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The Marathas
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India Travel Tourism > History
> The Marathas
The power that came closest to imperial pretensions was that of the Marathas.
Starting from scratch, the non-Brahmin castes in the Maharashtra region
had been organised into a fighting force by their legendary leader, Shivaji.
Dimunitive in height, clever beyond his enemy's imagination, Shivaji led
everyday of his life like a drama in which he was always a step ahead
of his adversaries. The Marathas moved like lightning and appeared in
areas where least expected, at times hundreds of miles away from their
home. They always went back with their hands full of plunder.
Gradually, states began to pay them vast amounts in "protection money,"
insurance aginst their plundering raids. By the third quarter of the 18th
century, the Marathas had under their direct administration or indirect
subjection enough Indian territory to justify use of the term "the Maratha
Empire", though it never came near the dimensions of the Mughal empire.
The Marathas also never sought to formally substitute themselves for the
Mughals; they often kept the emperor under their thumb but paid him formal
obeisance.
When Nadir Shah of Persia attacked Delhi in 1739, the declining Mughals
were even further weakened, but the expansion of the Maratha power came
to an abrupt halt in 1761 at Panipat. There the Marathas were defeated
by Ahmad Shah Durrani from Afganisthan. Their expansion to the west halted,
they nevertheless consolidated their control over central India and their
region known as Malwa. Soon, however, they were to fall to India's final
imperial power, the British.
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