796:, the Nyayadhish ("Chief Justice") of the Maratha empire, likely began looking into the killing of Narayanrao immediately after the incident despite Raghunathrao's opposition. The investigation lasted for around six weeks and decisions were made in accordance with established judicial practices. Shastri found Raghunathrao as the main culprit and in addition about fifty persons more or less responsible for the murder (forty nine males and one female servant). Of these forty nine men, thirteen were Gardis (eight Hindus and five Muslims), twenty six were Brahmin, three were Prabhu and seven were Marathas. The twenty six Brahmins were essentially clerks who acted as agents in planning and executing the details of the plan. Vyankatrao Kashi, his brother Laxman and Sakharam Hari Gupte were the three Prabhus who were declared to have played a prominent role in the plot. When Shastri approached Raghunathrao, the latter downplayed the murder as a private, personal affair and asked the former to not concern himself with it. Shastri on his part, without an ounce of fear, told Raghunathrao that he was the main culprit for the murder of his nephew. Hence Raghunathrao and the general public understood the degree of power that lay with the judiciary in a well-governmed state. But Shastri was dismissed from his office by Raghunathrao and went back to his native village.
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his life. Narayanrao ran to his uncle who was performing his worship and held on to him, begging to be saved and even offering to make him Peshwa in exchange for being spared by the Gardi soldiers. Meanwhile, Tulaji and
Sumersinh who had closely followed Narayanrao arrived there and pulled him away from his uncle. Tulaji violently seized Narayanrao and Sumersinh hacked him to pieces. Narayanrao's servant Chapaji Tilekar fell upon his master's body to save him with some maids and they were all cruelly cut down. A little later Naroba Naik, an old and trusted man on palace duty, came forth and berated Raghunathrao for allowing such deplorable actions and he too was slain by the Gardis. Within a period of half an hour, eleven people had been killed in the palace, seven of them were Brahmins, two Maratha servants, two maids. One
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him to be on his guard against danger to his life. After the meeting with
Raghuji, Narayanrao and Phadke went to the Parvati temple to have their breakfast along with some guests who had been invited there. After the meal, the Peshwa and Haripant went back to the palace. Narayanrao told Haripant what he had heard from Raghuji and asked him to take the necessary steps to prevent any mischief. Haripant assured him that he would take care of the matter but first he had to attend to a mid-day meal with a friend. The Peshwa retired to his room in the palace. Meanwhile, Tujali found out that the plot had been leaked and told the Gardi chiefs to immediately execute the plan or else everything could be ruined.
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The mother of
Narayanrao at Nashik was consumed with grief and sorrow when she learned about her son's death. Her eldest son and heir to the empire Vishwasrao had died at the Battle of Panipat in 1761, her second eldest son Madhavrao succumbed to disease and her youngest had been brutally murdered. She felt so overcome with grief that she gave up her comfortable life and went around begging for alms with a half coconut shell from door to door. She continued this practice for over a year and only regained her peace of mind when the ministers finally overthrew the murderer of her son and when his wife Gangabai gave birth to a new son.
344:, the ruler of Nagpur in order to put the succession dispute between Mudhoji and his brother Sabaji to an end. But when the two agents arrived at Pune in the summer of 1773 and discovered the tensions between Narayanrao and Raghunathrao, they realised they had much to benefit from the chaos. At the same time Narayanrao continued supporting the claim of Sabaji and sent armed reinforcements under Khanderao Darekar to support him against his brother. This caught the ire of Mudhoji who vaguely told his agents to do whatever they deemed necessary for accomplishing their mission by supporting Raghunathrao's power.
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cash reward of Rs. 3 lakh if they successfully executed the plot. A written order was produced by
Raghunathrao for these four chiefs, ordering them to "seize" the Peshwa. The written order might have been altered before being delivered to the Gardi chiefs and the word "seize" might've been replaced with the word "slay" but the identity of the person who did this has remained a mystery. Meanwhile, the Gardis chiefs were aware that the Peshwa could be slain if he were to offer armed resistance. When they conveyed these thoughts to Raghunathrao, he absolved them of any responsibility for the possible murder.
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Sakharam Bapu was overcome by grief since he couldn't fulfil the promise he had made to
Madhavrao and his wife Ramabai to protect Narayanrao. He refused to take any part in the new administration and left the city. Nana Phadnavis also refused to join Raghunathrao's government and the latter had no liking for him. The horrifying and chaotic events at Pune presented the enemies of the Marathas with the moment they had been looking for all along. A wave of attacks had occurred throughout the country although no one took up arms against the capital of Pune itself. It was only during the time of the
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palace and allowed neither his friends to visit him nor his servants to attend to him. His uncle, whether through exasperation or shrewdness, declared that he would starve himself to death so that his murder would be attributed to his nephew. For the next eighteen days, he consumed nothing except two ounces of deer milk each day. When he was finally exhausted due to pangs of hunger, his nephew somewhat relented by promising him a district and five castles and a jagir of Rs. 12 lakh per annum, provided some of the great chieftains would become surety for his future conduct.
