Chapter 3: The Rise of the Marathas Class 8th Social Science (Exploring Society: India and Beyond) ncert solution

The Rise of the Marathas — Full Solutions | @edugrown
⚔ Chapter 3  |  Tapestry of the Past  |  Grade 8

The Rise of
the Marathas
— Complete Solutions

Every Think About It, Let’s Explore, Don’t Miss Out and end-of-chapter question answered in detail, with all chapter figures embedded throughout.

Raigad Fort Maharashtra@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.1 — Raigad Fort, Maharashtra, where Chhatrapati Shivaji was crowned Chhatrapati in 1674
Raigad Fort palace gate@EDUGROWN
The grand entrance to the palace at Raigad Fort

Opener · Page 61The Big Questions

Three questions that frame the entire chapter. Comprehensive answers drawing on the full narrative.

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Big Question 1Who were the Marathas? How did they manage to become the largest pan-Indian power before the British took over?
Answer

Who were the Marathas?

The Marathas are a group of people native to the Deccan plateau, specifically present-day Maharashtra. They are identified with the Marathi language, which has had a rich literary tradition since the 12th century. During the 13th century, Maharashtra was ruled by the Yadava dynasty (capital: Devagiri/Daulatabad), which was then conquered by the Khilji Sultanate in the 14th century. Despite political changes, a powerful cultural and spiritual tradition of Bhakti continued through saints like Dnyaneshwar, Namdev, Tukaram and Ramdas, giving Maratha society a strong cultural foundation.

How they became the largest pan-Indian power

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Cultural foundations (7th–17th century)

The Bhakti saints built social cohesion, political awareness and cultural confidence. They translated the Upanishads and Bhagavad Gita into Marathi, making philosophy accessible to common people.

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Chhatrapati Shivaji’s founding vision (1646–1680)

Shivaji launched campaigns at age 16, capturing neglected forts, building a navy (1657 — the first full-time Indian navy), and using guerrilla warfare to defeat far stronger Bijapur and Mughal forces. He was crowned Chhatrapati in 1674 at Raigad, formally establishing the Maratha Empire. His concept of Swarajya (self-rule) gave the Marathas an inspiring ideology.

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Resistance to Aurangzeb (1682–1707)

Even after Aurangzeb captured and executed Sambhaji, the Marathas under Rajaram and then Tarabai kept fighting. Aurangzeb died without subduing them, and his prolonged Deccan campaigns bankrupted the Mughal treasury.

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Pan-Indian expansion under the Peshwas (18th century)

Under Peshwa Bajirao I and Nanasaheb Peshwa, the Marathas expanded to control large parts of India — briefly reaching Lahore, Attock and Peshawar in the northwest. By 1754 they controlled Delhi. They recovered quickly from the catastrophic defeat at Panipat (1761) under Peshwa Madhavrao I and recaptured Delhi in 1771 under Mahadji Shinde.

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Why they ultimately lost to the British

Internal disunity among Maratha chiefs, and the superior organisational and technological abilities of the British, led to defeat in three Anglo-Maratha Wars (1775–1818). The British effectively took India from the Marathas more than from any other power.

Shivaji portrait 1680s British Museum@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.5 — Painting of Shivaji made in the 1680s (British Museum)
Sindhudurg fort Maratha naval@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.6 — Sindhudurg Fort near Maharashtra-Goa border: one of the Maratha’s legendary naval fortifications
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Big Question 2What were some features of their governance?
Answer

The Maratha governance system, especially under Chhatrapati Shivaji, was innovative and in many ways ahead of its time:

Civilian Administration

  • Abolished hereditary posts: Unlike the Sultans and Mughals, Shivaji did not allow government positions to pass automatically from father to son. This prevented the creation of powerful, entrenched noble families who could challenge royal authority.
  • Salary-based bureaucracy: All officials were paid cash salaries from the state treasury, not rewarded with land assignments (jagirs). This kept officials dependent on the state and accountable to it.
  • Periodic transfers: Officials were regularly rotated to prevent them from building a local power base.
  • Ashtapradhana mandala: A council of eight ministers (Pradhan = Prime Minister, Amatya = Finance, Sachiv = Land Revenue, Mantri = Intelligence, Sumant = Foreign Affairs, Senapati = Commander-in-chief, Nyayadhish = Chief Justice, Panditrao = Religious Affairs) assisted the Chhatrapati.
  • Social welfare: Shivaji gave pensions to widows of soldiers and offered military posts to their sons — a remarkable early welfare system.
  • Chauth and sardeshmukhi: A taxation system levied on provinces not directly under Maratha control (25% chauth + 10% sardeshmukhi) in exchange for protection.

Military Administration

  • Armed forces divided into infantry, cavalry and navy. Cavalry had two types: bargirs (state-funded) and shilledars (self-funded).
  • Forts were “the core of the state” — the Marathas built and controlled hundreds of hill, coastal and land forts.
  • A formidable navy challenged European naval dominance. Kanhoji Angre famously reversed the cartaz (naval pass) system, demanding passes from Europeans rather than the other way round.

Judicial System

  • The panchayat (local gathering of officials) delivered justice. An appeal could be made to a Maratha chief for unsatisfactory verdicts.
  • Remarkable for moderate use of capital punishment.
  • Kotwals (police) maintained law and order in cities like Pune and Indore.

