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Manipur (princely state)

The Manipur Kingdom[1][2][3][4] was an ancient kingdom at the India–Burma frontier.[5][6][7] Historically, Manipur was an independent kingdom ruled by a Meitei dynasty.[8][9][10] But it was also invaded and ruled over by Burmese kingdom at various point of time.[11][12] It became a protectorate of the British East India Company from 1824, and a princely state of British Raj in 1891.[13] It bordered Assam Province in the west and British Burma in the east, and in the 20th century covered an area of 22,327 square kilometres (8,621 sq mi) and contained 467 villages.[citation needed] The capital of the state was Imphal.

Manipur Kingdom
Meitei: Meetei Leipak
1110–1949
Coat of arms
Manipur State in the Hicky's Bengal Gazette of 1907
CapitalImphal
Recognised national languagesMeitei language (officially known as Manipuri)
Religion
History 
• Foundation of the Kangleipak Kingdom
1110
1824
1891
• Accession to the Indian Union
1947
• Merged into the Indian Union
1949
Area
194122,372 km2 (8,638 sq mi)
Population
• 1941
512,069
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Early Seven Clan State
Today part ofIndia
Myanmar
Map of Hindostan or India (1814) by Mathew Carey from the David Rumsey Collection of Historic Maps
Kangla Uttra Sanglen at the Kangla Fort, former residence of the Meitei kings of Manipur. The two statues of Kangla Sha (Meitei dragon lions) standing in front of the inner gate were destroyed after the Anglo-Manipur War of 1891 but have been restored by the Manipur Government in recent years.
The princes of Manipur, Col. Johnstone, Thangal Major and the European officer in Kohima after relieving the fort from the siege of the Nagas, 1880
The Kohima Stone Inscription erected by Meitei King Gambhir Singh (Meitei: Chinglen Nongdrenkhomba), the Maharaja of Manipur, as the testimony of Meitei Dominance of Nagaland.
The Manipuri classical dance was developed by Meitei King Rajarshi Bhagyachandra (Meitei: Ching-Thang Khomba), the Maharajah of Manipur.
Raja Gambhir Singh (1788–1834) accepted British suzerainty in order to retrieve the kingdom from Burmese occupation

Kangleipak State

The early history of Manipur is composed of mythical narratives . The location of the Kangla Fort on the banks of the Imphal River is believed to be where King Pakhangba built his first palace.[14]

Loyumba Shinyen, the written constitution of Kangleipak was formally developed by King Loiyumba (1074–1121) in 1110 AD.[15] He consolidated the kingdom by incorporating most of the principalities in the surrounding hills.[16] After subjugating all the villages within their valley Kangleipak kings grew in power and began a policy of expansion beyond their territory. In 1443 King Ningthoukhomba raided Akla (present day Tamu, Myanmar), an area ruled by Shan people, initiating a policy of Manipuri claims to the neighbouring Kabaw Valley.[16] The zenith of the Kangleipak State was reached under the rule of King Khagemba (1597–1652). Khagemba's brother Prince Shalungba was not happy about Khagemba's rule so he fled to the Taraf where he allied with the local Bengali Muslim leaders. With a contingent of Bengali Muslim soldiers led by Muhammad Sani, Shalungba then attempted to invade Manipur but the soldiers were captured and made to work as labourers in Manipur. These soldiers married local Meitei women and adapted to the Meitei language. They introduced hookah to Manipur and founded the Meitei Pangals (Manipuri Muslim community).[17] It is claimed that Manipur learned the art of making gunpowder from the Chinese merchants who visited the state around 1630 and had started making rockets named Meikappi by the early 18th century.[18]

Manipur State

In 1714, King Pamheiba was initiated into Gaudiya Vaishnavism by Shantidas Gosai, a Bengali Hindu from Sylhet. He made the Gaudiya Vaishnava faith the state religion, replacing Meitei religion, made the Meitei language (aka Manipuri language) written in Bengali script, destroying many documents of Meitei language written in Meitei script and changed his name to Garib Niwaj. In 1724, the Sanskrit name Manipur (transl. the City of Jewels) was adopted as the name of the state, to make the realm eponymous with Manipura of the Mahabharata. King Garib Niwaj made several incursions into Burma, but made no permanent conquest. After the death of Gharib Nawaz in 1754, Manipur was occupied by the Kingdom of Burma and the Meitei king Bhagyachandra (Meitei: Ching-Thang Khomba) sought help from the British, but when the British refused help he went to Ahom King Rajeswar Singha who sent a force of 40,000 under Haranath Senapati Phukan to free Manipur.[19] A treaty of alliance was negotiated in 1762 and a military force was sent to assist Manipur. The force was later recalled and then the state was left to its own devices.[20] Manipur was invaded at the onset of the First Anglo-Burmese War, together with Cachar and Assam.

British protectorate

Following the Burmese invasions, in 1824 the king of Manipur Gambhir Singh (Chinglen Nongdrenkhomba) asked the British for help and the request was granted. Sepoys and artillery were sent and British officers trained a levy of Manipuri troops for the battles that ensued. After the Burmese were expelled, the Kabaw Valley down to the Ningthi River was added to the state.[20] In 1824–1826, on the conclusion of the First Anglo-Burmese War, Manipur became a British protectorate.[21] Manipur remained relatively peaceful and prosperous until King Gambhir Singh's death in 1834.

At the death of Gambhir Singh, his son Chandrakirti Singh was only one year old, and his uncle Nara Singh was appointed as regent. That same year the British decided to restore the Kabaw Valley to the Kingdom of Burma, which had never been happy about the loss. A compensation was paid to Raja of Manipur in the form of an annual allowance of Rs 6,370 and a British residency was established in Imphal, the only town of the state, in 1835 to facilitate communication between the British and the rulers of Manipur.[20]

After a thwarted attempt on his life, Nara Singh took power and held the throne until his death in 1850. His brother Devendra Singh was given the title of Raja by the British, but he was unpopular. After only three months, the rightful heir Chandrakirti Singh invaded Manipur and rose to the throne. Numerous members of the royal family tried to overthrow Chandrakirti Singh, but none of the rebellions was successful. In 1879, when British Deputy Commissioner G.H. Damant was killed by an Angami Naga party, the king of Manipur assisted the British by sending troops to neighbouring Kohima. Following this service to the crown, Chandrakirti Singh was rewarded with the Order of the Star of India.

After Maharaja Chandrakriti's death in 1886 his son Surachandra Singh succeeded him. As in previous occasions, several claimants to the throne tried to overthrow the new king. The first three attempts were defeated, but in 1890, following an attack on the palace by Tikendrajit and Kulachandra Singh, two of the king's brothers, Surachandra Singh announced his intention to abdicate and left Manipur for Cachar. Kulachandra Singh then rose to the throne while Tikendrajit Singh, as the commander of the Manipuri armed forces, held the real power behind the scenes. Meanwhile, Surachandra Singh, after leaving Manipur, appealed to the British for help to recover the throne.[20]

The 'Manipur Expedition'

The British decided to recognise Kulachandra Singh as Raja, and to send a military expedition of 400 men to Manipur to punish Senapati Tikendrajit Singh as the main person responsible for the unrest and the dynastic disturbances. This action and the violent events that followed are known in British annals as the 'Manipur Expedition, 1891',[22] while in Manipur they are known as the 'Anglo-Manipur War of 1891'.

