Baji Rao I, born on 18 August 1700, in Dubere, was a peshwa, or chief minister, of the Maratha confederacy from 1720 to 1740 during the reign of Shahu (1708–49). Baji Rao’s conquests were one of several contributors to the decay of the Mughal Empire, especially under Emperor Muhammad Shah (1719-48).
Baji Rao succeeded his father, Balaji Vishvanath Bhat, as peshwa in 1720, establishing hereditary succession for the post. His tenure oversaw the expansion in power and influence of the peshwa as well as of the dominion of the Marathas, especially into Malwa (now in Madhya Pradesh) and Gujarat. Upon Shahu’s death in 1749, Baji Rao’s son and successor, Balaji Baji Rao, became the virtual ruler of the Maratha confederacy.
Baji Rao’s success was achieved
through military conquest and effective diplomacy, including the formation of
alliances with Rajput princes, the ability to defeat and extract
compromises from the Nizam al-Mulk of Hyderabad, and the implementation
of a tax regime over a vast area of former Mughal territory. At the same time,
the large territorial holdings under the Marathas allowed rival chiefs to
assert a certain amount of independence, setting up the peshwas for setbacks later. The most
notable instance was Baji Rao’s appointment of Malhar Rao Holkar as his chief general in Malwa in 1724.
Holkar was able to set up a dynasty, which challenged Baji Rao II in 1801
and forced him to flee to the city of Bassein, where he sought protection
from the British. After a feud between
Baji Rao II and the British in 1817–18, the peshwa ceased
to exist.