Cultural Policy

  • Sanskrit seal inscription (departing from Persian tradition); commissioned the Rajya-Vyavahara-Kosha to replace Persian loanwords with Sanskrit equivalents.
  • Promoted Marathi and Sanskrit literature, rebuilt desecrated temples, supported the arts and religious institutions while respecting other faiths.
Shivaji coins Devanagari@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.12 — Chhatrapati Shivaji minted gold and copper coins in Devanagari script — an assertion of cultural sovereignty
Shivaji Sanskrit seal@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.17 — Chhatrapati Shivaji’s seal with Sanskrit inscription: “waxing like the new moon, reigning for the welfare of the people”
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Big Question 3What impact did the Maratha Empire leave in Indian history?
Answer

The Maratha Empire’s impact on Indian history was profound across several dimensions:

Political impact

  • Ended Mughal supremacy: The Marathas were the primary force that eroded Mughal power. Aurangzeb spent his last 25 years unsuccessfully trying to subdue them, exhausting the Mughal treasury.
  • Largest pre-British Indian empire: By the mid-18th century, the Marathas controlled more of the subcontinent than any other power, from Peshawar in the northwest to parts of Odisha and Tamil Nadu in the south and east.
  • The British inherited Maratha India: As the chapter states, “The British took India from the Marathas more than from the Mughals or any other power.” This is historically significant — the political vacuum left by Maratha decline was what the British filled.

Governance legacy

  • Shivaji’s salary-based, non-hereditary, accountable administration was an early model of merit-based governance.
  • The ideal of Swarajya (self-rule, freedom from foreign domination) planted the seeds of Indian nationalism. It directly inspired leaders of India’s independence movement.

Cultural impact

  • Revived Hindu cultural traditions suppressed during Mughal rule: temple rebuilding (Kashi Vishwanath by Ahilyabai Holkar, Somnath), patronage of Sanskrit and Marathi literature, revival of Carnatic music and Bharatanatyam dance under Thanjavur Maratha patronage.
  • The Thanjavur Marathas created a uniquely syncretic culture blending Tamil, Telugu and Marathi traditions. Serfoji II started the first printing press by a native ruler in India and established the Dhanwantari Mahal free medical centre combining Indian and Western medicine.
  • Cultural self-confidence: Shivaji’s coins bore Devanagari instead of Persian script; his seal used Sanskrit; his diplomacy used Marathi rather than Persian. This was a deliberate assertion of cultural identity.

Women’s leadership

  • Tarabai’s military leadership after Rajaram’s death preserved Maratha independence during its most critical moment. Without her, Aurangzeb might have succeeded.
  • Ahilyabai Holkar’s 30-year governance of the Holkar kingdom was a model of wise, people-centred administration — building temples, ghats, wells and roads across India from Kedarnath to Rameswaram.
Historical significance: The Maratha story demonstrated something no one had shown since the fall of Vijayanagara: that an Indian power, rooted in its own culture and fighting for its own self-rule, could challenge, resist and ultimately outlast the Mughal Empire. This demonstration inspired many who came after.

In-TextThink About It & Let’s Explore

All activity boxes from pages 63–79, answered in detail with supporting figures.

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Let’s Explore · Page 63Have you ever heard the term ‘bhakti’? What does it mean to you? Choose a bhakti saint from any part of India, learn about their life and teachings, and share one of their poems or bhajans.
Answer
Sant Ramdas Maratha@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.3 — Sant Ramdas, spiritual mentor of Chhatrapati Shivaji and composer of Dasbodh, a guide to spiritual and practical life
Raigad Fort Maharashtra@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.1 — Raigad Fort: built on the foundations of Maratha spiritual and cultural strength nurtured by bhakti saints

What is Bhakti?

Bhakti (from Sanskrit bhaj = to share/worship) means devotion to the divine — a personal, direct, heart-centred relationship with God or a particular deity, without the need for complex rituals, temple priests, or caste distinctions as intermediaries. Bhakti saints preached that God is accessible to all, regardless of birth, gender or social position.

Between the 7th and 17th centuries, bhakti movements spread across India, with saints composing devotional poetry and songs in the languages of common people (Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Marathi, Hindi, Punjabi), making spiritual wisdom universally accessible.

Maharashtra’s bhakti tradition: Sant Tukaram

  • Life (1598–1650): Tukaram was born into a family of traders in Dehu, near Pune. He faced personal tragedy (deaths of family members in famine) and turned to devotion to Vithoba (Vitthal) of Pandharpur. Despite opposition from Brahmin priests who tried to destroy his writings, his abhangas (devotional songs) survived and spread.
  • Teachings: He preached that God resides in the hearts of all people, not just in temples. He strongly opposed caste discrimination and the idea that knowledge of God was the preserve of the upper castes. His abhangas encouraged common people to find God through sincerity, honesty and love rather than ritual.
  • Key message: “The Name of God is my only capital. With this I earn my livelihood. God is the father and mother of all. There is no difference between a Brahmin and a cobbler in His eyes.”
  • Legacy: Tukaram’s around 4,500 surviving abhangas are sung across Maharashtra to this day. They gave Maratha society a profound sense of spiritual equality that underpinned the social solidarity Chhatrapati Shivaji would later mobilise politically.