The British attempt to remove Tikendrajit from his position as military commander (Senapati) and arrest him on 24 March 1891 caused a great stir. The British Residency in Imphal was attacked and the Chief Commissioner for Assam J.W. Quinton, Col. Sken, the British Resident and other British officials were murdered. In the middle of the unrest Ethel St Clair Grimwood, the widow of Frank St Clair Grimmond, the killed British Resident, was credited with leading a retreat of surviving sepoys out of Manipur to Cachar.[23] She was later lauded as a hero.[24]) A 5,000 strong punitive expedition was sent against Manipur on 27 April 1891. Three British columns entered Manipur from British Burma, Cachar and the Naga Hills, which after several skirmishes with the 3,000 men strong Manipuri army, managed to pacify the kingdom. Following the British attack, Tikendrajit and Kulachandra Singh fled, but were captured. Tikendrajit and those Manipuris involved in the killing of the British officers were tried and hanged, while the deposed King Kulachandra Singh and other leaders of the rebellion were sent to the Cellular Jail in the Andaman Islands. Manipur was briefly annexed to British India by virtue of the doctrine of lapse. On 22 September 1891 when Meidingngu Churachand (Churachandra), a 5-year-old boy, was put on the throne, power was restored nominally to the Manipuri crown over the state. During the dynastic disturbances and the British intervention the Naga and Kuki hill tribes of the state lapsed into lawlessness, with numerous instances of murder and arson in the mountain villages, a situation that lasted well into 1894.[20]

Princely state under British Raj

The child ruler Churachand belonged to a side branch of the Manipur royal family, so that all the main contenders to the throne were bypassed. While he was a minor the affairs of state were administered by the British Political Agent, which facilitated the introduction and implementation of reforms. The first paved road to Manipur was inaugurated in 1900 —until then there had been no proper roads to reach the kingdom— and this improvement in communication facilitated a visit by Viceroy Lord Curzon in 1901. Raja Churachand was formally declared king in 1907 after completing education in Ajmer.[20] In 1918 he was given the privilege to use the title 'Maharaja' and during his reign Manipur enjoyed a period of relative peace and prosperity. In 1934 king Churachand was knighted by the British, becoming Sir Churachandra Singh.[25]

Between March 1944 and July 1944 part of Manipur and the Naga Hills District of Assam Province were occupied by the Imperial Japanese Army. The capital Imphal was shelled on 10 May 1944.[26][verification needed]

Twilight and end of the princely state

On 14 August 1947, with the lapse of paramountcy of the British Crown, Manipur became briefly "independent" in the sense that it was free of control from the Governor of Assam, which may be regarded as reversion to political autonomy that existed before 1891.[27][28][29] However, the Maharaja had signed the Instrument of Accession on 11 August 1947, ceding the three subjects of defence, external affairs and communication to the Union of India.[27][30][31][32][33] A 'Manipur State Constitution Act 1947' was enacted, giving the state its own constitution, although this did not become known in other parts of India owing to the relative isolation of the kingdom.[29] The Government of India did not recognize the Constitution.[34]

On 21 September 1949, the Maharaja was coerced to sign a Merger Agreement with the Union of India, to take effect on 15 October the same year.[35] As a result of the agreement, the Manipur State merged into the Indian Union as a Part C State (similar to a Chief Commissioner's Province under the colonial regime or a Union Territory in the present Indian structure), to be governed by a Chief Commissioner appointed by the Government of India. The representative assembly of Manipur was abolished.[36]

Unhappy with the central rule, Rishang Keishing began a movement for representative government in Manipur in 1954. The Indian home minister, however, declared that the time was not yet ripe for the creation of representative assemblies in Part C States such as Manipur and Tripura, stating that they were located in strategic border areas of India, that the people were politically backward and that the administration in those states was still weak.[36] However, it was given a substantial measure of local self-government under the Territorial Councils Act of 1956, a legislative body and council of ministers in 1963, and full statehood in 1972.[37]

Rulers

The rulers of Manipur state were entitled to an 11-gun salute by the British authorities. The present dynasty began in 1714.[38]

Rajas under Burmese rule

There were two feudatory kings during the time of the Burmese invasions.

  • 1819–1823 Shubol
  • 1823–1825 Pitambara Singh

Rajas under British protection

Rulers of the princely state under British Raj

British Political Agents

The Political agents were subordinated to the Chief Commissioner of Assam (Lieutenant Governor of East Bengal and Assam during 1905–1912)[39][verification needed]

  • 1835–1844 George Gordon
  • 1844–1863 William McCulloch (1st time)[40][a]
  • 1863–1865 Dillon
  • 1865–1867 William McCulloch (2nd time) (s.a.)
  • 1867–1875 Robert Brown[b]
  • 1875–1877 Guybon Henry Damant (acting)
  • 1877–1886 Sir James Johnstone[c]
  • 1886 (6 weeks) Trotter (acting)
  • 25 Mar 1886 – 21 April 1886 Walter Haiks (acting)
  • 1886 – 24 April 1891 St. Clair Grimwood (d. 1891)
  • 1891 Sir Henry Collett (British commander)
  • 1891–1893 H.St.P. John Maxwell (1st time)
  • 1893–1895 Alexander Porteous (1st time)
  • 1895–1896 H.St.P. John Maxwell (2nd time)
  • 1896–1898 Henry Walter George Cole (1st time) (acting)
  • 1898–1899 Alexander Porteous (2nd time)
  • 1899–1902 H.St.P. John Maxwell (3rd time)
  • 1902–1904 Albert Edward Woods
  • 1904–1905 H.St.P. John Maxwell (4th time)
  • 1905–1908 John Shakespear (1st time)[d]
  • 1908–1909 A.W. Davis
  • 1909–1914 John Shakespear (2nd time)
  • 1914–1917 Henry Walter George Cole (2nd time) (s.a.)[clarification needed]
  • 1917–1918 John Comyn Higgins (1st time)
  • 1918–1920 William Alexander Cosgrave
  • 1920–1922 L.O. Clarke (1st time)
  • 1922 Christopher Gimson (1st time) (acting)
  • 1922–1924 L.O. Clarke (2nd time)
  • 1924–1928 John Comyn Higgins (2nd time) (s.a.)
  • 12 Mar 1928 – 23 November 1928 C.G. Crawford
  • 1928–1933 John Comyn Higgins (3rd time) (s.a.)
  • 1933–1938 Christopher Gimson (2nd time) (s.a.)
  • 1938–1941 Gerald Pakenham Stewart (1st time) (Japanese prisoner 1941–45)
  • 1941–1946 Christopher Gimson (3rd time) (s.a.)
  • Dec 1946 – 14 August 1947 Gerald Pakenham Stewart (2nd time)