351:, a strong partisan of Raghunathrao who had also been incensed by the Peshwa's decision to reduce the caste status of his community. They manage to obtain a secret meeting with Raghunathrao in which they hatch a plan which involved seizing Narayanrao and placing Raghunathrao on the throne. This would require Raghunathrao to be free and organise an armed force. In August 1773, during nighttime, Raghunathrao tried to escape using the help of Lakshman Kashi. But Raghunathrao was caught and taken into custody while Lakshman Kashi managed to escape and fled from Pune.
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Empire. Shastri obliged but only after the
Council agreed to never interfere with his duties and to faithfully execute the degrees he passed. The Council compelled Mudhoji and Haidra Ali to hand over the offenders they had been shielding and caught the ones who tried to escape. The most serious offenders such as Kharagsinh, Tujali Pawar and Muhammad Yusuf were sentenced to death, slightly less serious ones such as Vyankatrao Kashi and Sakharam Hari were sentenced to life imprisonment and the rest were discharged after having served their prison sentence.
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Sakharam Bapu contemplated the idea of making Ali
Bahadur, the grandson of Baji Rao, the Peshwa of the Maratha empire. He convinced most of the Maratha chiefs from Raghunathrao's camp to switch sides without rousing his suspicion. He laid the foundations of a group of twelve Maratha officials and chiefs who were collectively known as the Barbhais Council ("Twelve Comrades"). These included Nana Phadnavis, Haripant Phadnavis, Babuji Naik, Maloji Ghorpade, Bhavanrao Pratinidhi, Raste, Patwardhans with the addition of Mahadji Shinde and Tukoji Holkar.
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that their grievances would be listened to in the office. The soldiers responded by attacking the clerks; when one of them took shelter behind a cow, that used to be on the premises at all times for fresh milk, the soldiers cut down the animal and the man hiding behind it. They closed the front gate and proceeded to the Peshwa's room upstairs with their swords drawn and deafening shouts. The palace was packed with cries of horror and grief by the inmates but there was nothing they could do to stop the attack.
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285:, the uncle of both Madhavrao and Narayanrao, didn't have the courage to openly oppose the nomination of Narayanrao in front of the dying Peshwa and so he apparently acquiesced to the arrangement. The Peshwa had also ordered in writing that Raghunathrao was to continue his confinement so as to prevent him from engaging in mischief. Raghunathrao attempted an escape shortly before the Peshwa's death but was immediately caught and put back into confinement.
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in the open and gaze at the sun, but he was now barred from performing it which made him furious. Although the relationship between
Madhavrao and Raghunathrao, the former carefully avoided exasperating his uncle beyond a certain limit and skillfully employed his uncle's partisans so as to prevent any action against him. But Narayanrao lacked his elder brother's foresight and so his dissidents were able to find a common goal in supporting his uncle.
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377:. Tujali additionally felt he had been wronged by Narayanrao and possibly Madhavrao, and regardless of whether this supposed offense was real or not, it motivated him to play an integral part in the plot. While the previous plan involved simply capturing Narayanrao, the new plan involved his murder and was partly based on the assumption that Sakharam Bapu would remain neutral with regards to the plot.
761:, Manaji Phadke and Mudhoji Bhonsle. Gangadhar Yeshwant, an important partisan of Raghunathrao, died on 20 February 1774 and this considerably weakened his party. But at least his monetary troubles were relieved after Visaji Krishna arrived in Pune and brought with him, under orders from the previous Peshwa, a treasure of 22 lakh rupees and which Raghunathrao greedily sized.
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Pratinidhi as his agent for settling the matter with the Gardi chiefs. Bhavanrao
Pratinidhi got rid of the Gardi chiefs from the palace by paying them the stipulated five lakh rupees and an additional amount of three lakh rupees in lieu of the three forts they wanted as their safe resort. During the negotiations, the Gardis had threatened to depose Raghunathrao and install
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the young Peshwa, he ran over outside of the house of
Raghoba crying "Kaakaa malaa waachwaa" (Uncle, save me). His cry fell on deaf ears as Raghoba stood by imagining Narayanrao to be overacting while his nephew was eventually killed. After Narayanrao's murder, Raghoba became Peshwa, but he was shortly overthrown by
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Raghunathrao sent one of them, Laksham Kashi with a letter of friendly terms to Mudhoji Bhonsle inviting him to Pune with all his forces. The other Nagpur agent Vyankatrao remained in Pune to help the new Peshwa manage the new administration. He sent Amritrao to Satara to procure the robes from Chhatrapati
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processions. Tulaji met with the Gardi leaders during the Ganesh festival to inform them of the plot being hatched. Since he was an old servant he couldn't be abruptly dismissed even if suspected of a conspiracy and had ready access to his master and his wife in order to plan out various parts of the plot.
