Parvatibai

Second wife of Sadashivrao Bhau
(Learn how and when to remove this message)

Parvati
Bai
Born(1734-04-06)6 April 1734
Phaltan
Died23 September 1763(1763-09-23) (aged 29)
Satara
Occupation(s)Wife and administrator
SpouseSadashivrao Bhau
Parvati
HouseKolhatkar (by birth)
Bhat (by marriage)

Parvatibai (6 April 1734 – 23 September 1763) was second wife of Sadashivrao Bhau. She was from the Kolhatkar family of Pen and was married to Sadashivrao Bhau after the death of his first wife Umabai and hence became a member of the Peshwa family. She was also a trusted confidante of Shahuji. Her niece Radhikabai was married to Vishwasrao.

Panipat Campaign

When the Marathas under Sadashivrao went to North India, she escorted her husband. On the way to Panipat, she performed pilgrimage at Mathura and Vrindavan, along with Nana Phadnavis and other women folks in Maratha camp. She was present in the final battle fought on 14 January 1761 and was successfully led out of the battlefield by some loyal men of Sadashivrao Bhau. She accidentally met Malharrao Holkar on her escape route, who carried her off safely to the south of river Chambal.[1]

Death of her Husband and aftermath

Her husband, Sadashivrao Bhau died in the Third Battle of Panipat. For the rest of her life, she refused to be a widow (as she had promised her husband before the battle).[citation needed]

Death

She saw many ups and downs in the Maratha Empire and died when Madhavrao I was in power. She died in Pune due to Pneumonia and was treated as Sati of Sadashivrao Bhau after her death. She was cremated in Pune, however, the Marathas were not in a state to erect any monument of her. Her after-death rituals were done at her hometown, Pen.

In popular culture

References

  1. ^ Third Battle of Panipat by Abhas Verma ISBN 9788180903397 Bharatiya Kala Prakashan
  2. ^ "Kriti Sanon wraps up the shoot of Panipat; shares a note thanking Arjun Kapoor and Ashutosh Gowariker". ZoomTV. Retrieved 27 February 2020.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Chhatrapatis
Peshwas
Amatya & Pratinidhi
Women
Maratha Confederacy
Battles
Wars
Adversaries
Forts
Coins