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Princely state

A princely state (also called native state or Indian state) was a nominally sovereign[1] entity of the British Indian Empire that was not directly governed by the British, but rather by an Indian ruler under a form of indirect rule,[2] subject to a subsidiary alliance and the suzerainty or paramountcy of the British crown.

In July 1946, Jawaharlal Nehru pointedly observed that no princely state could prevail militarily against the army of independent India.[3] In January 1947, Nehru said that independent India would not accept the divine right of kings.[4] In May 1947, he declared that any princely state which refused to join the Constituent Assembly would be treated as an enemy state.[5] There were officially 565 princely states when India and Pakistan became independent in 1947, but the great majority had contracted with the viceroy to provide public services and tax collection. Only 21 had actual state governments, and only four were large (Hyderabad State, Mysore State, Jammu and Kashmir State, and Baroda State). They acceded to one of the two new independent nations between 1947 and 1949. All the princes were eventually pensioned off.[6]

At the time of the British withdrawal, 565 princely states were officially recognised in the Indian subcontinent,[7] apart from thousands of zamindari estates and jagirs. In 1947, princely states covered 40% of the area of pre-independence India and constituted 23% of its population.[8] The most important states had their own British political residencies: Hyderabad of the Nizams, Mysore and Travancore in the South, Jammu and Kashmir, Sikkim in the Himalayas, and Indore in Central India. The most prominent among those – roughly a quarter of the total – had the status of a salute state, one whose ruler was entitled to a set number of gun salutes on ceremonial occasions.

The princely states varied greatly in status, size, and wealth; the premier 21-gun salute states of Hyderabad and Jammu and Kashmir were each over 200,000 km2 (77,000 sq mi) in size. In 1941, Hyderabad had a population of over 16 million, while Jammu and Kashmir had a population of slightly over 4 million. At the other end of the scale, the non-salute principality of Lawa covered an area of 49 km2 (19 sq mi), with a population of just below 3,000. Some two hundred of the lesser states even had an area of less than 25 km2 (10 sq mi).[9][10]

The era of the princely states effectively ended with Indian independence in 1947; by 1950, almost all of the principalities had acceded to either India or Pakistan.[11] The accession process was largely peaceful, except in the cases of Jammu and Kashmir (whose ruler decided to accede to India following an invasion by Pakistan-based forces, resulting in a long-standing dispute between the two countries),[12] Hyderabad State (whose ruler opted for independence in 1947, followed a year later by the invasion and annexation of the state by India), Junagarh and its vassal Bantva Manavadar (whose rulers acceded to Pakistan, but were annexed by India),[13] and Kalat (whose ruler declared independence in 1947, followed in 1948 by the state's accession to Pakistan).[14][15][16]

As per the terms of accession, the erstwhile Indian princes received privy purses (government allowances), and initially retained their statuses, privileges, and autonomy in internal matters during a transitional period which lasted until 1956. During this time, the former princely states were merged into unions, each of which was headed by a former ruling prince with the title of Rajpramukh (ruling chief), equivalent to a state governor.[17] In 1956, the position of Rajpramukh was abolished and the federations dissolved, the former principalities becoming part of Indian states. The states which acceded to Pakistan retained their status until the promulgation of a new constitution in 1956, when most became part of the province of West Pakistan; a few of the former states retained their autonomy until 1969 when they were fully integrated into Pakistan. The Indian government abolished the privy purses in 1971, followed by the government of Pakistan in 1972.

History

Though principalities and chiefdoms existed on the Indian subcontinent from at least the Iron Age, the history of princely states on the Indian subcontinent dates to at least the fifth or sixth century C.E., during the rise of the middle kingdoms of India following the collapse of the Gupta Empire.[18][19] Many of the future ruling clan groups – notably the Rajputs – began to emerge during this period; by the 13th–14th centuries, many of the Rajput clans had firmly established semi-independent principalities in the north-west, along with several in the north-east. The widespread expansion of Islam during this time brought many principalities into tributary relations with Islamic sultanates, notably with the Mughal Empire. In the south, however, the Hindu Vijayanagara Empire remained dominant until the mid-17th century; among its tributaries was the future Mysore Kingdom.

The Turco-Mongol Mughal Empire brought a majority of the existing Indian kingdoms and principalities under its suzerainty by the 17th century, beginning with its foundation in the early 16th century. Despite the difference in religion, the Mughal emperors also contracted a series of marriages with Rajput princesses, and Rajput forces and generals became an important part of their military power. The advent of Sikhism resulted in the creation of the Sikh Empire in the north by the early 18th century, by which time the Mughal Empire was in full decline. The Muslim nawabs had begun as appointed governors of territories conquered by the Mughals, in theory a non-hereditary title, with obligations to pay a large share of their revenues to the emperor. As the emperors became too weak to enforce their power, the nawabs stopped paying, and passed on their realms to their sons.

At the same time, the Marathas carved out their own states to form the Maratha Empire. Through the 18th century, former Mughal governors formed their own independent states. In the north-west, some of those – such as Tonk – allied themselves with various groups, including the Marathas and the Durrani Empire, itself formed in 1747 from a loose agglomeration of tribal chiefdoms that composed former Mughal territories. In the south, the principalities of Hyderabad and Arcot were fully established by the 1760s, though they nominally remained vassals of the Mughal emperor.

The largest Muslim-ruled state was Hyderabad State, which was also the first to sign a treaty with the British, in 1798, when it was caught between them and the Marathas. The treaties of 1817 and 1818 concluding the decisive Third Anglo-Maratha War left the remaining Maratha territories as princely states, with treaties with the British, and the Rajput states resumed their subordinate status, now with the British.

British relationship with the princely states

India under the British Raj (the "Indian Empire") consisted of two types of territory: British India and the native states or princely states. In its Interpretation Act 1889, the British Parliament adopted the following definitions:

(4.) The expression "British India" shall mean all territories and places within Her Majesty's dominions which are for the time being governed by Her Majesty through the Governor-General of India or through any governor or other officer subordinate to the Governor-General of India.
(5.) The expression "India" shall mean British India together with any territories of any native prince or chief under the suzerainty of Her Majesty exercised through the Governor-General of India, or through any governor or other officer subordinate to the Governor-General of India.[20]

In general the term "British India" had been used (and is still used) also to refer to the regions under the rule of the East India Company in India from 1774 to 1858.[21][22]

The British Crown's suzerainty over 175 princely states, generally the largest and most important, was exercised in the name of the British Crown by the central government of British India under the Viceroy; the remaining approximately 400 states were influenced by Agents answerable to the provincial governments of British India under a governor, lieutenant-governor, or chief commissioner.[23] A clear distinction between "dominion" and "suzerainty" was supplied by the jurisdiction of the courts of law: the law of British India rested upon the legislation enacted by the British Parliament, and the legislative powers those laws vested in the various governments of British India, both central and local; in contrast, the courts of the princely states existed under the authority of the respective rulers of those states.[23]

Princely status and titles

The Indian rulers bore various titles – including Chhatrapati (exclusively used by the three Bhonsle dynasty of the Marathas) ("emperor"), Maharaja or Raja ("king"), Sultan, Nawab, Emir, Raje, Nizam, Wadiyar (used only by the Maharajas of Mysore, meaning "lord"), Agniraj Maharaj for the rulers of Bhaddaiyan Raj, Chogyal, Nawab ("governor"), Nayak, Wāli, Inamdar,[24] Saranjamdar[25] and many others. Whatever the literal meaning and traditional prestige of the ruler's actual title, the British government translated them all as "prince", to avoid the implication that the native rulers could be "kings" with status equal to that of the British monarch.

 
An old image of the British Residency in the city of Quilon, Kerala

More prestigious Hindu rulers (mostly existing before the Mughal Empire, or having split from such old states) often used the title "Raja", Raje" or a variant such as Rai, Rana, "Rao", "Rawat" or Rawal. Also in this 'class' were several Thakurs or Thai ores and a few particular titles, such as Sardar, Mankari (or Mānkari/Maankari), Deshmukh, Sar Desai, Istamuradar, Saranjamdar, Raja Inamdar etc.

The most prestigious Hindu rulers usually had the prefix "maha" ("great", compare for example Grand Duke) in their titles, as in Maharaja, Maharana, Maharao, etc. This was used in many princely states including Mewar, Travancore and Cochin. The state of Travancore also had queens regent styled Maharani, applied only to sister of king in Kerala.

There were also compound titles, such as (Maha)rajadhiraj, Raj-i-rajgan, often relics from an elaborate system of hierarchical titles under the Mughal emperors. For example, the addition of the adjective Bahadur raised the status of the titleholder one level.

Furthermore, most dynasties used a variety of additional titles such as Varma in South India. This should not be confused with various titles and suffixes not specific to princes but used by entire (sub)castes. This is almost analogous to Singh title in North India.

The Sikh princes concentrated at Punjab usually adopted Hindu type titles when attaining princely rank; at a lower level Sardar was used.

Muslim rulers almost all used the title "Nawab" (the Arabic honorific of naib, "deputy", used of the Mughal governors, who became de facto autonomous with the decline of the Mughal Empire), with the prominent exceptions of the Nizam of Hyderabad & Berar, the Wāli/Khan of Kalat and the Wāli of Swat. Other less usual titles included Darbar Sahib, Dewan, Jam, Mehtar (unique to Chitral) and Mir (from Emir).

Precedence and prestige

However, the actual importance of a princely state cannot be read from the title of its ruler, which was usually granted (or at least recognised) as a favour, often in recognition for loyalty and services rendered to the Mughal Empire. Although some titles were raised once or even repeatedly, there was no automatic updating when a state gained or lost real power. In fact, princely titles were even awarded to holders of domains (mainly jagirs) and even taluqdars and zamindars, which were not states at all. Most of the zamindar who hold the princely titles were in fact erstwhile princely and royal states reduced to zamindari by the British EIC. Various sources give significantly different numbers of states and domains of the various types. Even in general, the definition of titles and domains are clearly not well-established.

 
An 1895 group photograph of the eleven-year-old Krishnaraja Wadiyar IV, ruler of the princely state of Mysore in South India, with his brothers and sisters. In 1799, his grandfather, then aged five, had been granted dominion of Mysore by the British and forced into a subsidiary alliance. The British later directly governed the state between 1831 and 1881.
 
The Govindgarh Palace of the Maharaja of Rewa. The palace which was built as a hunting lodge later became famous for the first white tigers that were found in the adjacent jungle and raised in the palace zoo.
 
The Nawab of Junagarh Bahadur Khan III (seated centre in an ornate chair) shown in an 1885 photograph with state officials and family.
 
Photograph (1900) of the Maharani of Sikkim. Sikkim was under the suzerainty of the Provincial government of Bengal; its ruler received a 15-gun salute.

In addition to their titles all princely rulers were eligible to be appointed to certain British orders of chivalry associated with India, the Most Exalted Order of the Star of India and the Most Eminent Order of the Indian Empire. Women could be appointed as "Knights" (instead of Dames) of these orders. Rulers entitled to 21-gun and 19-gun salutes were normally appointed to the highest rank, Knight Grand Commander of the Order of the Star of India.

