Udai Singh I
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Udai Singh I | |
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Rana of Mewar | |
Rana of Mewar | |
Reign | 1468–1473 |
Predecessor | Rana Kumbha |
Successor | Rana Raimal |
Died | 1473 |
Issue | Surajmal Sahasmal |
Dynasty | Sisodias of Mewar |
Father | Rana Kumbha |
Mother | Rani Kumbhal Deiji |
Sisodia Rajputs of Mewar II (1326–1971) |
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Udai Singh I (? –1473) a.k.a. Udaikaran or Udah, was the Rana (r. 1468–1473) of Mewar Kingdom. He was a son of Rana Kumbha.
Biography
Udai Singh was born to Rana Kumbha and Maharani Kumbhal Devi. He was suspicious that his father wanted to make his younger brother, Raimal, his successor. So he killed his father, Rana Kumbha, in 1468 while Kumbha was praying in the Kumbhaswami Temple in Kumbhalgarh Fort. Thereafter became known as pitrahanta (patricide) or "Uda Hatiyaro" (Uda Murderer).[1] Udai himself died in 1473, with the cause of death sometimes being stated as a result of being struck by lightning but more likely to have also been murder by his own brother Rana Raimal to avenge the death of their father, Rana Kumbha.[2]
The death by lightning account is mentioned in the Mewar chronicle Vir Vinod, by Kavi Shyamaldas, which James Tod mistook to be about the sultan of Delhi rather than Ghiyath Shah, the Sultan of Malwa. It was Shah who agreed to render assistance to Udai Singh, and in return Udai Singh agreed to give his daughter in marriage to him. The proposed matrimonial alliance aimed at establishing friendly relations between the two States. But destiny had it otherwise. Rana Udai Singh was struck with lightning, when he was returning to his camp, after completing the negotiations, and thus the entire plan fell through and no marriage took place. Surajmal and Sahasmal, however, remained in the Malwa court and continued to press the Sultan to help them in recovering their patrimony. Sultan Ghiyath Shah finally agreed to assist them and with his forces marched on Chittor.[3]
References
- ^ Bravehearts of India. p. 97.
- ^ Ring, Trudy; Watson, Noelle; Schellinger, Paul, eds. (2012). Asia and Oceania: International Dictionary of Historic Places. Routledge. p. 193. ISBN 978-1-13663-979-1.
- ^ Day, Upendra Nath. "Medieval Malwa: A Political and Cultural History, 1401-1562". Delhi University, History Department. p. 224.