Other notable bhakti saints of Maharashtra

  • Dnyaneshwar (13th c.): Composed Dnyaneshwari, a commentary on the Bhagavad Gita in Marathi — one of the earliest and greatest works of Marathi literature.
  • Namdev (14th c.): Composed abhangas in both Marathi and Punjabi; his hymns are included in the Guru Granth Sahib, showing the pan-Indian reach of the bhakti tradition.
  • Sant Ramdas (17th c.): Spiritual mentor of Chhatrapati Shivaji; composed the Dasbodh, a comprehensive guide to spiritual and practical life that also emphasised social organisation and political awareness.
Connection to Maratha power: The bhakti tradition gave Maratha society a common spiritual language that transcended caste divisions, a deep sense of shared cultural identity rooted in Marathi, and an ethos of courage, service and devotion that the Marathas channelled into political and military action.
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Think About It · Page 65If you could time-travel and meet Chhatrapati Shivaji, what three questions would you ask him and why?
Creative + Historical Answer
Shivaji court throne panel Mumbai@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.8 — A court scene with Chhatrapati Shivaji on his throne receiving visitors (Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Park, Mumbai)

Here are three historically grounded questions that would reveal the most about Shivaji’s mind and legacy:

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Question 1: How did you develop your concept of Swarajya?

Why this question: Swarajya (self-rule) was not just a political goal — it was a moral and civilisational vision. At 16, when Shivaji began his campaigns, nobody believed a Maratha chief could challenge the Mughal Empire or the Bijapur Sultanate. Understanding how this vision formed — whether from his mother Jijabai’s stories of heroic kings, from Sant Ramdas’s teachings, or from witnessing the suffering of common people under Deccan sultanate infighting — would tell us a great deal about the sources of transformational leadership.

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Question 2: What made you decide to build a navy when no Indian power had prioritised one?

Why this question: The Maratha navy was truly revolutionary. The Bijapur Sultanate had only merchant ships; the Mughal navy was minimal. Establishing a professional naval force was a visionary strategic decision. Asking this question would reveal whether Shivaji foresaw the growing European threat at sea (the Portuguese cartaz system was already extorting Indian merchants) or whether it was primarily about controlling the profitable west coast trade routes. The answer would illuminate how Shivaji thought about strategy, economics and the changing world order.

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Question 3: How did you decide which enemies to fight and which to negotiate with — and when to switch between the two?

Why this question: Shivaji’s career shows remarkable tactical flexibility. He fought Bijapur (killing Afzal Khan), then negotiated with the Mughals (Treaty of Purandar), then refused to accept humiliation at Aurangzeb’s court and escaped, then was coronated and launched southern conquests. He sacked Surat (twice) but spared religious places and the house of a charitable man. He forbade the Dutch from slave trading in his territory. Understanding his moral framework for deciding when to fight, when to negotiate and where to draw the line would reveal the philosophical depth behind his actions.

Why these three: Together, these questions would reveal the sources of his vision (Q1), his strategic foresight (Q2) and his ethical framework (Q3) — the three pillars that made him not just a successful conqueror but a genuinely transformational historical figure.
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Let’s Explore · Page 66Try to find out more about guerrilla warfare. Which other countries in the world adopted this method? What geographical advantages did they utilise for this? Discuss your findings in groups.
Answer
Sindhudurg Fort coastal Maratha@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.6 — Sindhudurg Fort: coastal forts were key to Maratha guerrilla strategy, controlling sea lanes and providing refuge

Guerrilla warfare — from the Spanish guerrilla (little war) — uses small, mobile groups of fighters who use knowledge of terrain, speed and surprise to defeat larger, less mobile armies. It has been used throughout history across the world:

Country / MovementPeriodGeographical Advantage Used
Marathas (India)17th–18th centurySahyadri (Western Ghats) mountains, dense forests, hill forts — Mughal cavalry useless on steep terrain; Marathas knew every path
Ahoms (Assam)13th–17th centuryBrahmaputra River, dense forests, marshes — river warfare gave Ahoms huge advantage; Mughal cavalry was helpless
American Revolution1775–1783Dense forests and wilderness of New England; American militias used forests to ambush British columns marching in open formation
Vietnam (against French/US)20th centuryDense tropical jungle and underground tunnel networks — Vietnamese fighters moved invisibly; US air power was often neutralised by dense cover
Afghanistan (multiple periods)18th century onwardsRugged mountain terrain of Hindu Kush and Khyber Pass — passes allowed ambushes on larger armies that could not manoeuvre in the narrow valleys
Cuba (revolution)1950sSierra Maestra mountain range — Castro’s rebels used forests and mountains as base, conducting raids and retreating before government forces could respond
Second World War (resistance movements)1939–1945Forests of France (Maquis), mountains of Yugoslavia (Partisans), swamps of Belarus (Soviet partisans) — difficult terrain denied to larger, mechanised German forces

Common factors for guerrilla success

  • Terrain knowledge advantage: Home fighters know their terrain far better than invading armies — this neutralises the numerical and technological advantage of larger forces.
  • Mobility vs mass: Small, fast-moving groups can strike and retreat before a larger army can effectively respond. The key is never fighting on the enemy’s terms.
  • Popular support: Successful guerrilla campaigns almost always have the support of the local population, who provide information, food, shelter and recruits. Shivaji’s forts and the hill communities of the Sahyadris provided this support base.
  • Forts as base camps: The Maratha innovation was to combine guerrilla tactics with a strategic network of forts — fighters could strike, retreat to a fort, and resist siege while the enemy wore itself out trying to capture each fort.
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Think About It · Page 72Shivaji wrote to his officials: “Wood from big trees like teak is required for the Navy. If needed, secure permission for cutting the trees… do not touch mango and jackfruit trees… If you accomplish something by oppressing others, it perishes soon, along with the oppressor.” Based on this letter, what can you tell about his values as a ruler?
Answer
“Wood from big trees like teak is required for the Navy. If needed, secure permission for cutting the trees from the forest and then proceed. Other trees like the mango and jackfruit are also useful, but do not touch them. Because such trees take many years to mature, and the people look after them like their children. If you cut them, will their sorrow ever end? If you accomplish something by oppressing others, it perishes soon, along with the oppressor. There is harm in the absence of such trees as well. Therefore, do not use force in any circumstances.”