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Legend has it that the original command was "Hyala Dharaava" (Have him seized) written on a parchment of paper, and while the message was handed over to Anandibai to pass it on to the minions, she changed the letters to mean "Hyala Maraava" (Have him killed). And therefore when the assassins attacked
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Police Station while others such as Bhavanrao Pratinidhi, Maloji Ghorpade and others went to the palace to obtain correct information of what had happened. The Gardis were guarding the premises of the palace and only allowed the Maratha officials to enter after laying down their arms. When they were
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When news of Raghunathrao's attempted escape reached Narayanrao he made the terms of his uncle's confinement harsher. Raghunathrao was no longer allowed to leave his room, all his essentials were delivered to him and his lavish lifestyle was curtailed. As part of his prayer, Raghunathrao would stand
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Narayanrao was entirely unarmed at this time and in fear of his life he escaped through the back door to the apartment of his aunt Parvitabai, with whom he had a very close relationship as she had practically raised him since he was an infant. Parvatibai told him to go to his uncle as he could save
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At around one o'clock in the afternoon, five hundred soldiers led by the Gardi chiefs cut down the men guarding the hind gate and immediately rushed into the palace. They demanded payment of their long delayed salaries. The clerks and servants admonished the soldiers for the commotion and told them
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had arrived in Pune to meet with the Peshwa and asked him to make a return visit on 30 August. And so Narayanrao along with Haripant Phadke went to Angre's residence at around ten in the morning. Raghuji told Narayanrao during their conversational about the troubling rumours he had heard and warned
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was the Gardi officer who had been appointed by Narayanrao to be incharge of his uncle and hence had free access to him. He was won over by Tulaji, along with Muhammad Yusuf, Kharagsinh and Bahadur Khan, each of them had about a thousand soldiers working under them. They were promised to be given a
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Most people reluctantly accepted Raghunathrao's rule because there was no other male member of the Peshwa's family to take the reins of power, but they were apprehensive at heart to submit to the rule of a person who killed his own nephew who was unarmed and who belonged to the same Brahmin caste.
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was to take the throne but he was still a minor. There was debate among the Peshwas about who should become the next regent. Finally it was decided that Narayanrao would be the peshwa with his uncle Raghunathrao acting as regent. Initially this arrangement worked but soon Narayanrao imprisoned his
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who was soon invested with the robes of the Peshwa. Raghunathrao essentially gave up his position as Peshwa and fled towards Surat. At the same time, the Barbhais Council re-established their power at Pune and requested Shastri to come back and assume his position as the Nyayadhish of the Maratha
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A popular belief still prevails among people belonging to older generation here who claim that they had heard heart rending shouts of 'Kaka Mala Vachva' (Uncle please save me), at midnight emanating from the relics where Narayanrao Peshwa, one of the last heirs to the Peshwa throne, was slain on
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The Barbhais Council proceeded to go to war with Raghunathrao in order to bring him to justice and to save the state from British aggression. As it became apparent that Raghunathrao was losing the war, he shielded his allies from possible harm for the services they had rendered onto him. He sent
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Having failed to convince the senior and most highly competent ministers such as Sakharam Bapu and Nana Phadnavis to join his new administration, Raghunathrao had to begin his rule with the help of ministers Chinto Vithal and Moroba Phadnavis. The two Nagpur agents also continued supporting him.
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It nearly midnight when Raghunathrao had been proclaimed as the ruler of the state by the Gardis and allowed to pick his officials that the Gardis allowed the dead bodies to be taken out and funeral rites to be performed. The mangled pieces of Narayanrao were collected in a bundle for cremation.
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Raghunathrao was also able to find the finding the sympathy of Appaji Ram, the ambassador of Haidar Ali at Pune, who managed to persuade his ruler to support Raghunathrao's cause. When Narayan found out about his uncle's plan to escape by enlisting the support Haidar Ali, he confined him in his
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While Shastri was conducting his investigation, Sakharam Bapu ensured that pregnant Gangabai, the widow of Narayanrao, was secure and safe from harm's way. If Gangabai were to give birth to a male child, he would become the heir to the kingdom. But if she were to give birth to a female child,
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but there was a delay and the robes were finally obtained on 10 October 1773. He did not ceremoniously accept them in a durbar at Pune but rather at Alegaon near the river Bhima on the last day of October. He prepared his own seal and purposefully omitted Rajaram's name as being inauspicious.
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was held for a period of ten days between 21 and 31 August. The festival was a holiday for the administration and all the officials and staff were occupied with various aspects of the festival such as the worship in the morning and evening, Vedic recitation, music, dance, durbars, feasts and
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The period between 16 and 30 August witnessed an unprecedented number of secret talks and concealed discussions taking place among the various partisans of Raghunathrao, but as this had been a regular occurrence at the palace, no responsible official paid any serious attention to them. Since
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festival occurring on 25 September 1773, apart from having to discuss the threats posed by Haidar Ali and Nizam Ali, Raghunathrao also had to deal with the Gardi chiefs who virtually held all the power and whose only goal was to get as much money from him as possible. He appointed Bhavanrao
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As soon as this news reached Narayanrao he returned to Pune and found Raghunathrao in his tents. He brought him back to the palace on 11 April 1773 and placed additional guards to prevent his escape. This further strained the relationship between Narayanrao and Raghunathrao. In July 1773,
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for support. Naro Appaji, the Maratha officer in charge of law and order in Pune, heightened the security around Raghunathrao by placing guards to watch all the exits of the palace and the city. Raghunathrao pitched his tents outside and declared that he was going on an expedition.
