Sesodia is now the common title of the race; but being only a subdivision, the Guhilot holds its rank in the kula.
The Guhilot kula is subdivided into twenty-four sakha,[[16]] or ramifications, few of which exist:
| 1. | Aharya | At Dungarpur. | |
| 2. | Mangalia | In the Deserts. | |
| 3. | Sesodia | Mewar. | |
| 4. | Pipara | In Marwar. | |
| 5. | Kalam | ![]() | In few numbers, and mostly now unknown. |
| 6. | Gahor | ||
| 7. | Dhornia | ||
| 8. | Goda | ||
| 9. | Magrasa | ||
| 10. | Bhimla | ||
| 11. | Kamkotak | ||
| 12. | Kotecha | ||
| 13. | Sora | ||
| 14. | Uhar | ||
| 15. | Useba | ||
| 16. | Nirrup | ||
| 17. | Nadoria | ![]() | Almost extinct. |
| 18. | Nadhota | ||
| 19. | Ojakra | ||
| 20. | Kuchhra | ||
| 21. | Dosadh | ||
| 22. | Betwara | ||
| 23. | Paha | ||
| 24. | Purot[85] |
Yadu, Yādava.
The annals of Jaisalmer, which give this early history of their founder, mix up in a confused manner[[19]] the cause of their being again driven back into India; so that it is impossible to say whether it was owing to the Greek princes who ruled all these countries for a century after Alexander, or to the rise of Islamism.
Driven back on the Indus, they obtained possession of the Panjab and founded Salivahanpur. Thence expelled, they retired across the Sutlej and Ghara into the Indian deserts; whence expelling the Langahas, the Johyas, Mohilas, etc., they founded successively Tanot, Derawar, and Jaisalmer,[[20]] in S. 1212,[[21]] the present capital of the Bhattis, the lineal successors of Krishna.
Bhatti was the exile from Zabulistan, and as usual with the Rajput races on any such event in their annals, his name set aside the more ancient patronymic, Yadu. The Bhattis subdued all the tracts south of the Ghara; but their power has been greatly circumscribed since the arrival of the Rathors. The Map defines their existing limits, and their annals will detail their past history.
Jāreja, Jādeja is the most important tribe of Yadu race next to the Bhatti. Its history is similar. Descended from Krishna, and migrating simultaneously with the remains of the Harikulas, there is the strongest ground for believing that their range was not so wide as that of the elder branch, but that they settled themselves in the valley of the Indus, more especially on the west shore in Seistan; and in nominal and armorial distinctions, even in Alexander’s time, they retained the marks of their ancestry [86].
Sambos, who brought on him the arms of the Grecians, was in all likelihood a Harikula; and the Minnagara of Greek historians Samanagara (‘city of Sama’), his capital.[[22]]
The most common epithet of Krishna, or Hari, was Shama or Syama, from his dark complexion. Hence the Jareja bore it as a patronymic, and the whole race were Samaputras (children of Sama), whence the titular name Sambos of its princes.[[23]]

