Tomar or Tanwar
Tomara (also known as Tomar, Tanwar, and Tuar) is a Rajput clan whose members governed various regions of North India at different periods. The Tomars assert their lineage from the Puruvanshi ancestry of Indraprastha from the era of the Mahabharata. Initially associated with the Imperial Pratiharas, the Tomars gradually rose to independent power. An undated inscription of Mahendrapala mentions Gogga, a Tomar lord who, along with his brothers, built a triple Vishnu temple at Prithudaka (modern Pehowa, Haryana). The clan eventually ruled Delhi, with figures like Anangpal, Ajaypal, and Mahipal among their known rulers. They later served as feudatories under the Chauhans until the Ghurid conquests.
History of Tomar/Tanwar
According to ancient genealogies in the Puranas, the Tomars are believed to descend from the Pandava prince Arjuna, tracing their lineage through his great-grandson Emperor Janamejaya, son of Emperor Parikshit. Prince Dhritarashtra, born blind and the elder son of Kuru prince Vichitravirya, abdicated the throne in favor of his younger brother Pandu, whose sons were known as the Pandavas. Due to health issues, Pandu eventually returned the throne to his elder brother. The sons of Pandu engaged in a great battle, after which Yudhishthira emerged victorious over Duryodhana and became king. King Yudhishthira established Indraprastha in the Kuru kingdom and later abdicated in favor of Parikshit, Arjuna's grandson. After the Mahabharata war, Hastinapur remained the capital, but it was later flooded, prompting King Nishchakra to move the Pandava kingdom eastward. Indraprastha continued to be a significant city within the Kuru-Panchala Empire for many centuries. Around 300 BCE, the Kuru kingdom became one of the 16 Maha Janapadas under the Magadh Empire. King Kshemaka, the 28th in descent from Yudhishthira, was the last ruler with complete power in the Kuru kingdom before being overthrown by his ministers. His sons moved south to the Godavari River region, where his grandson Uttungabhuja founded a small kingdom. Centuries later, his descendants re-established Indraprastha under Anangpal Tomar I in the eighth century CE.