Harman Patil (Editor)

Ghasera Fort

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Country
  
India

District
  
Mewat district

Time zone
  
IST (UTC+5:30)

Elevation
  
199 m

State
  
Haryana

Demonym(s)
  
mewati

Vehicle registration
  
HR

ISO 3166 code
  
ISO 3166-2:IN

Ghasera Fort

Ghasera Fort (Hindi: घसेरा किला) is a ruined fort Ghasera village in Mewat district, Haryana state, northern India. Currently the villages is dominated by Muslims Meos, though Hindus also live there.

Contents

Ghasera Fort

The ruined Ghasera Fort lies at Ghasera village 14 kilometres (8.7 mi) from Nuh city on Nun-Sohna road that was ruled by Bahadur Singh Bargujar, a Rajput chief of 11 villages, he was killed in 1753 by the famous Jat king Surajmal of Bharatpur State after Jats besieged and ran over the Ghasera fort, after which Jats turned to Delhi by defeating Mughal king Ahmad Shah Bahadur and occupied the Red Fort there in 1754 CE.

History

Ruined walls and a grand entrance show that Ghasera was a historical village.

During the reign of Aurangzeb there was a Rajput freebooter named Hathi Singh Bargujar at Dahana (now called Badshahpur village in Mewat district). He sought the help of Jat King Churaman of Bharatpur State to seek his help to obtain pardon from Aurangzeb, which was granted to him on the condition that he will kill the famed bandit Sanwali. For achieving this task, he was granted pardon and given a jagir of 11 villages by Aurangzeb that included Ghasera, Indor, Kotla and Sohna, he built his fort at Ghasera.

Hathi Singh Bargujar was succeeded by his son Bhadur Singh Bargujar who entered in allaiance with Malhar Rao Holkar of Indore who was the Maratha Subhedar of Malwa to attack the Rajput King Maharaja Sawai Madho Singh I of Jaipur. Maharaja Sawai Madho Singh I sought the help of Jat king Maharaja Surajmal of Bharatpur State.

In 1753, Maharaja Surajmal besieged Ghasera fort of Bhadur Singh Bargujar. In the battle, Bahadur Singh lost and his wives committed suicide.

In 1754, after Ghasera Jats turned to Delhi, defeated the Mughal king Ahmad Shah Bahadur, occupied the Red Fort there, took away the bounty and gates of Red fort with them to humiliate the Mughals.

References

Ghasera Fort Wikipedia