Pratiharas' military power declined after Bhoja, and they suffered defeat after defeat under successive kings. When Indra III (915-928 CE) defeated Mahipala and completely devastated Kanyakubja in the early 10th century CE, and when Krishna III (939-967 CE) invaded again in 963 CE, the Rashtrakutas dealt severe blows. The Rajput feudatories of the Pratiharas posed a further threat, as "the descendants of Mihira Bhoja had little of Gurjaradesha left in their hands, for each of the feudatories was seeking greater power for himself at the expense of his suzerain."
The Gurjara-Pratihara dynasty ruled much of Northern India from the mid-8th to the 11th centuries. They ruled first in Ujjain, then in Kannauj. Pratiharas who ruled Kanauj for a long time are also known as Gurjara-Pratiharas.
In central and eastern Rajasthan, the Pratiharas established a series of principalities.
They fought the Rashtrakutas for control of Malwa and Gujarat, and later for control of Kanauj, which implied control of the upper Ganga valley.
Several feudatories of the empire, most notably the Paramaras of Malwa, the Chandelas of Bundelkhand, and the Kalachuris of Mahakoshal, took advantage of the Gurjara Pratiharas' temporary weakness during the succession war and declared their independence.
Although the Rashtrakuta emperor Indra III briefly captured Kannauj, the Pratiharas' position continued to deteriorate in the 10th century, partly due to the drain of fighting Turkic attacks from the west and Pala advances from the east.
In 950 C.E., the Gurjara-Pratiharas lost control of Rajasthan to their feudators, and the Chandelas captured the strategic fortress of Gwalior in central India.
During the reign of Mahipala
During the reign of Mahipala, the Pratihara Empire fell.
The Pratiharas ruled over the upper Gangetic Valley, Malwa, and parts of Rajputana during the reigns of Devpala and his successor, Vijaypala.
Chandellas gradually gained independence. Finally, a number of succession states grew, eventually leading to the demise of the Pratihara Empire.
The Chalukyas of Gujarat, the Chandelas of the Yamuna and Narmada Valleys, the Kachchhaghatas of Gwalior, the Guhilots of South Rajputana, the Chedis of Dahala, the Chahamanas of Sakambari, the Kalachuris of Central India, and the Paramaras of Malwa grew on the ruins of the Pratihara Empire.
By that time, the Pratihara Empire had vanished
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