647:(मारा) or 'kill' . The miscommunication led the Gardis to chase Narayanrao, who, upon hearing them coming, started running towards his uncles' residence screaming, "Kaka! Mala Vachva!!" ("Uncle! Save me!"). But nobody came to help him and he was killed in the presence of his uncle
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permitted to meet Raghunathrao they found him lying on the courtyard of the groundfloor and by Gardi soldiers with their swords drawn out. In the meanwhile some of the other Gardis began hastily plundering the palace and were only pacified due to the help of some city bankers.
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as assassins. Raghunath Rao was the next in line for the throne, at the time of Narayan Rao's death. Narayan Rao and his servant Chapaji Tilekar were both killed. A total of eleven people had been killed in the palace, seven of them were Brahmins, two servants, two maids. One
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Narayanrao's relationship with his uncle Raghunathrao was cordial at the beginning. When Raghunathrao's daughter Durgabai was about to get married, Narayanrao made the arrangements for the marriage which took place on 7 February 1773. But later when Narayanrao was at
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Raghunathrao become so exasperated with the restrictions imposed on him that he threatened to starve himself, his wife and his adopted son to death. Narayanrao failed to sooth things over by compromise. He had no advisors whom he could trust at this point.
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Upon hearing the news, Haripant Phadke hurriedly went to the palace with his troops and artillery but since he did not know what was happening inside he could not open fire on the structure. Many Maratha officials including Nana Phadnavis met at the
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as mercenaries. These men scaled and captured Shaniwar Wada. They quickly reached Narayanrao's chambers and held him captive. Narayanrao tried to appeal to his uncle but Anandibai intervened and did not allow his requests to reach Raghunathrao.
246:. He received a conventional education in reading, writing, and arithmetic and possessed a functional understanding of Sanskrit scriptures. He was married to Gangabai Sathe on 18 April 1763 before his eighth birthday. He was very close to
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Hence Raghunathrao now had no strong supporters except second rate men such as the Gardi chiefs, and Sakharam Hari, Sadashiv Ramchandra, Vyankatrao Kashi, Abaji Mahadev, Tulaji Pawar, Moroba Phadnavis, Maloji Ghorpade,
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It was to propitiate the ghost of Narayanrao, that haunted him throughout his life, that the Peshwa planted thousands of mango trees around Poona, gave gifts to Brahmins and to religious establishments
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believed in the ghost superstition too and planted thousands of mango trees around Pune city and gave donations to Brahmins and religious institutions in the hope that this would propitiate the ghost.
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There is a belief in Pune that Narayanrao's ghost roams the ruins of Shaniwar Wada at every full moon night and calls out for help just like the way he did on the fateful day of his assassination .
643:(धरा) or 'hold' (actual phrase in Marathi - " नारायणरावांना धरा"/"Narayanrao-ana dhara"). This message was intercepted by his wife Anandibai who changed a single letter to make it read as
753:(grandson of Peshwa Baji Rao) as the peshwa if their payments were made. They also demanded and were given a written order that Raghunathrao would protect them under all circumstances.
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and 11 other administrators in what is called "The Baarbhaai Conspiracy" (Conspiracy by the Twelve). Raghunathrao was tried, convicted, and sentenced to death by the justice
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Raghunathrao could not leave his confinement, the preparations for the plot were carried out by Tujali Pawar, an influential personal servant of Raghunathrao and his wife
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But the agents needed to have a discussion with Raghunathrao before they could formulate a plan. Raghunathrao was in strict confinement at the time and so they approached
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Before his death, Peshwa Madhavrao conducted a court session in which the issue of ascension was discussed at length and at the end of which, in the presence of the
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Muhammad Yusuf to Mudhoji Bhonsle in Nagpur, Tulaji Pawar and Kharagsinh to Haidar Ali, and finally Sumersinh to Indore. On 18 April 1774, Gangabai gave birth to a
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for a brief period from 1773 to 1774. Raghunathrao Bhat, also known as "Raghoba", "Raghoba Dada" and "Ragho Bharari," was the younger brother of
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According to popular legend, Raghunathrao had sent a message to Sumer Singh Gardi to fetch Narayanrao using the Marathi word
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festival on 25 September that Raghunathrao began to address that threats that were posed by Nizam Ali and Haidar Ali.
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August 30, 1773 by 'Gardis' (royal guards) in a contract killing ordered by his uncle, Raghoba, in a power struggle.
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to the young Peshwa. He soon fell out of favor with Madhavrao and even tried to conspire against him by joining the
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471:
214:
712:
288:
2393:
1911:
1901:
1840:
1825:
1639:
1634:
1619:
745:
604:. In December 1756, when Anandibai was yet a child, she was married to
585:
483:
1752:
1664:
1480:
781:
724:
589:
569:
514:
455:
333:
312:
238:
was born 10 August 1755. He was the third and youngest son of Peshwa
187:
1439:
763:
711:
659:
518:
397:
287:
67:
54:
2408:
1571:
2404:
423:
219:
596:
state. She was the daughter of Raghu Mahadev Oak. Her cousin
1148:
869:
India's Historic Battles: From Alexander the Great to Kargil
682:
was one of the prominent leaders of the Barbhais Council.