British administrators

During the princely state stage (1891–1947), an Indian Civil Service (ICS) officer of the East Bengal and Assam cadre was appointed as the administrator, first as the Vice-president of the Manipur State Darbar, and, from 1916, as its President.[45][46][47][25]

  • May 1907–1910 William Alexander Cosgrave[45]
  • April–June 1910 C. H. Bell
  • June 1910–1917 John Comyn Higgins
  • 1917–1918 Robert Herriot Henderson (1st time)
  • 1918–July 1918 V. Woods
  • 1918–1919 Sir Robert Herriot Henderson (s.a., 2nd time)
  • 1919–1921 Christopher Gimson[48]
  • 1921–June 1921 William Shaw
  • June 1921 – September 1922 Charles Seymour Mullan
  • September 1922 – June 1927 Colin Grant Crawford
  • June 1925 – February 1926 Hugh Weightman (acting)
  • June 1927 – 1930 Anthony Gilchrist McCall
  • 1930 – February 1933 Cecil Walter Lewery Harvey
  • February 1933 – February 1936 Gerald Pakenham Stewart
  • March 1936 – February 1937 Crispin Bernard Chitty Paine
  • February 1937 – 1939 Alexander Ranald Hume MacDonald
  • July 1939 – 1943 Thomas Arthur Timothy Sharpe[49]
  • May 1943 – November 1945 Edward Francis Lydall
  • November 1945 – 14 August 1947 Francis Fenwick Pearson (designated Chief Minister from 15 July 1947)

Indian administration

Political agents

The Indian Agents were subordinated to the Governor of Assam.

  • 15 August 1947 – 1947 Gerald Pakenham Stewart (s.a.)[50]
  • 1947–1948 Debeswar Sharma[50]
Dewans

The Dewans were representing the Governor of Assam.

  • 1948 – 16 April 1949 M. K. Priyobrata Singh (s.a.)[50]
  • 16 Apr 1949 – 15 October 1949 Rawal Amar Singh[51]

Flags

The State of Manipur had a set of two flags, a white one and a red one. All featured the Pakhangba dragon in the centre, although not as prominently in the latter flags.[52]

 
White flag with coat of arms (1907–1949)
 
Red flag with Pakhangba (till 1907)
 
White flag with Pakhangba (till 1907)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ William MuCulloch authored Account of the Valley of Munnipore and of the Hill Tribes (1859).[41]
  2. ^ Robert Brown authored Statistical Account of the Native State of Manipur and the Hill Territory under Its Rule (1874).[42]>
  3. ^ James Johnstone authored My Experiences in Manipur and the Naga Hills (1896).[43]
  4. ^ John Shakespear authored The Lushei Kuki Clans (1912).[44]