Many Indian princes served in the British Army, the Indian Army, or in local guard or police forces, often rising to high ranks; some even served while on the throne. Many of these were appointed as an Aide de camp, either to the ruling prince of their own house (in the case of relatives of such rulers) or indeed to the British monarchs. Many saw active service, both on the subcontinent and on other fronts, during both World Wars.

Apart from those members of the princely houses who entered military service and who distinguished themselves, a good number of princes received honorary ranks as officers in the British and Indian Armed Forces. Those ranks were conferred based on several factors, including their heritage, lineage, gun-salute (or lack of one) as well as personal character or martial traditions. After the First and Second World Wars, the princely rulers of several of the major states, including Gwalior, Patiala, Nabha, Faridkort, Bikaner, Jaipur, Jodhpur, Jammu and Kashmir and Hyderabad, were given honorary general officer ranks as a result of their states' contributions to the war effort.

  • Lieutenant/Captain/Flight Lieutenant or Lieutenant-Commander/Major/Squadron Leader (for junior members of princely houses or for minor princes)
  • Commander/Lieutenant-Colonel/Wing Commander or Captain/Colonel/Group Captain (granted to princes of salute states, often to those entitled to 15-guns or more)
  • Commodore/Brigadier/Air Commodore (conferred upon princes of salute states entitled to gun salutes of 15-guns or more)
  • Major-General/Air Vice-Marshal (conferred upon princes of salute states entitled to 15-guns or more; conferred upon rulers of the major princely states, including Baroda, Kapurthala, Travancore, Bhopal and Mysore)
  • Lieutenant-General (conferred upon the rulers of the largest and most prominent princely houses after the First and Second World Wars for their states' contributions to the war effort.)
  • General (very rarely awarded; the Maharajas of Gwalior and Jammu & Kashmir were created honorary Generals in the British Army in 1877, the Maharaja of Bikaner was made one in 1937, and the Nizam of Hyderabad in 1941)[citation needed]

It was also not unusual for members of princely houses to be appointed to various colonial offices, often far from their native state, or to enter the diplomatic corps.

Salute states

 
HH Maharaja Sir Jayaji Rao Scindia of Gwalior State, General Sir Henry Daly (Founder of The Daly College), with British officers and Maratha nobility (Sardars, Jagirdars & Mankaris) in Indore, Holkar State, c. 1879.

The gun salute system was used to set unambiguously the precedence of the major rulers in the area in which the British East India Company was active, or generally of the states and their dynasties. As heads of a state, certain princely rulers were entitled to be saluted by the firing of an odd number of guns between three and 21, with a greater number of guns indicating greater prestige. Generally, the number of guns remained the same for all successive rulers of a particular state, but individual princes were sometimes granted additional guns on a personal basis. Furthermore, rulers were sometimes granted additional gun salutes within their own territories only, constituting a semi-promotion. The states of all these rulers (about 120) were known as salute states.

After Indian Independence, the Maharana of Udaipur displaced the Nizam of Hyderabad as the most senior prince in India, because Hyderabad State had not acceded to the new Dominion of India, and the style Highness was extended to all rulers entitled to 9-gun salutes. When the princely states had been integrated into the Indian Union their rulers were promised continued privileges and an income (known as the Privy Purse) for their upkeep. Subsequently, when the Indian government abolished the Privy Purse in 1971, the whole princely order ceased to be recognised under Indian law, although many families continue to retain their social prestige informally; some descendants of the rulers are still prominent in regional or national politics, diplomacy, business and high society.

At the time of Indian independence, only five rulers – the Nizam of Hyderabad, the Maharaja of Mysore, the Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir state, the Maharaja Gaekwad of Baroda and the Maharaja Scindia of Gwalior – were entitled to a 21-gun salute. Six more[citation needed] – the Nawab of Bhopal, the Maharaja Holkar of Indore, the Maharaja of Bharatpur[citation needed], the Maharana of Udaipur, the Maharaja of Kolhapur, the Maharaja of Patiala[citation needed] and the Maharaja of Travancore – were entitled to 19-gun salutes. The most senior princely ruler was the Nizam of Hyderabad, who was entitled to the unique style Exalted Highness and 21-gun salute.[26] Other princely rulers entitled to salutes of 11 guns (soon 9 guns too) or more were entitled to the style Highness. No special style was used by rulers entitled to lesser gun salutes.

As paramount ruler, and successor to the Mughals, the British King-Emperor of India, for whom the style of Majesty was reserved, was entitled to an 'imperial' 101-gun salute—in the European tradition also the number of guns fired to announce the birth of an heir (male) to the throne.

Non-salute states

There was no strict correlation between the levels of the titles and the classes of gun salutes, the real measure of precedence, but merely a growing percentage of higher titles in classes with more guns. As a rule the majority of gun-salute princes had at least nine, with numbers below that usually the prerogative of Arab Sheikhs of the Aden protectorate, also under British protection.

There were many so-called non-salute states of lower prestige. Since the total of salute states was 117 and there were more than 500 princely states, most rulers were not entitled to any gun salute. Not all of these were minor rulers – Surguja State, for example, was both larger and more populous than Karauli State, but the Maharaja of Karauli was entitled to a 17-gun salute and the Maharaja of Surguja was not entitled to any gun salute at all.

A number of princes, in the broadest sense of the term, were not even acknowledged as such.[example needed] On the other hand, the dynasties of certain defunct states were allowed to keep their princely status – they were known as political pensioners, such as the Nawab of Oudh. There were also certain estates of British India which were rendered as political saranjams, having equal princely status.[27] Though none of these princes were awarded gun salutes, princely titles in this category were recognised as a form of vassals of salute states, and were not even in direct relation with the paramount power.

Largest princely states by area

Eleven largest princely states in terms of area
Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Present State Title, ethnicity, and religion of ruler Gun-salute for ruler
  Jammu and Kashmir 84,471 4,021,616 including Gilgit, Baltistan (Skardu), Ladakh, and Punch (mostly Muslim, with sizeable Hindu and Buddhist populations) Jammu and Kashmir Maharaja, Dogra, Hindu 21
  Hyderabad State 82,698 16,338,534 (mostly Hindu with a sizeable Muslim minority) Telangana Nizam, Turkic, Sunni Muslim 21
  Jodhpur State 36,071 2,125,000 (mostly Hindu with a sizeable Muslim minority) Rajasthan Maharaja, Rathore, Hindu 17
  Kingdom of Mysore 29,458 7,328,896 (Chiefly Hindu, with pockets of Muslim populations) Karnataka Wodeyar dynasty; Maharaja; Kannadiga; Hindu Kshattriya (Urs/Arasu in Kannada) 21
  Gwalior State 26,397 4,006,159 (chiefly Hindu, with a sizeable Muslim population) Madhya Pradesh Maharaja, Maratha, Hindu 21
  Bikaner State 23,317 936,218 (chiefly Hindu, with a low Muslim minority) Rajasthan Maharaja, Rathore, Hindu 17
  Bahawalpur State 17,726 1,341,209 (Chiefly Muslim, with a sizeable Hindu, Sikh population) Punjab (Pakistan) Nawab Amir, Abbasid, Muslim 17
  Jaisalmer State 16,100 76,255 (Chiefly Hindu with a sizeable Muslim minority) Rajasthan Maharaja, Bhati, Hindu 15
  Jaipur State 15,601 2,631,775 (Chiefly Hindu, with a sizeable Muslim minority) Rajasthan Maharaja, Kachhwaha, Hindu 17
  Bastar State 13,062 306,501 (Chiefly Hindu, with a low Muslim minority) Chhattisgarh Maharaja, Kakatiya - Bhanj, HIndu -

Doctrine of lapse

A controversial aspect of East India Company rule was the doctrine of lapse, a policy under which lands whose feudal ruler died (or otherwise became unfit to rule) without a male biological heir (as opposed to an adopted son) would become directly controlled by the company and an adopted son would not become the ruler of the princely state. This policy went counter to Indian tradition where, unlike Europe, it was far more the accepted norm for a ruler to appoint his own heir.

The doctrine of lapse was pursued most vigorously by the Governor-General Sir James Ramsay, 10th Earl (later 1st Marquess) of Dalhousie. Dalhousie annexed seven states, including Awadh (Oudh), whose Nawabs he had accused of misrule, and the Maratha states of Nagpur, Jhansi, Satara, Sambalpur, and Thanjavur. Resentment over the annexation of these states turned to indignation when the heirlooms of the Maharajas of Nagpur were auctioned off in Calcutta. Dalhousie's actions contributed to the rising discontent amongst the upper castes which played a large part in the outbreak of the Indian mutiny of 1857. The last Mughal Badshah (emperor), whom many of the mutineers saw as a figurehead to rally around, was deposed following its suppression.

In response to the unpopularity of the doctrine, it was discontinued with the end of Company rule and the British Parliament's assumption of direct power over India.

Imperial governance

 
Photograph (1894) of the 19-year-old Shahaji II Bhonsle Maharajah of Kolhapur visiting the British resident and his staff at the Residency

By treaty, the British controlled the external affairs of the princely states absolutely. As the states were not British possessions, they retained control over their own internal affairs, subject to a degree of British influence which in many states was substantial.

By the beginning of the 20th century, relations between the British and the four largest states – Hyderabad, Mysore, Jammu and Kashmir, and Baroda – were directly under the control of the governor-general of India, in the person of a British resident. Two agencies, for Rajputana and Central India, oversaw twenty and 148 princely states respectively. The remaining princely states had their own British political officers, or Agents, who answered to the administrators of India's provinces. The agents of five princely states were then under the authority of Madras, 354 under Bombay, 26 of Bengal, two under Assam, 34 under Punjab, fifteen under the Central Provinces and Berar and two under the United Provinces.

 
Chamber of Princes meeting in March 1941

The Chamber of Princes (Narender Mandal or Narendra Mandal) was an institution established in 1920 by a royal proclamation of the King-Emperor to provide a forum in which the rulers could voice their needs and aspirations to the government. It survived until the end of the British Raj in 1947.[28]

By the early 1930s, most of the princely states whose agencies were under the authority of India's provinces were organised into new Agencies, answerable directly to the governor-general, on the model of the Central India and Rajputana agencies: the Eastern States Agency, Punjab States Agency, Baluchistan Agency, Deccan States Agency, Madras States Agency and the Northwest Frontier States Agency. The Baroda Residency was combined with the princely states of northern Bombay Presidency into the Baroda, Western India and Gujarat States Agency. Gwalior was separated from the Central India Agency and given its own Resident, and the states of Rampur and Benares, formerly with Agents under the authority of the United Provinces, were placed under the Gwalior Residency in 1936. The princely states of Sandur and Banganapalle in Mysore Presidency were transferred to the agency of the Mysore Resident in 1939.

Principal princely states in 1947

The native states in 1947 included five large states that were in "direct political relations" with the Government of India. For the complete list of princely states in 1947, see List of princely states of India.

