TFIPOST हिन्दी
TFIPOST Global
Tfipost.com
Tfipost.com
No Result
View All Result
  • Premium
  • Politics
    • All
    • Analysis
    • Opinions
    • Trending
    New address, old controversy as “Sheesh Mahal 2”

    From Flagstaff Road To Lodhi Estate: Kejriwal’s New Bungalow Triggers Fresh “Sheesh Mahal 2” Political Controversy

    The Bengal campaign takes a more aggressive turn.

    “Bengal Under Mafia Grip”: Yogi Adityanath Escalates Attack On TMC, Flags ‘Identity Crisis’ In Rally

    From AAP dissenter to BJP rebel, Swati Maliwal sharpens her attack on Kejriwal

    Did Swati Maliwal Just Puncture AAP’s Politics of Virtue?

    Ahmadis in Pakistan: From Faith to Marginalisation Under Law and Society

    Ahmadis in Pakistan: From Faith to Marginalisation Under Law and Society

    • Analysis
    • Opinions
    • Trending
  • Economy
    • All
    • Business
    • Economy1
    • Finance
    Ahmadis in Pakistan: From Faith to Marginalisation Under Law and Society

    Ahmadis in Pakistan: From Faith to Marginalisation Under Law and Society

    Open Demat Account with Zero Annual Maintenance Charges What to Look For

    Open Demat Account with Zero Annual Maintenance Charges What to Look For

    Blood in the Meadows: How the Pahalgam Terror Attack Exposed Calculated Targeting of Civilians in Kashmir

    Blood in the Meadows: How the Pahalgam Terror Attack Exposed Calculated Targeting of Civilians in Kashmir

    Indian economy is stronger than the ranking.

    IMF Ranking Jolt Misread: India’s Economy Strong, Sixth Spot Just a Statistical Glitch

    • Business
    • Finance
  • Defense
    • All
    • Defence
    • Strategy
    • Weaponry
    The scars of Pahalgam endure, even as the nation moves forward

    Pahalgam Anniversary: Modi Signals Firm National Stand as India Reasserts Anti-Terror Resolve

    Precision Strike: Indian Army Approves Procurement of Indigenous MPATGM to Modernise Infantry Wings

    Precision Strike: Indian Army Approves Procurement of Indigenous MPATGM to Modernise Infantry Wings

    Amit Shah on sensitive Gorkha land issue

    Shah Assures Constitutional Path for Gorkha Issue, Intensifies Attack on TMC at Bengal Rally

    Historic Leap for ‘Aatmanirbhar Bharat’ as First India-Made BrahMos Missiles from Lucknow Join Indian Army

    Historic Leap for ‘Aatmanirbhar Bharat’ as First India-Made BrahMos Missiles from Lucknow Join Indian Army

    • Defence
    • Strategy
    • Weaponry
  • Geopolitics
    • All
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia Pacific
    • Europe
    • South Asia
    • West Asia
    Pakistan Tried to Bury an NYT Report. It Only Exposed Asim Munir’s Panic

    Pakistan Tried to Bury an NYT Report. It Only Exposed Asim Munir’s Panic

    The Strategic Double-Game: Pakistan’s Fatal Gambit in the US-Iran War

    The Strategic Double-Game: Pakistan’s Fatal Gambit in the US-Iran War

    When a repost became a foreign policy problem

    Trump’s India ‘Hellhole’ Insult Triggers Backlash as New Delhi Hits Back, US Scrambles for Damage Control

    PLA Navy Day Spectacle vs South China Sea Reality: How Beijing’s Naval Pageantry Masks Maritime Coercion

    PLA Navy Day Spectacle vs South China Sea Reality: How Beijing’s Naval Pageantry Masks Maritime Coercion

    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia Pacific
    • Europe
    • South Asia
    • West Asia
  • Knowledge
    • All
    • Culture
    • Education
    • History
    • Indology
    Chants of ‘Jai Badri Vishal’ Echo as Badrinath Portals Open; All Four Dhams Now Accessible to Pilgrims

    Chants of ‘Jai Badri Vishal’ Echo as Badrinath Portals Open; All Four Dhams Now Accessible to Pilgrims

