[25]. [Thirty miles E. of Jaipur city.]
[26]. [Now in Mācheri, Alwar State.]
[27]. [‘The twenty-two,’ a term originally applied to the Mughal army, because it was supposed to contain twenty-two lakhs of men. The twenty-two nobles of Jaipur were a later creation.]
[28]. A litter, literally 'seat (asan) of ease (sukh).'
[29]. [Bhābhi, ‘sister-in-law.’]
[30]. The descendants of this chieftain still occupy lands at Anupshahr.
[31]. [The betel leaf eaten before battle.]
[32]. [About 20 miles N. of Jaipur city.]
[33]. [See Vol. II. p. [665].]
[34]. Rajor is esteemed a place of great antiquity, and the chief seat of the Bargujar tribe for ages, a tribe mentioned with high respect in the works of the bard Chand, and celebrated in the wars of Prithiraj. I sent a party to Rajor in 1813.