issue: slain by the Mosque invaders under Abu'l Aas).[१]
 Harsharájú or Harihara Rai (defeated Naziru'd-din [qu, Subakte. gin ?], thence styled “Sulțângråha’).
 Bir Billandeva, (Balianga Râi or Dharmagachha; slain defending Ajmer against Mahmud of Ghazni).
 Bisaldeva (classically Viśaladeva); his period from various inscriptions, S, 1066 to S, 1130.
 Sarañgadēva, his son (died in nonage).
 Ána Deva (constructed the Aná Ságar as Ajmer, which still bears his name), his sons—
 Jayapåla or Jayasimha (A.D. 977) fathar of—
 Hursapål (Hispâl of Ferishtah).
 Ajaya Deva or Anandeva, son of Jayapâla (A.D. 1000); Bijyadeva and Udayadeva were his brothers.
 Someşvara, son of Ajaya Deva, married Rukābāi, the daughter of
Anangapāla of Dehli. His brothers were Kanbarãi and Jaitrašimha,
Goelwâl Kanharầi's son İśvaradâs turned Muhammadan.
 Prithvi Rājā (A.D. 1176), son of Someşvara, obtained Dehli; slain by Shahábu'd-din, S,1949, A.D. 1193.
 Renast (A.D. 1192), son of Prithvirija, slain in the sack of Dehli.
 Vijayaråja, son of Chohadadeva, the second son of Someśvara
(adopted successor to Prithvirája; his name is on the pillar at Dehii).
 Läkhansi, son of Vijayarāja, had twenty-one sons; seven of whom
were legitimate, the others illegitimate, and founders of mixed
tribes, From Iakhansi there were twenty-six generations to Nonad
Simha, the chief of Nimrånå (in Col. Tod's time), the nearest lineal
descendant of Ajayapāla and Prithvirāja).

 As observed before, up to the time of Prithviraja, the last
great Chohān, the poem is made up mostly of poetical bombast,

in which, at intervals, a grain of historical matter may be


  1. Tod, Raj. vol.II. p. 441, Ten more names are giyen in Bombay Government Selections, vol. III, p. 193; and Prinsep's Antinuities by Thomas, vol II Us. Tab.p.947