1225:
Journal of the Bombay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society
1522:
Peshwa Bajirao II and The Downfall of The Maratha Power
478:
on 8 December 1734. Much of his childhood was spent in
1503:"Security guard at historical Peshwa palace murdered"
2557:
2520:
2485:
2458:
2442:
2386:
2320:
2269:
2233:
1930:
1894:
1798:
1751:
1663:
1610:
631:, in an effort to free himself, Raghunathrao hired
505:) death in 1761, the Peshwa title was passed on to
454:) (18 August 1734 – 11 December 1783) was the 11th
168:
160:
152:
142:
128:
110:
98:
88:
74:
45:
23:
1443:. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015
525:against the Peshwa. The alliance was defeated at
482:. A small time after his birth, his step-mother,
186:occurred on 30 August 1773, when the 18 year old
624:uncle on charges of plotting to overthrow him.
258:, heir to the title of the Peshwa, died in the
600:(of the Raste family), was the wife of Peshwa
2420:
1583:
426:was also killed. The recently launched book,
16:1773 murder in modern-day Maharashtra, India
8:
1247:|Indian express article about Shaniwar Wada
430:, covers this tragic incident in detail.
2427:
2413:
2405:
1590:
1576:
1568:
1533:
488:Krishna Rao, also named Shamsher Bahadur I
20:
545:, he had his nephew Narayanrao murdered.
1192:Survey and Calendar of Marathi Documents
871:. Permanent Black. pp. 89, 90, 91.
674:
557:but the sentence was never carried out.
242:(also known as Nana Saheb) and his wife
1396:. Phoenix Publications. pp. 32–33.
1381:. Phoenix Publications. pp. 39–40.
1366:. Phoenix Publications. pp. 30–31.
829:
501:Peshwa's death and his half brother's (
474:. Raghunathrao was born in Mahuli near
201:. This plot was carried out During the
1454:
1318:. Phoenix Publications. p. 29,30.
1281:. Phoenix Publications. p. 27,28.
1136:. Phoenix Publications. p. 26,27.
1106:. Phoenix Publications. p. 25,26.
1091:. Phoenix Publications. p. 24,25.
1016:. Phoenix Publications. p. 21,22.
986:. Phoenix Publications. p. 20,21.
941:. Phoenix Publications. p. 18,19.
707:
37:A 1922 sketch depicting the Murder of
1409:"Top 10 most haunted places in India"
1327:
1325:
1294:
1292:
1290:
1288:
1272:
1270:
1268:
708:Raghunathrao's short lived government
7:
1433:Huned Contractor (31 October 2011).
529:, and Raghunathrao was placed under
1351:. Phoenix Publications. p. 28.
1336:. Phoenix Publications. p. 30.
1303:. Phoenix Publications. p. 29.
1261:. Phoenix Publications. p. 27.
1121:. Phoenix Publications. p. 26.
1076:. Phoenix Publications. p. 23.
1061:. Phoenix Publications. p. 24.
1046:. Phoenix Publications. p. 22.
1031:. Phoenix Publications. p. 22.
1001:. Phoenix Publications. p. 21.
971:. Phoenix Publications. p. 19.
956:. Phoenix Publications. p. 20.
926:. Phoenix Publications. p. 18.
911:. Phoenix Publications. p. 17.
896:. Phoenix Publications. p. 13.
856:. Phoenix Publications. p. 14.
841:. Phoenix Publications. p. 23.
1524:. Pragati Prakashan. p. 249.
1392:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1377:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1362:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1347:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1332:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1314:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1299:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1277:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1257:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1132:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1117:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1102:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1087:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1072:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1057:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1042:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1027:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
1012:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
997:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
982:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
967:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
952:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
937:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
922:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
907:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
892:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
852:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
837:Sardesai, Govind Sakharam (1948).
14:
1598:
1164:Indian History Congress (1966).
31:
2241:Maratha-Mughal War of 27 years
78:30 August 1773, 251 years ago
1:
584:Brahmin family belonging to
580:. Anandibai was born into a
184:Assassination of Narayan Rao
25:Assassination of Narayan Rao
1790:Jagjivanrao Pant Pratinidhi
1150:Assassination of the Peshwa
486:gave birth to his brother,
428:Assassination of the Peshwa
405:the place of assassination
301:Confinement of Raghunathrao
213:. They used members of the
2657:
2616:Mass murder in Maharashtra
1785:Shripatrao Pant Pratinidhi
2626:Stabbing attacks in India
1775:Parshuram Pant Pratinidhi
1556:
1544:
1536:
1461:: CS1 maint: unfit URL (
1147:Chaudhary, Ankur (2023).
576:, the 11th Peshwa of the
541:. Together with his wife
30:
2641:Mass murder in the 1770s
2621:Murdered Indian monarchs
2256:Second Anglo-Maratha War
768:Ather the accusation of
493:After Maratha defeat at
466:. His father was Peshwa
328:Second attempt to escape
2611:Assassinations in India
2261:Third Anglo-Maratha War
2251:First Anglo-Maratha War
1673:Moropant Trimbak Pingle
495:Third Battle of Panipat
359:Third attempt to escape
306:First attempt to escape
1765:Ramchandra Pant Amatya
1683:Ramchandra Pant Amatya
785:
732:
683:
672:
592:region of what is now
572:Queen and the wife of
406:
297:
1520:S. G. Vaidya (1976).
