[1] In the late 8th century in the Maitraka kingdom, a Cāraṇ named Mamadiya Gaḍhvī lived near the capital of Vallabhi.
The king ordered the girls to be burned alive, but a voice from heaven said "'You unjustly chased our father for his barrenness: now, your own line will have no issue'".
The Ahīr chief admitted he had the boy, but sent his own son to be killed instead of Navghaṇ, and eventually became close with the governor.
The chief used the treasure to buy weapons to overthrow the governor while his soldiers were drunk at Jāsal's wedding feast.
[3] In Saurāṣṭra the chief of Sihor was Gohil Śādulsīnhjī; one day a Cāraṇ visited him and sang in praise of Khoḍiyār, who he said was a form of Ambikā-Bhavānī.
She told him to build a temple to her nearby on a small hill near a spring marked with a hand in red.
He noted that when disease broke out in the village, Khoḍiyār was propitiated with many offerings, including those of animal meat and blood.