    Kedarnath Dham Portals Open for Devotees After 181 Days Amid Vedic Chants, Traditional Rituals

    Kedarnath Dham Portals Open for Devotees After 181 Days Amid Vedic Chants, Traditional Rituals

    Sardar Patel and Amit Shah

    Sardar Patel’s 1947 Blueprint on Minority Quotas Resurfaces as Reservation Debate Returns to Centre Stage

    The 1973 Constitution and ‘Bhutto’ the Man Who Made It: What Pakistan Owes and What It Destroyed

    The 1973 Constitution and ‘Bhutto’ the Man Who Made It: What Pakistan Owes and What It Destroyed

    • Culture
    • History
    • Indology
  • Law
  • Lounge
    • All
    • Books
    • Cinema
    • Entertainment
    • Food
    • Games
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Satire
    • Sports
    • technology
    • Travel
    Digital Data Collection In India

    India’s Data Reset Begins: Census 2027 to Become First Fully Digital Population Count

    5 Facilities in Bengaluru Specializing in Mental Health Treatment for Those with Cancer

    5 Facilities in Bengaluru Specializing in Mental Health Treatment for Those with Cancer

    UNESCO World Book Day and Copyright Day

    World Book Day 2026: UNESCO’s Multilingual Push Aligns with India’s Deep Literary Continuum

    Fashion Fusion Accessory Pairings That Modernize Your Look

    Fashion Fusion Accessory Pairings That Modernize Your Look

    • Books
    • Cinema
    • Food
    • Health
    • Sports
    • technology
    • Travel
    • Satire
Tfipost.com
  • Premium
  • Politics
    • All
    • Analysis
    • Opinions
    • Trending
    New address, old controversy as “Sheesh Mahal 2”

    From Flagstaff Road To Lodhi Estate: Kejriwal’s New Bungalow Triggers Fresh “Sheesh Mahal 2” Political Controversy

    The Bengal campaign takes a more aggressive turn.

    “Bengal Under Mafia Grip”: Yogi Adityanath Escalates Attack On TMC, Flags ‘Identity Crisis’ In Rally

    From AAP dissenter to BJP rebel, Swati Maliwal sharpens her attack on Kejriwal

    Did Swati Maliwal Just Puncture AAP’s Politics of Virtue?

    Ahmadis in Pakistan: From Faith to Marginalisation Under Law and Society

    Ahmadis in Pakistan: From Faith to Marginalisation Under Law and Society

    • Analysis
    • Opinions
    • Trending
  • Economy
    • All
    • Business
    • Economy1
    • Finance
    Ahmadis in Pakistan: From Faith to Marginalisation Under Law and Society

    Ahmadis in Pakistan: From Faith to Marginalisation Under Law and Society

    Open Demat Account with Zero Annual Maintenance Charges What to Look For

    Open Demat Account with Zero Annual Maintenance Charges What to Look For

    Blood in the Meadows: How the Pahalgam Terror Attack Exposed Calculated Targeting of Civilians in Kashmir

    Blood in the Meadows: How the Pahalgam Terror Attack Exposed Calculated Targeting of Civilians in Kashmir

    Indian economy is stronger than the ranking.

    IMF Ranking Jolt Misread: India’s Economy Strong, Sixth Spot Just a Statistical Glitch

    • Business
    • Finance
  • Defense
    • All
    • Defence
    • Strategy
    • Weaponry
    The scars of Pahalgam endure, even as the nation moves forward

    Pahalgam Anniversary: Modi Signals Firm National Stand as India Reasserts Anti-Terror Resolve

    Precision Strike: Indian Army Approves Procurement of Indigenous MPATGM to Modernise Infantry Wings

    Precision Strike: Indian Army Approves Procurement of Indigenous MPATGM to Modernise Infantry Wings

    Amit Shah on sensitive Gorkha land issue

    Shah Assures Constitutional Path for Gorkha Issue, Intensifies Attack on TMC at Bengal Rally

    Historic Leap for ‘Aatmanirbhar Bharat’ as First India-Made BrahMos Missiles from Lucknow Join Indian Army

    Historic Leap for ‘Aatmanirbhar Bharat’ as First India-Made BrahMos Missiles from Lucknow Join Indian Army