In direct relations with the central government

Five large princely states in direct political relations with the Central Government in India[29][30][31][32]
Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state (in hundred thousand Rupees) Title, ethnicity, and religion of ruler Gun-salute for ruler Designation of local political officer
  Baroda State 13,866 3,343,477 (chiefly Hindu, with a sizeable Muslim population) 323.26 Maharaja, Maratha, Hindu 21 Resident at Baroda
  Hyderabad State 82,698 16,338,534 (mostly Hindu with a sizeable Muslim minority) 1582.43 Nizam, Turkic, Sunni Muslim 21 Resident in Hyderabad
  Jammu and Kashmir 84,471 4,021,616 including Gilgit, Baltistan (Skardu), Ladakh, and Punch (mostly Muslim, with sizeable Hindu and Buddhist populations) 463.95 Maharaja, Dogra, Hindu 21 Resident in Jammu & Kashmir
  Kingdom of Mysore 29,458 7,328,896 (Chiefly Hindu, with sizeable Muslim populations) 1001.38 Wodeyar (means Owner in Kannada) and Maharaja, Kannadiga, Hindu 21 Resident in Mysore
  Gwalior State 26,397 4,006,159 (chiefly Hindu, with a sizeable Muslim population) 356.75 Maharaja, Maratha, Hindu 21 Resident at Gwalior
Total 236,890 35,038,682 3727.77

Central India Agency, Gwalior Residency, Baluchistan Agency, Rajputana Agency, Eastern States Agency

88 princely states forming the Central India Agency[33][34]
Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state (in hundred thousand Rupees) Title, ethnicity, and religion of ruler Gun-salute for ruler Designation of local political officer
Indore State 9,341 1,513,966 (chiefly Hindu, with a sizeable Muslim population) 304.9 Maharaja, Maratha, Hindu 19 (plus 2 local) Resident at Indore
Bhopal 6,924 785,322 (chiefly Hindu, with a sizeable Muslim population) 119.82 Nawab(m)/Begum(f), Afghan, Muslim 19 (plus 2 local) Political Agent in Bhopal
Rewah 13,000 1,820,445 (chiefly Hindu, with a sizeable Muslim population) 65 Maharaja, Baghel Rajput, Hindu 17 Second largest state in Baghelkhand
85 smaller and minor states (1941) 22,995 (1901) 2.74 million (Chiefly Hindu, 1901) 129 (1901)
Total 77,395 (1901) 8.51 million (1901) 421 (1901)
42 princely states forming the Eastern States Agency[33][35]
Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state (in hundred thousand Rupees) Title, ethnicity, and religion of ruler Gun-salute for ruler Designation of local political officer
Cooch Behar 1,318 639,898 (chiefly Hindu and Muslim) 91 Maharaja, Koch (Kshattriya), Brahmo 13 Resident for the Eastern States
Tripura State 4,116 513,010 (chiefly Vaishnavite, with a sizeable Sanamahi minority) 54 Maharaja, Tripuri, Vaishnavite (Kshattriya) 13 Resident for the Eastern States
Mayurbhanj State 4,243 990,977 (chiefly Hindu) 49 Maharaja, Kshattriya, Hindu 9 Resident for the Eastern States
39 smaller and minor states (1941) 56,253 6,641,991 241.31
Total 65,930 8,785,876 435.31

Gwalior Residency (two states)

Two states under the suzerainty of the Resident at Gwalior, Gwalior having direct relations with the central government.[29][36]
Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state (in hundred thousand Rupees) Title, ethnicity, and religion of ruler Gun-salute for ruler Designation of local political officer
Rampur 893 464,919 (chiefly Hindu and Muslim, in 1931) 51 Nawab, Pathan, Muslim 15 Political Agent at Rampur
Benares State 875 391,165 (chiefly Hindu, 1931) 19 Maharaja, Bhumihar, Hindu 13 (plus 2 local) Political Agent at Benares
Total 1,768 856,084 (1941, approx.) 70
23 princely states forming the Rajputana Agency, with the Resident for Rajputana at Abu[37][38]
Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state (in hundred thousand Rupees) Title, ethnicity, and religion of ruler Gun-salute for ruler Designation of local political officer
Udaipur (Mewar) 13,170 1,926,698 (chiefly Hindu and Bhil) 107 Maharana, Sisodia Rajput, Hindu 19 (plus 2 personal) Political Agent for the Mewar and Southern Rajputana States
Jaipur 15,610 3,040,876 (chiefly Hindu) 188.6 Maharaja, Kachwaha Rajput, Hindu 17 (plus 2 personal) Political Agent at Jaipur
Jodhpur (Marwar) 36,120 2,555,904 (chiefly Hindu) 208.65 Maharaja, Rathor Rajput, Hindu 17 Political Agent for the Western States of Rajputana
Bikaner 23,181 1,292,938 (chiefly Hindu) 185.5 Maharaja, Rathor Rajput, Hindu 17 Political agent for the Western States of Rajputana
17 salute states, 1 chiefship, 1 zamindari 42,374 3.64 million (chiefly Hindu, 1901) 155 (1901)
Total 128,918 (1901) 9.84 million (1901) 320 (1901)
Three princely states forming the Baluchistan Agency[39][40]
Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state (in hundred thousand Rupees) Title, ethnicity, and religion of ruler Gun-salute for ruler Designation of local political officer
Kalat 73,278 250,211 (chiefly Sunni Muslim) 21.3 Khan or Wali, Baloch, Sunni Muslim 19 Political Agent in Kalat
Las Bela 7,132 68,972 (chiefly Sunni Muslim) 6.1 Jam, Baloch, Sunni Muslim Political Agent in Kalat
Kharan 14,210 33,763 (chiefly Sunni Muslim) 2 Nawab, Baloch, Sunni Muslim Political Agent in Kalat
Total 94,620 352,946 29.4
Sikkim, as a protectorate of the British Government[41]
Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state (in hundred thousand Rupees) Title, ethnicity, and religion of ruler Gun-salute for ruler Designation of local political officer
Sikkim 2,818 121,520 (chiefly Buddhist and Hindu) 5 Chogyal, Tibetan, Buddhist 15 Political Officer, Sikkim

Other states under provincial governments

Madras (5 States)

5 states under the suzerainty of the Provincial Government of Madras[39]
Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1901 Approximate revenue of the state (in hundred thousand) Rupees Title, ethnicity, and religion of ruler Gun-salute for ruler Designation of local political officer
Travancore 7,091 2,952,157 (chiefly Hindu and Christian) 100 Maharaja, Kshatriya-Samanthan, Hindu 21 (including two guns personal to the then ruler) Resident in Travancore and Cochin
Cochin 1,362 812,025 (chiefly Hindu and Christian) 27 Raja, Samanta-Kshatriya, Hindu 17 Resident in Travancore and Cochin
Pudukkottai 1,100 380,440 (chiefly Hindu) 11 Raja, Kallar, Hindu 11 Collector of Trichinopoly (ex officio Political Agent)
2 minor states (Banganapalle and Sandur) 416 43,464 3
Total 9,969 4,188,086 141

Bombay (354 States)

354 states under the suzerainty of the Provincial Government of Bombay[42]
Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1901 Approximate revenue of the state (in hundred thousand Rupees) Title, ethnicity, and religion of ruler Gun-salute for ruler Designation of local political officer
Kolhapur 2,855 910,011 (chiefly Hindus) 48 Maharaja,"Chhtrapati "Maratha, Hindu 19 Political Agent for Kolhapur
Cutch 7,616 488,022 (chiefly Hindu) 20 Maharao, Jadeja Rajput, Hindu 17 Political Agent in Cutch
Junagarh 3,284 395,428 (chiefly Hindu) 27 Nawab, Pathan, Muslim 11 Agent to the Governor in Kathiawar
Navanagar 3,791 336,779 (chiefly Hindu) 31 Jam Sahib, Jadeja Rajput, Hindu 11 Agent to the Governor in Kathiawar
349 other states 42,165 4,579,095 281
Total 65,761 6,908,648 420

Central Provinces (15 States)

15 states under the suzerainty of the Provincial Government of the Central Provinces[43]
Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1901 Approximate revenue of the state (in hundred thousand Rupees) Title, ethnicity, and religion of ruler Gun-salute for ruler Designation of local political officer
Kalahandi 3,745 284,465 (chiefly Hindu) 4 Raja, Kshatriya, Hindu 9 Political Agent for the Chhattisgarh Feudatories
Bastar 13,062 306,501 (chiefly Animist) 3 Raja, Kshatriya, Hindu Political Agent for the Chhattisgarh Feudatories
13 other states 12,628 1,339,353 (chiefly Hindu) 16 11
Total 29,435 1,996,383 21

Punjab (45 States)

45 states under the suzerainty of the Provincial Government of the Punjab[44][45]
Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state (in hundred thousand Rupees) Title, ethnicity, and religion of ruler Gun-salute for ruler Designation of local political officer
Bahawalpur 16,434 1,341,209 (chiefly Muslim) 335 Nawab, Daudputra, Muslim 17 Political Agent for Phulkian States and Bahawalpur
Patiala 5,942 1,936,259 (chiefly Sikh) 302.6 Maharaja, Sikh 17 (and 2 personal) Political Agent for Phulkian States and Bahawalpur
Nabha 947 340,044 (chiefly Sikh) 38.7 Maharaja, Sikh 13 (and 2 local) Political Agent for Phulkian States and Bahawalpur
Jind 1,299 361,812 (chiefly and Sikh) 37.4 Maharaja, Sikh 13 (and 2 personal) Political Agent for Phulkian States and Bahawalpur
Kapurthala 645 378,380 (chiefly Sikh) 40.5 Maharaja, Ahuluwalia, Sikh 13 (and 2 personal) Commissioner of the Jullundur Division (ex officio Political Agent)
Faridkot 638 199,283 (Sikh) 22.7 Raja, Sikh 11 Commissioner of the Jullundur Division (ex officio Political Agent)
Tehri (Garhwal) 4,500 397,369 (chiefly Hindu) 26.9 Maharaja, Rajput Hindu 11 Commissioner of Kumaun (ex officio Political Agent)
Khairpur 6,050 305,387 (chiefly Muslim) 15 (plus 2 local) Mir, Talpur Baloch, Muslim 37.8 Political Agent for Khairpur
25 other states 12,661 (in 1901) 1,087,614 (in 1901) 30 (in 1901)
Total 36,532 (in 1901) 4,424,398 (in 1901) 155 (in 1901)

Assam (26 states)

26 states under the suzerainty of the Provincial Government of Assam[46][47]
Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state (in hundred thousand Rupees) Title, ethnicity, and religion of ruler Gun-salute for ruler Designation of local political officer
Manipur 8,638 512,069 (chiefly Hindu and Animist) 19 Raja, Kshatriya, Hindu 11 Political Agent in Manipur
25 Khasi States 3,778 213,586 (Khasi and Christian) ~1 (1941, approx.) Deputy Commissioner, Khasi and Jaintia Hills
Total 12,416 725,655 20 (1941; approx.)

