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Tain is a village in the
Jhunjhunu district Jhunjhunu district is a district of the Indian state of Rajasthan in northern India. The city of Jhunjhunu is the district headquarters. Jhunjhunu is an old and historical town having its own district headquarters. The district is famous for th ...
, India. It is part of the
Shekhawati Shekhawati is a region in the northern part of the States and union territories of India, Indian state of Rajasthan, comprising the districts of Sikar, Jhunjhunu, and Churu district, Churu. The language of this region is also called Shekhawat ...
region of Rajasthan.


About the village

Tain lies 15 km to the north of
Mandawa Mandawa is a town located just 29 km from Jhunjhunu city in Jhunjhunu district of Rajasthan, India. It is part of Shekhawati region. Mandawa is located at . It has an average elevation of 316 metres (1036 ft). The nearest rail ...
town in the Jhunjhunu district, bounded by the districts of
Sikar Sikar is a city and municipal council in the Sikar district of the state of Rajasthan in India. It is the administrative headquarters of the Sikar district. It is largest city of the Shekhawati region, which consists of Sikar, Churu and Jhu ...
and Churu. It is a former estate of 12 villages founded in 1761 by Thakur Sahib Salem Singhji the grandson of Maharao Sardul Singh, a ruler of Jhunjhunu. Tain estate has a very turbulent history going back more than 250 years. There have been many upheavals, as is evident from the state of its historical monuments. The Shekhawati Brigade, a cavalry regiment under the command of Major Henry Forster, inflicted major damage on Tain's fort in the 1830s. The regiment was formed and raised to specifically target and bring to book the so-called "Rogue" rulers, chieftains and
Thikanas of Shekhawati Shekhawati is a region in the northern part of the Indian state of Rajasthan, comprising the districts of Sikar, Jhunjhunu, and Churu. The language of this region is also called Shekhawati, which is one of the eight dialects of the Rajasthan ...
, who refused to pay allegiance to the
Jaipur State The Kingdom of Amber, later the Kingdom of Jaipur or the Jaipur State, was located in the north-eastern historic Dhundhar region of Rajputana and was ruled by the Kachwaha Rajput dynasty. The kingdom was established by Dulha Rai, possibly t ...
and its British overlords. The majority of the Shekhawat rulers were opposed to their cousins, the larger Jaipur State and the British.


Demographics

Tain village has a population of around 5,000. It is primarily divided into three parts, according to an old custom of social hierarchy: Tain Garh is home mainly to
Rajput Rājpūt (, from Sanskrit ''rājaputra'' meaning "son of a king"), also called Thākur (), is a large multi-component cluster of castes, kin bodies, and local groups, sharing social status and ideology of genealogical descent originating fro ...
s; Tain Johad is home to
Jats The Jat people (, ), also spelt Jaat and Jatt, are a traditionally agricultural community in Northern India and Pakistan. Originally pastoralists in the lower Indus river-valley of Sindh, many Jats migrated north into the Punjab region in ...
and other peasant farming communities; and Tain Baas has a mainly
Qaimkhani Qaimkhani (also spelled Qayam Khani, Kayamkhani or as Kaimkhani) is a Muslim community of India. Most of them migrated to the southern part of Sindh in Pakistan after partition. They were notable for ruling the Fatehpur and Jhunjhunu regions ...
population. Many of the villagers are serving or have served in the armed or paramilitary forces. Most of the people are dependent on agriculture, dairy, poultry farming and related activities for their livelihood. Tain is well connected to all major district roads (metalled). There is better open spaces and greenery is far better than other near location to the TAIN, and it has a
BSNL Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited (commonly known as BSNL) () is an Indian central public sector undertaking, under the ownership of Department of Telecommunications, which is part of the Ministry of Communications, Government of India with its he ...
telephone exchange and an electric sub-station. It is administered by a Gram Panchayat, which is democratically elected every 5 years.


History

In 1730
Jhunjhunu Jhunjhunu is a city and municipal council in the state of Rajasthan in India. It is the administrative headquarters of the Jhunjhunu district. It is also the largest city of the Shekhawati region, which includes Jhunjhunu, Churu and Sikar ...
was seized by Thakur Shardul Singh (ruled 1730–1742) after the death of the ruling
Nawab Nawab is a royal title indicating a ruler, often of a South Asian state, in many ways comparable to the Western title of Prince. The relationship of a Nawab to the Emperor of India has been compared to that of the Kingdom of Saxony, Kings of ...
, Rohella Khan. Under Maharao Shardul Singh, Jhunjhunu was the richest and most powerful estate of the Shekhawati region. After Maharao Shardul's demise in 1742, the estate was divided equally among his five surviving sons, Zorawar Singh, Kishen Singh, Akhey Singh, Nawal Singh and Keshri Singh. Jhunjhunu thus came to be known as the Panchpana – the five estates. Akhey died without leaving an heir. Zorawar inherited Tain, Gangiyasar, Mandrella and Malsisar; Kishen got Khetri and Alsisar; Thakur Nawal singh founded Nawalgarh, Mandawa, Keshri Bissau & Surajgarh and Dundlod. The thakurs of every village in the region covered by Panchpana were all descended from one of these men. Tain was a flourishing town in the eighteenth century and till early part of the nineteenth century. It was founded by Thakur Salem Singh (Grandson of Maharao Shardul Singh and son of the eldest Rao Zorawar Singh) in 1761 and the fort was completed in 1769, a square structure with four corner bastions. This town was one of the several that fell within Shyam Singh of Bissau’s orbit and was notorious for dacoities and banditry. When the Shekhawati Brigade cavalry Regiment under Major Forster sliced the fort in 1837, the Bissau family took away the great gates for their own fort. The walls were never rebuilt. Only two bastions remained, with the gate in a precarious state. Near the fort is a ''kothi'' (mansion) built by Moti Singh Karnawat (Musahibs/caretakers of the Estate) in 1846. It has beautiful frescoes but is in a poor state of repair. One of the oldest Monastery " mutt" of the Nath Sampradaya/ sect in India is located at Tain village. There is a legend that there is a tunnel from this ancient monastery of monk Shri Kesarnathji right up to Deedwana, through which monks used to pick up salt. There are traces of a few jal trees from which, according to legend, there used to be rain of sugar granules. Thakur JAI SINGH of Tain and Thakur SURAJ MAL of Bissau lost their lives in The Battle of Tunga (Madhogarh) in the year 1787 valiantly fighting against the Marathas led by Mahadji Scindhia. Sirohi Village near
Neem-Ka-Thana Neem Ka Thana is a city in Sikar district located 73 km from Sikar City in the Shekhawati region in the Rajasthan state of India. Sikar, Udaipurwati, Khandela, Sri Madhopur, Kotputli, Khetri, and Narnaul are some major cities and t ...
in Sikar district, is the location of a Hill fort that was part of Tain estate. Some of the prominent villages that were part of Tain Estate were Lutu, Bhorki, Kali pahari, Mojas etc.


Gallery

Image:Fort_Tain.jpg, Picture of Historic Tain Fort Image:Cenotaph tain.jpg, Cenotaph at village Tain File:Kesarnathji Monastery.jpg, Temple with Stone carvings inside the ancient Kesarnathji Monastery (NATH sect) at village Tain. Image:Tain castle.jpg, Estd.1761


References

{{Reflist *‘The Painted Towns of Shekhawati’ by Ilay Cooper. * TERRITORY, POLITY AND STATUS. A Study of Shekhawats. Author : B.L. Meharda.


See also


Location Map
Villages in Jhunjhunu district