    • Defence
    • Strategy
    • Weaponry
  • Geopolitics
    • All
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia Pacific
    • Europe
    • South Asia
    • West Asia
    Pakistan Tried to Bury an NYT Report. It Only Exposed Asim Munir’s Panic

    Pakistan Tried to Bury an NYT Report. It Only Exposed Asim Munir’s Panic

    The Strategic Double-Game: Pakistan’s Fatal Gambit in the US-Iran War

    The Strategic Double-Game: Pakistan’s Fatal Gambit in the US-Iran War

    When a repost became a foreign policy problem

    Trump’s India ‘Hellhole’ Insult Triggers Backlash as New Delhi Hits Back, US Scrambles for Damage Control

    PLA Navy Day Spectacle vs South China Sea Reality: How Beijing’s Naval Pageantry Masks Maritime Coercion

    PLA Navy Day Spectacle vs South China Sea Reality: How Beijing’s Naval Pageantry Masks Maritime Coercion

    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia Pacific
    • Europe
    • South Asia
    • West Asia
  • Knowledge
    • All
    • Culture
    • Education
    • History
    • Indology
    Chants of ‘Jai Badri Vishal’ Echo as Badrinath Portals Open; All Four Dhams Now Accessible to Pilgrims

    Chants of ‘Jai Badri Vishal’ Echo as Badrinath Portals Open; All Four Dhams Now Accessible to Pilgrims

    Kedarnath Dham Portals Open for Devotees After 181 Days Amid Vedic Chants, Traditional Rituals

    Kedarnath Dham Portals Open for Devotees After 181 Days Amid Vedic Chants, Traditional Rituals

    Sardar Patel and Amit Shah

    Sardar Patel’s 1947 Blueprint on Minority Quotas Resurfaces as Reservation Debate Returns to Centre Stage

    The 1973 Constitution and ‘Bhutto’ the Man Who Made It: What Pakistan Owes and What It Destroyed

    The 1973 Constitution and ‘Bhutto’ the Man Who Made It: What Pakistan Owes and What It Destroyed

    • Culture
    • History
    • Indology
  • Law
  • Lounge
    • All
    • Books
    • Cinema
    • Entertainment
    • Food
    • Games
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Satire
    • Sports
    • technology
    • Travel
    Digital Data Collection In India

    India’s Data Reset Begins: Census 2027 to Become First Fully Digital Population Count

    5 Facilities in Bengaluru Specializing in Mental Health Treatment for Those with Cancer

    5 Facilities in Bengaluru Specializing in Mental Health Treatment for Those with Cancer

    UNESCO World Book Day and Copyright Day

    World Book Day 2026: UNESCO’s Multilingual Push Aligns with India’s Deep Literary Continuum

    Fashion Fusion Accessory Pairings That Modernize Your Look

    Fashion Fusion Accessory Pairings That Modernize Your Look

    • Books
    • Cinema
    • Food
    • Health
    • Sports
    • technology
    • Travel
    • Satire
No Result
View All Result
Tfipost.com
Tfipost.com
No Result
View All Result
  • Premium
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Defense
  • Geopolitics
  • Knowledge
  • Law
  • Lounge

Madhavrao Peshwa – One of the Most Towering Yet least Celebrated Heroes of Bharatavarsha

Kapil Routray by Kapil Routray
18 November 2017
in History
Madhavrao Peshwa
Share on FacebookShare on X

“And the plains of Panipat were not more fatal to the Maratha Empire than the early end of this excellent Prince…”

So was written about one of the most towering figures of Indian history- someone whose career both as a diplomat and general has only been rarely equalled by anyone across the World, someone who fought constantly the plots of his venomous foes, the treachery of his own family, and even the pains of his own illnesses in order to establish his dream of a Hindu Pad Padshahi.

RelatedPosts

Chhatrapati Shivaji’s Southern Legacy: The Maratha Flame in Tamil Nadu

Maharashtra Assembly Elections: Maratha Factor and How Mahayuti Foiled MVA’s Power Play

Raghunath Rao vs Peshwa Madhavrao: The Mahabharata that could’ve been avoided

Load More

Today is the death anniversary of one of the most towering- albeit least celebrated- heroes of Bharatavarsha- Madhavrao, third Peshwa of the Maratha Empire, someone to whom Bharatas owe debts we can never repay.