Burma

Burma (52 states)
52 states in Burma: all except Kantarawadi, one of the Karenni States, were included in British India until 1937[48]
Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1901 Approximate revenue of the state (in hundred thousand Rupees) Title, ethnicity, and religion of ruler Gun-salute for ruler Designation of local political officer
Hsipaw (Thibaw) 5,086 105,000 (Buddhist) 3 Sawbwa, Shan, Buddhist 9 Superintendent, Northern Shan States
Kengtung 12,000 190,000 (Buddhist) 1 Sawbwa, Shan, Buddhist 9 Superintendent Southern Shan States
Yawnghwe 865 95,339 (Buddhist) 2.13 Sawbwa, Shan, Buddhist 9 Superintendent Southern Shan States
Mongnai 2,717 44,000 (Buddhist) 0.5 Sawbwa, Shan, Buddhist Superintendent Southern Shan States
5 Karenni States 3,130 45,795 (Buddhist and Animist) 0.035 Sawbwa, Karenni, Buddhist Superintendent Southern Shan States
44 other states 42,198 792,152 (Buddhist and Animist) 8.5
Total 67,011 1,177,987 13.5

State military forces

The armies of the Native States were bound by many restrictions that were imposed by subsidiary alliances. They existed mainly for ceremonial use and for internal policing, although certain units designated as Imperial Service Troops, were available for service alongside the regular Indian Army upon request by the British government.[49]

According to the Imperial Gazetteer of India vol. IV 1907, p. 85,

Since a chief can neither attack his neighbour nor fall out with a foreign nation, it follows that he needs no military establishment which is not required either for police purposes or personal display, or for cooperation with the Imperial Government. The treaty made with Gwalior in 1844, and the instrument of transfer given to Mysore in 1881, alike base the restriction of the forces of the State upon the broad ground of protection. The former explained in detail that unnecessary armies were embarrassing to the State itself and the cause of disquietude to others: a few months later a striking proof of this was afforded by the army of the Sikh kingdom of Lahore. The British Government has undertaken to protect the dominions of the Native princes from invasion and even from rebellion within: its army is organised for the defence not merely of British India, but of all the possessions under the suzerainty of the King-Emperor.[50]

In addition, other restrictions were imposed:

The treaties with most of the larger States are clear on this point. Posts in the interior must not be fortified, factories for the production of guns and ammunition must not be constructed, nor may the subject of other States be enlisted in the local forces. ... They must allow the forces that defend them to obtain local supplies, to occupy cantonments or positions, and to arrest deserters; and in addition to these services they must recognise the Imperial control of the railways, telegraphs, and postal communications as essential not only to the common welfare but to the common defence.[51]

The Imperial Service Troops were routinely inspected by British army officers and had the same equipment as soldiers in the British Indian Army.[52] Although their numbers were relatively small, the Imperial Service Troops were employed in China and British Somaliland in the first decade of the 20th century, and later saw action in the First World War and Second World War .[52]

Political integration of princely states in 1947 and after

India

At the time of Indian independence on 15 August 1947, India was divided into two sets of territories, the first being the territories of "British India", which were under the direct control of the India Office in London and the governor-general of India, and the second being the "princely states", the territories over which the Crown had suzerainty, but which were under the control of their hereditary rulers. In addition, there were several colonial enclaves controlled by France and Portugal. The integration of these territories into Dominion of India, that had been created by the Indian Independence Act 1947 by the British Parliament, was a declared objective of the Indian National Congress, which the Government of India pursued over the years 1947 to 1949. Through a combination of tactics, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel and V. P. Menon in the months immediately preceding and following the independence convinced the rulers of almost all of the hundreds of princely states to accede to India. In a speech in January 1948, Vallabhbhai Patel said:

As you are all aware, on the lapse of Paramountcy every Indian State became a separate independent entity and our first task of consolidating about 550 States was on the basis of accession to the Indian Dominion on three subjects. Barring Hyderabad and Junagadh all the states which are contiguous to India acceded to Indian Dominion. Subsequently, Kashmir also came in... Some Rulers who were quick to read the writing on the wall, gave responsible government to their people; Cochin being the most illustrious example. In Travancore, there was a short struggle, but there, too, the Ruler soon recognised the aspiration of his people and agreed to introduce a constitution in which all powers would be transferred to the people and he would function as a constitutional Ruler.[53]

Although this process successfully integrated the vast majority of princely states into India, it was not as successful in relation to a few states, notably the former princely state of Kashmir, whose Maharaja delayed signing the instrument of accession into India until his territories were under the threat of invasion by Pakistan, and the state of Hyderabad, whose ruler decided to remain independent and was subsequently defeated by the Operation Polo invasion.

Having secured their accession, Sardar Patel and V. P. Menon then proceeded, in a step-by-step process, to secure and extend the central government's authority over these states and to transform their administrations until, by 1956, there was little difference between the territories that had formerly been part of British India and those that had been princely states. Simultaneously, the Government of India, through a combination of diplomatic and economic pressure, acquired control over most of the remaining European colonial exclaves on the subcontinent. Fed up with the protracted and stubborn resistance of the Portuguese government; in 1961 the Indian Army invaded and annexed Portuguese India.[54] These territories, like the princely states, were also integrated into the Republic of India.

As the final step, in 1971, the 26th amendment[55] to the Constitution of India withdrew recognition of the princes as rulers, took away their remaining privileges, and abolished the remuneration granted to them by privy purses. In 2012, the High Court of Kerala in a judgement on Mujeeba Rahman vs the State Of Kerala stated that, 'though by the 26th amendment of the Constitution, Article 363 was repealed whereby the rights and privileges of the rulers of Indian States were taken away, still the name and title of the rulers remained as such and unaffected in so far as names and titles were not contemplated as rights or privileges under the repealed Articles 291 and 362 of the Constitution.' So the titles were not abolished by the government; only their political powers and right to receive Privy Purse were cancelled.[56][57]

Pakistan

During the period of the British Raj, there were four princely states in Balochistan: Makran, Kharan, Las Bela and Kalat. The first three acceded to Pakistan.[58][59][60][61] However, the ruler of the fourth princely state, the Khan of Kalat Ahmad Yar Khan, declared Kalat's independence as this was one of the options given to all princely states.[62] The state remained independent until it was acceded on 27 March 1948. The signing of the Instrument of Accession by Ahmad Yar Khan, led his brother, Prince Abdul Karim, to revolt against his brother's decision in July 1948, causing an ongoing and still unresolved insurgency.[63]

Bahawalpur from the Punjab Agency joined Pakistan on 5 October 1947. The princely states of the North-West Frontier States Agencies. included the Dir Swat and Chitral Agency and the Deputy Commissioner of Hazara acting as the Political Agent for Amb and Phulra. These states joined Pakistan on independence from the British.[citation needed]

See also


References

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  2. ^ Ramusack 2004, p. 87 Quote: "The British system of indirect rule over Indian states ... provided a model for the efficient use of scarce monetary and personnel resources that could be adopted to imperial acquisitions in Malaya and Africa. (p. 87)"
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  8. ^ Datar, Arvind P. (18 November 2013). "Who betrayed Sardar Patel?". The Hindu.
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Bibliography

  • Bangash, Yaqoob Khan (2016). "A Princely Affair: The Accession and Integration of the Princely States of Pakistan, 1947–1955". Oxford University Press Pakistan. ISBN 9780199407361
  • Bhagavan, Manu. "Princely States and the Hindu Imaginary: Exploring the Cartography of Hindu Nationalism in Colonial India" Journal of Asian Studies, (Aug 2008) 67#3 pp 881–915 in JSTOR
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  • Ernst, W. and B. Pati, eds. India’s Princely States: People, Princes, and Colonialism (2007)
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  • Jeffrey, Robin. People, Princes and Paramount Power: Society and Politics in the Indian Princely States (1979) 396pp
  • Kooiman, Dick. Communalism and Indian Princely States: Travancore, Baroda & Hyderabad in the 1930s (2002), 249pp
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Gazetteers

  • Imperial Gazetteer of India vol. II (1908), The Indian Empire, Historical, Published under the authority of His Majesty's Secretary of State for India in Council, Oxford at the Clarendon Press. Pp. xxxv, 1 map, 573. online
  • Imperial Gazetteer of India vol. III (1907), The Indian Empire, Economic (Chapter X: Famine, pp. 475–502, Published under the authority of His Majesty's Secretary of State for India in Council, Oxford at the Clarendon Press. Pp. xxxvi, 1 map, 520. online
  • Imperial Gazetteer of India vol. IV (1907), The Indian Empire, Administrative, Published under the authority of His Majesty's Secretary of State for India in Council, Oxford at the Clarendon Press. Pp. xxx, 1 map, 552. online

External links

  • Sir Roper Lethbridge (1893). The Golden Book of India: A Genealogical and Biographical Dictionary of the Ruling Princes, Chiefs, Nobles, and Other Personages, Titled or Decorated, of the Indian Empire (Full text). Macmillan And Co., New York.
  • Exhaustive lists of rulers and heads of government, and some biographies.