This extraordinary letter reveals several layers of Shivaji’s values as a ruler:

  • Restraint in the use of state power: Shivaji explicitly forbids his officials from taking even a blade of grass from subjects without permission. In an era when most rulers treated ordinary people as instruments to be exploited, this is a remarkable standard. He understood that the legitimacy of his state depended on the people’s trust.
  • Environmental consciousness: His concern for fruit trees — noting that “people look after them like their children” and that their loss causes lasting sorrow — shows a genuine understanding of the relationship between natural resources and people’s livelihoods. He distinguishes between timber needed for the state (teak for ships, with permission) and trees that people depend on for food (mango, jackfruit, which must not be touched). This is an early articulation of what we today call sustainable resource use.
  • Long-term thinking: He notes that trees “take many years to mature” — showing concern not just for today’s needs but for future resource availability. This is a ruler thinking in terms of the long-term prosperity of his kingdom, not just short-term military advantage.
  • Moral philosophy of governance: The line “If you accomplish something by oppressing others, it perishes soon, along with the oppressor” is a profound statement of political philosophy. He is telling his officials that governance built on oppression is inherently self-defeating — it destroys the very resources and loyalty that the state needs to survive.
  • Empathy for subjects: Shivaji’s phrasing — asking whether the people’s sorrow from losing their trees “will ever end” — shows genuine empathy for his subjects’ feelings, not just concern for economic productivity. This is the quality that distinguished him from most rulers of his era.
Connecting to Swarajya: This letter shows that Shivaji’s Swarajya was not simply about replacing Mughal or Bijapur rule with Maratha rule — it was about a fundamentally different relationship between state and citizen. The state existed to serve and protect the people, not to extract from and oppress them. This vision is what made the Marathas a genuine mass movement, not just a dynasty.
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Let’s Explore · Page 79Have you heard of the dance form ‘Bharatnatyam’? Did you know it has a deep connection with the Marathas? Can you find out what this connection was?
Answer
Thanjavur painting Maratha patron@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.21 — Traditional Thanjavur style painting with gold foil work, flourishing under Maratha patronage in Tamil Nadu
Marathi inscription Brihadishwara Thanjavur@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.22 — Marathi inscription on the Brihadishwara temple wall at Thanjavur, recording the history of the Bhonsle family

Bharatanatyam’s connection with the Marathas

Bharatanatyam, today recognised as one of India’s most classical dance forms and now a UNESCO-recognised intangible heritage, traces its modern form directly to the court of the Thanjavur Marathas.

  • Background: Ekoji, the half-brother of Chhatrapati Shivaji, conquered the Thanjavur region in Tamil Nadu in the late 17th century, establishing Maratha rule there. The Thanjavur Marathas became enthusiastic patrons of arts and music, creating a rich, syncretic cultural environment blending Tamil, Telugu and Marathi traditions.
  • Serfoji II (reigned 1798–1832): Of all Thanjavur Maratha rulers, Serfoji II was the most remarkable. He was multilingual (Indian and European languages), was deeply interested in music and arts, and patronised many talented musicians and dancers.
  • The Thanjavur Quartet: Under Serfoji II’s patronage, four brothers — Chinnaiah, Ponnaiah, Sivanandam and Vadivelu (the “Tanjore Quartet”) — systematised and codified what was then known as Sadir (a temple dance tradition). They standardised the repertoire, set the structure of Bharatanatyam performances (the margam), and composed the jatiswaram, tillana and varnam forms that are still performed today. This codification happened specifically under Maratha royal patronage.
  • Carnatic music: The same period and court also saw the shaping of modern Carnatic classical music. The famous composers Thyagaraja, Muthuswami Dikshitar and Syama Sastri (the “Trinity of Carnatic music”) were contemporaries of Serfoji II, and the cultural environment of Thanjavur was central to their work.
  • 20th century revival: Bharatanatyam’s name itself was given in the 20th century (by E. Krishna Iyer) during its revival as a classical dance form after colonial-era suppression. But its structure, repertoire and aesthetic were essentially the product of the Thanjavur Maratha court’s patronage.
Broader significance: The Thanjavur Maratha court demonstrates how the Maratha cultural impact extended far beyond Maharashtra. By patronising Tamil, Telugu and Sanskrit traditions alongside their own Marathi culture, the Thanjavur Marathas created a uniquely syncretic cultural environment whose fruits — Bharatanatyam, Carnatic music, Thanjavur painting — are among India’s greatest cultural gifts to the world.

Exercise · Page 81Questions and Activities — Full Answers

Detailed solutions to all eight end-of-chapter questions from the textbook.