References

  1. ^ Keen, Caroline (2015). An Imperial Crisis in British India. I.B. Tauris. p. 150-152. doi:10.5040/9780755624355. ISBN 978-1-78673-987-2. Ghose maintained that under the Indian Penal Code only subjects of the Queen or foreigners residing in British India could be guilty of waging war against the Queen. Manipur was an independent sovereign state and..
  2. ^ Lloyd, Nick (2016). "Review of AN IMPERIAL CRISIS IN BRITISH INDIA: THE MANIPUR UPRISING OF 1891". Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research. 94 (380): 347–348. ISSN 0037-9700. JSTOR 44233143.
  3. ^ Sen (1992), p. 17
  4. ^ Andaya, Barbara Watson; Andaya, Leonard Y. (19 February 2015). A History of Early Modern Southeast Asia, 1400–1830. Cambridge University Press. p. 264. doi:10.1017/cbo9781139051323. ISBN 978-0-521-88992-6.
  5. ^ Somorjit, Wangam (1 March 2016). Manipur: The Forgotten Nation of Southeast Asia. Waba Publications & Advanced Research Consortium. ISBN 978-81-926687-2-7.
  6. ^ Fantz, Paul R.; Pradeep, S. V. (1995). Clitoria (Leguminosae) of South Eastern Asia.
  7. ^ https://press.uchicago.edu/books/HOC/HOC_V2_B2/HOC_VOLUME2_Book2_chapter18.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  8. ^ Arora, Vibha; Kipgen, Ngamjahao (2012). "The Politics of Identifying with and Distancing from Kuki Identity in Manipur". Sociological Bulletin. 61 (3): 429–449. doi:10.1177/0038022920120303. ISSN 0038-0229. JSTOR 26290634. S2CID 157167951. Historically, Manipur was an independent kingdom ruled by Meitei dynasty. The physical boundary of Manipur has been fluctuating with historical changes in political power and the intra state and the inter state boundaries
  9. ^ Singha, Memchaton (2016). "Marriage Diplomacy Between the States of Manipur and Burma, 18th to 19th Centuries". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 77: 874–879. ISSN 2249-1937. JSTOR 26552717. Both Manipur and Burma succeeded in maintaining their status as independent princely states until the British occupation by in the last part of 19th century
  10. ^ Waikhom, Rangitabali (2002). "Women's Society and Politics in Pre-Colonial Manipur". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 63: 1356–1357. ISSN 2249-1937. JSTOR 44158255.
  11. ^ Thant, Myint-U (2001), The Making of Modern Burma, Cambridge University Press, p. 15, ISBN 978-0-521-79914-0
  12. ^ Lieberman, Victor (1996). "POLITICAL CONSOLIDATION IN BURMA UNDER THE EARLY KONBAUNG DYNASTY 1752 – c. 1820". Journal of Asian History. 30 (2): 152–168. ISSN 0021-910X. JSTOR 41931038.
  13. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Manipur" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 582.
  14. ^ Yuhlung, Cheithou Charles (2013). "The Identity of Pakhangpa: The Mystical Dragon-Python God of Chothe of Manipur". SSRN Electronic Journal. doi:10.2139/ssrn.2317260. ISSN 1556-5068.
  15. ^ Bhattacharjee, J.B.; Bhattacharya, J.B. (2003). "'Loiyamba Shinyen': A Landmark in Meitei State Formation in Medieval Manipur". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 64: 362–368. ISSN 2249-1937. JSTOR 44145476.
  16. ^ a b Phanjoubam Tarapot, Bleeding Manipur, Har Anand Publications (30 July 2007) ISBN 978-8124109021
  17. ^ Nath, Rajmohan (1948). The back-ground of Assamese culture. A. K. Nath. p. 90.
  18. ^ Laichen 2003, pp. 505–506.
  19. ^ Comprehensive history of Assam, SL Baruah. pp. 296–297.
  20. ^ a b c d e f "Imperial Gazetteer2 of India, Volume 17, page 186 – Imperial Gazetteer of India – Digital South Asia Library". Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  21. ^ Phanjoubam, Pradip (2015), The Northeast Question: Conflicts and frontiers, Routledge, pp. 3–4, ISBN 978-1-317-34004-1: "After comprehensively defeating the Burmese in 1826 in Assam and Manipur, and the signing of the Treaty of Yandabo, the British annexed Assam, but allowed Manipur to remain a protectorate state."
  22. ^ Ian F.W. Beckett, Victoria's Wars, Shire, ISBN 978-0747803881, p. 62
  23. ^ Reynolds, K. D. (2010). "Grimwood [née Moore; other married name Miller], Ethel Brabazon [pseud. Ethel St Clair Grimwood] (1867–1928), the heroine of Manipur". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/101006. Retrieved 11 October 2020. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  24. ^ Ethel St. Clair Grimwood, My Three Years in Manipur and Escape from the Recent Mutiny (fl.1891)
  25. ^ a b "Indian Princely States K-Z". Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  26. ^ Pum Khan Pau (2012) Tedim Road—The Strategic Road on a Frontier: A Historical Analysis, Strategic Analysis, 36:5, 776-786, doi:10.1080/09700161.2012.712387
  27. ^ a b Subramanian, K. S. State, Policy and Conflicts in Northeast India. Routledge & CRC Press. pp. 31–32.
  28. ^ Akoijam, A. Bimol (28 July 2001), "How History Repeats Itself", Economic and Political Weekly, 36 (30): 2807–2812, JSTOR 4410908
  29. ^ a b Banerjee, S. K. (January–March 1958), "Manipur State Constitution Act, 1947", The Indian Journal of Political Science, 19 (1): 35–38, JSTOR 42748891
  30. ^ Colonialism and Resistance: Society and State in Manipur, Taylor & Francis, 2015, p. 169, ISBN 9781317270669, retrieved 14 January 2021
  31. ^ Why Pre-Merger Political Status for Manipur: Under the Framework of the Instrument of Accession, 1947, Research and Media Cell, CIRCA, 2018, p. 26, GGKEY:8XLWSW77KUZ: "Before the controversial merger, both Manipur and India were bound by the Instrument of Accession (IOA) which the King of Manipur signed on 11 August 1947. The IOA was accepted by the Governor General of India Lord Mountbatten on 16 August 1947 vide Home Department, Government of India file no A-1/1/1947. Subsequently, the Manipur State Council approved the IOA in its meeting held on 22 August 1947 Vide Memo No. 383 PTI Reference Council Minutes Part I of 11-8-1947. The execution of the Instrument of Accession was published in the Manipur State Gazette on 27 August 1947."
  32. ^ Sudhirkumar Singh, Socio-religious and Political Movements 2011, p. 139; See Chapter 2 for the limitations of sovereignty under the colonial regime.
  33. ^ "Instrument of Accession of the State of Manipur" (PDF). Wikimedia Commons.
  34. ^ Sudhirkumar Singh, Socio-religious and Political Movements (2011), Chapter 6, p. 145.
  35. ^ Haokip, Thongkholal (2012). "Political Integration of Northeast India: A Historical Analysis". Strategic Analysis. 36 (2): 304–314. doi:10.1080/09700161.2012.646508. ISSN 0970-0161. S2CID 153661583.: "The Maharajah of Manipur was invited to Shillong in September 1949 for talks on integration.... The Maharaja was placed under house arrest and debarred from any communication with the outside world. The Maharaja was thus forced to sign the ‘Merger Agreement’ with India on September 21, 1949, and Manipur became a 'Part-C state' of the Indian Union."
  36. ^ a b Guha, Ramachandra (2008), India after Gandhi: The History of the World's Largest Democracy, Pan Macmillan, Section 13.V, ISBN 978-0330396110
  37. ^ Agnihotri, Constitutional Development in North-East India (1996), p. 68.
  38. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  39. ^ Thokchom, Princely State of Manipur (2022), Appendix IV.
  40. ^ "Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 35.djvu/27 - Wikisource, the free online library".
  41. ^ McCulloch, W. (1859). Account of the Valley of Munnipore and of the Hill Tribes. Selections from the Records of the Government of India (Foreign Department). Calcutta: Bengal Printing Company. OCLC 249105916 – via archive.org.
  42. ^ Brown, R. (1874), Statistical Account of the Native State of Manipur and the Hill Territory under Its Rule, Calcutta: Office of the Superintendent of Government Printing
  43. ^ Johnstone, Sir James (1896), My Experiences in Manipur and the Naga Hills, London: Sampson Low, Marston and Company – via archive.org
  44. ^ Shakespear, J. (1912), The Lushei Kuki Clans, London: McMillan and Co – via archive.org
  45. ^ a b Singh, History of the Christian Missions in Manipur (1991), p. 9.
  46. ^ Sudhirkumar Singh, Socio-religious and Political Movements (2011), pp. 49–50.
  47. ^ Epstein, M. (2016), The Statesman's Year-Book: Statistical and Historical Annual of the States of the World for the Year 1932, Springer, p. 75, ISBN 978-0-230-27061-9
  48. ^ C Gimson 1955-56, Leicester Literary and Philosophical Society.
  49. ^ Thokchom, Princely State of Manipur (2022), p. 10.
  50. ^ a b c Sudhirkumar Singh, Socio-religious and Political Movements (2011), pp. 139–140.
  51. ^ Sudhirkumar Singh, Socio-religious and Political Movements (2011), pp. 141–142.
  52. ^ "Manipur". Retrieved 1 April 2015.

Bibliography

  • Laichen, Sun (2003). "Military Technology Transfers from Ming China and the Emergence of Northern Mainland Southeast Asia (c. 1390-1527)". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 34 (3). Cambridge University Press: 495–517. doi:10.1017/S0022463403000456. JSTOR 20072535. S2CID 162422482.
  • Agnihotri, S. K. (1996), "Constitutional Development in North-East India since 1947", in B. Datta-Ray; S. P. Agrawal (eds.), Reorganization of North-East India Since 1947, Concept Publishing Company, pp. 57–92, ISBN 978-81-7022-577-5
  • Sen, Sipra (1992), Tribes and Castes of Manipur: Description and Select Bibliography, Mittal Publications, ISBN 81-7099-310-5
  • Singh, Karam Manimohan (1991), History of the Christian Missions in Manipur and Neighbouring States, Mittal Publications, ISBN 81-7099-285-0 – via archive.org
  • Sudhirkumar Singh, Haorongbam (2011). Socio-religious and Political Movements in Modern Manipur 1934–51. INFLIBNET (PhD thesis). Jawaharlal Nehru University. hdl:10603/121665 – via Shodhganga.
  • Thokchom, Veewon (2022). Princely State of Manipur: Durbar, the Raj and Resistances, C. 1900-1950 (PDF) (M. Phil. thesis). Aizwal: Department of History & Ethnography, Mizoram University.

