Ahibaran

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Ahibaran
Maharaja Ahibaran
PredecessorMaharaja Parmal
SuccessorMaharaja Bhadrawah
Burial
Baran (now Bulandshahr)
ConsortMaharani Varanavati
HouseIkshwaku
DynastySolar Dynasty
FatherMaharaja Parmal
MotherMaharani Bhadrawati
ReligionHinduism

Maharaja Ahibaran (Sanskrit: अहिबरन) was a legendary Indian king (Maharaja) of Baran, a city of traders. Maharaja Ahibaran was born as Sooryavanshi Kshatriya.[1]

The Baranwal communities claim descent from him.[2]

Etymology and names[edit]

Ahibaran means "snake coloured" (Ahi means snake and baran means colours). He is also known as Varan, Varna (which means colours).[3]

Legends and beliefs[edit]

According to local legends, the town of Baran (now called Bulandshahr) was named after king Ahi-baran (literally "cobra-coloured"). F. S. Growse, in the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, theorizes that no such king ever existed.[4][5]

The legends describe the ancestry of Ahibaran as follows: The children of King Dharmadat established their separate state, whose children are now called Bais Rajputs. King Harshavardhana was in his lineage.[6] The child of the eldest son Subhankar continued to rule in his native state, Chandravati.[1] Their offspring were King Tendumal and his descendant Maharaja Varaksh who took the side of religion in the war of Mahabharata and died by becoming a partisan of Pandavas.[7] The remaining people left Chandravati and came to North India due to the storm in Chandravati.[2] The clan of Maharaja Varaksha laid the foundation of his kingdom in a place called 'Ahar' in the presence of the Emperor of Hastinapur.[8] In the generation of Maharaja Varaksha, King Parmal descendants from him.[9] King Ahibaran born to King Parmal. King Ahibaran was married to Varanavati, the daughter of Khandav's King, who lives in a dense forest of selection trees located in the western part of the Ikshumati River in Antravredi.[10]


One Agarwal historian has tried to link King Ahibaran as great grandson of Agrasen.[11]

Baran[edit]

According to Hindu mythology the pandavas had an encounter with Prajapati Daksh, father-in-law of Hindu lord Shiva; the place of their conversation, a pond, is in Bulandshahr. Later, after the fall of Hastinapur, the Pandavas ruled from Ahar, located in the north eastern part of Baran district.[12] Over the years, Maharaja Paramaal built a fort in the region and later, Ahibaran, a Suryavanshi king built a tower named Baran and made the region his capital and named it to Baran/Baranagar.[1]

The ancient palaces, building and temples found at places in Bhatora Veerpur, Ghalibpur in ruined form, are indicative of the antiquity of Baran.[13] There are several other important places in the District from where statues belonging to the medieval age and objects of ancient temples have been found.[14] Even today, several of these historical and ancient objects such as coins, statues and inscriptions etc. are preserved in the State Museum Lucknow.[1]

Varanavati River[edit]

Varanavati River is a river of north india which flows throughout Bulandshahr district.[15] The Varanavati River flows in almost the entire Bulandshahr district. The history of this river is as old as Bulandshahr. It is also said that the Varanavati River was the most holy river at that time.[16] When Maharaja Ahibaran ruled there, he named the river on his wife name, Varanavati River.[17] Earlier, when the Pandavas ruled there, the river was known as Ikshumati River, it is also described in the Atharvaveda.[18] But presently this river is named after Kali, the Hindu goddess Kali.[19][20]

Baran Tower[edit]

When Maharaja Ahibaran ruled in Bulandshahr, he also built Baran Tower there.[21][22]

Baran is mentioned in Mahabharata.[23] There is also evidence of baran, The old name 'Baran' can be still be traced in the old Government documents.[24][25] According to the book Etihasik Sthanavali, Baran was very important and attractive place for many kings at that time.[26] Sir Henry Miers Elliot writes quoting the Yamini which says that, in his Twelfth Expedition A.H. 409 (1018-1019 AD) after passing by the borders of Kashmir, that is, close under the sub-Himalayan range, and crossing the Jumna, Mahmud of Ghazni takes Baran.[27] Later the seat of power went to Dors and Chauhans, with the rise of Hardatta, a Dor ruler who took possession of Baran along with Meerut and Koil. In 1192 CE when Muhammad Ghauri conquered parts of India, his Senapati (Military commander) Qutbu l-Din Aibak surrounded Fort Baran and with the help of traitors, was able to kill King Chandrasen Dor and in the process take control of the Baran kingdom.[28] Baran is presently named as Bulandshahr which mean High city.[7]

It was a rich and prosperous capital state of King Ahibaran's kingdom and numerous copper and gold coins with Greek and Pali inscriptions had been excavated at the site of the fort. According to Asian Folklore society the city Baran was the richest and famous at that time.[29]

After the fall of Baran, the Baranwal community scattered to different parts of India, mostly to the Gangetic plains of India, and started living under the various names of Anand, Prasad, Prakash, Gupta, Bharti, Agrawal, Lal, Arya, Shah and Singh.[30] Few of the baranwals adopted Modi surname, which is also this community.[31][32]

