Purandar FortPurandar Fort is a mountain fort in Pune district in Western Indian state of Maharashtra, India. The fort stands at 4,472 ft (1,390 m) above the sea level in the Western Ghats, 50 km to the southeast of Pune . The twin forts of Purandar and Vajragad (or Rudramal) of which the latter is the smaller of the two, is located on the eastern side of the main fort. The village of Purandar takes its name from this fort. It is the birthplace of Dharmaveer Chatrapati Sambhaji Maharaj.
Adil Shahi dynastyThe Adil Shahi or Adilshahi, was a Shia, and later Sunni Muslim, dynasty founded by Yusuf Adil Shah, that ruled the Sultanate of Bijapur, centred on present-day Bijapur district, Karnataka in India, in the Western area of the Deccan region of Southern India from 1489 to 1686. Bijapur had been a province of the Bahmani Sultanate (1347–1518), before its political decline in the last quarter of the 15th century and eventual break-up in 1518. The Bijapur Sultanate was absorbed into the Mughal Empire on 12 September 1686, after its conquest by the Emperor Aurangzeb.
Satara stateSatara State was a Maratha rump state later Princely state in India created after the fall of the Maratha Confederacy in 1818 after the Third Anglo-Maratha War and annexed by the British in 1849 using the Doctrine of lapse. The state was ruled by the Bhonsle dynasty, descendants of Shivaji, the founder of the Maratha Empire. The first Raja of the state was Pratap Singh who was freed by the British after they defeated Peshwa Bajirao II in 1818. Pratap Singh was deposed in 1838.
DaulatabadDaulatabad (Marâthî दौलताबाद ; persan دولتآباد ; « la ville fortunée » ), est une ville forte du située dans le Maharashtra, en Inde, à environ au nord-ouest de Aurangâbâd. Le lieu est connu dès le sous le nom de Devagiri ou Deogiri, époque où il était une ville importante du plateau du Deccan, située le long des routes caravanières. Ce n'est plus aujourd'hui qu'un village. La ville est célèbre pour être, à partir de 1327, la capitale de la dynastie des Tughlûq sous Muhammad bin-Tughlûq, qui lui donne le nom de Daulatabad après y avoir transféré de force l'ensemble de la population de Delhi, faisant de nombreuses victimes.