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The
Treatise written by Manu, the
lawgiver in Indian mythology,
designated Haryana as Brahmavart
from where the Brahmanical
religion and social system grew
up and spread outwards to the
rest of the country. In a sense,
therefore, one can say that much
of the Hindu religion and
society was formed on the flat,
dry plains of the present-day
Haryana.
In the epic of the Mahabharata,
it was at Kurukshetra, during a
battle between that Kaurava and
Pandava princes that Lord
Krishna delivered one of his
most important messages through
the celestial sermon-the Geeta.
With Delhi as the prize awaiting
generations of invaders, Haryana
served as a sort of a
geographical corridor. Over the
centuries, waves of invaders
poured across the plains of
Haryana, sometimes fighting
battles there. At the end of the
14th century, Timur led an army
through the state towards Delhi.
In 1526, the invading Mughals
defeated the armies of the
ruling Lodi dynasty at the
Battle of Panipat and 30 years
later, in 1556, the Mughals won
yet another decisive battle
there.
By the mid-18th century, the
Marathas were in control of
Haryana, an era that was brought
to an end after the Afghans
under Ahmed Shah Abdali defeated
the Maratha forces in the third
battle of Panipat in 1761.
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