Even in the annals of the history of the Maratha Empire- architect of the Hindu restoration- let alone the glorious history of the Arya nations of Bharatavarsha studded with the lives of uncountable heroes, the life of Madhavrao Peshwa shines resplendent. As a general, he had few equals across Indian history save the likes of Emperor Samudradeva Gupta and his own illustrious kin Bajirao I Ballal. As an administrator, he was the finest of his time. As a diplomat and Statesman, he was unequalled- restoring an Empire that, to all eyes, had all but collapsed. He was young when he came to power and he was young still when he met his untimely end- but what he did accomplished would’ve graced the entire lifetimes of many celebrated ‘heroes’ Indians often ‘celebrate’.

Madhavrao was an unlikely candidate to be Peshwa. The Empire was strong under the Peshwaship of Nanasaheb. The succession was well-established under Vishwasrao- himself a capable diplomat noted for his charm- and the Empire was supported by able generals such as Sadashivrao Bhau, Gopalrao Patwardhan, Nana Fadnavis, and others. There were plans to rebuild the destroyed temples at Ajodhya, Kashi, and Prayaga, to take the Bhagwadwaja to lands it hadn’t been seen in since the collapse of the Shahi dynasty almost 600 years earlier, to make common cause with the Dharmic states that held out in furtherance of the cause of Hindu Pad Padshahi. The Maratha Empire was the mightiest power in possibly all of Asia- extending over more than 2/3rds of Bharatavarsha.

In contemporary letters, Maratha generals discussed the possibility of marching up to the gates of Constantinople, restoring the borders of Emperor Bharata- “From the Vakshu to Irravati, and between the Himavat to the Dakshin Mahasagar”.

The Third Battle of Panipat brought that all crashing down. The Marathas lost not only the heir to the Peshwaship, some of their best generals, and nearly hundred fifty thousand fighting men- the finest army east of the Urals, they also lost any alliances and support they had north of the Vindhyas. The treachery of the Nawab of Awadh- a supposed ally- ensured that the entire eastern reach would’ve seen the same atrocities against Hindus as once seen under Aurangzeb. Apart from the dominions of Suraj Mal Jat, raiders and plunderers ran amok across North India. Peshwa Nanasaheb- an Arya by any account- fell into depression and died shortly after, leaving the State open to the machinations of his treacherous brother, Raghunathrao. To the north and the west, countless Ulemas called for jihad and began to invite Afghans, Turks, Persians and the hordes of Central Asia to invade again. To the south and east, the English and the Nizam amassed their forces. To the west were the Turks and Portuguese. And like a cancer, the unjust realm of Mysore- which Haider Ali had usurped from his employers, the Wodeyars- grew.

While Sadashivrao Bhau had succeeded in his original objective- weakening the Afghan forces enough to drive them out of India, the cost had been incredible. The Maratha Empire tottered on the verge of collapse.

This was the World in which Madhavrao came to power at the age of 16.

Dangers surrounded him. His villainous uncle- Raghunathrao- had allied with the Nizam and was marching onto Pune. He even succeeded in defeating Madhavrao and placing him under house arrest but the intervention of Malhar Rao Holkar prevented the usurper from murdering the young Peshwa. Within one year, the latter rallied and decisively defeated his uncle. Even though he remained reluctant to execute Raghunathrao, the latter’s continued treachery- such as demanding a split of the Empire in 1765 and unilaterally allying with the Nizam in 1764- would result in an order of house arrest.

At Rakshabhuvan, a force of a mere 12000 Marathas met an entrenched Nizami army, equipped with the latest European artillery and training, almost three times larger than them. Like Bajirao I at Bhopal, Madhavrao not only annihilated this force but also signed treaties ensuring the Maratha frontiers with Hyderabad were well-fortified. He had to, surrounded by enemies as the Marathas were, they neither had the manpower or the finances for further southern conquests.

But Madhavrao wasn’t done yet. In his letters to his generals, he declared his intentions to restore every inch of Bharatavarsha. “… What have you gained? Have you freed the holy places of Kashi and Prayaga from Muslim control?” he demanded of his generals.

