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List of governors of Bombay Presidency

Until the 18th century, Bombay consisted of seven islands separated by shallow sea. These seven islands were part of a larger archipelago in the Arabian sea, off the western coast of India. The date of city's founding is unclear—historians trace back urban settlement to the late 17th century after the British secured the seven islands from the Portuguese to establish a secure base in the region. The islands provided the British with a sheltered harbour for trade, in addition to a relatively sequestered location that reduced the chances of land-based attacks. Over the next two centuries, the British dominated the region, first securing the archipelago from the Portuguese, and later defeating the Marathas to secure the hinterland.[1]

Bombay Presidency in 1906

Bombay Presidency was one of the three Presidencies of British India; the other two being Madras Presidency, and Bengal Presidency. It was in the centre-west of the Indian subcontinent on the Arabian Sea. It was bordered to the north-west, north, and north-east by Baluchistan province, Punjab province, and Rajputana Agency; to the east by Central India Agency, the Central Provinces and Berar and Hyderabad State; and to the south by Madras Presidency and Mysore State. The Presidency was established in the late 17th century and named after Bombay, the capital city and the island on which it was built. By 1906, the area under the jurisdiction of Bombay Presidency stretched from North Canara in the south to Sindh in the north, encompassing the now-Pakistani province of Sindh, some parts of the present-day state of Gujarat, northwestern part of Karnataka state, the British Aden protectorate in Yemen, and the western two-thirds of modern-day Maharashtra.[2][3]

During British rule, a Governor was the chief administrative and political officer of Bombay. The executive Government of the Presidency was administered by the Governor. He had the same power and right in the Presidency as the Governor-General of India, and observed the same order and course in their proceedings.[4] Governors of Bombay and Madras Presidencies, who were appointed by the British Crown, were the most important officials after the Viceroy.[5] Bombay Castle was the official residence of the governor of Bombay until the 1770s, when it was moved to Parel; a century later, in 1883, it was moved to Malabar Hill.[6][7]

Abraham Shipman was appointed the first Royal Governor of Bombay in 1662. Beginning in 1668, Charles II leased the islands to the British East India CompanyGeorge Oxeden was appointed the first Company Governor of Bombay on 23 September 1668. In 1687, the Company relocated its headquarters from Surat to Bombay.[8] In 1858, the British Crown took formal repossession of the territory after the company was disbanded. After India's independence in 1947, the territory was restructured into Bombay State. The area of Bombay State increased, after several erstwhile princely states that acceded to the Indian union were integrated into Bombay State. Raja Maharaj Singh was the first Indian Governor of Bombay after independence. On 1 May 1960, Bombay State was restructured on linguistic lines—Gujarati-speaking areas were partitioned into the state of Gujarat, and Marathi-speaking areas of Bombay State, Central Provinces and Berar, and Hyderabad State were integrated as the state of Maharashtra. The last person to hold the title of "Governor of Bombay" was Sri Prakasa in 1960.

Royal governors (1662–1668) Edit

 
Charles II of England, who received Bombay as part of his dowry

The marriage treaty of Charles II of England and Catherine of Braganza that concluded on 8 May 1661 incorporated Bombay into the English colonial empire- the territory was part of Catherine's dowry.[9] On 19 March 1662, Abraham Shipman was appointed the first Governor and General of the city, and his fleet arrived in Bombay in September and October 1662. On being asked to hand over Bombay and Salsette to the English, the Portuguese Governor contended that the Bombay Island alone had been ceded, and alleging irregularity in the patent, he refused to give up even Bombay Island. The Portuguese Viceroy declined to interfere and Shipman was prevented from landing in Bombay. He was forced to retire to the island of Anjediva in North Canara and died there in October 1664. In November 1664, Shipman's successor Humphrey Cooke agreed to accept Bombay Island without its dependencies.[10] The first four governors held Bombay for the Crown.[11]

No. Name Assumed office Left office Years in office Remarks[a]
1 Abraham Shipman 19 March 1662 October 1664 2
2 Humphrey Cooke February 1665 5 November 1666 1 Acting
3 Gervase Lucas 5 November 1666 21 May 1667 1
4 Henry Gary 22 May 1667 23 September 1668 1 Acting

Sources: The India List and India Office List[11] and Origin of Bombay[12]

Company governors (1668–1862) Edit

 
Map of India showing Bombay as a British possession (c. 1783)
 
Map of India (c. 1804)
 
Bombay Presidency in 1832

On 21 September 1668, the Royal Charter of 27 March 1668 led to the transfer of Bombay from Charles II to the British East India Company for an annual rent of £10 (equivalent retail price index of £1,226 in 2007).[13] The islands were handed over to the company on 23 September 1668. Upon the transfer, Bombay was made subordinate to the company's settlement in Surat.[14] During 1668–87, the Governors of Bombay, who were also presidents of Surat Council, spent most of their time in Surat. During this time, Bombay was administered by a Deputy Governor.[11]

In 1687, the Company shifted its main holdings from Surat to Bombay, which had become the administrative centre of all the west coast settlements.[15] Following the transfer, Bombay was placed at the head of all the company's establishments in India.[16] However, the onset of plague and cholera delayed implementation, and the headquarters was not actually moved to Bombay until 1708.[14] During the Governorships of John Gayer, Nicholas Waite, and William Aislabie (1694–1715), the Bombay Governors also held the title of "General".[11][17] Their main title, meanwhile, continued to be "President", with Governor of Bombay being a supplementary title and role.

During the 18th century, the Maratha Empire expanded rapidly, claiming Konkan and much of eastern Gujarat from the disintegrating Mughal Empire. In western Gujarat, including Kathiawar and Kutch, the loosening of Mughal control allowed numerous local rulers to create virtually independent states. In 1737, Salsette was captured by Baji Rao I of the Maratha Empire from the Portuguese, and the Portuguese province of Bassein was ceded to the Marathas in 1739.[18] The growth of the Bengal provinces soon undermined Bombay's supremacy. In 1753, Bombay was made subordinate to Calcutta. Thereafter, Bengal always maintained much greater importance relative to Madras and Bombay.[14] Bankot (Fort Victoria) in Konkan was incorporated into Bombay Presidency in 1756.[19] The First Anglo-Maratha War began with the Treaty of Surat, which was signed on 6 March 1775, between Raghunathrao of the Maratha Empire and the British. According to the treaty, Raghunathrao ceded Salsette and Bassein to the British. The war ended when Salsette, Elephanta, Hog Island, and Karanja were formally ceded to the British by the Treaty of Salbai, signed on 17 May 1782. These territories were incorporated into the Bombay Presidency. Also according to the treaty, Bassein and its dependencies were restored to Raghunathrao, while Bharuch was ceded to the Maratha ruler Scindia.[20] The British annexed Surat on 15 May 1800.[21] The British received the districts of Ahmadabad, Bharuch and Kaira in 1803 after British victory in the Second Anglo-Maratha War.[22]