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Exercise Question 1Analyse how geography (particularly mountains and coastlines) guided Maratha military strategy and state formation.
Detailed Answer
Shivaji kingdom 1680 map forts ports@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.9 — Chhatrapati Shivaji’s Kingdom c.1680, showing the distribution of hill forts, coastal forts, ports and territories along the Western Ghats and coastline

Geography was not just a backdrop to Maratha history — it was the primary shaper of Maratha military strategy, state structure and ultimate extent of power. Two geographical features in particular were decisive:

1. The Sahyadri (Western Ghats) mountains — the foundation of Maratha power

  • Natural fortress: The Western Ghats form a near-continuous mountain wall running along Maharashtra’s west, with steep escarpments, dense forests and narrow passes. This terrain rendered the Mughal and Deccan Sultanate’s primary military asset — their large cavalry — almost useless. Heavy horses cannot charge up steep slopes or through dense forest.
  • Guerrilla warfare advantage: The Marathas exploited this terrain brilliantly. Small groups of Maratha fighters, intimately familiar with every path, stream and hidden valley, could ambush much larger forces, then vanish into the forest. The Bijapur general Afzal Khan was lured into exactly this kind of terrain and killed.
  • Fort network: The Marathas controlled hundreds of hill forts built on the commanding peaks of the Sahyadri range and the Deccan. Each fort was effectively impregnable to cavalry assault and could only be taken by long siege. Even when Aurangzeb captured Raigad (the Maratha capital) and executed Sambhaji, the remaining forts continued to hold out, denying him control of the region. As Ramachandrapant Amatya wrote: “It was due to forts that the [Maratha] state survived despite decades of onslaught.”
  • Strategic control of passes: The ghats were crossed by only a few negotiable passes (ghat margs). Whoever controlled these passes controlled movement between the coast and the Deccan interior — economically and militarily vital.

2. The Maharashtra and Konkan coastline — naval power and trade

  • The navy was born of coastal geography: When Shivaji’s kingdom expanded to India’s west coast (the Konkan), he immediately recognised that controlling the coast required a navy, not just a land army. The Konkan coast — dotted with natural harbours, islands (like Sindhudurg) and estuaries — was ideal for naval bases.
  • Coastal forts: The Marathas built a chain of coastal forts (Sindhudurg, Vijaydurg, Janjira — though Janjira was never fully captured — and others). These controlled sea lanes, protected fishing communities and provided naval bases from which to challenge European and rival Indian naval power.
  • Trade and revenue: Control of coastal ports (Rajapur, Dabhol, Malwan, Vengurla) gave the Marathas customs revenue from the lucrative west-coast trade in horses, textiles, spices and gold. Shivaji himself sent ships to Mocha (Yemen), Muscat (Oman) and Malacca (Malaysia).
  • Strategic depth against the Mughals: Shivaji’s southern campaign (dakshina-digvijaya, 1677) extended Maratha territory to northern Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. This gave the Marathas strategic depth — when the Mughals captured the Deccan heartland, the Marathas could retreat southward (as Rajaram did, fleeing to Gingee in Tamil Nadu) and continue the fight from there.

Summary: Geography as strategy

Geographic FeatureMilitary AdvantageKey Example
Western Ghats mountainsNeutralised Mughal cavalry; guerrilla baseKilling Afzal Khan at Pratapgad; Aurangzeb unable to subdue hill forts
Hill forts on commanding peaksImpregnable to cavalry; supply bases; strategic refugeState survived 25 years of Aurangzeb’s campaigns
Konkan coastline & harboursBasis for Maratha navy; control of sea lanesSindhudurg naval fort; Kanhoji Angre’s naval victories
Deccan plateau interiorBase for northward expansion once Mughals weakenedMarathas reached Peshawar in the 18th century
Southern extension (Tamil Nadu)Strategic depth against Mughal pressure in the northRajaram held out at Gingee; Thanjavur as southern Maratha base
Conclusion: The Marathas did not just fight in their geographical environment — they built their entire state structure (fort-centred administration, navy, guerrilla cavalry tactics) around the specific features of their geography. This is why they could resist the most powerful empire in India for 25 years and ultimately outlast it.
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Exercise Question 2Imagine you are creating a short biography of a Maratha leader for younger students. Choose one personality (Kanhoji Angre, Bajirao I, Mahadji Shinde, Ahilyabai Holkar or Tarabai) and write 3-4 paragraphs highlighting what makes them inspirational. Include at least one challenge they overcame.
Model Biography — Ahilyabai Holkar
Ahilyabai Holkar postage stamp@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.19 — Postage stamp commemorating Ahilyabai Holkar — honoured by modern India as one of its greatest rulers
Tarabai in battle Maratha queen@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.18 — Tarabai in battle (painting by M.V. Dhurandhar) — she preserved Maratha independence during its most critical hour
Ahilyabai Holkar: The Queen Who Built a Nation’s Soul

Imagine a ruler who, after losing both her husband and her son, didn’t give up and withdraw from public life — but instead stepped forward and governed an entire kingdom wisely and compassionately for thirty years. That was Ahilyabai Holkar (1725–1795), one of the greatest rulers in Indian history.

Ahilyabai was born into a family in Chondi village in present-day Maharashtra. She showed such intelligence and character that Malhar Rao Holkar, a powerful Maratha general, chose her as his son’s bride. She learned statecraft at her father-in-law’s side. But life tested her severely — her husband Khanderao died in battle in 1754, and her only son Malerao died shortly after succeeding his grandfather. Ahilyabai could have retreated into grief. Instead, she stepped up and governed the Holkar kingdom centred around present-day Indore.

What made her truly remarkable was how she governed. She travelled her kingdom in a palanquin to hear people’s grievances directly. She kept her administration lean and honest. She built and restored hundreds of temples, ghats, wells, dharmashalas (rest houses) and roads across all of India — from Kedarnath in the Himalayas to Rameswaram at the southern tip of the country — understanding that good rulers care for all people, not just their immediate subjects. Most famously, she rebuilt the Kashi Vishwanath temple in Varanasi that Aurangzeb had destroyed, and the Somnath temple in Gujarat. She also promoted the Maheshwar weaving industry, reviving traditional handloom craft that continues to thrive today.

