Bajar
Bajar (बाजड) Bajad (बजाड़)[1][2] Bazaad (बजाड़)[3] Bazad (बज़ाड़) Bazzad (बज़ाड़) gotra Jats are found in Rajasthan, Haryana, Maharashtra and Delhi. Bazid clan is found in Afghanistan.[4]
Histroy
According to H.A. Rose Bajar (बजाड़) is also a Gujar clan (agricultural) found in Amritsar. [5]
James Tod on Bazar and Tak
Mention of Tak - James Tod writes that This incidental mention of the race of Tak in Annals of Jaisalmer, and of its being in great consideration on the settlement of the Yadus in the Punjab, is very important. I have given a sketch of this tribe (Vol. I, p. 93), but since I wrote it, I have discovered the capital of the Tak, and on the very spot where I should have expected the site of Taxila, the capital of Taxiles, the friend of Alexander. In that sketch I hesitated not to say, that the name was not personal, but arose from his being the head of the Takshac or Naga tribe, which is confirmed. It is to Babar, or rather to his translator, that I am indebted for this discovery. In describing the limits of Banu, Babar thus mentions it : "And on the west is Desht, which is also called Bazar and Tak ;" to which the erudite translator adds, "Tak is said long to have been the capital of Damān." In Mr. Elphinstone's map, Bazar, which Baber makes identical with Tak, is a few miles north of the city of Attoc. There is no question that both the river and city were named after the race of Tak or Takshac, the Nagas, Nagavansi, or 'snake race', who spread over India. Indeed, I would assume that the name of Omphis, which young Taxiles had on his father's death, is Ophis, the Greek version of Tak, the 'serpent' The Taks appear to have been established in the same region at the earliest period. The Mahabharata describes the wars between Janamejaya and the Takshacs, to revenge on their king the death of his father Parikshita, emperor of Indraprastha, or Dehli.[6]
Rajatarangini[7] tells....The king Uchchala (b.1070,r.1101–1111) of Lohara family was pleased with the services of Bhogasena and though he was without follower or a house, the king made him the governor of the Rajasthana (palace). He had seen Bhogasena's valor in the battle on the day of Indradvadashi when Gaggachandra, though he had a large army under him, fled from the engagement. The king raised Saḍḍa, Chchhaḍḍa and Byaḍḍasa, sons of Sadda, a common soldier, to the post of ministers. (p.16-17) (Saḍḍa→Sadh, Chchhaḍḍa→ Chad, Byaḍḍasa→ Bajad)
Distribution of Bazar Jats in Rajasthan
Villages in Sikar district
Villages in Ajmer district
Villages in Bikaner district
Suin,
Villages in Churu district
Distribution in Haryana
Villages in Bhiwani district
Aadampur Dadi(आदमपुर दाडी), Sui (सूई), Baliyali (बलियाली),
Villages in Rohtak district
Makrauli (मकड़ौली) Makrauli Kalan, Makrauli Khurd
Villages in Sonipat District
Distribution in Delhi
Hirnki, Nithari, Jia Sarai, Ber Sarai, Humayunpur
Distribution in Maharashtra
Villages in Nasik district
Distribution in Punjab
Villages in Jalandhar district
Notable persons from this gotra
Arun Kumar Bazad Raghubir Singh DSO
External links
Bajar village
References
- ↑ B S Dahiya:Jats the Ancient Rulers (A clan study)/Jat Clan in India, p.236, s.n.12
- ↑ Jat History Dalip Singh Ahlawat/Parishisht-I, s.n. ब-27
- ↑ O.S.Tugania:Jat Samuday ke Pramukh Adhar Bindu, p.50, s.n. 1644
- ↑ An Inquiry Into the Ethnography of Afghanistan, H. W. Bellew, p.79, 119
- ↑ A glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Punjab and North-West Frontier Province By H.A. Rose Vol II/B , p.38
- ↑ James Tod: Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan, Volume II, Annals of Jaisalmer, p.203 fn-4
- ↑ Kings of Kashmira Vol 2 (Rajatarangini of Kalhana)/Book VIII,p.16-17
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