The framework of the Presidency formed between 1803 and 1827. The districts of Ahmadabad, Bharuch, and Kaira in Gujarat were taken over by the Bombay Government in 1805 and enlarged in 1818. The numerous small states of Kathiawar and Mahikantha were organised into princely states under British suzerainty between 1807 and 1820.[3] Baji Rao II, the last of the Maratha Peshwas, was defeated by the British in the Battle of Kirkee, which took place near Poona in the Deccan on 5 November 1817.[23] Following his defeat, the whole of the Deccan (except Satara and Kolhapur), and certain parts of Gujarat, were included in the Presidency.[24][25] The districts included were Khandesh, Belgaum, Dharwar, Ratnagiri, Kolaba (except Alibag taluka), Poona, Ahmadnagar, Nasik.[26] Aden was incorporated in 1839.[27] Alibag taluka was annexed in 1840 and added to the Presidency.[28] Sind province, which included the districts of Karachi, Hyderabad, Shikarpur, Thar and Parkar, and Upper Sind Frontier, were annexed in 1847.[29] In 1848, the districts of Satara and Bijapur were added to the Presidency.[26] In 1853, Panch Mahals in Gujarat was leased from the Scindias.[3] The Canara district, which was under Madras Presidency, was bifurcated into North Canara and South Canara in 1860. South Canara remained under Madras Presidency, while North Canara was transferred to Bombay Presidency in 1861.[26][30] Between 1818 and 1858, certain princely states like Mandvi in Surat and some in Satara were lapsed to the Presidency.[26]

No. Name Portrait Assumed office Left office Years in office Remarks[a]
1 George Oxenden   23 September 1668 14 July 1669 1
2 Gerald Aungier 14 July 1669 30 June 1677 8
3 Henry Oxenden   30 June 1677 27 October 1681 4
4 John Child 27 October 1681 4 February 1690 8
5 Richard Keigwin[b] 27 December 1683 19 November 1684 1 Unofficial
6 Bartholomew Harris 4 February 1690 10 May 1694 4
7 Daniel Annesley 10 May 1694 17 May 1694 Acting
8 John Gayer 17 May 1694 November 1704 10
9 Nicholas Waite November 1704 September 1708 4
10 William Aislabie September 1708 11 October 1715 7
11 Stephen Strutt 11 October 1715 26 December 1715 Acting
12 Charles Boone 26 December 1715 9 January 1722 7
13 William Phipps 9 January 1722 10 January 1729 7
14 Robert Cowan 10 January 1729 22 September 1734 5
15 John Horne 22 September 1734 7 April 1739 5
16 Stephen Law 7 April 1739 15 November 1742 3
17 John Geekie 15 November 1742 26 November 1742 Acting
18 William Wake 26 November 1742 17 November 1750 8
19 Richard Bourchier 17 November 1750 1760 10
20 Sir John Holkell 1760 28 February 1760 Acting
21 Charles Crommelin 28 February 1760 27 January 1767 7
22 Thomas Hodges 27 January 1767 23 February 1771 4
23 William Hornby 26 February 1771 1 January 1784 13
24 Rawson Hart Boddam 1 January 1784 9 January 1788 4
25 Andrew Ramsay 9 January 1788 6 September 1788 1 Acting
26 William Medows   6 September 1788 21 January 1790 2
27 Robert Abercromby   21 January 1790 26 November 1792 2
28 George Dick 26 November 1792 9 November 1795 3 Acting
29 John Griffith 9 November 1795 27 December 1795 Acting
30 Jonathan Duncan   27 December 1795 11 August 1811 16
31 George Brown 11 August 1811 12 August 1812 1 Acting
32 Sir Evan Nepean, Bt.   12 August 1812 1 November 1819 7
33 Mountstuart Elphinstone   1 November 1819 1 November 1827 8
34 Sir John Malcolm   1 November 1827 1 December 1830 3
35 Sir Thomas Sidney Beckwith 1 December 1830 15 January 1831 1 Acting
36 John Romer 17 January 1831 21 March 1831 Acting
37 John FitzGibbon, 2nd Earl of Clare   21 March 1831 17 March 1835 4
38 Sir Robert Grant   17 March 1835 9 July 1838 3
39 James Farish 11 July 1838 31 May 1839 1 Acting
40 James Rivett Carnac   31 May 1839 27 April 1841 2
41 William Hay Macnaghten   27 April 1841 28 April 1841 Acting
42 George William Anderson 28 April 1841 9 June 1842 1 Acting
43 George Arthur   9 June 1842 6 August 1846 4
44 Lestock Robert Reid 6 August 1846 23 January 1847 1 Acting
45 George Russell Clerk 23 January 1847 1 May 1848 1 Acting
46 Lucius Cary (Lord Falkland)   1 May 1848 26 December 1853 5
47 John Elphinstone (Lord Elphinstone)   26 December 1853 11 May 1860 7
48 George Russell Clerk 11 May 1860 24 April 1862 2 Acting

Sources: The India List and India Office List[11][17][31] and Oxford Dictionary of National Biography[27]

Deputy Governors of Bombay (1668–1690)
The transfer of the headquarters of the company's power to Bombay largely eliminated the need for a Deputy Governor. In spite of the change, the title continued to be borne by the second member of the Executive Council of the Governor. It fell into disuse sometime between 1720 and 1758.

