Translations:Rajput/17/en

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During its formative stages, the Rajput class was quite assimilative and absorbed people from a wide range of lineages.[1] However, by the late 16th century, it had become genealogically rigid, based on the ideas of blood purity.[2] The membership of the Rajput class was now largely inherited rather than acquired through military achievements.[3] A major factor behind this development was the consolidation of the Mughal Empire, whose rulers had great interest in genealogy. As the various Rajput chiefs became Mughal feduatories, they no longer engaged in major conflicts with each other. This decreased the possibility of achieving prestige through military action, and made hereditary prestige more important.[4]

  1. Tanuja Kothiyal 2016, p. 8.
  2. Tanuja Kothiyal 2016, pp. 8–9.
  3. Cynthia Talbot 2015, p. 120.
  4. Cynthia Talbot 2015, p. 121.