Ahilyabai Holkar never led an army into battle — she was not a warrior queen like Tarabai. Her power was the power of justice, compassion and wisdom. She showed that leadership is not about force, but about service. Her image appears on a postage stamp, and she is remembered across India as Devi (goddess) — a ruler whose people experienced her rule not as governance but as grace.

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Exercise Question 3If you could visit one Maratha fort today (Raigad, Sindhudurg, Gingee or Pratapgad), which would you choose and why? Research its history, architecture and strategic importance.
Model Answer — Raigad Fort
Raigad Fort Maharashtra aerial@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.1 — Raigad Fort: the capital of the Maratha Empire, set on a flat-topped hill in the Sahyadri range, Maharashtra
Raigad Fort gate entrance@EDUGROWN
The grand Maha Darwaja (Great Gate) entrance to Raigad Fort — through this gate, kings, ambassadors and armies passed

I would choose to visit Raigad Fort — the capital of the Maratha Empire and perhaps the most historically significant fort of the entire Maratha period.

Why Raigad?

  • Historical significance: Raigad is where Chhatrapati Shivaji was coronated on 6 June 1674 — an event of immense political and cultural importance. It was the moment the Marathas formally declared themselves an independent sovereign power. The coronation was performed with full Vedic rites, asserting both political and cultural legitimacy.
  • Architecture: Raigad sits atop a flat-topped hill rising about 820 metres from sea level, with sheer cliffs on most sides. Its defensive position is naturally commanding. The fort contains the ruins of Shivaji’s palace, the great Jagdishwar temple, a market (bazaar) that once housed 300 shops (showing it was more than a military installation — it was a functioning city), and Shivaji’s samadhi (memorial).
  • Strategic importance: Located in the heart of the Sahyadri range, Raigad commanded the key routes between the Konkan coast and the Deccan plateau. It was accessible by a single narrow path (now replaced by a ropeway), making it virtually impregnable to direct assault. Only through treachery could it be taken — and even when Aurangzeb’s forces finally captured it after Sambhaji’s execution, it was only a temporary setback.
  • Personal significance: Shivaji spent many of his most active years here, governing, planning campaigns and receiving ambassadors. He died here in 1680. Visiting Raigad is as close as one can come to standing where the Maratha Empire was born and where its founder lived and died.
Visiting today: Raigad Fort in Mahad district of Maharashtra is accessible by a ropeway (the only such fort in India with this facility) or by a steep trek. The Archaeological Survey of India maintains the ruins. The view from the fort, looking out over the Sahyadri range and the distant Arabian Sea, makes immediately clear why Shivaji chose this location as his capital.
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Exercise Question 4“The British took India from the Marathas more than from the Mughals or any other power.” What do you think this means? What evidence from the chapter supports this idea?
Answer
British surrender Nana Phadnavis Mahadji Shinde@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.11 — A British officer surrendering before Nana Phadnavis and Mahadji Shinde after the First Anglo-Maratha War (1775–1782) — which the Marathas won

What this statement means

This statement means that when the British East India Company expanded to control most of the Indian subcontinent, it was primarily the Marathas, not the Mughals, who were the last significant Indian power standing in their way. The Mughal Empire had already effectively collapsed after Aurangzeb’s death in 1707. The British conquest of India in the 18th and early 19th centuries was fundamentally a contest against the Maratha confederacy.

Evidence from the chapter

EvidenceWhat it shows
Maratha control by mid-18th centuryBy 1754, the Marathas controlled Delhi itself. They were the dominant power in north and central India when the British began their serious expansion.
Three Anglo-Maratha Wars (1775–1818)The British had to fight three separate major wars against the Marathas — far more than against any other single power. The First Anglo-Maratha War (1775–1782) ended in a Maratha victory (Treaty of Salbai). Only the Third War (1818) finally ended Maratha independence.
Nana Phadnavis pan-Indian allianceNana Phadnavis organised the first pan-Indian anti-British alliance, uniting even old Maratha adversaries like Hyder Ali of Mysore and the Nizam of Hyderabad — showing that the Marathas were the one power capable of coordinating Indian resistance to British expansion.
Mahadji Shinde’s European-style armyThe Marathas recognised the need to modernise their military to counter British superiority. Mahadji Shinde built a large European-style disciplined army — the most serious Indian military response to British technological superiority until this point.
Mughal state of collapse by 1757By the time of the Battle of Plassey (1757), when the British defeated Nawab Siraj ud-Daulah of Bengal and began their territorial control of India, the Mughal Empire was a shadow with no real power. The Mughal emperor was essentially the Marathas’ pensioner — it was Maratha power, not Mughal power, that held India together.