No. Name Assumed office Left office Years in office
1 Henry Young 1668 13 November 1669 2
2 Matthew Gray 1670 1670
3 Phillip Gifford 1670 1676 6
4 Henry Oxenden 1676 1682 6
5 Charles Ward[b] 1682 1683 1
6 Charles Zinzan 1684 1686 2
7 John Wyborne 1686 1688 2
8 John Vaux 1689 1689
9 George Cooke 1689 1690 1
10 George Weldon 1690 1690
11 John Burniston 1690 1704 14

Source: Origin of Bombay[32]

Crown governors (1862–1948) Edit

 
Bombay Presidency in 1893
 
Bombay Presidency in 1909 (northern portion)
 
Bombay Presidency in 1909, (southern portion)

Following the Indian Rebellion of 1857,[33] the company was accused of mismanagement, and Bombay reverted to the British Crown.[34] On 2 August 1858, the British Parliament began abolition of the company and asserted full, direct Crown authority over India. The execution was slow. The company for purposes of liquidation maintained its formal existence until 1874.[35] India was thereafter directly ruled by the Crown as a colony of the United Kingdom, and officially known as the Empire of India after 1876. India consisted of some regions referred to as British India that were directly administered by the British and other regions called the Princely States that were ruled by Indian rulers.[36][37]

Laws were made for British India by a Legislative Council under the Viceroy having wide powers of legislation. This council could pass laws as important as any Acts by the British Parliament. The Legislative Council was made of six members besides the Viceroy.[38][39] In addition, the governors served as extraordinary members when the Legislative Council met in their provinces. They also had an Executive Council of two members of the Indian Civil Service for 12 years standing, appointed by the Crown.[35][39]

The Governor would consult the Executive Council in the exercise of all his functions (except on trivial or urgent matters or where the public interest made it undesirable). He would not be required to consult in cases where he was specifically authorised by the Constitution to act in his discretion or on the advice of, or after consultation with, some other person or authority. He would in general act in accordance with the advice of the Executive Council but could act against such advice, where he considered it necessary in the interests of the public order, public faith or good government; in such cases he would be required to seek approval of the Secretary of State for India.[40]

The Governor didn't have the right to make or suspend any laws, unless in cases of urgent necessity, he could do it with the consent of the Governor-General of India. He didn't have the power of creating a new office, or granting any salary, gratuity, or allowance, without the sanction of the Governor-General of India.[4] The Governor-General had full power to superintend and control the Governor in all points relating to the civil or military administration of the Presidency, and the Governor had to obey the orders and instructions of the Governor-General in all cases.[41] The Governors could propose to the Governor-General drafts of any laws which they thought expedient, together with their reasons for the same; and the Governor-General communicated the resolutions to the Governor, after considering the reasons.[42] The Governors regularly transmitted to the Governor-General true copies of all orders and acts of their governments, and also advice of all matters which they felt to be communicated to the Governor-General.[43] The powers of the Governors were not suspended when the Governor-General visited the Presidency.[44] The departure of the Governor from India with intent to return to Europe was deemed to be a resignation from his office. Alternately, the Governor could resign by declaring it in writing and delivering it to the secretary for the public department of the Presidency.[45]

In 1906, Bombay Presidency had four commissionerships and twenty-six districts with Bombay City as its capital. The four commissionerships were the northern province of Gujarat, the central province of Deccan, the southern province of Carnatic, and the northwestern province of Sind.[14] The 26 districts were Bombay City, Bombay Island,[c] Ahmedabad, Bharuch, Kaira, Panch Mahal, Surat, Thana, Ahmednagar, East Khandesh,[d] West Khandesh,[d] Nasik, Poona, Satara, Solapur, Belgaum, Bijapur, Dharwar, North Canara, Kolaba, Ratnagiri, Karachi, Hyderabad, Shikarpur, Thar and Parkar and Upper Sind Frontier.[2][46][47] Aden separated from Bombay Presidency in 1932,[27] and Sind separated in 1936.[29]

No. Name Portrait Assumed office Left office Years in office Remarks[a]
1 Sir Bartle Frere   24 April 1862 6 March 1867 5
2 Sir William Vesey-FitzGerald   6 March 1867 6 May 1872 5
3 Sir Philip Wodehouse   6 May 1872 30 April 1877 5
4 Sir Richard Temple, Bt.   30 April 1877 13 March 1880 3
5 Lionel Robert Ashburner 13 March 1880 28 April 1880 Acting
6 Sir James Fergusson, Bt.   28 April 1880 27 March 1885 5
7 James Braithwaite Peile 27 March 1885 30 March 1885 Acting
8 The Lord Reay   30 March 1885 12 April 1890 5
9 The Lord Harris   27 March 1890 16 February 1895 5
10 Herbert Mills Birdwood   16 February 1895 18 February 1895 Acting
11 The Lord Sandhurst   18 February 1895 17 February 1900 5
12 The Lord Northcote   17 February 1900 5 September 1903 3
13 James Monteath 5 September 1903 12 December 1903 Acting
14 The Lord Lamington   12 December 1903 27 July 1907 4
15 John William Muir Mackenzie   27 July 1907 18 October 1907 Acting
16 Sir George Sydenham Clarke   18 October 1907 5 April 1913 6
17 The Lord Willingdon   5 April 1913 16 December 1918 5
18 Sir George Lloyd   16 December 1918 8 December 1923 5
19 Maurice Hayward 8 December 1923 10 December 1923 Acting
20 Sir Leslie Orme Wilson   10 December 1923 20 March 1926 3
21 Sir Henry Staveley Lawrence 20 March 1926 8 December 1928 2 Acting
22 Sir Frederick Sykes   9 December 1928 9 December 1933 5
23 John Ernest Buttery Hotson[e] 1931 1931 Acting
24 The Lord Brabourne   9 December 1933 30 May 1937 4
25 Robert Duncan Bell 30 May 1937 18 September 1937 Acting
26 The Earl of Scarbrough 18 September 1937 24 March 1943 6
27 Sir John Colville   24 March 1943 5 January 1948 5

Sources: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography[27] and Governor of Maharashtra[48]

Chief Ministers of Bombay (1937–1947)

No. Name Portrait Assumed office Left office Years in Office
1 Bal Gangadhar Kher   1937 October 1939 2
2 Governor's rule October 1939 30 March 1946 7
3 Bal Gangadhar Kher   30 March 1946 15 August 1947 1

Source: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography[27]

Post independence (1948–1960) Edit

 
Maharashtra State

After India gained independence in 1947, Bombay Presidency became part of India, and Sind province became part of Pakistan. The territory retained by India was restructured into Bombay State. It included princely states such as Kolhapur in Deccan, Baroda, Dang in Gujarat, which were under the political influence of Bombay Presidency.[49] As a result of the States Reorganisation Act of 1956, the Kannada-speaking districts of Belgaum (except Chandgad taluk), Bijapur, Dharwar, and North Canara were transferred from Bombay State to Mysore State.[50] In Lok Sabha discussions in 1955, the Congress party demanded that the city be constituted as an autonomous city-state.[51] In 1956, the States Reorganisation Committee recommended a bilingual state for Maharashtra-Gujarat with Bombay as its capital. In the 1957 elections, the Samyukta Maharashtra movement opposed these proposals, and insisted that Bombay be declared the capital of Maharashtra.[52] Following protests by the movement in which 105 people were killed by police, Bombay State was reorganised on linguistic lines on 1 May 1960.[53] Gujarati-speaking areas of Bombay State were partitioned into the state of Gujarat.[54] Maharashtra State with Bombay as its capital was formed with the merger of Marathi-speaking areas of Bombay State, eight districts from Central Provinces and Berar, five districts from Hyderabad State, and numerous princely states enclosed between them.[55] In 1960, the designation of the "Governor of Bombay" was transmuted as the Governor of Maharashtra.[48]