princely, state, this, article, about, british, indian, usage, global, concept, principality, princely, state, also, called, native, state, indian, state, nominally, sovereign, entity, british, indian, empire, that, directly, governed, british, rather, indian,. This article is about the British Indian usage For the global concept see Principality A princely state also called native state or Indian state was a nominally sovereign 1 entity of the British Indian Empire that was not directly governed by the British but rather by an Indian ruler under a form of indirect rule 2 subject to a subsidiary alliance and the suzerainty or paramountcy of the British crown In July 1946 Jawaharlal Nehru pointedly observed that no princely state could prevail militarily against the army of independent India 3 In January 1947 Nehru said that independent India would not accept the divine right of kings 4 In May 1947 he declared that any princely state which refused to join the Constituent Assembly would be treated as an enemy state 5 There were officially 565 princely states when India and Pakistan became independent in 1947 but the great majority had contracted with the viceroy to provide public services and tax collection Only 21 had actual state governments and only four were large Hyderabad State Mysore State Jammu and Kashmir State and Baroda State They acceded to one of the two new independent nations between 1947 and 1949 All the princes were eventually pensioned off 6 At the time of the British withdrawal 565 princely states were officially recognised in the Indian subcontinent 7 apart from thousands of zamindari estates and jagirs In 1947 princely states covered 40 of the area of pre independence India and constituted 23 of its population 8 The most important states had their own British political residencies Hyderabad of the Nizams Mysore and Travancore in the South Jammu and Kashmir Sikkim in the Himalayas and Indore in Central India The most prominent among those roughly a quarter of the total had the status of a salute state one whose ruler was entitled to a set number of gun salutes on ceremonial occasions The princely states varied greatly in status size and wealth the premier 21 gun salute states of Hyderabad and Jammu and Kashmir were each over 200 000 km2 77 000 sq mi in size In 1941 Hyderabad had a population of over 16 million while Jammu and Kashmir had a population of slightly over 4 million At the other end of the scale the non salute principality of Lawa covered an area of 49 km2 19 sq mi with a population of just below 3 000 Some two hundred of the lesser states even had an area of less than 25 km2 10 sq mi 9 10 The era of the princely states effectively ended with Indian independence in 1947 by 1950 almost all of the principalities had acceded to either India or Pakistan 11 The accession process was largely peaceful except in the cases of Jammu and Kashmir whose ruler decided to accede to India following an invasion by Pakistan based forces resulting in a long standing dispute between the two countries 12 Hyderabad State whose ruler opted for independence in 1947 followed a year later by the invasion and annexation of the state by India Junagarh and its vassal Bantva Manavadar whose rulers acceded to Pakistan but were annexed by India 13 and Kalat whose ruler declared independence in 1947 followed in 1948 by the state s accession to Pakistan 14 15 16 As per the terms of accession the erstwhile Indian princes received privy purses government allowances and initially retained their statuses privileges and autonomy in internal matters during a transitional period which lasted until 1956 During this time the former princely states were merged into unions each of which was headed by a former ruling prince with the title of Rajpramukh ruling chief equivalent to a state governor 17 In 1956 the position of Rajpramukh was abolished and the federations dissolved the former principalities becoming part of Indian states The states which acceded to Pakistan retained their status until the promulgation of a new constitution in 1956 when most became part of the province of West Pakistan a few of the former states retained their autonomy until 1969 when they were fully integrated into Pakistan The Indian government abolished the privy purses in 1971 followed by the government of Pakistan in 1972 Contents 1 History 2 British relationship with the princely states 3 Princely status and titles 4 Precedence and prestige 4 1 Salute states 4 2 Non salute states 4 3 Largest princely states by area 5 Doctrine of lapse 6 Imperial governance 7 Principal princely states in 1947 7 1 In direct relations with the central government 8 Burma 9 State military forces 10 Political integration of princely states in 1947 and after 10 1 India 10 2 Pakistan 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 13 1 Gazetteers 14 External linksHistory EditThough principalities and chiefdoms existed on the Indian subcontinent from at least the Iron Age the history of princely states on the Indian subcontinent dates to at least the fifth or sixth century C E during the rise of the middle kingdoms of India following the collapse of the Gupta Empire 18 19 Many of the future ruling clan groups notably the Rajputs began to emerge during this period by the 13th 14th centuries many of the Rajput clans had firmly established semi independent principalities in the north west along with several in the north east The widespread expansion of Islam during this time brought many principalities into tributary relations with Islamic sultanates notably with the Mughal Empire In the south however the Hindu Vijayanagara Empire remained dominant until the mid 17th century among its tributaries was the future Mysore Kingdom The Turco Mongol Mughal Empire brought a majority of the existing Indian kingdoms and principalities under its suzerainty by the 17th century beginning with its foundation in the early 16th century Despite the difference in religion the Mughal emperors also contracted a series of marriages with Rajput princesses and Rajput forces and generals became an important part of their military power The advent of Sikhism resulted in the creation of the Sikh Empire in the north by the early 18th century by which time the Mughal Empire was in full decline The Muslim nawabs had begun as appointed governors of territories conquered by the Mughals in theory a non hereditary title with obligations to pay a large share of their revenues to the emperor As the emperors became too weak to enforce their power the nawabs stopped paying and passed on their realms to their sons At the same time the Marathas carved out their own states to form the Maratha Empire Through the 18th century former Mughal governors formed their own independent states In the north west some of those such as Tonk allied themselves with various groups including the Marathas and the Durrani Empire itself formed in 1747 from a loose agglomeration of tribal chiefdoms that composed former Mughal territories In the south the principalities of Hyderabad and Arcot were fully established by the 1760s though they nominally remained vassals of the Mughal emperor The largest Muslim ruled state was Hyderabad State which was also the first to sign a treaty with the British in 1798 when it was caught between them and the Marathas The treaties of 1817 and 1818 concluding the decisive Third Anglo Maratha War left the remaining Maratha territories as princely states with treaties with the British and the Rajput states resumed their subordinate status now with the British British relationship with the princely states EditIndia under the British Raj the Indian Empire consisted of two types of territory British India and the native states or princely states In its Interpretation Act 1889 the British Parliament adopted the following definitions 4 The expression British India shall mean all territories and places within Her Majesty s dominions which are for the time being governed by Her Majesty through the Governor General of India or through any governor or other officer subordinate to the Governor General of India 5 The expression India shall mean British India together with any territories of any native prince or chief under the suzerainty of Her Majesty exercised through the Governor General of India or through any governor or other officer subordinate to the Governor General of India 20 In general the term British India had been used and is still used also to refer to the regions under the rule of the East India Company in India from 1774 to 1858 21 22 The British Crown s suzerainty over 175 princely states generally the largest and most important was exercised in the name of the British Crown by the central government of British India under the Viceroy the remaining approximately 400 states were influenced by Agents answerable to the provincial governments of British India under a governor lieutenant governor or chief commissioner 23 A clear distinction between dominion and suzerainty was supplied by the jurisdiction of the courts of law the law of British India rested upon the legislation enacted by the British Parliament and the legislative powers those laws vested in the various governments of British India both central and local in contrast the courts of the princely states existed under the authority of the respective rulers of those states 23 Princely status and titles Edit Sayajirao Gaekwad III the maharaja of Baroda State The Indian rulers bore various titles including Chhatrapati exclusively used by the three Bhonsle dynasty of the Marathas emperor Maharaja or Raja king Sultan Nawab Emir Raje Nizam Wadiyar used only by the Maharajas of Mysore meaning lord Agniraj Maharaj for the rulers of Bhaddaiyan Raj Chogyal Nawab governor Nayak Wali Inamdar 24 Saranjamdar 25 and many others Whatever the literal meaning and traditional prestige of the ruler s actual title the British government translated them all as prince to avoid the implication that the native rulers could be kings with status equal to that of the British monarch An old image of the British Residency in the city of Quilon Kerala More prestigious Hindu rulers mostly existing before the Mughal Empire or having split from such old states often used the title Raja Raje or a variant such as Rai Rana Rao Rawat or Rawal Also in this class were several Thakurs or Thai ores and a few particular titles such as Sardar Mankari or Mankari Maankari Deshmukh Sar Desai Istamuradar Saranjamdar Raja Inamdar etc The most prestigious Hindu rulers usually had the prefix maha great compare for example Grand Duke in their titles as in Maharaja Maharana Maharao etc This was used in many princely states including Mewar Travancore and Cochin The state of Travancore also had queens regent styled Maharani applied only to sister of king in Kerala There were also compound titles such as Maha rajadhiraj Raj i rajgan often relics from an elaborate system of hierarchical titles under the Mughal emperors For example the addition of the adjective Bahadur raised the status of the titleholder one level Furthermore most dynasties used a variety of additional titles such as Varma in South India This should not be confused with various titles and suffixes not specific to princes but used by entire sub castes This is almost analogous to Singh title in North India The Sikh princes concentrated at Punjab usually adopted Hindu type titles when attaining princely rank at a lower level Sardar was used Muslim rulers almost all used the title Nawab the Arabic honorific of naib deputy used of the Mughal governors who became de facto autonomous with the decline of the Mughal Empire with the prominent exceptions of the Nizam of Hyderabad amp Berar the Wali Khan of Kalat and the Wali of Swat Other less usual titles included Darbar Sahib Dewan Jam Mehtar unique to Chitral and Mir from Emir Precedence and prestige EditHowever the actual importance of a princely state cannot be read from the title of its ruler which was usually granted or at least recognised as a favour often in recognition for loyalty and services rendered to the Mughal Empire Although some titles were raised once or even repeatedly there was no automatic updating when a state gained or lost real power In fact princely titles were even awarded to holders of domains mainly jagirs and even taluqdars and zamindars which were not states at all Most of the zamindar who hold the princely titles were in fact erstwhile princely and royal states reduced to zamindari by the British EIC Various sources give significantly different numbers of states and domains of the various types Even in general the definition of titles and domains are clearly not well established An 1895 group photograph of the eleven year old Krishnaraja Wadiyar IV ruler of the princely state of Mysore in South India with his brothers and sisters In 1799 his grandfather then aged five had been granted dominion of Mysore by the British and forced into a subsidiary alliance The British later directly governed the state between 1831 and 1881 The Govindgarh Palace of the Maharaja of Rewa The palace which was built as a hunting lodge later became famous for the first white tigers that were found in the adjacent jungle and raised in the palace zoo The Nawab of Junagarh Bahadur Khan III seated centre in an ornate chair shown in an 1885 photograph with state officials and family Photograph 1900 of the Maharani of Sikkim Sikkim was under the suzerainty of the Provincial government of Bengal its ruler received a 15 gun salute In addition to their titles all princely rulers were eligible