Why the Marathas ultimately lost

  • Internal disunity: The Maratha confederacy was divided among five major chiefs (the Holkars, Scindias, Bhonsles of Nagpur, Gaekwads of Baroda, and the Peshwas), who frequently competed with each other. The British exploited these divisions through diplomacy and subsidiary alliances.
  • Superior British organisation: The British East India Company combined military professionalism with financial and administrative resources no single Indian power could match. Their ability to sustain long wars without exhausting their treasury was a decisive advantage.
  • Technology gap: By the early 19th century, British artillery and military technology had advanced significantly. Even Mahadji Shinde’s European-style army could not fully close this gap.
Historical implication: Understanding that the British took India primarily from the Marathas changes the history of Indian independence. The ideal of Swarajya that Shivaji articulated — Indian self-rule, freedom from foreign domination — directly inspired 19th and 20th century nationalists like Bal Gangadhar Tilak, who used Shivaji Jayanti as a platform for national awakening. The Maratha legacy lived on in the freedom movement.
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Exercise Question 5Compare how Chhatrapati Shivaji and later Marathas treated religious places and people of different faiths. What evidence from the chapter shows their approach to religious diversity?
Answer
AspectChhatrapati Shivaji (17th c.)Later Marathas (18th c.)
Temple policyRebuilt desecrated temples; promoted Sanskrit and Marathi literature and religious institutions; his seal bore Sanskrit inscription honouring ShivaAhilyabai Holkar rebuilt Kashi Vishwanath temple (destroyed by Aurangzeb) and Somnath temple (destroyed by Mahmud of Ghazni); Bhonsles of Nagpur supported Jagannath worship at Puri
Treatment of other faiths during campaignsWhen sacking Surat, deliberately spared religious places and the house of a charitable man (Mohandas Parekh); did not attack mosques or churchesMixed record: Maratha campaign in Bengal was noted for cruelty to ordinary people, in “stark contrast with Chhatrapati Shivaji’s values”
Devout Hindu identityDevout Hindu who respected other religions while upholding his own; adopted saffron flag; used Sanskrit in official documentsSerfoji II at Thanjavur patronised Tamil, Telugu and Marathi traditions simultaneously; created genuinely syncretic court culture
Treatment of non-Hindu subjectsMany key officers in Shivaji’s forces were Muslim; he did not impose religious restrictions on service in his stateAhilyabai welcomed people of all faiths; her administration was noted for fair treatment
Slave tradeForbade the Dutch from trading Indian slaves during his southern campaign — a principled stance protecting all of his subjects regardless of faithNo direct parallel mentioned in the chapter

Key evidence from the chapter

  • Shivaji was described as “a devout Hindu who respected other religions while upholding his own.”
  • When sacking Surat, he “was careful not to attack religious places and even spared the house of Mohandas Parekh, a charitable man.”
  • In the South, he forbade the Dutch from trading slaves — protecting his subjects regardless of their faith.
  • His seal carried a Sanskrit inscription expressing that his rule existed for “the welfare of the people” — all people, not just Hindus.
  • The Thanjavur Marathas “helped create a syncretic culture” combining Tamil, Telugu and Marathi traditions.

The contrast with later Marathas

The chapter honestly acknowledges that as the Maratha confederacy decentralised after Shivaji’s era, individual chiefs sometimes departed from his standards. The ten-year campaign in Bengal “inflicted much cruelty and devastation on the common people” — behaviour that would have been forbidden under Shivaji’s own instructions (such as not taking even a blade of grass from subjects).

Pattern: Shivaji’s approach was principled pluralism — maintaining his own Hindu identity strongly while scrupulously protecting people of other faiths and rebuilding rather than destroying. The later Marathas were more varied, with Ahilyabai and the Thanjavur rulers maintaining Shivaji’s ideals, while some military campaigns fell short of them.
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Exercise Question 6The chapter describes how forts were ‘the core of the state’ for Marathas. Why were they so important? How did they help the Marathas survive against larger enemies?
Detailed Answer
Sindhudurg coastal fort Maratha@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.6 — Sindhudurg: Maratha coastal fort that controlled sea lanes, resisted European naval power and served as a naval base
Maratha weapons swords spears@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.15 — Weapons used by the Marathas: swords, spears and other arms that were effective in the guerrilla and fort-based warfare of the Sahyadri terrain

As Ramachandrapant Amatya wrote in the Adnyapatra: “Forts are the core of the state. In their absence, the land gets devastated in the face of an invasion… it was due to forts that the [Maratha] state survived despite decades of onslaught.”

Why forts were so central to the Maratha state

Role of FortsHow it helpedExample
Military base for guerrilla warfareGave the Maratha fighters a safe refuge to return to after guerrilla attacks. Enemy cavalry pursuing Marathas could be lured under fort walls and ambushed by defenders above.Pratapgad fort: Shivaji lured Afzal Khan to the forest below, killed him, then the Marathas hidden in the mountains routed the Khan’s army
State survival during siegesEven when a larger enemy occupied the surrounding territory, Maratha forces inside forts could hold out for months or years, denying the enemy real control. The enemy army eventually ran out of supplies trying to maintain a siege.During Mughal-Maratha wars, Aurangzeb captured some forts but could never capture all of them; the state continued to function from the remaining forts
Administrative centresForts housed garrisons, weapons stores, grain reserves and administrative offices. The network of forts across the Deccan was effectively a distributed administrative infrastructure.Raigad served as the Maratha capital with a 300-shop market within the fort complex
Control of strategic routesForts commanding mountain passes and coastal points controlled movement of armies, traders and information. Holding the fort = holding the route.Forts controlling Ghat passes between Konkan coast and Deccan plateau gave Marathas leverage over trade and military movement
Psychological and political significanceA fort on a commanding hilltop projected power over the surrounding region. Capturing or building a fort was a political statement of territorial control.Shivaji began his career at 16 by capturing “neglected and unoccupied forts” to establish his hold over the Pune region
Coastal forts gave naval powerCoastal forts at natural harbours provided bases for the Maratha navy, allowing them to challenge European naval supremacy.Sindhudurg Fort; Vijaydurg Fort — Kanhoji Angre used these as bases for victories over European naval forces
The key insight: Conventional large armies need to control territory to be effective. The Maratha fort system allowed them to control territory without needing to hold every field and road — as long as the forts held, the Marathas controlled the surrounding region. This was a fundamentally different concept of military power, ideally suited to the Sahyadri mountain terrain.
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Exercise Question 7You have been appointed as the chief designer for Maratha coins. Design a coin that represents Maratha achievements and values. Explain the symbols you chose.
Creative Answer with Historical Justification
Shivaji coins gold copper Devanagari@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.12 — Shivaji’s gold and copper coins in Devanagari script: an assertion of sovereign identity departing from Persian/Arabic traditions
Shivaji seal Sanskrit welfare people@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.17 — Shivaji’s Sanskrit seal: “waxing like the new moon, reigning for the welfare of the people” — the philosophical statement of Maratha governance

Design Description: The Swarajya Coin

Shape and material: Octagonal gold coin (echoing the ashtapradhana — eight-minister council — structure) with a copper ring border.