Baranwal gotras[edit]

Historically, there has been no unanimity regarding number and names of gotras, and there are regional differences between the list of gotras. The Baranwals are divided into thirty six gotras (exogamous clans). There is also a Goyan and Mittal gotra in this community.[33][failed verification][page needed] Some of the gotras like Kashyap and Kaushik are specific to Rajputs.[8]

  1. Garg
  2. Vatsil
  3. Goyal
  4. Gohil
  5. Karav
  6. Deval
  7. Kashyap
  8. Vats
  9. Atri
  10. Vamdev
  11. Kapil
  12. Gaalab
  13. Singhal
  14. Aarnay
  15. Kashil
  16. Upmanyu
  17. Yamini
  18. Parashar
  19. Kaushik
  20. Munas
  21. Katyapan
  22. Kondilya
  23. Pulish
  24. Bhrigu
  25. Sarve
  26. Angira
  27. Krishrabhi
  28. Udhwalak
  29. Ashwalayan
  30. Bharadwaj
  31. Kankhal
  32. Mudgal
  33. Yamadgiri
  34. Chyawan
  35. Vedpramiti
  36. Sanskritayan

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "About District | District Bulandshahr, Government of Uttar Pradesh | India". bulandshahar.nic.in.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. 2.0 2.1 Crooke, William (1890). An Ethnographical Hand-book for the N.-W. Provinces and Oudh. North-Western Provinces and Oudh Government Pres. p. 16.
  3. Edwin Thomas Atkinson 1876, p. 271.
  4. F. S. Growse (1883). "The town of Bulandshahr". Journal of Asiatic Society of Bengal. Calcutta: Asiatic Society of Bengal. LII (1): 275.
  5. Frederic Salmon Growse 1884, p. 62.
  6. Edwin Thomas Atkinson 1876, p. 66.
  7. 7.0 7.1 "History of Bulandshahr". Blessings on net. Retrieved 2 May 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  8. 8.0 8.1 Singh, Kumar Suresh (2008). People of India, Volume 16, Part 1 (1st ed.). India: Anthropological Survey of India. p. 131. ISBN 978-81-7046-302-3. Retrieved 16 May 2011.
  9. Frederic Salmon Growse 1884, p. 36.
  10. Frederic Salmon Growse 1884, p. 98.
  11. Mittal, J. P. (1991). History of ancient India. p. 675. ISBN 9788126906161.
  12. Edwin Thomas Atkinson 1876, p. 48.
  13. Baynes, Thomas Spencer (1878). The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General Literature. Vol. 4. C. Scribner's sons. p. 515.
  14. Edwin Thomas Atkinson 1876, p. 55.
  15. The Missionary Chronicle: Containing the Proceedings of the Board of Foreign Missions and of the Board of Domestic Missions of the Presbyterian Church: and a General View of Other Benevolent Operations. Vol. 17. 1849. p. 233.
  16. Khan, Zahoor Ali (1987). "Kali Nadi: The History of a River". Indian History Congress. 48: 744. JSTOR 44141794.
  17. Khan, Zahoor Ali (1987). "Kali Nadi: The History of a River". Indian History Congress. 48: 741–742. JSTOR 44141794.
  18. Atharvaveda (4.1.7)
  19. Edwin Thomas Atkinson 1876, p. 59.
  20. Hydrology and water resources of India By Sharad K. Jain, Vijay P. Singh,p. 349 Springer, The Netherlands. ISBN 1-4020-5179-4.
  21. "Bulandshahr District". CSR Identity. 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  22. Frederic Salmon Growse 1884, p. 42.
  23. Ahich chhatran kalkutan Gadgakulank ch Bharata, Varana vatdhanam ch Yamunash Chev Parvatah (V.19.30) Mahabharata
  24. "Bulandshahr - Census of India" (PDF). censusindia.gov.in. Retrieved 2 May 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  25. "Bulandshahar - Dc Msme" (PDF). dcmsme.gov.in. Retrieved 2 May 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  26. Mathur, Vijayendra Kumar (1969). Etihasik Sthanavali. p. 608.
  27. Elliot, Henry Miers (1867). The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians: The Muhammadan Period, The Posthumous Papers of the Late H. M. Elliot, edited by John Dowson. Vol. 8. p. 458.
  28. Pletcher, Kenneth. "History of Bulandshahr". Encyclopædia Britannica.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  29. Asian Folklore Institute; Society for Asian Folklore; JSTOR (Organization); American Theological Library Association (1972). Asian folklore studies. Asian Folklore Institute; [sold by Cellar Book Shop, Detroit, Mich.] Retrieved 19 December 2011.
  30. "About us | Baranwal Community". baranwalmatrimony.org.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  31. "Patna News - state and center giving barnwal status to obc". Dainik Bhaskar (in Hindi). Retrieved 5 May 2020.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link) CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  32. "Bokaro MLA stirs Vaishya caste cauldron". Times of india. Retrieved 4 May 2020.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  33. Babb, Lawrence A (2004). Alchemies of Violence: Myths of Identity and the Life of Trade in Western India. Sage. ISBN 978-0-7619-3223-9.

Bibliography[edit]

External links[edit]

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