Raja Nipal Chand
Raja Nipal Chand was a member of a Rajput clan and belonged to the Suryavanshi lineage. He embraced Islam during the reign of Mahmud of Ghazni and adopted the name Naru Shah (also known as Naru Khan).[1] The Naru Rajput clan is named after him.
Naru Rajputs
The Narus of Hoshiarpur district claim descent from Nipal Chand, a Rajput from Mathura (“Muttra”) who traced his lineage to Raja Ram Chand. According to tradition, he converted to Islam during the time of Mahmud of Ghazni, adopting the name Naru Shah.[2]
Rose’s colonial-era account further adds:
> “Confused and conflicting as these various accounts are... the Naru say that their ancestor was a Surajbansi Rajput of Muttra, named Nipal Chand, and descended from Raja Ram Chand. He was converted in the time of Mahmud of Ghazni and took the name of Naru Shah. Naru Shah settled at Mau in Jullundur, whence his son, Ratan Pal, founded Phillaur. Thence were founded the four Naru parganas of Hariana, Bajwara, Sham Chaurasi and Ghorewaha in Hoshiarpur, and that of Bahram in Jullundur. The chief men of the parganas are still called Rai or Rana. The Naru are all Musalman but keep Brahmans of the Basdeo got.”[2]
Rose also notes that the Narus later served as revenue collectors during the reign of Emperor Akbar, until being displaced by Sikh powers in the 18th century.[2]
Distribution
Colonial census data from 1911 recorded approximately 30,967 Narus in the Jalandhar Division—about 16,000 in Hoshiarpur, 7,100 in Jalandhar, and smaller numbers in neighboring districts.[2]
Following the Partition of India in 1947, most Muslim Narus migrated to Pakistan. Today, they are primarily found in the Punjab and Sindh provinces, particularly in districts such as Sialkot, Lahore, Gujranwala, Sargodha, Mianwali, Bhakkar, Okara, Faisalabad, and others.[3]
See also
References
- ^ Biographical Research Institute, Pakistan (1961). Biographical Encyclopedia of Pakistan. Biographical Research Institute, Pakistan.
- ^ a b c d "Naru Rajputs". New Pakistan Historian. 25 October 2022.
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(help) - ^ ""Naru Rajput – Academic Dictionaries and Encyclopedias"".
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Further reading
- H. A. Rose, “A Glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Punjab and North-West Frontier Province” (Oxford, 1911), entries on Narus.