No. Name Portrait Assumed office Left office Years in Office
1 Raja Sir Maharaj Singh   6 January 1948 30 May 1952 4
2 Sir Girija Shankar Bajpai   30 May 1952 5 December 1954 2
3 Harekrushna Mahatab   2 March 1955 14 October 1956 1
4 Sri Prakasa[f]   10 December 1956 16 April 1962 6

Sources: Governor of Maharashtra[48] and Greater Bombay District Gazetteer[56]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

a ^ The Acting Governors were appointed for a temporary period until the post of Governor was filled. Whenever there was a vacancy for the post of the Governor, and no provisional or other successor was available, then the member of the Executive Council of the Governor, next in rank to the Governor, other than the Commander-in-chief of the Presidency, would be selected as the Governor. If the Executive Council was not available, then the senior secretary of Government of the Presidency, executed the office of Governor until a successor arrived. Every Acting Governor was entitled to the emoluments and salaries appertaining to the office of Governor, until the time he held the post.[57]
b ^ In 1683, Bombay was the scene of a revolt headed by Richard Keigwin, the third member of the Council against the company's authority. Placing Deputy Governor Charles Ward under arrest, Keigwin ruled Bombay in the King's name from 27 December 1683 to 19 November 1684, when on promise of pardon he handed over the island to Admiral Thomas Grantham.[58]
c ^ Bombay Island was treated as a separate district under a Collector.[2]
d ^ Khandesh was partitioned into East Khandesh and West Khandesh in 1906.[2]
e ^ John Ernest Buttery Hotson, Member of the Executive Council of Bombay (1926–31), was appointed Acting Governor of Bombay for a short period on the departure of Frederick Sykes.[59][60]
f ^ Sri Prakasa was Governor of Bombay from 10 December 1956 to 1 May 1960 and Governor of Maharashtra thereafter from 1 May 1960 to 16 April 1962.

Citations Edit

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  • Hunter, William Wilson; James Sutherland Cotton, Richard Burn, William Stevenson Meyer, Great Britain India Office (1909), The Imperial Gazetteer of India, Clarendon Press, retrieved 7 January 2009{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Naravane, M.S. (2006), Battles of the Honourable East India Company, APH Publishing, pp. 80–1, ISBN 978-81-313-0034-3
  • Ratnagiri and Savantvadi District Gazetteer, vol. X, The Gazetteers Department (Government of Maharashtra), 1996 [1880], retrieved 15 January 2009
  • Thana District Gazetteer, Gazetteers of the Bombay Presidency, vol. XIII, The Gazetteer Departments (Government of Maharashtra), 1986 [1882], retrieved 7 January 2009
  • Thomas Edlyne Tomlins, Thomas Colpitts Granger (1835), The Law-dictionary, Explaining the Rise, Progress, and Present State of the British Law:: Defining and Interpreting the Terms Or Words of Art, and Comprising Also Copious Information on the Subjects of Trade and Government, vol. 1, J. Clarke, J. and W. T. Clarke, Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman, pp. M1 364, M1 365, retrieved 16 January 2009

External links Edit

  • Governors of Bombay from rootsweb
  • Provinces of British India (Bombay) from WorldStatesmen.org

