[21]. A.D. 1155.

[22]. [The capital of Sambos was Sindimana, perhaps the modern Sihwān (Smith, EHI, 101).]

[23]. [This is very doubtful.]

[24]. They have an infinitely better etymology for this, in being descendants of Jambuvati, one of Hari’s eight wives. [The origin of the term Jām is very doubtful: see Yule, Hobson-Jobson, s.v.]

[25]. The Suraseni of Vraj, the tract so named, thirty miles around Mathura.

[26]. Its chief, Rao Manohar Singh, was well known to me, and was, I may say, my friend. For years letters passed between us, and he had made for me a transcript of a valuable copy of the Mahabharata.

[27]. [Vigraha-rāja, known as Vīsaladeva, Bīsal Deo, in the middle of the twelfth century, is alleged to have conquered Delhi from a chief of the Tomara clan. That chief was a descendant of Ānangapāla, who, a century before, had built the Red Fort (Smith, EHI, 386).]

[28]. Several Mahratta chieftains deduce their origin from the Tuar race, as Ram Rao Phalkia, a very gallant leader of horse in Sindhia’s State.

[29]. [This is a pure myth (Smith, EHI, 385, 413).]

[30]. [For a fuller list, see Census Report, Rajputana, 1911, i. 255 f.]