to be appointed to certain British orders of chivalry associated with India the Most Exalted Order of the Star of India and the Most Eminent Order of the Indian Empire Women could be appointed as Knights instead of Dames of these orders Rulers entitled to 21 gun and 19 gun salutes were normally appointed to the highest rank Knight Grand Commander of the Order of the Star of India Many Indian princes served in the British Army the Indian Army or in local guard or police forces often rising to high ranks some even served while on the throne Many of these were appointed as an Aide de camp either to the ruling prince of their own house in the case of relatives of such rulers or indeed to the British monarchs Many saw active service both on the subcontinent and on other fronts during both World Wars Apart from those members of the princely houses who entered military service and who distinguished themselves a good number of princes received honorary ranks as officers in the British and Indian Armed Forces Those ranks were conferred based on several factors including their heritage lineage gun salute or lack of one as well as personal character or martial traditions After the First and Second World Wars the princely rulers of several of the major states including Gwalior Patiala Nabha Faridkort Bikaner Jaipur Jodhpur Jammu and Kashmir and Hyderabad were given honorary general officer ranks as a result of their states contributions to the war effort Lieutenant Captain Flight Lieutenant or Lieutenant Commander Major Squadron Leader for junior members of princely houses or for minor princes Commander Lieutenant Colonel Wing Commander or Captain Colonel Group Captain granted to princes of salute states often to those entitled to 15 guns or more Commodore Brigadier Air Commodore conferred upon princes of salute states entitled to gun salutes of 15 guns or more Major General Air Vice Marshal conferred upon princes of salute states entitled to 15 guns or more conferred upon rulers of the major princely states including Baroda Kapurthala Travancore Bhopal and Mysore Lieutenant General conferred upon the rulers of the largest and most prominent princely houses after the First and Second World Wars for their states contributions to the war effort General very rarely awarded the Maharajas of Gwalior and Jammu amp Kashmir were created honorary Generals in the British Army in 1877 the Maharaja of Bikaner was made one in 1937 and the Nizam of Hyderabad in 1941 citation needed It was also not unusual for members of princely houses to be appointed to various colonial offices often far from their native state or to enter the diplomatic corps Salute states Edit Main article Salute state HH Maharaja Sir Jayaji Rao Scindia of Gwalior State General Sir Henry Daly Founder of The Daly College with British officers and Maratha nobility Sardars Jagirdars amp Mankaris in Indore Holkar State c 1879 The gun salute system was used to set unambiguously the precedence of the major rulers in the area in which the British East India Company was active or generally of the states and their dynasties As heads of a state certain princely rulers were entitled to be saluted by the firing of an odd number of guns between three and 21 with a greater number of guns indicating greater prestige Generally the number of guns remained the same for all successive rulers of a particular state but individual princes were sometimes granted additional guns on a personal basis Furthermore rulers were sometimes granted additional gun salutes within their own territories only constituting a semi promotion The states of all these rulers about 120 were known as salute states After Indian Independence the Maharana of Udaipur displaced the Nizam of Hyderabad as the most senior prince in India because Hyderabad State had not acceded to the new Dominion of India and the style Highness was extended to all rulers entitled to 9 gun salutes When the princely states had been integrated into the Indian Union their rulers were promised continued privileges and an income known as the Privy Purse for their upkeep Subsequently when the Indian government abolished the Privy Purse in 1971 the whole princely order ceased to be recognised under Indian law although many families continue to retain their social prestige informally some descendants of the rulers are still prominent in regional or national politics diplomacy business and high society At the time of Indian independence only five rulers the Nizam of Hyderabad the Maharaja of Mysore the Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir state the Maharaja Gaekwad of Baroda and the Maharaja Scindia of Gwalior were entitled to a 21 gun salute Six more citation needed the Nawab of Bhopal the Maharaja Holkar of Indore the Maharaja of Bharatpur citation needed the Maharana of Udaipur the Maharaja of Kolhapur the Maharaja of Patiala citation needed and the Maharaja of Travancore were entitled to 19 gun salutes The most senior princely ruler was the Nizam of Hyderabad who was entitled to the unique style Exalted Highness and 21 gun salute 26 Other princely rulers entitled to salutes of 11 guns soon 9 guns too or more were entitled to the style Highness No special style was used by rulers entitled to lesser gun salutes As paramount ruler and successor to the Mughals the British King Emperor of India for whom the style of Majesty was reserved was entitled to an imperial 101 gun salute in the European tradition also the number of guns fired to announce the birth of an heir male to the throne Non salute states Edit There was no strict correlation between the levels of the titles and the classes of gun salutes the real measure of precedence but merely a growing percentage of higher titles in classes with more guns As a rule the majority of gun salute princes had at least nine with numbers below that usually the prerogative of Arab Sheikhs of the Aden protectorate also under British protection There were many so called non salute states of lower prestige Since the total of salute states was 117 and there were more than 500 princely states most rulers were not entitled to any gun salute Not all of these were minor rulers Surguja State for example was both larger and more populous than Karauli State but the Maharaja of Karauli was entitled to a 17 gun salute and the Maharaja of Surguja was not entitled to any gun salute at all A number of princes in the broadest sense of the term were not even acknowledged as such example needed On the other hand the dynasties of certain defunct states were allowed to keep their princely status they were known as political pensioners such as the Nawab of Oudh There were also certain estates of British India which were rendered as political saranjams having equal princely status 27 Though none of these princes were awarded gun salutes princely titles in this category were recognised as a form of vassals of salute states and were not even in direct relation with the paramount power Largest princely states by area Edit Eleven largest princely states in terms of area Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Present State Title ethnicity and religion of ruler Gun salute for ruler Jammu and Kashmir 84 471 4 021 616 including Gilgit Baltistan Skardu Ladakh and Punch mostly Muslim with sizeable Hindu and Buddhist populations Jammu and Kashmir Maharaja Dogra Hindu 21 Hyderabad State 82 698 16 338 534 mostly Hindu with a sizeable Muslim minority Telangana Nizam Turkic Sunni Muslim 21 Jodhpur State 36 071 2 125 000 mostly Hindu with a sizeable Muslim minority Rajasthan Maharaja Rathore Hindu 17 Kingdom of Mysore 29 458 7 328 896 Chiefly Hindu with pockets of Muslim populations Karnataka Wodeyar dynasty Maharaja Kannadiga Hindu Kshattriya Urs Arasu in Kannada 21 Gwalior State 26 397 4 006 159 chiefly Hindu with a sizeable Muslim population Madhya Pradesh Maharaja Maratha Hindu 21 Bikaner State 23 317 936 218 chiefly Hindu with a low Muslim minority Rajasthan Maharaja Rathore Hindu 17 Bahawalpur State 17 726 1 341 209 Chiefly Muslim with a sizeable Hindu Sikh population Punjab Pakistan Nawab Amir Abbasid Muslim 17 Jaisalmer State 16 100 76 255 Chiefly Hindu with a sizeable Muslim minority Rajasthan Maharaja Bhati Hindu 15 Jaipur State 15 601 2 631 775 Chiefly Hindu with a sizeable Muslim minority Rajasthan Maharaja Kachhwaha Hindu 17 Bastar State 13 062 306 501 Chiefly Hindu with a low Muslim minority Chhattisgarh Maharaja Kakatiya Bhanj HIndu Doctrine of lapse EditMain article Doctrine of lapse A controversial aspect of East India Company rule was the doctrine of lapse a policy under which lands whose feudal ruler died or otherwise became unfit to rule without a male biological heir as opposed to an adopted son would become directly controlled by the company and an adopted son would not become the ruler of the princely state This policy went counter to Indian tradition where unlike Europe it was far more the accepted norm for a ruler to appoint his own heir The doctrine of lapse was pursued most vigorously by the Governor General Sir James Ramsay 10th Earl later 1st Marquess of Dalhousie Dalhousie annexed seven states including Awadh Oudh whose Nawabs he had accused of misrule and the Maratha states of Nagpur Jhansi Satara Sambalpur and Thanjavur Resentment over the annexation of these states turned to indignation when the heirlooms of the Maharajas of Nagpur were auctioned off in Calcutta Dalhousie s actions contributed to the rising discontent amongst the upper castes which played a large part in the outbreak of the Indian mutiny of 1857 The last Mughal Badshah emperor whom many of the mutineers saw as a figurehead to rally around was deposed following its suppression In response to the unpopularity of the doctrine it was discontinued with the end of Company rule and the British Parliament s assumption of direct power over India Imperial governance EditMain articles Agencies of British India and Residencies of British India Photograph 1894 of the 19 year old Shahaji II Bhonsle Maharajah of Kolhapur visiting the British resident and his staff at the Residency By treaty the British controlled the external affairs of the princely states absolutely As the states were not British possessions they retained control over their own internal affairs subject to a degree of British influence which in many states was substantial By the beginning of the 20th century relations between the British and the four largest states Hyderabad Mysore Jammu and Kashmir and Baroda were directly under the control of the governor general of India in the person of a British resident Two agencies for Rajputana and Central India oversaw twenty and 148 princely states respectively The remaining princely states had their own British political officers or Agents who answered to the administrators of India s provinces The agents of five princely states were then under the authority of Madras 354 under Bombay 26 of Bengal two under Assam 34 under Punjab fifteen under the Central Provinces and Berar and two under the United Provinces Chamber of Princes meeting in March 1941 The Chamber of Princes Narender Mandal or Narendra Mandal was an institution established in 1920 by a royal proclamation of the King Emperor to provide a forum in which the rulers could voice their needs and aspirations to the government It survived until the end of the British Raj in 1947 28 By the early 1930s most of the princely states whose agencies were under the authority of India s provinces were organised into new Agencies answerable directly to the governor general on the model of the Central India and Rajputana agencies the Eastern States Agency Punjab States Agency Baluchistan Agency Deccan States Agency Madras States Agency and the Northwest Frontier States Agency The Baroda Residency was combined with the princely states of northern Bombay Presidency into the Baroda Western India and Gujarat States Agency Gwalior was separated from the Central India Agency and given its own Resident and the states of Rampur and Benares formerly with Agents under the authority of the United Provinces were placed under the Gwalior Residency in 1936 The princely states of Sandur and Banganapalle in Mysore Presidency were transferred to the agency of the Mysore Resident in 1939 Principal princely states in 1947 EditThe native states in 1947 included five large states that were in direct political relations with the Government of India For the complete list of princely states in 1947 see List of princely states of India In direct relations with the central government Edit Five large princely states in direct political relations with the Central Government in India 29 30 31 32 Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state in hundred thousand Rupees Title ethnicity and religion of ruler Gun salute for ruler Designation of local political officer Baroda State 13 866 3 343 477 chiefly Hindu with a sizeable Muslim population 323 26 Maharaja Maratha Hindu 21 Resident at Baroda Hyderabad State 82 698 16 338 534 mostly Hindu with a sizeable Muslim minority 1582 43 Nizam Turkic Sunni Muslim 21 Resident in Hyderabad Jammu and Kashmir 84 471 4 021 616 including Gilgit Baltistan Skardu Ladakh and Punch mostly Muslim with sizeable Hindu and Buddhist populations 463 95 Maharaja Dogra Hindu 21 Resident in Jammu amp Kashmir Kingdom of Mysore 29 458 7 328 896 Chiefly Hindu with sizeable Muslim populations 1001 38 Wodeyar means Owner in Kannada and Maharaja Kannadiga Hindu 21 Resident in Mysore Gwalior State 26 397 4 006 159 chiefly Hindu with a sizeable Muslim population 356 75 Maharaja