Further reading

  • Joychandra Singh, L. (1995), The Lost Kingdom: Royal Chronicle of Manipur, Prajatantra Publishing House

External links

  • Territorial Councils Act, 1956, Lok Sabha Bills, retrieved 25 November 2020.
  • Seven clans of Manipur

24°49′N 93°57′E / 24.817°N 93.950°E / 24.817; 93.950

  • Government of Manipur (1949). Manipur Gazette, 1949, January–June. pp. 1–5.
  • Hosting sites of FOTW, National Flag

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This article is about the Kingdom For modern Indian political state see Manipur For the ancient coastal Hindu kingdom mentioned in the epic Mahabharata see Manipur Mahabharata For other uses see Manipur disambiguation The Manipur Kingdom 1 2 3 4 was an ancient kingdom at the India Burma frontier 5 6 7 Historically Manipur was an independent kingdom ruled by a Meitei dynasty 8 9 10 But it was also invaded and ruled over by Burmese kingdom at various point of time 11 12 It became a protectorate of the British East India Company from 1824 and a princely state of British Raj in 1891 13 It bordered Assam Province in the west and British Burma in the east and in the 20th century covered an area of 22 327 square kilometres 8 621 sq mi and contained 467 villages citation needed The capital of the state was Imphal Manipur KingdomMeitei Meetei Leipak1110 1949Flag Coat of armsManipur State in the Hicky s Bengal Gazette of 1907CapitalImphalRecognised national languagesMeitei language officially known as Manipuri ReligionSanamahism Later Vaishnavite HinduismHistory Foundation of the Kangleipak Kingdom1110 Protectorate of British Empire1824 Princely state of India1891 Accession to the Indian Union1947 Merged into the Indian Union1949Area194122 372 km2 8 638 sq mi Population 1941512 069Preceded by Succeeded by Early Seven Clan State Manipur Kabaw ValleyToday part ofIndia Myanmar Map of Hindostan or India 1814 by Mathew Carey from the David Rumsey Collection of Historic Maps Kangla Uttra Sanglen at the Kangla Fort former residence of the Meitei kings of Manipur The two statues of Kangla Sha Meitei dragon lions standing in front of the inner gate were destroyed after the Anglo Manipur War of 1891 but have been restored by the Manipur Government in recent years The princes of Manipur Col Johnstone Thangal Major and the European officer in Kohima after relieving the fort from the siege of the Nagas 1880 The Kohima Stone Inscription erected by Meitei King Gambhir Singh Meitei Chinglen Nongdrenkhomba the Maharaja of Manipur as the testimony of Meitei Dominance of Nagaland The Manipuri classical dance was developed by Meitei King Rajarshi Bhagyachandra Meitei Ching Thang Khomba the Maharajah of Manipur Raja Gambhir Singh 1788 1834 accepted British suzerainty in order to retrieve the kingdom from Burmese occupation Contents 1 Kangleipak State 2 Manipur State 3 British protectorate 3 1 The Manipur Expedition 4 Princely state under British Raj 5 Twilight and end of the princely state 6 Rulers 6 1 Rajas under Burmese rule 6 2 Rajas under British protection 6 3 Rulers of the princely state under British Raj 6 4 British Political Agents 6 5 British administrators 6 6 Indian administration 7 Flags 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksKangleipak StateThe early history of Manipur is composed of mythical narratives The location of the Kangla Fort on the banks of the Imphal River is believed to be where King Pakhangba built his first palace 14 Loyumba Shinyen the written constitution of Kangleipak was formally developed by King Loiyumba 1074 1121 in 1110 AD 15 He consolidated the kingdom by incorporating most of the principalities in the surrounding hills 16 After subjugating all the villages within their valley Kangleipak kings grew in power and began a policy of expansion beyond their territory In 1443 King Ningthoukhomba raided Akla present day Tamu Myanmar an area ruled by Shan people initiating a policy of Manipuri claims to the neighbouring Kabaw Valley 16 The zenith of the Kangleipak State was reached under the rule of King Khagemba 1597 1652 Khagemba s brother Prince Shalungba was not happy about Khagemba s rule so he fled to the Taraf where he allied with the local Bengali Muslim leaders With a contingent of Bengali Muslim soldiers led by Muhammad Sani Shalungba then attempted to invade Manipur but the soldiers were captured and made to work as labourers in Manipur These soldiers married local Meitei women and adapted to the Meitei language They introduced hookah to Manipur and founded the Meitei Pangals Manipuri Muslim community 17 It is claimed that Manipur learned the art of making gunpowder from the Chinese merchants who visited the state around 1630 and had started making rockets named Meikappi by the early 18th century 18 Manipur StateIn 1714 King Pamheiba was initiated into Gaudiya Vaishnavism by Shantidas Gosai a Bengali Hindu from Sylhet He made the Gaudiya Vaishnava faith the state religion replacing Meitei religion made the Meitei language aka Manipuri language written in Bengali script destroying many documents of Meitei language written in Meitei script and changed his name to Garib Niwaj In 1724 the Sanskrit name Manipur transl the City of Jewels was adopted as the name of the state to make the realm eponymous with Manipura of the Mahabharata King Garib Niwaj made several incursions into Burma but made no permanent conquest After the death of Gharib Nawaz in 1754 Manipur was occupied by the Kingdom of Burma and the Meitei king Bhagyachandra Meitei Ching Thang Khomba sought help from the British but when the British refused help he went to Ahom King Rajeswar Singha who sent a force of 40 000 under Haranath Senapati Phukan to free Manipur 19 A treaty of alliance was negotiated in 1762 and a military force was sent to assist Manipur The force was later recalled and then the state was left to its own devices 20 Manipur was invaded at the onset of the First Anglo Burmese War together with Cachar and Assam British protectorateFollowing the Burmese invasions in 1824 the king of Manipur Gambhir Singh Chinglen Nongdrenkhomba asked the British for help and the request was granted Sepoys and artillery were sent and British officers trained a levy of Manipuri troops for the battles that ensued After the Burmese were expelled the Kabaw Valley down to the Ningthi River was added to the state 20 In 1824 1826 on the conclusion of the First Anglo Burmese War Manipur became a British protectorate 21 Manipur remained relatively peaceful and prosperous until King Gambhir Singh s death in 1834 At the death of Gambhir Singh his son Chandrakirti Singh was only one year old and his uncle Nara Singh was appointed as regent That same year the British decided to restore the Kabaw Valley to the Kingdom of Burma which had never been happy about the loss A compensation was paid to Raja of Manipur in the form of an annual allowance of Rs 6 370 and a British residency was established in Imphal the only town of the