list, governors, bombay, presidency, until, 18th, century, bombay, consisted, seven, islands, separated, shallow, these, seven, islands, were, part, larger, archipelago, arabian, western, coast, india, date, city, founding, unclear, historians, trace, back, ur. Until the 18th century Bombay consisted of seven islands separated by shallow sea These seven islands were part of a larger archipelago in the Arabian sea off the western coast of India The date of city s founding is unclear historians trace back urban settlement to the late 17th century after the British secured the seven islands from the Portuguese to establish a secure base in the region The islands provided the British with a sheltered harbour for trade in addition to a relatively sequestered location that reduced the chances of land based attacks Over the next two centuries the British dominated the region first securing the archipelago from the Portuguese and later defeating the Marathas to secure the hinterland 1 Bombay Presidency in 1906Bombay Presidency was one of the three Presidencies of British India the other two being Madras Presidency and Bengal Presidency It was in the centre west of the Indian subcontinent on the Arabian Sea It was bordered to the north west north and north east by Baluchistan province Punjab province and Rajputana Agency to the east by Central India Agency the Central Provinces and Berar and Hyderabad State and to the south by Madras Presidency and Mysore State The Presidency was established in the late 17th century and named after Bombay the capital city and the island on which it was built By 1906 the area under the jurisdiction of Bombay Presidency stretched from North Canara in the south to Sindh in the north encompassing the now Pakistani province of Sindh some parts of the present day state of Gujarat northwestern part of Karnataka state the British Aden protectorate in Yemen and the western two thirds of modern day Maharashtra 2 3 During British rule a Governor was the chief administrative and political officer of Bombay The executive Government of the Presidency was administered by the Governor He had the same power and right in the Presidency as the Governor General of India and observed the same order and course in their proceedings 4 Governors of Bombay and Madras Presidencies who were appointed by the British Crown were the most important officials after the Viceroy 5 Bombay Castle was the official residence of the governor of Bombay until the 1770s when it was moved to Parel a century later in 1883 it was moved to Malabar Hill 6 7 Abraham Shipman was appointed the first Royal Governor of Bombay in 1662 Beginning in 1668 Charles II leased the islands to the British East India Company George Oxeden was appointed the first Company Governor of Bombay on 23 September 1668 In 1687 the Company relocated its headquarters from Surat to Bombay 8 In 1858 the British Crown took formal repossession of the territory after the company was disbanded After India s independence in 1947 the territory was restructured into Bombay State The area of Bombay State increased after several erstwhile princely states that acceded to the Indian union were integrated into Bombay State Raja Maharaj Singh was the first Indian Governor of Bombay after independence On 1 May 1960 Bombay State was restructured on linguistic lines Gujarati speaking areas were partitioned into the state of Gujarat and Marathi speaking areas of Bombay State Central Provinces and Berar and Hyderabad State were integrated as the state of Maharashtra The last person to hold the title of Governor of Bombay was Sri Prakasa in 1960 Contents 1 Royal governors 1662 1668 2 Company governors 1668 1862 3 Crown governors 1862 1948 4 Post independence 1948 1960 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Citations 8 References 9 External linksRoyal governors 1662 1668 Edit nbsp Charles II of England who received Bombay as part of his dowryThe marriage treaty of Charles II of England and Catherine of Braganza that concluded on 8 May 1661 incorporated Bombay into the English colonial empire the territory was part of Catherine s dowry 9 On 19 March 1662 Abraham Shipman was appointed the first Governor and General of the city and his fleet arrived in Bombay in September and October 1662 On being asked to hand over Bombay and Salsette to the English the Portuguese Governor contended that the Bombay Island alone had been ceded and alleging irregularity in the patent he refused to give up even Bombay Island The Portuguese Viceroy declined to interfere and Shipman was prevented from landing in Bombay He was forced to retire to the island of Anjediva in North Canara and died there in October 1664 In November 1664 Shipman s successor Humphrey Cooke agreed to accept Bombay Island without its dependencies 10 The first four governors held Bombay for the Crown 11 No Name Assumed office Left office Years in office Remarks a 1 Abraham Shipman 19 March 1662 October 1664 22 Humphrey Cooke February 1665 5 November 1666 1 Acting3 Gervase Lucas 5 November 1666 21 May 1667 14 Henry Gary 22 May 1667 23 September 1668 1 ActingSources The India List and India Office List 11 and Origin of Bombay 12 Company governors 1668 1862 Edit nbsp Map of India showing Bombay as a British possession c 1783 nbsp Map of India c 1804 nbsp Bombay Presidency in 1832On 21 September 1668 the Royal Charter of 27 March 1668 led to the transfer of Bombay from Charles II to the British East India Company for an annual rent of 10 equivalent retail price index of 1 226 in 2007 13 The islands were handed over to the company on 23 September 1668 Upon the transfer Bombay was made subordinate to the company s settlement in Surat 14 During 1668 87 the Governors of Bombay who were also presidents of Surat Council spent most of their time in Surat During this time Bombay was administered by a Deputy Governor 11 In 1687 the Company shifted its main holdings from Surat to Bombay which had become the administrative centre of all the west coast settlements 15 Following the transfer Bombay was placed at the head of all the company s establishments in India 16 However the onset of plague and cholera delayed implementation and the headquarters was not actually moved to Bombay until 1708 14 During the Governorships of John Gayer Nicholas Waite and William Aislabie 1694 1715 the Bombay Governors also held the title of General 11 17 Their main title meanwhile continued to be President with Governor of Bombay being a supplementary title and role During the 18th century the Maratha Empire expanded rapidly claiming Konkan and much of eastern Gujarat from the disintegrating Mughal Empire In western Gujarat including Kathiawar and Kutch the loosening of Mughal control allowed numerous local rulers to create virtually independent states In 1737 Salsette was captured by Baji Rao I of the Maratha Empire from the Portuguese and the Portuguese province of Bassein was ceded to the Marathas in 1739 18 The growth of the Bengal provinces soon undermined Bombay s supremacy In 1753 Bombay was made subordinate to Calcutta Thereafter Bengal always maintained much greater importance relative to Madras and Bombay 14 Bankot Fort Victoria in Konkan was incorporated into Bombay Presidency in 1756 19 The First Anglo Maratha War began with the Treaty of Surat which was signed on 6 March 1775 between Raghunathrao of the Maratha Empire and the British According to the treaty Raghunathrao ceded Salsette and Bassein to