Maratha Hindu 21 Resident at GwaliorTotal 236 890 35 038 682 3727 77Central India Agency Gwalior Residency Baluchistan Agency Rajputana Agency Eastern States Agency 88 princely states forming the Central India Agency 33 34 Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state in hundred thousand Rupees Title ethnicity and religion of ruler Gun salute for ruler Designation of local political officerIndore State 9 341 1 513 966 chiefly Hindu with a sizeable Muslim population 304 9 Maharaja Maratha Hindu 19 plus 2 local Resident at IndoreBhopal 6 924 785 322 chiefly Hindu with a sizeable Muslim population 119 82 Nawab m Begum f Afghan Muslim 19 plus 2 local Political Agent in BhopalRewah 13 000 1 820 445 chiefly Hindu with a sizeable Muslim population 65 Maharaja Baghel Rajput Hindu 17 Second largest state in Baghelkhand85 smaller and minor states 1941 22 995 1901 2 74 million Chiefly Hindu 1901 129 1901 Total 77 395 1901 8 51 million 1901 421 1901 42 princely states forming the Eastern States Agency 33 35 Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state in hundred thousand Rupees Title ethnicity and religion of ruler Gun salute for ruler Designation of local political officerCooch Behar 1 318 639 898 chiefly Hindu and Muslim 91 Maharaja Koch Kshattriya Brahmo 13 Resident for the Eastern StatesTripura State 4 116 513 010 chiefly Vaishnavite with a sizeable Sanamahi minority 54 Maharaja Tripuri Vaishnavite Kshattriya 13 Resident for the Eastern StatesMayurbhanj State 4 243 990 977 chiefly Hindu 49 Maharaja Kshattriya Hindu 9 Resident for the Eastern States39 smaller and minor states 1941 56 253 6 641 991 241 31Total 65 930 8 785 876 435 31Gwalior Residency two states Two states under the suzerainty of the Resident at Gwalior Gwalior having direct relations with the central government 29 36 Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state in hundred thousand Rupees Title ethnicity and religion of ruler Gun salute for ruler Designation of local political officerRampur 893 464 919 chiefly Hindu and Muslim in 1931 51 Nawab Pathan Muslim 15 Political Agent at RampurBenares State 875 391 165 chiefly Hindu 1931 19 Maharaja Bhumihar Hindu 13 plus 2 local Political Agent at BenaresTotal 1 768 856 084 1941 approx 7023 princely states forming the Rajputana Agency with the Resident for Rajputana at Abu 37 38 Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state in hundred thousand Rupees Title ethnicity and religion of ruler Gun salute for ruler Designation of local political officerUdaipur Mewar 13 170 1 926 698 chiefly Hindu and Bhil 107 Maharana Sisodia Rajput Hindu 19 plus 2 personal Political Agent for the Mewar and Southern Rajputana StatesJaipur 15 610 3 040 876 chiefly Hindu 188 6 Maharaja Kachwaha Rajput Hindu 17 plus 2 personal Political Agent at JaipurJodhpur Marwar 36 120 2 555 904 chiefly Hindu 208 65 Maharaja Rathor Rajput Hindu 17 Political Agent for the Western States of RajputanaBikaner 23 181 1 292 938 chiefly Hindu 185 5 Maharaja Rathor Rajput Hindu 17 Political agent for the Western States of Rajputana17 salute states 1 chiefship 1 zamindari 42 374 3 64 million chiefly Hindu 1901 155 1901 Total 128 918 1901 9 84 million 1901 320 1901 Three princely states forming the Baluchistan Agency 39 40 Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state in hundred thousand Rupees Title ethnicity and religion of ruler Gun salute for ruler Designation of local political officerKalat 73 278 250 211 chiefly Sunni Muslim 21 3 Khan or Wali Baloch Sunni Muslim 19 Political Agent in KalatLas Bela 7 132 68 972 chiefly Sunni Muslim 6 1 Jam Baloch Sunni Muslim Political Agent in KalatKharan 14 210 33 763 chiefly Sunni Muslim 2 Nawab Baloch Sunni Muslim Political Agent in KalatTotal 94 620 352 946 29 4Sikkim as a protectorate of the British Government 41 Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state in hundred thousand Rupees Title ethnicity and religion of ruler Gun salute for ruler Designation of local political officerSikkim 2 818 121 520 chiefly Buddhist and Hindu 5 Chogyal Tibetan Buddhist 15 Political Officer SikkimOther states under provincial governmentsMadras 5 States 5 states under the suzerainty of the Provincial Government of Madras 39 Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1901 Approximate revenue of the state in hundred thousand Rupees Title ethnicity and religion of ruler Gun salute for ruler Designation of local political officerTravancore 7 091 2 952 157 chiefly Hindu and Christian 100 Maharaja Kshatriya Samanthan Hindu 21 including two guns personal to the then ruler Resident in Travancore and CochinCochin 1 362 812 025 chiefly Hindu and Christian 27 Raja Samanta Kshatriya Hindu 17 Resident in Travancore and CochinPudukkottai 1 100 380 440 chiefly Hindu 11 Raja Kallar Hindu 11 Collector of Trichinopoly ex officio Political Agent 2 minor states Banganapalle and Sandur 416 43 464 3Total 9 969 4 188 086 141Bombay 354 States 354 states under the suzerainty of the Provincial Government of Bombay 42 Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1901 Approximate revenue of the state in hundred thousand Rupees Title ethnicity and religion of ruler Gun salute for ruler Designation of local political officerKolhapur 2 855 910 011 chiefly Hindus 48 Maharaja Chhtrapati Maratha Hindu 19 Political Agent for KolhapurCutch 7 616 488 022 chiefly Hindu 20 Maharao Jadeja Rajput Hindu 17 Political Agent in CutchJunagarh 3 284 395 428 chiefly Hindu 27 Nawab Pathan Muslim 11 Agent to the Governor in KathiawarNavanagar 3 791 336 779 chiefly Hindu 31 Jam Sahib Jadeja Rajput Hindu 11 Agent to the Governor in Kathiawar349 other states 42 165 4 579 095 281Total 65 761 6 908 648 420Central Provinces 15 States 15 states under the suzerainty of the Provincial Government of the Central Provinces 43 Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1901 Approximate revenue of the state in hundred thousand Rupees Title ethnicity and religion of ruler Gun salute for ruler Designation of local political officerKalahandi 3 745 284 465 chiefly Hindu 4 Raja Kshatriya Hindu 9 Political Agent for the Chhattisgarh FeudatoriesBastar 13 062 306 501 chiefly Animist 3 Raja Kshatriya Hindu Political Agent for the Chhattisgarh Feudatories13 other states 12 628 1 339 353 chiefly Hindu 16 11Total 29 435 1 996 383 21Punjab 45 States 45 states under the suzerainty of the Provincial Government of the Punjab 44 45 Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state in hundred thousand Rupees Title ethnicity and religion of ruler Gun salute for ruler Designation of local political officerBahawalpur 16 434 1 341 209 chiefly Muslim 335 Nawab Daudputra Muslim 17 Political Agent for Phulkian States and BahawalpurPatiala 5 942 1 936 259 chiefly Sikh 302 6 Maharaja Sikh 17 and 2 personal Political Agent for Phulkian States and BahawalpurNabha 947 340 044 chiefly Sikh 38 7 Maharaja Sikh 13 and 2 local Political Agent for Phulkian States and BahawalpurJind 1 299 361 812 chiefly and Sikh 37 4 Maharaja Sikh 13 and 2 personal Political Agent for Phulkian States and BahawalpurKapurthala 645 378 380 chiefly Sikh 40 5 Maharaja Ahuluwalia Sikh 13 and 2 personal Commissioner of the Jullundur Division ex officio Political Agent Faridkot 638 199 283 Sikh 22 7 Raja Sikh 11 Commissioner of the Jullundur Division ex officio Political Agent Tehri Garhwal 4 500 397 369 chiefly Hindu 26 9 Maharaja Rajput Hindu 11 Commissioner of Kumaun ex officio Political Agent Khairpur 6 050 305 387 chiefly Muslim 15 plus 2 local Mir Talpur Baloch Muslim 37 8 Political Agent for Khairpur25 other states 12 661 in 1901 1 087 614 in 1901 30 in 1901 Total 36 532 in 1901 4 424 398 in 1901 155 in 1901 Assam 26 states 26 states under the suzerainty of the Provincial Government of Assam 46 47 Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1941 Approximate revenue of the state in hundred thousand Rupees Title ethnicity and religion of ruler Gun salute for ruler Designation of local political officerManipur 8 638 512 069 chiefly Hindu and Animist 19 Raja Kshatriya Hindu 11 Political Agent in Manipur25 Khasi States 3 778 213 586 Khasi and Christian 1 1941 approx Deputy Commissioner Khasi and Jaintia HillsTotal 12 416 725 655 20 1941 approx Burma EditSee also Shan States and Wa States Burma 52 states 52 states in Burma all except Kantarawadi one of the Karenni States were included in British India until 1937 48 Name of princely state Area in square miles Population in 1901 Approximate revenue of the state in hundred thousand Rupees Title ethnicity and religion of ruler Gun salute for ruler Designation of local political officerHsipaw Thibaw 5 086 105 000 Buddhist 3 Sawbwa Shan Buddhist 9 Superintendent Northern Shan StatesKengtung 12 000 190 000 Buddhist 1 Sawbwa Shan Buddhist 9 Superintendent Southern Shan StatesYawnghwe 865 95 339 Buddhist 2 13 Sawbwa Shan Buddhist 9 Superintendent Southern Shan StatesMongnai 2 717 44 000 Buddhist 0 5 Sawbwa Shan Buddhist Superintendent Southern Shan States5 Karenni States 3 130 45 795 Buddhist and Animist 0 035 Sawbwa Karenni Buddhist Superintendent Southern Shan States44 other states 42 198 792 152 Buddhist and Animist 8 5Total 67 011 1 177 987 13 5State military forces EditMain article Indian State Forces The armies of the Native States were bound by many restrictions that were imposed by subsidiary alliances They existed mainly for ceremonial use and for internal policing although certain units designated as Imperial Service Troops were available for service alongside the regular Indian Army upon request by the British government 49 According to the Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1907 p 85 Since a chief can neither attack his neighbour nor fall out with a foreign nation it follows that he needs no military establishment which is not required either for police purposes or personal display or for cooperation with the Imperial Government The treaty made with Gwalior in 1844 and the instrument of transfer given to Mysore in 1881 alike base the restriction of the forces of the State upon the broad ground of protection The former explained in detail that unnecessary armies were embarrassing to the State itself and the cause of disquietude to others a few months later a striking proof of this was afforded by the army of the Sikh kingdom of Lahore The British Government has undertaken to protect the dominions of the Native princes from invasion and even from rebellion within its army is organised for the defence not merely of British India but of all the possessions under the suzerainty of the King Emperor 50 In addition other restrictions were imposed The treaties with most of the larger States are clear on this point Posts in the interior must not be fortified factories for the production of guns and ammunition must not be constructed nor may the subject of other States be enlisted in the local forces They must allow the forces that defend them to obtain local supplies to occupy cantonments or positions and to arrest deserters and in addition to these services they must recognise the Imperial control of the railways telegraphs and postal communications as essential not only to the common welfare but to the common defence 51 The Imperial Service Troops were routinely inspected by British army officers and had the same equipment as soldiers in the British Indian Army 52 Although their numbers were relatively small the Imperial Service Troops were employed in China and British Somaliland in the first decade of the 20th century and later saw action in the First World War and Second World War 52 Political integration of princely states in 1947 and after EditIndia Edit Main article Political integration of India At the time of Indian independence on 15 August 1947 India was divided into two sets of territories the first being the territories of British India which were under the direct control of the India Office in London and the governor general of India and the second being the princely states the territories over which the Crown had suzerainty but which were under the control of their hereditary rulers In addition there were several colonial enclaves controlled by France and Portugal The integration of these territories into Dominion of India that had been created by the Indian Independence Act 1947 by the British Parliament was a declared objective of the Indian National Congress which the Government of India pursued over the years 1947 to 1949 Through a combination of tactics Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel and V P Menon in the months immediately preceding and following the independence convinced the rulers of almost all of the hundreds of princely states to accede to India In a speech in January 1948 Vallabhbhai Patel said As you are all aware on the lapse of Paramountcy every Indian State became a separate independent entity and our first task of consolidating about 550 States was on the basis of accession to the Indian Dominion on three subjects Barring Hyderabad and Junagadh all the states which are contiguous to India acceded to Indian Dominion Subsequently Kashmir also came in Some Rulers who were quick to read the writing on the wall gave responsible government to their people Cochin being the most illustrious example In Travancore there was a short struggle but there too the Ruler soon recognised the aspiration of his people and agreed to introduce a constitution in which all powers would be transferred to the people and he would function as a constitutional Ruler 53 Although this process successfully integrated the vast majority of princely states