[1]. Brother of Ajit, the negotiator of the treaty with the British.

[2]. Chief of the Jagawat clan, also a branch of the Chondawats; he was killed in a battle with the Mahrattas.

[3]. It is yet held by the successor of Sangram, whose faithful services merited the grant he obtained from his prince, and it was in consequence left unmolested in the arrangement of 1817, from the knowledge of his merits.

[4]. The father of Rawat Jawan Singh, whom I found at Udaipur as military minister, acting for his grand-uncle Ajit the organ of the Chondawats, whose head, Padam Singh, was just emerging from his minority. It was absolutely necessary to get to the very root of all these feuds, when as envoy and mediator I had to settle the disputes of half a century, and make each useful to detect their joint usurpations of the crown domain.

[5]. She was the grandmother of Man Singh, a fine specimen of a Saktawat cavalier.

[6]. [Lālsot, about 40 miles south of Jaipur city. For an account of the battle see Compton, European Military Adventurers, 346 f.]

[7]. Megh Singh was the chief of Begun, and founder of that subdivision of the Chondawats called after him Meghawat, and his complexion being very dark (kala), he was called ‘Kala Megh,’ the ‘black cloud.’ His descendants were very numerous and very refractory.

[8]. A.D. 1788.

[9]. He did not recover his liberty for two years, nor till he had surrendered four of the best towns in his fief.