the British The war ended when Salsette Elephanta Hog Island and Karanja were formally ceded to the British by the Treaty of Salbai signed on 17 May 1782 These territories were incorporated into the Bombay Presidency Also according to the treaty Bassein and its dependencies were restored to Raghunathrao while Bharuch was ceded to the Maratha ruler Scindia 20 The British annexed Surat on 15 May 1800 21 The British received the districts of Ahmadabad Bharuch and Kaira in 1803 after British victory in the Second Anglo Maratha War 22 The framework of the Presidency formed between 1803 and 1827 The districts of Ahmadabad Bharuch and Kaira in Gujarat were taken over by the Bombay Government in 1805 and enlarged in 1818 The numerous small states of Kathiawar and Mahikantha were organised into princely states under British suzerainty between 1807 and 1820 3 Baji Rao II the last of the Maratha Peshwas was defeated by the British in the Battle of Kirkee which took place near Poona in the Deccan on 5 November 1817 23 Following his defeat the whole of the Deccan except Satara and Kolhapur and certain parts of Gujarat were included in the Presidency 24 25 The districts included were Khandesh Belgaum Dharwar Ratnagiri Kolaba except Alibag taluka Poona Ahmadnagar Nasik 26 Aden was incorporated in 1839 27 Alibag taluka was annexed in 1840 and added to the Presidency 28 Sind province which included the districts of Karachi Hyderabad Shikarpur Thar and Parkar and Upper Sind Frontier were annexed in 1847 29 In 1848 the districts of Satara and Bijapur were added to the Presidency 26 In 1853 Panch Mahals in Gujarat was leased from the Scindias 3 The Canara district which was under Madras Presidency was bifurcated into North Canara and South Canara in 1860 South Canara remained under Madras Presidency while North Canara was transferred to Bombay Presidency in 1861 26 30 Between 1818 and 1858 certain princely states like Mandvi in Surat and some in Satara were lapsed to the Presidency 26 No Name Portrait Assumed office Left office Years in office Remarks a 1 George Oxenden nbsp 23 September 1668 14 July 1669 12 Gerald Aungier 14 July 1669 30 June 1677 83 Henry Oxenden nbsp 30 June 1677 27 October 1681 44 John Child 27 October 1681 4 February 1690 85 Richard Keigwin b 27 December 1683 19 November 1684 1 Unofficial6 Bartholomew Harris 4 February 1690 10 May 1694 47 Daniel Annesley 10 May 1694 17 May 1694 Acting8 John Gayer 17 May 1694 November 1704 109 Nicholas Waite November 1704 September 1708 410 William Aislabie September 1708 11 October 1715 711 Stephen Strutt 11 October 1715 26 December 1715 Acting12 Charles Boone 26 December 1715 9 January 1722 713 William Phipps 9 January 1722 10 January 1729 714 Robert Cowan 10 January 1729 22 September 1734 515 John Horne 22 September 1734 7 April 1739 516 Stephen Law 7 April 1739 15 November 1742 317 John Geekie 15 November 1742 26 November 1742 Acting18 William Wake 26 November 1742 17 November 1750 819 Richard Bourchier 17 November 1750 1760 1020 Sir John Holkell 1760 28 February 1760 Acting21 Charles Crommelin 28 February 1760 27 January 1767 722 Thomas Hodges 27 January 1767 23 February 1771 423 William Hornby 26 February 1771 1 January 1784 1324 Rawson Hart Boddam 1 January 1784 9 January 1788 425 Andrew Ramsay 9 January 1788 6 September 1788 1 Acting26 William Medows nbsp 6 September 1788 21 January 1790 227 Robert Abercromby nbsp 21 January 1790 26 November 1792 228 George Dick 26 November 1792 9 November 1795 3 Acting29 John Griffith 9 November 1795 27 December 1795 Acting30 Jonathan Duncan nbsp 27 December 1795 11 August 1811 1631 George Brown 11 August 1811 12 August 1812 1 Acting32 Sir Evan Nepean Bt nbsp 12 August 1812 1 November 1819 733 Mountstuart Elphinstone nbsp 1 November 1819 1 November 1827 834 Sir John Malcolm nbsp 1 November 1827 1 December 1830 335 Sir Thomas Sidney Beckwith 1 December 1830 15 January 1831 1 Acting36 John Romer 17 January 1831 21 March 1831 Acting37 John FitzGibbon 2nd Earl of Clare nbsp 21 March 1831 17 March 1835 438 Sir Robert Grant nbsp 17 March 1835 9 July 1838 339 James Farish 11 July 1838 31 May 1839 1 Acting40 James Rivett Carnac nbsp 31 May 1839 27 April 1841 241 William Hay Macnaghten nbsp 27 April 1841 28 April 1841 Acting42 George William Anderson 28 April 1841 9 June 1842 1 Acting43 George Arthur nbsp 9 June 1842 6 August 1846 444 Lestock Robert Reid 6 August 1846 23 January 1847 1 Acting45 George Russell Clerk 23 January 1847 1 May 1848 1 Acting46 Lucius Cary Lord Falkland nbsp 1 May 1848 26 December 1853 547 John Elphinstone Lord Elphinstone nbsp 26 December 1853 11 May 1860 748 George Russell Clerk 11 May 1860 24 April 1862 2 ActingSources The India List and India Office List 11 17 31 and Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 27 Deputy Governors of Bombay 1668 1690 The transfer of the headquarters of the company s power to Bombay largely eliminated the need for a Deputy Governor In spite of the change the title continued to be borne by the second member of the Executive Council of the Governor It fell into disuse sometime between 1720 and 1758 No Name Assumed office Left office Years in office1 Henry Young 1668 13 November 1669 22 Matthew Gray 1670 16703 Phillip Gifford 1670 1676 64 Henry Oxenden 1676 1682 65 Charles Ward b 1682 1683 16 Charles Zinzan 1684 1686 27 John Wyborne 1686 1688 28 John Vaux 1689 16899 George Cooke 1689 1690 110 George Weldon 1690 169011 John Burniston 1690 1704 14Source Origin of Bombay 32 Crown governors 1862 1948 Edit nbsp Bombay Presidency in 1893 nbsp Bombay Presidency in 1909 northern portion nbsp Bombay Presidency in 1909 southern portion Following the Indian Rebellion of 1857 33 the company was accused of mismanagement and Bombay reverted to the British Crown 34 On 2 August 1858 the British Parliament began abolition of the company and asserted full direct Crown authority over India The execution was slow The company for purposes of liquidation maintained its formal existence until 1874 35 India was thereafter directly ruled by the Crown as a colony of the United Kingdom and officially known as the Empire of India after 1876 India consisted of some regions referred to as British India that were directly administered by the British and other regions called the Princely States that were ruled by Indian rulers 36 37 Laws were made for British India by a Legislative Council under the Viceroy having wide powers of legislation This council could pass laws as important as any Acts by the British Parliament The Legislative Council was made of six members besides the Viceroy 38 39 In addition the governors served as extraordinary members when the Legislative Council met in their provinces They also had an Executive Council of two members of the Indian Civil Service for 12 years standing appointed by the Crown 35 39 The Governor would consult the Executive Council in the exercise of all his functions except on trivial or urgent matters or where the public interest made it undesirable He would not be required to consult in cases where he was specifically authorised by the Constitution to act in his discretion or on the advice of or after consultation with some other person or authority He would in general act in accordance with the advice of the Executive Council but could act against such advice where he considered it necessary in the interests of the public order public faith or good government in such cases he would be required to seek approval of the Secretary