Instead Maratha forces marched north. Bhundelkhand, Rohillakhand, and even most of east Punjab fell. The Rajputs and Jats were vassalized and nominally brought into the Hindu Pad Padshahi. The English were warned off and denied lands to trade in. North, East, South- the borders of the Maratha Empire sped farther every day on the hoof trails of Maratha lancers and horse artillery. Simultaneously, the Marathas under General Trimbak Rao met the armies of Haider Ali, who was not only inflicting great atrocities on the local Hindus but also aiming at spreading his tyranny. At the battle of Moti Talav- an ancient tank built by the Hoysala dynasty long ago, the outnumbered Maratha forces crushed their foes so decisively that it would take almost a decade for Haider Ali to recover.

Within ten years of the disaster at Panipat, the foes of Hindu Dharma were fleeing India in their thousands, the betrayers of Sadashivarao- from the Nawab of Awadh to the lords of Lahore- were quaking in their boots, and the armies of the Maratha were pouring into Delhi.

For the first time since the defeat of Prithviraj Chauhan in 1192, the Bhagwadwaja fluttered proudly atop the walls of Delhi- something the Secular state of India refuses to do even now.

But as he poured his life into the restoration of the Maratha Empire, Madhavrao’s own life force bled out.

By the time he was twenty five, he was dying of tuberculosis- incurable at the time. An assassination attempt on his life, probably orchestrated by Raghunathrao, weakened him further. He began to retire from public life, to the Ganesh Chintamani Temple at Theur. On the 18th November of 1772, he breathed his last.

By the time of his death at the extremely young age of 27, Madhavrao had accomplished all Bharatavarsha and Dharma could’ve asked of him. 

He had restored the Hindu Pad Padshahi to the heights of its old glory. He had defeated the Nizam and humiliated Haider. He had restored the Hindu Pad Padshahi, making Shah Alam the puppet Mughal Emperor a vassal of the Marathas. He had destroyed the roving bands of Afghan and Persian raiders who had plagued India since the death of Bajirao I, and financed the development of ports and cities. Like the Emperor Skandadeva more than a millennia earlier, he spent his short life in nothing but service to Bharatavarsha.

Madhavrao was far-sighted and wise beyond measure even with foreign policy; even before the battle of Plassey, he was known to caution his generals about the rising menace of European invaders. In a memorable letter, he warned Mahadji Shinde- “… you must never allow the English to make a lodgement at Delhi. If they once obtain a footing, they can never be dislodged… They have seized strategic points and have formed a ring around the Indian continent from Calcutta to Surat.”

If the likes of Jawaharlal Nehru and Rajiv Gandhi had showed even a hundredth part of Madhavrao’s political acumen, would the Chinese String of Pearls been such a menace today?

Madhavrao had new infrastructure built all over India; even now the Holkar bridge near Pune- named after the Holkars who repaired it in the nineteenth century- stands testament to his administration’s success. New ponds were excavated, new temples were raised, trade and security was re-established across Maratha domains. He lowered taxes and funded new businesses. He banned the forced leveeing of peasants as porters into armies, making a new more professional Maratha force. From Attock to Cuttack to Tanjore, he established rule of law and security of roads- a feat even the Mughal Emperors- well loved by India’s educated classes- had been incapable of in the works of their own contemporaries.

If Peshwa Madhavrao Ballal hadn’t been a Hindu, possibly India’s eminent historians would’ve penned odes to his love for the poor- but since he wasn’t some Turkish barbarian plying jiziya and breaking temples, no great intellectual and scholar from India’s big colleges will spare two minutes for him.

Instead they would whine that Madhavrao extracted Chauth & Sardeshmukhi as taxes- even though their beloved Mughals had higher taxes AND jiziya AND oversaw the mindless system called Jagirdari that caused as much harm to Indian peasantry as any murderous British tax collector.

They will rail about Shivaji sacking Surat or Madhavrao denying them trade- even though their beloved Mughals and Afghans and British did way worse to Hindu and Jain merchants than any Peshwa.

They will celebrate Tipu Jayanti and cry about some renegade mercenaries in <Madhavrao’s forces sacking a Math- as if they themselves are such defenders of Ram Rajya!