state in 1835 to facilitate communication between the British and the rulers of Manipur 20 After a thwarted attempt on his life Nara Singh took power and held the throne until his death in 1850 His brother Devendra Singh was given the title of Raja by the British but he was unpopular After only three months the rightful heir Chandrakirti Singh invaded Manipur and rose to the throne Numerous members of the royal family tried to overthrow Chandrakirti Singh but none of the rebellions was successful In 1879 when British Deputy Commissioner G H Damant was killed by an Angami Naga party the king of Manipur assisted the British by sending troops to neighbouring Kohima Following this service to the crown Chandrakirti Singh was rewarded with the Order of the Star of India After Maharaja Chandrakriti s death in 1886 his son Surachandra Singh succeeded him As in previous occasions several claimants to the throne tried to overthrow the new king The first three attempts were defeated but in 1890 following an attack on the palace by Tikendrajit and Kulachandra Singh two of the king s brothers Surachandra Singh announced his intention to abdicate and left Manipur for Cachar Kulachandra Singh then rose to the throne while Tikendrajit Singh as the commander of the Manipuri armed forces held the real power behind the scenes Meanwhile Surachandra Singh after leaving Manipur appealed to the British for help to recover the throne 20 The Manipur Expedition Main article Anglo Manipur War The British decided to recognise Kulachandra Singh as Raja and to send a military expedition of 400 men to Manipur to punish Senapati Tikendrajit Singh as the main person responsible for the unrest and the dynastic disturbances This action and the violent events that followed are known in British annals as the Manipur Expedition 1891 22 while in Manipur they are known as the Anglo Manipur War of 1891 The British attempt to remove Tikendrajit from his position as military commander Senapati and arrest him on 24 March 1891 caused a great stir The British Residency in Imphal was attacked and the Chief Commissioner for Assam J W Quinton Col Sken the British Resident and other British officials were murdered In the middle of the unrest Ethel St Clair Grimwood the widow of Frank St Clair Grimmond the killed British Resident was credited with leading a retreat of surviving sepoys out of Manipur to Cachar 23 She was later lauded as a hero 24 A 5 000 strong punitive expedition was sent against Manipur on 27 April 1891 Three British columns entered Manipur from British Burma Cachar and the Naga Hills which after several skirmishes with the 3 000 men strong Manipuri army managed to pacify the kingdom Following the British attack Tikendrajit and Kulachandra Singh fled but were captured Tikendrajit and those Manipuris involved in the killing of the British officers were tried and hanged while the deposed King Kulachandra Singh and other leaders of the rebellion were sent to the Cellular Jail in the Andaman Islands Manipur was briefly annexed to British India by virtue of the doctrine of lapse On 22 September 1891 when Meidingngu Churachand Churachandra a 5 year old boy was put on the throne power was restored nominally to the Manipuri crown over the state During the dynastic disturbances and the British intervention the Naga and Kuki hill tribes of the state lapsed into lawlessness with numerous instances of murder and arson in the mountain villages a situation that lasted well into 1894 20 Princely state under British RajThe child ruler Churachand belonged to a side branch of the Manipur royal family so that all the main contenders to the throne were bypassed While he was a minor the affairs of state were administered by the British Political Agent which facilitated the introduction and implementation of reforms The first paved road to Manipur was inaugurated in 1900 until then there had been no proper roads to reach the kingdom and this improvement in communication facilitated a visit by Viceroy Lord Curzon in 1901 Raja Churachand was formally declared king in 1907 after completing education in Ajmer 20 In 1918 he was given the privilege to use the title Maharaja and during his reign Manipur enjoyed a period of relative peace and prosperity In 1934 king Churachand was knighted by the British becoming Sir Churachandra Singh 25 Between March 1944 and July 1944 part of Manipur and the Naga Hills District of Assam Province were occupied by the Imperial Japanese Army The capital Imphal was shelled on 10 May 1944 26 verification needed Twilight and end of the princely stateOn 14 August 1947 with the lapse of paramountcy of the British Crown Manipur became briefly independent in the sense that it was free of control from the Governor of Assam which may be regarded as reversion to political autonomy that existed before 1891 27 28 29 However the Maharaja had signed the Instrument of Accession on 11 August 1947 ceding the three subjects of defence external affairs and communication to the Union of India 27 30 31 32 33 A Manipur State Constitution Act 1947 was enacted giving the state its own constitution although this did not become known in other parts of India owing to the relative isolation of the kingdom 29 The Government of India did not recognize the Constitution 34 On 21 September 1949 the Maharaja was coerced to sign a Merger Agreement with the Union of India to take effect on 15 October the same year 35 As a result of the agreement the Manipur State merged into the Indian Union as a Part C State similar to a Chief Commissioner s Province under the colonial regime or a Union Territory in the present Indian structure to be governed by a Chief Commissioner appointed by the Government of India The representative assembly of Manipur was abolished 36 Unhappy with the central rule Rishang Keishing began a movement for representative government in Manipur in 1954 The Indian home minister however declared that the time was not yet ripe for the creation of representative assemblies in Part C States such as Manipur and Tripura stating that they were located in strategic border areas of India that the people were politically backward and that the administration in those states was still weak 36 However it was given a substantial measure of local self government under the Territorial Councils Act of 1956 a legislative body and council of ministers in 1963 and full statehood in 1972 37 RulersMain article List of Meitei kings The rulers of Manipur state were entitled to an 11 gun salute by the British authorities The present dynasty began in 1714 38 1709 1754 Gharib Nawaz Pamheiba d 1754 1754 1756 Bharat Shah Chitsai 1756 1764 Guru Sham Gaurisiam d 1764 1764 1798 Jai Singh Bhagya Chandra 1798 1801 Rohinchandra Harshachandra Singh d 1801 1801 1806 Maduchandra Singh d 1806 1806 1812 Charajit Singh d 1812 1812 1819 Marjit Singh d 1824 Rajas under Burmese rule There were two feudatory kings during the time of the Burmese invasions 