1477:"Pune and its ghosts"
1435:"Going ghost hunting"
1189:Gune, Vithal (1996),
1153:. Srishti Publishers.
867:Roy, Kaushik (2004).
776:, 40 days old infant
767:
715:
678:
663:
627:On 30 August 1773 in
619:in 1772, his brother
608:, younger brother of
401:
291:
266:took over as Peshwa.
555:Ram Shastri Prabhune
231:Reign of Narayan Rao
176:(escaped by fleeing)
2606:Maratha Confederacy
2574:Shamsher Bahadur II
2075:Invasions of Bengal
1895:Maratha Confederacy
1604:Maratha Confederacy
1222:Turner, O. (1904),
665:Ramshastri Prabhune
615:After the death of
349:Sakharam Hari Gupte
292:Portrait of Peshwa
192:Maratha Confederacy
147:Right to Succession
59:Maratha Confederacy
2577:Nawab Zulfikar Ali
2512:Shamsher Bahadur I
2307:Nizam of Hyderabad
2246:Maratha–Mysore War
1922:Patwardhan dynasty
1912:Scindia of Gwalior
789:Legal consequences
786:
733:
684:
673:
407:
298:
222:was also killed.
2593:
2592:
2450:Balaji Vishwanath
2402:
2401:
2302:Portuguese Empire
1907:Gaekwad of Baroda
1902:Bhonsle of Nagpur
1693:Balaji Vishwanath
1678:Moreshvar Pingale
1566:
1565:
1557:Succeeded by
1202:978-81-7074-166-4
759:Govindrao Gaikwad
470:& mother was
444:Raghunathrao Bhat
409:Raghuji Angre of
382:Ganapati festival
260:Battle of Panipat
180:
179:
2648:
2507:Sadashivrao Bhau
2429:
2422:
2415:
2406:
2120:Capture of Delhi
2095:North-west India
2065:2nd Trichinopoly
2055:1st Trichinopoly
1917:Holkar of Indore
1886:Tulsi Bai Holkar
1806:Ahilyabai Holkar
1708:Madhavrao Ballal
1688:Bahiroji Pingale
1602:
1592:
1585:
1578:
1569:
1551:years=1772–1773
1537:Preceded by
1534:
1529:
1528:
1517:
1511:
1510:
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904:
898:
897:
889:
883:
882:
864:
858:
857:
849:
843:
842:
834:
800:Barbhais Council
723:was berfly made
509:, second son of
503:Shamsher Bahadur
464:Nanasaheb Peshwa
332:Two agents from
203:Ganesh Chaturthi
35:
26:
21:
2656:
2655:
2651:
2650:
2649:
2647:
2646:
2645:
2596:
2595:
2594:
2589:
2553:
2516:
2493:Balaji Baji Rao
2481:
2454:
2438:
2433:
2403:
2398:
2382:
2316:
2265:
2229:
1926:
1890:
1794:
1747:
1723:Sawai Madhavrao
1703:Balaji Baji Rao
1659:
1606:
1596:
1562:
1554:
1542:
1532:
1519:
1518:
1514:
1501:
1500:
1496:
1486:
1484:
1475:
1474:
1470:
1453:
1446:
1444:
1432:
1431:
1427:
1417:
1415:
1407:Preeti Panwar.
1406:
1405:
1401:
1391:
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1371:
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1356:
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1195:, K.P. Bagchi,
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865:
861:
851:
850:
846:
836:
835:
831:
827:
802:
791:
710:
658:
653:
610:Balaji Baji Rao
588:village in the
563:
441:
436:
396:
370:
361:
342:Mudhoji Bhonsle
338:Raghuji Bhonsle
330:
308:
303:
250:, the widow of
240:Balaji Baji Rao
236:Narayanrao Bhat
233:
228:
175:
135:
123:
121:
119:
117:
115:
101:
82:Local mean time
80:10:00 am (
79:
61:
53:
41:
24:
17:
12:
11:
5:
2654:
2652:
2644:
2643:
2638:
2633:
2628:
2623:
2618:
2613:
2608:
2598:
2597:
2591:
2590:
2588:
2587:
2584:
2582:Ali Bahadur II
2578:
2575:
2572:
2567:
2561:
2559:
2558:5th generation
2555:
2554:
2552:
2551:
2550:(Krishna Sinh)
2545:
2540:
2535:
2530:
2524:
2522:
2521:4th generation
2518:
2517:
2515:
2514:
2509:
2504:
2501:
2496:
2489:
2487:
2486:3rd generation
2483:
2482:
2480:
2479:
2476:
2473:
2468:
2462:
2460:
2459:2nd generation
2456:
2455:
2453:
2452:
2446:
2444:
2443:1st generation
2440:
2439:
2434:
2432:
2431:
2424:
2417:
2409:
2400:
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2324:
2322:
2318:
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2315:
2314:
2309:
2304:
2299:
2297:British Empire
2294:
2292:Durrani Empire
2289:
2284:
2279:
2273:
2271:
2267:
2266:
2264:
2263:
2258:
2253:
2248:
2243:
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2222:
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2212:
2207:
2202:
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2182:
2177:
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2167:
2162:
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2147:
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2137:
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2127:
2122:
2117:
2112:
2107:
2102:
2097:
2092:
2087:
2082:
2077:
2072:
2067:
2062:
2057:
2052:
2047:
2042:
2037:
2032:
2027:
2022:
2017:
2012:
2007:
2002:
2000:Raigarh (1689)
1997:
1992:
1987:
1982:
1977:
1972:
1967:
1962:
1957:
1952:
1947:
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1936:
1934:
1928:
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1914:
1909:
1904:
1898:
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1892:
1891:
1889:
1888:
1883:
1878:
1876:Umabai Dabhade
1873:
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1848:
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1833:
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1823:
1818:
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1800:
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1793:
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1787:
1782:
1772:
1770:Pralhad Niraji
1767:
1761:
1759:
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1748:
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1720:
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1543:
1538:
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1512:
1494:
1483:. 19 July 2015
1468:
1425:
1399:
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1354:
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1321:
1306:
1284:
1264:
1249:
1238:
1214:
1201:
1181:
1170:. Vol. 28
1156:
1139:
1124:
1109:
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1079:
1064:
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1034:
1019:
1004:
989:
974:
959:
944:
929:
914:
899:
884:
877:
859:
844:
828:
826:
823:
801:
798:
790:
787:
729:Raghunathrao's
709:
706:
680:Nana Phadnavis
671:of this case.