As a Maratha statesman once quipped: If they do a small thing, they won’t stop crowing about it for years but “even the greatest deeds accomplished by Hindus are dismissed by us as trifles.”

 Perhaps it is for the best.

After all, it would hardly befit the dignity and grandeur of this unvanquished young Peshwa to be paraded around like some two-bit dancing monkey in some mob-funded Bollywood joke. For his lady wife Ramabai who chose to sacrifice her life with his body as a Sati, to be mocked by India’s feminists. For his lady mother Gopikabai to dance like some common Circassian courtesan for these ‘artistic’ types. For the heroes who restored the Hindu Pad Padshahi after the disaster of Panipat to be insulted like their grandfathers & great-grandfathers were in the ridiculous insult recently made against the memory of the first Peshwa. Of course- one wonders where today’s Maratha Pride heroes were there then. Did the fact that Bajirao I was a Brahmin have to do something with their silence?

Let it be.

Let Madhavrao remain unknown and unsung- save in the hearts of all Aryas who still dream of Ram Rajya. Let the sky be a dark blue with swift rains, let the winds be favourable to him, let Varuna be gracious to him, may Agni be generous to him, may Vayu sped his glittering chariots as he and his kin ascend to the Golden Halls of Indra- as befits all valiant and just Aryas.

Tags: Madhavrao PeshwaMarathas
Share22TweetSend
Previous Post

Yogi Adityanath Disapproves Secularism in His Column

Next Post

A Woman Tears into Devdutt Pattanaik for his Shameful Commentary about Rani Padmini

Related Posts

Sardar Patel and Amit Shah
History

Sardar Patel’s 1947 Blueprint on Minority Quotas Resurfaces as Reservation Debate Returns to Centre Stage

17 April 2026

Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel’s 1947 intervention on minority representation in India’s Constituent Assembly has returned to the centre of political...

The 1973 Constitution and ‘Bhutto’ the Man Who Made It: What Pakistan Owes and What It Destroyed
Analysis

The 1973 Constitution and ‘Bhutto’ the Man Who Made It: What Pakistan Owes and What It Destroyed

6 April 2026

Pakistan’s constitutional story is built on a contradiction so stark that it still indicts the state nearly half a...

The Fall of Lhasa: How Nine Days in 1959 Changed Tibet Forever
History

The Fall of Lhasa: How Nine Days in 1959 Changed Tibet Forever

26 March 2026

There is a photograph that has never left the minds of those who have seen it. Lhasa, March 1959,...

Load More

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I agree to the Terms of use and Privacy Policy.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Currently Playing

From Runways to Warships: India’s Firefighting Warrior Built for Bases & Battles| IAF | VayuShakti

From Runways to Warships: India’s Firefighting Warrior Built for Bases & Battles| IAF | VayuShakti

00:05:40

Ethanol, EVs and Solar- How India’s Energy Game Is Changing | Modi on LPG & Crude Oil | war| Hormuz

00:05:21

Truth of IRIS Dena: 8 Days That Changed Narrative | War zone Reality, Not an Indian Navy Exercise

00:08:02

300 Million Euros for SCALP: Strategic Necessity or Costly Dependency on France300

00:04:06

Tejas Mk1A: 19th aircraft coupled but Not Delivered: What Is Holding Back the IAF Induction?

00:07:21
Facebook Twitter Instagram Youtube
tfipostTfipost.com
Right Wing | News Analysis | Indian Opinion
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Careers
  • Brand Partnerships
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap

©2026 TFI Media Private Limited

No Result
View All Result
  • Premium
  • Politics
    • Analysis
    • Opinions
    • Trending
  • Economy
    • Business
    • Finance
  • Defense
    • Defence
    • Strategy
    • Weaponry
  • Geopolitics
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia Pacific
    • Europe
    • South Asia
    • West Asia
  • Knowledge
    • Culture
    • History
    • Indology
  • Law
  • Lounge
    • Books
    • Cinema
    • Food
    • Health
    • Sports
    • technology
    • Travel
    • Satire
TFIPOST हिन्दी
TFIPOST Global

©2026 TFI Media Private Limited