of State for India 40 The Governor didn t have the right to make or suspend any laws unless in cases of urgent necessity he could do it with the consent of the Governor General of India He didn t have the power of creating a new office or granting any salary gratuity or allowance without the sanction of the Governor General of India 4 The Governor General had full power to superintend and control the Governor in all points relating to the civil or military administration of the Presidency and the Governor had to obey the orders and instructions of the Governor General in all cases 41 The Governors could propose to the Governor General drafts of any laws which they thought expedient together with their reasons for the same and the Governor General communicated the resolutions to the Governor after considering the reasons 42 The Governors regularly transmitted to the Governor General true copies of all orders and acts of their governments and also advice of all matters which they felt to be communicated to the Governor General 43 The powers of the Governors were not suspended when the Governor General visited the Presidency 44 The departure of the Governor from India with intent to return to Europe was deemed to be a resignation from his office Alternately the Governor could resign by declaring it in writing and delivering it to the secretary for the public department of the Presidency 45 In 1906 Bombay Presidency had four commissionerships and twenty six districts with Bombay City as its capital The four commissionerships were the northern province of Gujarat the central province of Deccan the southern province of Carnatic and the northwestern province of Sind 14 The 26 districts were Bombay City Bombay Island c Ahmedabad Bharuch Kaira Panch Mahal Surat Thana Ahmednagar East Khandesh d West Khandesh d Nasik Poona Satara Solapur Belgaum Bijapur Dharwar North Canara Kolaba Ratnagiri Karachi Hyderabad Shikarpur Thar and Parkar and Upper Sind Frontier 2 46 47 Aden separated from Bombay Presidency in 1932 27 and Sind separated in 1936 29 No Name Portrait Assumed office Left office Years in office Remarks a 1 Sir Bartle Frere nbsp 24 April 1862 6 March 1867 52 Sir William Vesey FitzGerald nbsp 6 March 1867 6 May 1872 53 Sir Philip Wodehouse nbsp 6 May 1872 30 April 1877 54 Sir Richard Temple Bt nbsp 30 April 1877 13 March 1880 35 Lionel Robert Ashburner 13 March 1880 28 April 1880 Acting6 Sir James Fergusson Bt nbsp 28 April 1880 27 March 1885 57 James Braithwaite Peile 27 March 1885 30 March 1885 Acting8 The Lord Reay nbsp 30 March 1885 12 April 1890 59 The Lord Harris nbsp 27 March 1890 16 February 1895 510 Herbert Mills Birdwood nbsp 16 February 1895 18 February 1895 Acting11 The Lord Sandhurst nbsp 18 February 1895 17 February 1900 512 The Lord Northcote nbsp 17 February 1900 5 September 1903 313 James Monteath 5 September 1903 12 December 1903 Acting14 The Lord Lamington nbsp 12 December 1903 27 July 1907 415 John William Muir Mackenzie nbsp 27 July 1907 18 October 1907 Acting16 Sir George Sydenham Clarke nbsp 18 October 1907 5 April 1913 617 The Lord Willingdon nbsp 5 April 1913 16 December 1918 518 Sir George Lloyd nbsp 16 December 1918 8 December 1923 519 Maurice Hayward 8 December 1923 10 December 1923 Acting20 Sir Leslie Orme Wilson nbsp 10 December 1923 20 March 1926 321 Sir Henry Staveley Lawrence 20 March 1926 8 December 1928 2 Acting22 Sir Frederick Sykes nbsp 9 December 1928 9 December 1933 523 John Ernest Buttery Hotson e 1931 1931 Acting24 The Lord Brabourne nbsp 9 December 1933 30 May 1937 425 Robert Duncan Bell 30 May 1937 18 September 1937 Acting26 The Earl of Scarbrough 18 September 1937 24 March 1943 627 Sir John Colville nbsp 24 March 1943 5 January 1948 5Sources Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 27 and Governor of Maharashtra 48 Chief Ministers of Bombay 1937 1947 No Name Portrait Assumed office Left office Years in Office1 Bal Gangadhar Kher nbsp 1937 October 1939 22 Governor s rule October 1939 30 March 1946 73 Bal Gangadhar Kher nbsp 30 March 1946 15 August 1947 1Source Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 27 Post independence 1948 1960 Edit nbsp Maharashtra StateAfter India gained independence in 1947 Bombay Presidency became part of India and Sind province became part of Pakistan The territory retained by India was restructured into Bombay State It included princely states such as Kolhapur in Deccan Baroda Dang in Gujarat which were under the political influence of Bombay Presidency 49 As a result of the States Reorganisation Act of 1956 the Kannada speaking districts of Belgaum except Chandgad taluk Bijapur Dharwar and North Canara were transferred from Bombay State to Mysore State 50 In Lok Sabha discussions in 1955 the Congress party demanded that the city be constituted as an autonomous city state 51 In 1956 the States Reorganisation Committee recommended a bilingual state for Maharashtra Gujarat with Bombay as its capital In the 1957 elections the Samyukta Maharashtra movement opposed these proposals and insisted that Bombay be declared the capital of Maharashtra 52 Following protests by the movement in which 105 people were killed by police Bombay State was reorganised on linguistic lines on 1 May 1960 53 Gujarati speaking areas of Bombay State were partitioned into the state of Gujarat 54 Maharashtra State with Bombay as its capital was formed with the merger of Marathi speaking areas of Bombay State eight districts from Central Provinces and Berar five districts from Hyderabad State and numerous princely states enclosed between them 55 In 1960 the designation of the Governor of Bombay was transmuted as the Governor of Maharashtra 48 No Name Portrait Assumed office Left office Years in Office1 Raja Sir Maharaj Singh nbsp 6 January 1948 30 May 1952 42 Sir Girija Shankar Bajpai nbsp 30 May 1952 5 December 1954 23 Harekrushna Mahatab nbsp 2 March 1955 14 October 1956 14 Sri Prakasa f nbsp 10 December 1956 16 April 1962 6Sources Governor of Maharashtra 48 and Greater Bombay District Gazetteer 56 See also EditList of governors of Maharashtra Governors of India History of MumbaiNotes Edita The Acting Governors were appointed for a temporary period until the post of Governor was filled Whenever there was a vacancy for the post of the Governor and no provisional or other successor was available then the member of the Executive Council of the Governor next in rank to the Governor other than the Commander in chief of the Presidency would be selected as the Governor If the Executive Council was not available then the senior secretary of Government of the Presidency executed the office of Governor until a successor arrived Every Acting Governor was entitled to the emoluments and salaries appertaining to the office of Governor until the time he held the post 57 b In 1683 Bombay was the scene of a revolt headed by Richard Keigwin the third member of the Council against the company s authority Placing Deputy Governor Charles Ward under arrest Keigwin ruled Bombay in the King s name from 27 December 1683 to 19 November 1684 when on promise of pardon he handed over the island to Admiral Thomas Grantham 58 c Bombay Island was treated as a separate district under a Collector 2 d Khandesh was partitioned into East Khandesh and West Khandesh in 1906 2 e John Ernest Buttery Hotson Member of the Executive Council of Bombay 1926 31 was appointed Acting Governor of Bombay for a short period on the departure of Frederick Sykes 59 