Solanki dynasty
Solanki dynasty was a Rajput dynasty of Medieval India. Solanki's authority was to the Patan and the tough states. They ruled from the 9th to the 13th century. They were also known as Chalukya of Gujarat. These people are essentially Suryavanshi Vratya Kshatriyas and are from Dakshinpath, but with the influence of Jain Munis, these people got involved in the Jain sect. After this, during the time of India's Emperor Ashokvardhan Maurya, the Brahmins of Kanye Kubbs shared the following: in the Vedic (tumor infested).
The Chalukyas of Gujarat are described as Solankis in the folklores of the 13th and the 14th centuries. It is said that the founder of this lineage was born from a fire pit on Abu Mountains. These descendants, pratars, Parmar and Chahuman were all members of Agnikul. On the basis of their archives, Chalukya claims that they were born from Brahma's cheek (kirtal), and this is why they got this name (Chalukya).
In ancient traditions, it seems that Chalukya originally lived in a place called Kalyanakkat of Kanauj and from there he settled in Gujarat. Four branches of this family are known till now. The oldest of them ruled in Matthamur (Madhya Bharat) in the fourth quarter of the ninth century. The other three ruled Gujarat and the wave. The most important of these four branches was that branch which was ruled by the Ahenilpattan (Patan of the current Gujarat) as the capital in Saraswat Mandal.
The oldest known king of this lineage is Manraj. He defeated the arcs in 942 AD and established his dominance in the Saraswamandal. Mularaj defeated the rulers of Saurashtra and Kutch, got their state in his state, but to protect his territory, he had to fight with Shakibi's chaukams, flood wrecks, Malv's Parmaras and Trichuri kalchuris. p>
Bhima is the second ruler of this dynasty, who is sitting on the throne in 1022. In the initial period of the rule of this king, Mahmud Ghajnavi destroyed Anheilpattan in 1025 and looted the temple of Somnath. After some time after Mahmud Ghaznavi returned from the state of Chalukya, Bhima won the Abu Mountains and Bhanimal and fought with the wishes of South Marwar. In the middle of the 11th century, he defeated Parmar by making a treaty with Kaluchuri Karna and took possession of Malav for some time. Bhima's son and successor, Karna, made a treaty with the Karnatwals and attacked Malav and killed his ruler Parmar Jai Singh, but Parmar lost heart to Udiyaditya.
Karan's son and successor Jaising Singh Siddharj was the most important ruler of this dynasty. From the beginning of the 11th century, the state of Chauquisites was called Gurgar. Jaisingham successfully fought from Shakambari and South Marwah, the Parmaras of Malav, the Chandels of Bundelkhand and the South Chautuks. His successor Kumarapal fought the chhattisites of Shankhari, Malav Narsesh Vallal and Konkan Nars Malikargun. He came under the influence of the great Jeddharm teacher Hemchandra. His successor Ajayapal also fought with the wishes of Sharkhari's desires and the incarnation of Mewar, but in 1176 he was killed by his guardian. In the reign of his son and successor Anarchar II, Mujaheddin Muhammad Gori invaded Gujarat in 1178, but the fourths failed. The successor of Originator II, his younger brother Bhim II, was a powerful ruler.
In this period, the provincial rulers and consulates raised their heads for independence but succeeded in keeping the control of Baghelwanti Sardar, the king's minister. Even then, a person named Jaisingh succeeded him for a long time under the control of the throne, but in the end he had to bow before Bhima II. Baghels related to the Cholukya dynasty have protected this time from foreign invasions of Gujarat, and became the real ruler of that region. After the second Bhima II, Tribhuvanapala became the last known king of this lineage. It was ruling in 1242. Right after the fall of this branch of the Chalukya, the rights of the people have been taken over the country.
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