History, asked by shivam7998, 1 year ago

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Tell me all words that sabasad say during Shivaji Maharaj coronation?​

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Answered by gajendrabishnoi5529
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The coronation of Shivaji Maharaj was a watershed event in the history of Maharashtra.

After a long hiatus during which foreigners had ruled, Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaj had managed to carve out a Hindu kingdom in an Islamic India.

Those were troubled times. The foreign rulers had always displayed religious arrogance towards their Hindu subjects. Justice was never fairly distributed and lawlessness was rampant. Even their royal courts produced rival factions, with the Irani (Persian) / Turani (Central Asian) stock gaining precedence over the indigenous Hindustani. Their Hindu fief holders were more interested in retaining their estates and they turned a blind eye to the fanaticism of their masters. Hence there was a general feeling of discontent amongst the populace, albeit muted. However, people secretly desired a liberator. That was when Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaj arrived on the scene.

Shivaji

Such was the personal charisma and persuasiveness of the king, that his every follower identified with his cause and joined him in large numbers. He gave them hope to cling to and a dream to cherish. He promised them a land that they could call their own, a land free of oppression and religious bigotry, a land in which justice prevailed, a land where people were heard and had their say. Of course it was to be a monarchy, but it would be a very benevolent monarchy.

Eventually, it took Shivaji almost three decades to translate his dream into reality. His kingdom was duly named 'swarajya' or self rule. Though popularly known as Hindavi swarajya, it wasn't just a swarajya for the Hindus but a swarajya for all those who considered themselves to be the sons of the soil (sons of hind - Hindustan).

According to the historian Sir Jadunath Sarkar, Shivaji's greatness lay not in his creation of a kingdom, but in the circumstances in which he created it (...from the survey of the conditions amidst which he rose to sovereignty). Shivaji's swarajya was accomplished amidst extreme adversity. This was something nobody had envisaged. After decades of enslavement, the most fierce of warriors had turned benign and resigned to their fate of subservience. This remained the case until the advent of Shivaji. He stirred them from their slumber and ignited in them the spark of freedom. After almost three and-a-half centuries of foreign rule (by the Afghans, the Mughals, or sultans of Persian descent), finally the people had a king who had risen from their own stock.

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