1819 1823 Shubol 1823 1825 Pitambara Singh Rajas under British protection 26 Jun 1825 9 January 1834 Gambhir Singh d 1834 1834 1844 Nara Singh Regent d 1850 1844 10 April 1850 Nara Singh s a 1850 3 months Devendra Singh d 1871 1850 May 1886 Chandrakirti Singh s a b 1831 d 1886 from 18 February 1880 Sir Chandrakirti Singh 1886 24 September 1890 Surachandra Singh d 1891 24 Sep 1890 19 April 1891 Kulachandra Singh b 18 d 1934 Rulers of the princely state under British Raj 19 Apr 1891 18 September 1891 Interregnum 18 Sep 1891 September 1941 Churachandra Singh b 1885 d 1941 titled Maharaja in 1918 knighted 1934 Sep 1941 15 October 1949 Bodhchandra Singh b 1909 d 1955 British Political Agents The Political agents were subordinated to the Chief Commissioner of Assam Lieutenant Governor of East Bengal and Assam during 1905 1912 39 verification needed 1835 1844 George Gordon 1844 1863 William McCulloch 1st time 40 a 1863 1865 Dillon 1865 1867 William McCulloch 2nd time s a 1867 1875 Robert Brown b 1875 1877 Guybon Henry Damant acting 1877 1886 Sir James Johnstone c 1886 6 weeks Trotter acting 25 Mar 1886 21 April 1886 Walter Haiks acting 1886 24 April 1891 St Clair Grimwood d 1891 1891 Sir Henry Collett British commander 1891 1893 H St P John Maxwell 1st time 1893 1895 Alexander Porteous 1st time 1895 1896 H St P John Maxwell 2nd time 1896 1898 Henry Walter George Cole 1st time acting 1898 1899 Alexander Porteous 2nd time 1899 1902 H St P John Maxwell 3rd time 1902 1904 Albert Edward Woods 1904 1905 H St P John Maxwell 4th time 1905 1908 John Shakespear 1st time d 1908 1909 A W Davis 1909 1914 John Shakespear 2nd time 1914 1917 Henry Walter George Cole 2nd time s a clarification needed 1917 1918 John Comyn Higgins 1st time 1918 1920 William Alexander Cosgrave 1920 1922 L O Clarke 1st time 1922 Christopher Gimson 1st time acting 1922 1924 L O Clarke 2nd time 1924 1928 John Comyn Higgins 2nd time s a 12 Mar 1928 23 November 1928 C G Crawford 1928 1933 John Comyn Higgins 3rd time s a 1933 1938 Christopher Gimson 2nd time s a 1938 1941 Gerald Pakenham Stewart 1st time Japanese prisoner 1941 45 1941 1946 Christopher Gimson 3rd time s a Dec 1946 14 August 1947 Gerald Pakenham Stewart 2nd time British administrators During the princely state stage 1891 1947 an Indian Civil Service ICS officer of the East Bengal and Assam cadre was appointed as the administrator first as the Vice president of the Manipur State Darbar and from 1916 as its President 45 46 47 25 May 1907 1910 William Alexander Cosgrave 45 April June 1910 C H Bell June 1910 1917 John Comyn Higgins 1917 1918 Robert Herriot Henderson 1st time 1918 July 1918 V Woods 1918 1919 Sir Robert Herriot Henderson s a 2nd time 1919 1921 Christopher Gimson 48 1921 June 1921 William Shaw June 1921 September 1922 Charles Seymour Mullan September 1922 June 1927 Colin Grant Crawford June 1925 February 1926 Hugh Weightman acting June 1927 1930 Anthony Gilchrist McCall 1930 February 1933 Cecil Walter Lewery Harvey February 1933 February 1936 Gerald Pakenham Stewart March 1936 February 1937 Crispin Bernard Chitty Paine February 1937 1939 Alexander Ranald Hume MacDonald July 1939 1943 Thomas Arthur Timothy Sharpe 49 May 1943 November 1945 Edward Francis Lydall November 1945 14 August 1947 Francis Fenwick Pearson designated Chief Minister from 15 July 1947 Indian administration Political agents The Indian Agents were subordinated to the Governor of Assam 15 August 1947 1947 Gerald Pakenham Stewart s a 50 1947 1948 Debeswar Sharma 50 Dewans The Dewans were representing the Governor of Assam 1948 16 April 1949 M K Priyobrata Singh s a 50 16 Apr 1949 15 October 1949 Rawal Amar Singh 51 FlagsThe State of Manipur had a set of two flags a white one and a red one All featured the Pakhangba dragon in the centre although not as prominently in the latter flags 52 nbsp White flag with coat of arms 1907 1949 nbsp Red flag with Pakhangba till 1907 nbsp White flag with Pakhangba till 1907 See alsoHistory of Manipur Manipur State Constitution Act 1947 Meitei inscriptions Ningthouja dynasty Meitei mythology Political integration of IndiaNotes William MuCulloch authored Account of the Valley of Munnipore and of the Hill Tribes 1859 41 Robert Brown authored Statistical Account of the Native State of Manipur and the Hill Territory under Its Rule 1874 42 gt James Johnstone authored My Experiences in Manipur and the Naga Hills 1896 43 John Shakespear authored The Lushei Kuki Clans 1912 44 References Keen Caroline 2015 An Imperial Crisis in British India I B Tauris p 150 152 doi 10 5040 9780755624355 ISBN 978 1 78673 987 2 Ghose maintained that under the Indian Penal Code only subjects of the Queen or foreigners residing in British India could be guilty of waging war against the Queen Manipur was an independent sovereign state and Lloyd Nick 2016 Review of AN IMPERIAL CRISIS IN BRITISH INDIA THE MANIPUR UPRISING OF 1891 Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research 94 380 347 348 ISSN 0037 9700 JSTOR 44233143 Sen 1992 p 17 Andaya Barbara Watson Andaya Leonard Y 19 February 2015 A History of Early Modern Southeast Asia 1400 1830 Cambridge University Press p 264 doi 10 1017 cbo9781139051323 ISBN 978 0 521 88992 6 Somorjit Wangam 1 March 2016 Manipur The Forgotten Nation of Southeast Asia Waba Publications amp Advanced Research Consortium ISBN 978 81 926687 2 7 Fantz Paul R Pradeep S V 1995 Clitoria Leguminosae of South Eastern Asia https press uchicago edu books HOC HOC V2 B2 HOC VOLUME2 Book2 chapter18 pdf bare URL PDF Arora Vibha Kipgen Ngamjahao 2012 The Politics of Identifying with and Distancing from Kuki Identity in Manipur Sociological Bulletin 61 3 429 449 doi 10 1177 0038022920120303 ISSN 0038 0229 JSTOR 26290634 S2CID 157167951 Historically Manipur was an independent kingdom ruled by Meitei dynasty The physical boundary of Manipur has been fluctuating with historical changes in political power and the intra state and the inter state boundaries Singha Memchaton 2016 Marriage Diplomacy Between the States of Manipur and Burma 18th to 19th Centuries Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 77 874 879 ISSN 2249 1937 JSTOR 26552717 Both Manipur and Burma succeeded in maintaining their status as independent princely states until the British occupation by in the last part of 19th century Waikhom Rangitabali 2002 Women s Society and Politics in Pre Colonial Manipur Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 63 1356 1357 ISSN 2249 1937 JSTOR 44158255 Thant Myint U 2001 The Making of Modern Burma Cambridge University Press p 15 ISBN 978 0 521 79914 0 Lieberman Victor 1996 POLITICAL CONSOLIDATION IN BURMA UNDER THE EARLY KONBAUNG DYNASTY 1752 c 1820 Journal of Asian History 30 2 152 168 ISSN 0021 910X JSTOR 41931038 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Manipur Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 582 Yuhlung Cheithou Charles 2013 The Identity of Pakhangpa The Mystical Dragon Python God of