657:
654:
652:
649:
602:Balaji Bajirao
578:Maratha Empire
562:
559:
551:Nana Phadnavis
497:, his brother
460:Maratha Empire
440:
437:
435:
432:
395:
392:
369:
366:
360:
357:
329:
326:
307:
304:
302:
299:
232:
229:
227:
224:
215:Kalbelia tribe
178:
177:
170:
166:
165:
162:
158:
157:
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150:
149:
144:
140:
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130:
126:
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90:
86:
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76:
72:
71:
47:
43:
42:
36:
28:
27:
15:
13:
10:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
2653:
2642:
2639:
2637:
2636:1773 in India
2634:
2632:
2631:Sword attacks
2629:
2627:
2624:
2622:
2619:
2617:
2614:
2612:
2609:
2607:
2604:
2603:
2601:
2586:Jagat Bahadur
2585:
2583:
2579:
2576:
2573:
2571:
2568:
2566:
2563:
2562:
2560:
2556:
2549:
2546:
2544:
2541:
2539:
2536:
2534:
2531:
2529:
2526:
2525:
2523:
2519:
2513:
2510:
2508:
2505:
2502:
2500:
2497:
2494:
2491:
2490:
2488:
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2477:
2474:
2472:
2469:
2467:
2464:
2463:
2461:
2457:
2451:
2448:
2447:
2445:
2441:
2437:
2430:
2425:
2423:
2418:
2416:
2411:
2410:
2407:
2395:
2392:
2391:
2389:
2385:
2379:
2376:
2374:
2371:
2369:
2366:
2364:
2361:
2359:
2358:Shaniwar Wada
2356:
2354:
2351:
2349:
2346:
2344:
2341:
2339:
2336:
2334:
2331:
2329:
2326:
2325:
2323:
2319:
2313:
2310:
2308:
2305:
2303:
2300:
2298:
2295:
2293:
2290:
2288:
2287:Mughal Empire
2285:
2283:
2280:
2278:
2275:
2274:
2272:
2268:
2262:
2259:
2257:
2254:
2252:
2249:
2247:
2244:
2242:
2239:
2238:
2236:
2232:
2226:
2223:
2221:
2218:
2216:
2213:
2211:
2208:
2206:
2203:
2201:
2198:
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2191:
2188:
2186:
2183:
2181:
2178:
2176:
2173:
2171:
2168:
2166:
2163:
2161:
2160:Bahadur Benda
2158:
2156:
2153:
2151:
2148:
2146:
2143:
2141:
2138:
2136:
2133:
2131:
2128:
2126:
2123:
2121:
2118:
2116:
2115:Rakshasbhuvan
2113:
2111:
2108:
2106:
2103:
2101:
2098:
2096:
2093:
2091:
2088:
2086:
2083:
2081:
2078:
2076:
2073:
2071:
2068:
2066:
2063:
2061:
2058:
2056:
2053:
2051:
2048:
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629:Shaniwar Wada
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394:Assassination
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209:and his wife
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2565:Madhavrao II
2503:Janardan Rao
2499:Raghunathrao
2471:Chimaji Appa
1778:
1718:Raghunathrao
1655:Pratap Singh
1612:Chhatrapatis
1560:Raghunathrao
1552:
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1525:
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1497:
1485:. Retrieved
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1445:. Retrieved
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755:
743:
734:
719:, Nawab of
702:
694:
685:
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614:
574:Raghunathrao
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531:house arrest
492:
451:
448:Ragho Ballal
447:
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434:Perpetrators
427:
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416:
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379:
371:
368:Preparations
362:
353:
346:
331:
322:
309:
283:Raghunathrao
271:family deity
268:
235:
234:
199:assassinated
183:
181:
129:Perpetrators
118:7 Brahmins,
62:(modern day
18:
2548:Ali Bahadur