60 f Sri Prakasa was Governor of Bombay from 10 December 1956 to 1 May 1960 and Governor of Maharashtra thereafter from 1 May 1960 to 16 April 1962 Citations Edit Bombay History of a City The British Library Retrieved 8 November 2008 a b c d The Imperial Gazetteer of India v 8 p 266 a b c Dupont 2001 p 563 a b The Law dictionary Explaining the Rise Progress and Present State of the British Law 1835 p 364 59 Collier Price January 1999 The West in the East from an American Point of View Adamant Media Corporation p 61 ISBN 978 0 543 91758 4 retrieved 25 December 2008 Bombay Castle Governor of Maharashtra Archived from the original on 23 September 2008 Retrieved 7 November 2008 Sans Pareil Governor of Maharashtra Archived from the original on 10 February 2009 Retrieved 5 January 2009 R K Kochhar 25 June 1994 Shipbuilding at Bombay PDF 297 KB Current Science 12 Indian Academy of Sciences 66 Retrieved on 9 November 2008 Catherine of Braganca 1638 1705 BBC Retrieved 5 November 2008 Thana District Gazetteer 1986 Portuguese 1500 1670 a b c d e The India List and India Office List 1905 p 125 Da Cunha 1993 p 323 Anderson Philip 1854 The English in Western India Smith and Taylor p 55 ISBN 978 0 7661 8695 8 retrieved 18 August 2008 a b c d Dupont 2001 p 564 Carsten F L 1961 The New Cambridge Modern History Volume V The ascendancy of France 1648 88 vol V Cambridge University Press Archive p 427 ISBN 978 0 521 04544 5 retrieved 7 January 2009 Hughes William 1863 The geography of British history Longman Green Longman Roberts amp Green p 227 retrieved 15 January 2009 a b The India List and India Office List 1905 p 126 Thana District Gazetteer 1986 The Marathas Ratnagiri and Savantvadi District Gazetteer 1996 Justice Thana District Gazetteer 1986 Acquisition Changes and Staff Acquisition 1774 1817 Kalia Ravi 2004 Gandhinagar Building National Identity in Postcolonial India University of South Carolina Press p 16 ISBN 978 1 57003 544 9 retrieved 15 January 2009 Farooqui 2005 p 18 Naravane M S 2006 Battles of the Honourable East India Company APH Publishing pp 80 1 ISBN 978 81 313 0034 3 Ahmadnagar District Gazetteer 1976 Maratha Period Cox 1887 pp 257 261 a b c d Dodwell p 59 a b c d e Colonial administrators and post independence leaders in India 1616 2000 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or UK public library membership required Cox 1887 pp 320 321 a b History of Sindh Government of Sindh Archived from the original on 27 December 2008 Retrieved 7 January 2009 Cox 1887 p 195 The India List and India Office List 1905 p 127 Da Cunha 1993 p 324 History of Mumbai Department of Theoretical Physics Tata Institute of Fundamental Research Retrieved 23 December 2008 Sir Henry Bartle Edward Frere Department of Theoretical Physics Tata Institute of Fundamental Research Retrieved 23 December 2008 a b Dupont 2001 p 483 The Imperial Gazetteer of India v 4 p 59 The Imperial Gazetteer of India v 4 p 60 Dicey Albert Venn 2005 Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution Adamant Media Corporation p 95 ISBN 978 1 4021 8555 7 retrieved 12 January 2009 a b Hunter William Wilson 2005 The Indian Empire Its People History and Products Asian Educational Services p 432 ISBN 978 81 206 1581 6 retrieved 13 January 2009 Madden A F David Kenneth Fieldhouse John Darwin 2000 Select Documents on the Constitutional History of the British Empire and Commonwealth The Foundations of a Colonial System of Government Greenwood Publishing Group p 409 ISBN 978 0 313 29072 5 retrieved 13 January 2009 The Law dictionary Explaining the Rise Progress and Present State of the British Law 1835 p 365 65 The Law dictionary Explaining the Rise Progress and Present State 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1956 Commonwealth Legal Information Institute Archived from the original on 16 May 2008 Retrieved 1 July 2008 The battle for Bombay The Hindu 13 April 2003 Archived from the original on 14 May 2005 Retrieved 12 November 2008 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint unfit URL link Samyukta Maharashtra Government of Maharashtra Archived from the original on 6 October 2008 Retrieved 12 November 2008 Sons of soil born reborn Indian Express Newspapers Mumbai Ltd 6 February 2008 Retrieved on 12 November 2008 Gujarat Government of India Retrieved 16 January 2008 Maharashtra Government of India Retrieved 16 January 2008 List of the Governors of Bombay Greater Bombay District Gazetteer Maharashtra State Gazetteers vol I Government of Maharashtra 1986 archived from the original on 6 September 2008 retrieved 13 August 2008 The Law dictionary Explaining the Rise Progress and Present State of the British Law 1835 p 364 63 Riddick John F 2006 The History of British India Greenwood Publishing Group p 8 ISBN 978 0 313 32280 8 retrieved 7 January 2009 Monday Aug 03 1931 Time 3 August 1931 Archived from the original on 2 November 2012 Retrieved 12 January 2009 Bulletin of International News vol 8 Royal Institute of International Affairs 1931 1932 p 86 References EditAhmadnagar District Gazetteer The Gazetteer Departments Government of Maharashtra 1976 archived from the original on 10 April 2009 retrieved 15 January 2009 Calcutta Magazine and Monthly Register vol 33 36 S Smith amp Co 1832 retrieved 7 November 2008 Cox Edmund Charles 1887 A short history of the Bombay Presidency Thacker and Company retrieved 16 January 2009 Da Cunha Jose Gerson 1993 Origin of Bombay Asian Educational Services ISBN 978 81 206 0815 3 retrieved 4 January 2009 Dodwell H H 1922 The Cambridge History of India Cambridge University Press Archive retrieved 16 January 2009 Dupont Jerry 2001 The Common Law Abroad Constitutional and Legal Legacy of the British Empire Wm S Hein Publishing ISBN 978 0 8377 3125 4 retrieved 6 January 2009 Farooqui Amar 2005 Smuggling as Subversion Colonialism Indian Merchants and the Politics of Opium 1790 1843 Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 0886 4 retrieved 16 January 2009 Great Britain India Office 1905 The India List and India Office List vol I Harrison retrieved 9 October 2008 Hunter William Wilson James Sutherland Cotton Richard Burn William Stevenson Meyer Great Britain India Office 1909 The Imperial Gazetteer of India Clarendon Press retrieved 7 January 2009 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Naravane M S 2006 Battles of the Honourable East India Company APH Publishing pp 80 1 ISBN 978 81 313 0034 3 Ratnagiri and Savantvadi District Gazetteer vol X The Gazetteers Department Government of Maharashtra 1996 1880 retrieved 15 January 2009 Thana District Gazetteer Gazetteers of the Bombay Presidency vol XIII The Gazetteer Departments Government of Maharashtra 1986 1882 retrieved 7 January 2009 Thomas Edlyne Tomlins Thomas Colpitts Granger 1835 The Law dictionary Explaining the Rise Progress and Present State of the British Law Defining and Interpreting the Terms Or Words of Art and Comprising Also Copious Information on the Subjects of Trade and Government vol 1 J Clarke J and W T Clarke Longman Rees Orme Brown Green and Longman pp M1 364 M1 365 retrieved 16 January 2009External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Governors of Bombay Governors of Bombay from rootsweb Provinces of British India Bombay from WorldStatesmen org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of governors of Bombay Presidency amp oldid 1169593214, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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