Front face (Obverse)

  • Central image: A stylised hill fort silhouetted against a rising sun — representing the forts as “the core of the state” and the new dawn of Indian self-rule (Swarajya).
  • Script: “श्री राजा शिव छत्रपती” (Shri Raja Shiva Chhatrapati) in Devanagari — deliberately following Shivaji’s own coins, departing from Persian/Arabic coinage to assert cultural identity.
  • Border: A continuous band of lotus flowers — symbolising purity, prosperity and Indian cultural tradition; the lotus grows in murky water but remains clean, much as the Marathas maintained their values amid surrounding conflict.

Back face (Reverse)

  • Central symbol: A ship with sails (representing the Maratha Navy — the revolutionary military innovation; also symbolising trade, exploration and the outward-looking maritime vision of the Marathas).
  • Flanking symbols: On the left, a sword (military power); on the right, a veena or book (cultural patronage — referencing Krishnadevaraya’s literary tradition and the Maratha bhakti heritage).
  • Inscription: “स्वराज्य” (Swarajya) at the top; “जनकल्याणाय” (Janakalyanaya = for the welfare of the people) at the bottom — drawing directly from Shivaji’s seal inscription.
  • Denomination mark: In the Devanagari numeral tradition (not Arabic/Persian), asserting the same cultural independence Shivaji expressed in his own coinage.

Why these symbols?

  • The fort and rising sun represent the defining military and political achievement: Swarajya — self-rule won through the fort network.
  • The ship represents the revolutionary naval innovation that challenged European maritime dominance — often overlooked but historically decisive.
  • The Devanagari script follows Shivaji’s own practice of using Indian cultural symbols rather than imported Persian ones — a statement of civilisational self-respect.
  • The welfare inscription honours the most profound aspect of Shivaji’s legacy: that power existed for the people’s welfare, not for the ruler’s glory.
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Exercise Question 8After this introduction to the Maratha period, what do you think was their most important contribution to Indian history? Write a paragraph supporting your opinion with examples from the chapter. Then share and discuss your ideas with classmates.
Model Answer — with analysis
Shivaji kingdom map Maratha Empire@EDUGROWN
Fig. 3.9 — The Maratha Empire at its height under Chhatrapati Shivaji c.1680: a testament to what a people fighting for Swarajya can achieve

The Maratha period offers several strong candidates for “most important contribution,” and different historians — and different students — will reasonably disagree. Here is a case for three possible answers, with supporting evidence:

Answer 1: The concept of Swarajya and its legacy for Indian independence

I believe the Marathas’ most important contribution was demonstrating through action that Indians could organise, fight and govern themselves against the most powerful empire of the day. Chhatrapati Shivaji’s vision of Swarajya (self-rule, not just from Mughal authority but as a positive ideal of just, accountable governance) planted the seeds of what would become India’s freedom movement. When Bal Gangadhar Tilak, in the late 19th century, began using Shivaji Jayanti as a platform for national awakening, he was drawing directly on this legacy. The Maratha demonstration that “mighty kingdoms and empires could be defeated, and the Marathas could maintain, expand and administer an empire of their own” gave future generations the confidence to believe they too could govern themselves. Without this demonstration, the idea of Indian self-rule might have seemed impossibly distant.

Answer 2: The Maratha administration and governance model

The Maratha administrative reforms — salary-based governance, abolition of hereditary posts, periodic transfers, welfare for soldiers’ families, the ashtapradhana council — represented a genuinely new model of governance in the Indian context. At a time when most rulers relied on jagir-based systems that created powerful, often unaccountable local nobles, Shivaji’s centralised, salary-based, accountable system was a significant administrative innovation.

Answer 3: Cultural revival and confidence

The Maratha period revived Indian cultural confidence after centuries of rule during which Persian had dominated official culture and many Hindu traditions had been suppressed or interrupted. Shivaji’s use of Sanskrit in his seal, Devanagari on his coins and Marathi in his diplomacy (through the Rajya-Vyavahara-Kosha) were deliberate assertions that Indian languages and traditions were as worthy of respect as Persian ones. The rebuilding of temples (Kashi Vishwanath, Somnath), the revival of Jagannath worship at Puri, the flowering of Bharatanatyam and Carnatic music at Thanjavur under Maratha patronage — all created a cultural confidence that outlasted the Maratha Empire itself.

For class discussion: The three answers above reflect genuinely different values — political, administrative and cultural. In class discussion, consider: which of these contributions has had the longest-lasting impact? Which do you personally find most impressive and why? Is it possible that all three are equally important because they reinforced each other — the cultural confidence enabling the political vision, which enabled the administrative model?
Exploring Society: India and Beyond  |  Grade 8 Part 1  —  Chapter 3: The Rise of the Marathas
Solutions compiled for educational purposes by @edugrown

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