Asiagh

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This article is about the Asiagh gotra, also known as Sehwag. For the batsman, see Virender Sehwag.

Asiagh (असियाग) (other spellings: Asiyag (असियाग), Sihag (सियाग), Sehwag (सहवाग), Siag (सियाग), Siyag (सियाग), Siak (सियाक)) is a gotra of jats in Rajasthan, Haryana and Madhya Pradesh in India. They are mentioned as Asoi by Megasthenes in his book Indica.

They were rulers in Jangladesh, which coincided with the princely state of Bikaner in Rajasthan. The Asiagh people were inhabitants of Asirgarh. One group of them migrated to Europe. Another group moved to Jangladesh. The country Assyria derives its name from Asiaghs. The origin of word Asiagh is from Sanskrit word ‘Asii’ meaning sword. According to Kautilya the people who depended on ‘Asii’ (sword) for their living were known as Asiagh.

According to G. Bongard-Levin and A. Vigasin, Soviet studies have revealed that the migration of steppes tribes from Central Asia started in the second century BCE. Excavations in Tajikistan and Swat (Pakistan) reveal the presence of Aryan culture in Central Asia at that time. Some groups of these people had lineage directly with the Rig Vedic Aryans.

In the second century BCE, the Saka tribes crossed the Pamir and moved to north India. They carried with them some elements of Central Asian culture. The sword, “Asii” in Sanskrit, is one of them that came to Taxila. From the above description it becomes clear that the Asiagh people were the first wave of Sakas from Central Asia.

Asiagh Jat were rulers in Jangladesh for many centuries. They had about 150 villages in their republic in Jangladesh when Rathores under the leadership of Bika and Kandal were spreading their rule in Jangladesh in late 15th century. Bika established his capital at Bikaner in 1488. Chokha Singh was their king and their capital was at Pallu town. Raotsar, Biramsar, Dandoosar and Gandeli were other famous towns in their state.

Chokha Singh had war with Rathores, but the Godara Jats had aligned with Rathores due to which Asiaghs faced a defeat. Godaras were the most powerful among the Jat rulers of Jangladesh. Rathores had established good relations with the Delhi Muslim rulers and became powerful. The lack of harmony and coordination among other Jat rulers led to the defeat of Jat states in Jangladesh and established the Rathore Kingdom.

[edit] Notable persons of this gotra

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Thakur Deshraj: Jat Itihas (Hindi), Maharaja Suraj Mal Smarak Shiksha Sansthan, Delhi, 1934.
  • James Tod: Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan (1829)
  • G. Bongard-Levin and A.Vigasin : The Image of India - A study of Ancient Indian Civilization in the USSR, 1984
Tribes and Clans of the Jat people

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