Chothe of Manipur SSRN Electronic Journal doi 10 2139 ssrn 2317260 ISSN 1556 5068 Bhattacharjee J B Bhattacharya J B 2003 Loiyamba Shinyen A Landmark in Meitei State Formation in Medieval Manipur Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 64 362 368 ISSN 2249 1937 JSTOR 44145476 a b Phanjoubam Tarapot Bleeding Manipur Har Anand Publications 30 July 2007 ISBN 978 8124109021 Nath Rajmohan 1948 The back ground of Assamese culture A K Nath p 90 Laichen 2003 pp 505 506 Comprehensive history of Assam SL Baruah pp 296 297 a b c d e f Imperial Gazetteer2 of India Volume 17 page 186 Imperial Gazetteer of India Digital South Asia Library Retrieved 1 April 2015 Phanjoubam Pradip 2015 The Northeast Question Conflicts and frontiers Routledge pp 3 4 ISBN 978 1 317 34004 1 After comprehensively defeating the Burmese in 1826 in Assam and Manipur and the signing of the Treaty of Yandabo the British annexed Assam but allowed Manipur to remain a protectorate state Ian F W Beckett Victoria s Wars Shire ISBN 978 0747803881 p 62 Reynolds K D 2010 Grimwood nee Moore other married name Miller Ethel Brabazon pseud Ethel St Clair Grimwood 1867 1928 the heroine of Manipur Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 101006 Retrieved 11 October 2020 Subscription or UK public library membership required Ethel St Clair Grimwood My Three Years in Manipur and Escape from the Recent Mutiny fl 1891 a b Indian Princely States K Z Retrieved 1 April 2015 Pum Khan Pau 2012 Tedim Road The Strategic Road on a Frontier A Historical Analysis Strategic Analysis 36 5 776 786 doi 10 1080 09700161 2012 712387 a b Subramanian K S State Policy and Conflicts in Northeast India Routledge amp CRC Press pp 31 32 Akoijam A Bimol 28 July 2001 How History Repeats Itself Economic and Political Weekly 36 30 2807 2812 JSTOR 4410908 a b Banerjee S K January March 1958 Manipur State Constitution Act 1947 The Indian Journal of Political Science 19 1 35 38 JSTOR 42748891 Colonialism and Resistance Society and State in Manipur Taylor amp Francis 2015 p 169 ISBN 9781317270669 retrieved 14 January 2021 Why Pre Merger Political Status for Manipur Under the Framework of the Instrument of Accession 1947 Research and Media Cell CIRCA 2018 p 26 GGKEY 8XLWSW77KUZ Before the controversial merger both Manipur and India were bound by the Instrument of Accession IOA which the King of Manipur signed on 11 August 1947 The IOA was accepted by the Governor General of India Lord Mountbatten on 16 August 1947 vide Home Department Government of India file no A 1 1 1947 Subsequently the Manipur State Council approved the IOA in its meeting held on 22 August 1947 Vide Memo No 383 PTI Reference Council Minutes Part I of 11 8 1947 The execution of the Instrument of Accession was published in the Manipur State Gazette on 27 August 1947 Sudhirkumar Singh Socio religious and Political Movements 2011 p 139 See Chapter 2 for the limitations of sovereignty under the colonial regime Instrument of Accession of the State of Manipur PDF Wikimedia Commons Sudhirkumar Singh Socio religious and Political Movements 2011 Chapter 6 p 145 Haokip Thongkholal 2012 Political Integration of Northeast India A Historical Analysis Strategic Analysis 36 2 304 314 doi 10 1080 09700161 2012 646508 ISSN 0970 0161 S2CID 153661583 The Maharajah of Manipur was invited to Shillong in September 1949 for talks on integration The Maharaja was placed under house arrest and debarred from any communication with the outside world The Maharaja was thus forced to sign the Merger Agreement with India on September 21 1949 and Manipur became a Part C state of the Indian Union a b Guha Ramachandra 2008 India after Gandhi The History of the World s Largest Democracy Pan Macmillan Section 13 V ISBN 978 0330396110 Agnihotri Constitutional Development in North East India 1996 p 68 MANIPUR Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 1 April 2015 Thokchom Princely State of Manipur 2022 Appendix IV Page Dictionary of National Biography volume 35 djvu 27 Wikisource the free online library McCulloch W 1859 Account of the Valley of Munnipore and of the Hill Tribes Selections from the Records of the Government of India Foreign Department Calcutta Bengal Printing Company OCLC 249105916 via archive org Brown R 1874 Statistical Account of the Native State of Manipur and the Hill Territory under Its Rule Calcutta Office of the Superintendent of Government Printing Johnstone Sir James 1896 My Experiences in Manipur and the Naga Hills London Sampson Low Marston and Company via archive org Shakespear J 1912 The Lushei Kuki Clans London McMillan and Co via archive org a b Singh History of the Christian Missions in Manipur 1991 p 9 Sudhirkumar Singh Socio religious and Political Movements 2011 pp 49 50 Epstein M 2016 The Statesman s Year Book Statistical and Historical Annual of the States of the World for the Year 1932 Springer p 75 ISBN 978 0 230 27061 9 C Gimson 1955 56 Leicester Literary and Philosophical Society Thokchom Princely State of Manipur 2022 p 10 a b c Sudhirkumar Singh Socio religious and Political Movements 2011 pp 139 140 Sudhirkumar Singh Socio religious and Political Movements 2011 pp 141 142 Manipur Retrieved 1 April 2015 BibliographyLaichen Sun 2003 Military Technology Transfers from Ming China and the Emergence of Northern Mainland Southeast Asia c 1390 1527 Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 34 3 Cambridge University Press 495 517 doi 10 1017 S0022463403000456 JSTOR 20072535 S2CID 162422482 Agnihotri S K 1996 Constitutional Development in North East India since 1947 in B Datta Ray S P Agrawal eds Reorganization of North East India Since 1947 Concept Publishing Company pp 57 92 ISBN 978 81 7022 577 5 Sen Sipra 1992 Tribes and Castes of Manipur Description and Select Bibliography Mittal Publications ISBN 81 7099 310 5 Singh Karam Manimohan 1991 History of the Christian Missions in Manipur and Neighbouring States Mittal Publications ISBN 81 7099 285 0 via archive org Sudhirkumar Singh Haorongbam 2011 Socio religious and Political Movements in Modern Manipur 1934 51 INFLIBNET PhD thesis Jawaharlal Nehru University hdl 10603 121665 via Shodhganga Thokchom Veewon 2022 Princely State of Manipur Durbar the Raj and Resistances C 1900 1950 PDF M Phil thesis Aizwal Department of History amp Ethnography Mizoram University Further readingJoychandra Singh L 1995 The Lost Kingdom Royal Chronicle of Manipur Prajatantra Publishing HouseExternal links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Manipur State Territorial Councils Act 1956 Lok Sabha Bills retrieved 25 November 2020 Seven clans of Manipur 24 49 N 93 57 E 24 817 N 93 950 E 24 817 93 950 Government of Manipur 1949 Manipur Gazette 1949 January June pp 1 5 Hosting sites of FOTW National Flag Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Manipur princely state amp oldid 1216793039, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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