2543:Baji Rao II
2538:Narayan Rao
2533:Madhavrao I
2495:(Nanasaheb)
2436:Bhat family
2270:Adversaries
2205:Farrukhabad
2155:Gajendragad
2105:3rd Panipat
2070:Katwa (2nd)
2060:Katwa (1st)
1950:Pavan Khind
1743:Bhat family
1728:Baji Rao II
1713:Narayan Rao
1547:Narayan Rao
1540:Madhavrao I
1174:11 February
1167:Proceedings
794:Ram Shastri
751:Ali Bahadur
744:During the
617:Madhavrao I
594:Maharashtra
535:Madhavrao I
507:Madhavrao I
294:Narayan Rao
252:Sadashivrao
195:Narayan Rao
161:Convictions
120:2 servants,
116:(including
100:Attack type
93:Narayan Rao
64:Maharashtra
39:Narayan Rao
2600:Categories
2570:Nana Sahib
2528:Vishwasrao
2466:Baji Rao I
2368:Sindhudurg
2282:Qutb Shahi
2277:Adil Shahi
1990:Bhupalgarh
1955:Umberkhind
1940:Pratapgarh
1846:Parvatibai
1836:Lakshmibai
1779:hereditary
1757:Pratinidhi
1738:Nana Sahib
1698:Baji Rao I
1645:Rajaram II
1232:14 January
1208:14 January
878:8178241099
825:References
819:Bajirao II
738:Rajaram II
621:Narayanrao
539:Narayanrao
317:Haidar Ali
296:aged 17-18
256:Vishwasrao
248:Parvatibai
226:Background
2338:Pratapgad
2210:Bharatpur
2190:3rd Delhi
2090:2nd Delhi
1871:Soyarabai
1866:Sakvarbai
1851:Putalabai
1816:Gopikabai
1811:Anandibai
1733:Amrut Rao
1630:Rajaram I
1457:cite news
774:Anandibai
651:Aftermath
598:Gopikabai
582:Chitpavan
566:Anandibai
561:Anandibai
543:Anandibai
527:Ghodegaon
523:Hyderabad
511:Nanasaheb
499:Nanasaheb
468:Bajirao I
387:Sumersinh
375:Anandibai
264:Madhavrao
244:Gopikabai
211:Anandibai
137:Anandibai
122:2 maids)
2363:Shivneri
2343:Purandar
2225:Mahidpur
2220:Koregaon
2170:Chaksana
2125:Pachgaon
2100:Peshawar
2040:Mandsaur
1975:Sinhagad
1970:Purandar
1945:Kolhapur
1881:Baka Bai
1831:Kashibai
1821:Jankibai
1650:Shahu II
1625:Sambhaji
1505:. 2009.
1413:Zee News
656:Reaction
533:. After
472:Kashibai
446:(a.k.a.
46:Location
2475:Bhiubai
2394:Shivrai
2333:Panhala
2200:Laswari
2150:Savanur
2135:Wadgaon
2130:Saunshi
2110:Alegaon
2080:Burdwan
2030:Palkhed
2020:Raigarh
1995:Bijapur
1932:Battles
1856:Ramabai
1841:Mastani
1826:Jijabai
1665:Peshwas
1640:Shahu I
1635:Tarabai
1620:Shivaji
1487:21 July
1447:21 July
1418:21 July
780:became
746:Dashera
698:Dashera
689:Budhwar
586:Guhagar
484:Mastani
458:of the
190:of the
169:Charges
153:Verdict
2580:Nawab
2478:Anubai
2373:Rajgad
2353:Rajgad
2348:Raigad
2328:Mangad
2312:Mysore
2215:Khadki
2195:Assaye
2180:Kharda
2165:Lalsot
2145:Badami
2085:Narela
2045:Bhopal
2015:Khelna
2010:Satara
1985:Kalyan
1980:Salher
1960:Chakan
1861:Saibai
1755:&
1753:Amatya
1481:Rediff
1199:
875:
782:Peshwa
727:after
725:Peshwa
645:maaraa
641:dharaa
633:Gardis
590:Konkan
570:Peshwa
568:was a
515:regent
480:Satara
476:Satara
456:Peshwa
411:Kolaba
334:Nagpur
313:Nashik
197:, was
188:Peshwa
164:Murder
156:guilty
143:Motive
111:Deaths
89:Target
2387:Coins
2378:Torna
2321:Forts
2185:Poona
2175:Patan
2140:Adoni
2050:Vasai
2035:Malwa
2025:Torna
2005:Jinji
1965:Surat
1799:Women
1440:Sakal
721:Banda
519:Nizam
173:Death
124:1 Cow
68:India
2234:Wars
1489:2015
1463:link
1449:2015
1420:2015
1234:2009
1210:2009
1197:ISBN
1176:2019
873:ISBN
772:and
667:the
380:The
277:and
182:The
75:Date
55:Pune
811:son
521:of
450:or
424:cow
220:cow
114:11
2602::
1479:.
1459:}}
1455:{{
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1267:^
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1465:)
1451:.
1422:.
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70:)
52:,
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