into India it was not as successful in relation to a few states notably the former princely state of Kashmir whose Maharaja delayed signing the instrument of accession into India until his territories were under the threat of invasion by Pakistan and the state of Hyderabad whose ruler decided to remain independent and was subsequently defeated by the Operation Polo invasion Having secured their accession Sardar Patel and V P Menon then proceeded in a step by step process to secure and extend the central government s authority over these states and to transform their administrations until by 1956 there was little difference between the territories that had formerly been part of British India and those that had been princely states Simultaneously the Government of India through a combination of diplomatic and economic pressure acquired control over most of the remaining European colonial exclaves on the subcontinent Fed up with the protracted and stubborn resistance of the Portuguese government in 1961 the Indian Army invaded and annexed Portuguese India 54 These territories like the princely states were also integrated into the Republic of India As the final step in 1971 the 26th amendment 55 to the Constitution of India withdrew recognition of the princes as rulers took away their remaining privileges and abolished the remuneration granted to them by privy purses In 2012 the High Court of Kerala in a judgement on Mujeeba Rahman vs the State Of Kerala stated that though by the 26th amendment of the Constitution Article 363 was repealed whereby the rights and privileges of the rulers of Indian States were taken away still the name and title of the rulers remained as such and unaffected in so far as names and titles were not contemplated as rights or privileges under the repealed Articles 291 and 362 of the Constitution So the titles were not abolished by the government only their political powers and right to receive Privy Purse were cancelled 56 57 Pakistan Edit Main article Princely states of Pakistan During the period of the British Raj there were four princely states in Balochistan Makran Kharan Las Bela and Kalat The first three acceded to Pakistan 58 59 60 61 However the ruler of the fourth princely state the Khan of Kalat Ahmad Yar Khan declared Kalat s independence as this was one of the options given to all princely states 62 The state remained independent until it was acceded on 27 March 1948 The signing of the Instrument of Accession by Ahmad Yar Khan led his brother Prince Abdul Karim to revolt against his brother s decision in July 1948 causing an ongoing and still unresolved insurgency 63 Bahawalpur from the Punjab Agency joined Pakistan on 5 October 1947 The princely states of the North West Frontier States Agencies included the Dir Swat and Chitral Agency and the Deputy Commissioner of Hazara acting as the Political Agent for Amb and Phulra These states joined Pakistan on independence from the British citation needed See also EditFlags of Indian princely states Political integration of India List of princely states of British India by region List of Indian monarchs Praja Mandal Salute state Indian feudalism Indian honorifics Ghatwals and Mulraiyats Jagirdar List of Maratha dynasties and states List of Rajput dynasties and states Maratha Empire Maratha titles Oudh Bequest Rajputana Zamindar Vorstenlanden princely states in the Netherlands IndiesReferences Edit Ramusack 2004 pp 85 Quote The British did not create the Indian princes Before and during the European penetration of India indigenous rulers achieved dominance through the military protection they provided to dependents and their skill in acquiring revenues to maintain their military and administrative organisations Major Indian rulers exercised varying degrees and types of sovereign powers before they entered treaty relations with the British What changed during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries is that the British increasingly restricted the sovereignty of Indian rulers The Company set boundaries it extracted resources in the form of military personnel subsidies or tribute payments and the purchase of commercial goods at favourable prices and limited opportunities for other alliances From the 1810s onwards as the British expanded and consolidated their power their centralised military despotism dramatically reduced the political options of Indian rulers p 85 Ramusack 2004 p 87 Quote The British system of indirect rule over Indian states provided a model for the efficient use of scarce monetary and personnel resources that could be adopted to imperial acquisitions in Malaya and Africa p 87 Menon Shivshankar 20 April 2021 India and Asian Geopolitics The Past Present Brookings Institution Press p 34 ISBN 978 0 670 09129 4 Lumby E W R 1954 The Transfer of Power in India 1945 1947 London George Allen amp Unwin p 228 Tiwari Aaditya 30 October 2017 Sardar Patel Man who United India pib gov in Wilhelm von Pochhammer India s road to nationhood a political history of the subcontinent 1981 ch 57 Bhargava R P 1991 The Chamber of Princes Northern Book Centre pp 312 323 ISBN 978 81 7211 005 5 Datar Arvind P 18 November 2013 Who betrayed Sardar Patel The Hindu Markovits Claude 2004 A history of modern India 1480 1950 Anthem Press pp 386 409 ISBN 9781843310044 The India Office and Burma Office List 1945 Harrison amp Sons Ltd 1945 pp 33 37 Ravi Kumar Pillai of Kandamath in the Journal of the Royal Society for Asian Affairs pages 316 319 https dx doi org 10 1080 03068374 2016 1171621 Bajwa Kuldip Singh 2003 Jammu and Kashmir War 1947 1948 Political and Military Perspectiv New Delhi Hari Anand Publications Limited ISBN 9788124109236 Aparna Pande 16 March 2011 Explaining Pakistan s Foreign Policy Escaping India Taylor amp Francis pp 31 ISBN 978 1 136 81893 6 Jalal Ayesha 2014 The Struggle for Pakistan A Muslim Homeland and Global Politics Harvard University Press p 72 ISBN 978 0 674 74499 8 Equally notorious was his high handed treatment of the state of Kalat whose ruler was made to accede to Pakistan on threat of punitive military action Samad Yunas 2014 Understanding the insurgency in Balochistan Commonwealth amp Comparative Politics 52 2 293 320 doi 10 1080 14662043 2014 894280 S2CID 144156399 When Mir Ahmed Yar Khan dithered over acceding the Baloch Brauhi confederacy to Pakistan in 1947 the centre s response was to initiate processes that would coerce the state joining Pakistan By recognising the feudatory states of Las Bela Kharan and the district of Mekran as independent states which promptly merged with Pakistan the State of Kalat became land locked and reduced to a fraction of its size Thus Ahmed Yar Khan was forced to sign the instrument of accession on 27 March 1948 which immediately led to the brother of the Khan Prince Abdul Karim raising the banner of revolt in July 1948 starting the first of the Baloch insurgencies Harrison Selig S 1981 In Afghanistan s Shadow Baluch Nationalism and Soviet Temptations Carnegie Endowment for International Peace p 24 ISBN 978 0 87003 029 1 Pakistani leaders summarily rejected this declaration touching off a nine month diplomatic tug of war that came to a climax in the forcible annexation of Kalat it is clear that Baluch leaders including the Khan were bitterly opposed to what happened Wilhelm von Pochhammer India s road to nationhood a political history of the subcontinent 1982 ch 57 Agarwal Ashvini 1989 Rise and Fall of the Imperial Guptas Delhi Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 81 208 0592 5 pp 264 9 Grousset Rene 1970 The Empire of the Steppes Rutgers University Press pp 69 ISBN 978 0 8135 1304 1 Interpretation Act 1889 52 amp 53 Vict c 63 s 18 1 Imperial Gazetteer of India volume IV published under the authority of the Secretary of State for India in Council 1909 Oxford University Press page 5 Quote The history of British India falls as observed by Sir C P Ilbert in his Government of India into three periods From the beginning of the seventeenth century to the middle of the eighteenth century the East India Company is a trading corporation existing on the sufferance of the native powers and in rivalry with the merchant companies of Holland and France During the next century the Company acquires and consolidates its dominion shares its sovereignty in increasing proportions with the Crown and gradually loses its mercantile privileges and functions After the mutiny of 1857 the remaining powers of the Company are transferred to the Crown and then follows an era of peace in which India awakens to new life and progress 2 The Statutes From the Twentieth Year of King Henry the Third to the by Robert Harry Drayton Statutes of the Realm Law 1770 Page 211 3 Save as otherwise expressly provided in this Act the law of British India and of the several parts thereof existing immediately before the appointed 3 Edney M E 1997 Mapping an Empire The Geographical Construction of British India 1765 1843 University of Chicago Press 480 pages ISBN 978 0 226 18488 3 4 Hawes C J 1996 Poor Relations The Making of a Eurasian Community in British India 1773 1833 Routledge 217 pages ISBN 0 7007 0425 6 Imperial Gazetteer of India vol II 1908 pp 463 470 Quote1 Before passing on to the political history of British India which properly begins with the Anglo French Wars in the Carnatic p 463 Quote2 The political history of the British in India begins in the eighteenth century with the French Wars in the Carnatic p 471 a b Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1907 p 60 Great Britain Indian Statutory Commission Viscount John Allsebrook Simon Simon 1930 Report of the Indian Statutory Commission H M Stationery Office Retrieved 9 June 2012 All India reporter D V Chitaley 1938 Retrieved 9 June 2012 King of all rewinds Govindlal Dalsukhbhai Patel 1957 The land problem of reorganized Bombay state N M Tripathi Retrieved 9 June 2012 Vapal Pangunni Menon 1956 The Story of the Integration of the Indian States Macmillan Co pp 17 19 a b Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1907 p 92 Mysore Indian States and Agencies The Statesman s Year Book 1947 pg 173 Macmillan amp Co Jammu and Kashmir Indian States and Agencies The Statesman s Year Book 1947 pg 171 Macmillan amp Co Hyderabad Indian States and Agencies The Statesman s Year Book 1947 pg 170 Macmillan amp Co a b Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1907 p 93 Central India Agency Indian States and Agencies The Statesman s Year Book 1947 pg 168 Macmillan amp Co Eastern States Indian States and Agencies The Statesman s Year Book 1947 pg 168 Macmillan amp Co Gwalior Residency Indian States and Agencies The Statesman s Year Book 1947 pg 170 Macmillan amp Co Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1907 pp 94 95 Rajputana Indian States and Agencies The Statesman s Year Book 1947 pg 175 Macmillan amp Co a b Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1907 p 96 Baluchistan States Indian States and Agencies The Statesman s Year Book 1947 pg 160 Macmillan amp Co Sikkim Indian States and Agencies The Statesman s Year Book 1947 pg 175 Macmillan amp Co Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1907 p 97 Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1907 p 102 Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1907 p 100 Punjab States Indian States and Agencies The Statesman s Year Book 1947 pg 174 Macmillan amp Co Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1907 p 103 Assam States Indian States and Agencies The Statesman s Year Book 1947 pg 160 Macmillan amp Co Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1907 p 101 Lt Gen Sir George MacMunn page 198 The Armies of India ISBN 0 947554 02 5 Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1907 p 85 Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1907 pp 85 86 a b Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1907 p 87 R P Bhargava 1992 The Chamber of Princes p 313 Praval Major K C 2009 Indian Army after Independence New Delhi Lancer p 214 ISBN 978 1 935501 10 7 The Constitution 26 Amendment Act 1971 indiacode nic in Government of India 1971 archived from the original on 6 December 2011 retrieved 9 November 2011 hanif mahir His Highness isn t unconstitutional Kerala high court The Times of India No Kochi The Times Group Archived from the original on 18 December 2013 Retrieved 24 November 2014 Mujeeba Rahman vs State Of Kerala High Court of Kerala 22 October 2013 Text Pervaiz I Cheema Manuel Riemer 22 August 1990 Pakistan s Defence Policy 1947 58 Palgrave Macmillan UK pp 60 ISBN 978 1 349 20942 2 Farhan Hanif Siddiqi 2012 The Politics of Ethnicity in Pakistan The Baloch Sindhi and Mohajir Ethnic Movements Routledge pp 71 ISBN 978 0 415 68614 3 T V Paul February 2014 The Warrior State Pakistan in the Contemporary World OUP USA pp 133 ISBN 978 0 19 932223 7 Bangash Y K 2015 Constructing the state Constitutional integration of the princely states of Pakistan in Roger D Long Gurharpal Singh Yunas Samad Ian Talbot eds State and Nation Building in Pakistan Beyond Islam and Security Routledge pp 82 ISBN 978 1 317 44820 4 Nicholas Schmidle 2 March 2010 To Live or to Perish Forever Two Tumultuous Years in Pakistan Henry Holt and Company pp 86 ISBN 978 1 4299 8590 1 Syed Farooq Hasnat 26 May 2011 Global Security Watch Pakistan ABC CLIO pp 94 ISBN 978 0 313 34698 9 Bibliography EditBangash Yaqoob Khan 2016 A Princely Affair The Accession and Integration of the Princely States of Pakistan 1947 1955 Oxford University Press Pakistan ISBN 9780199407361 Bhagavan Manu Princely States and the Hindu Imaginary Exploring the Cartography of Hindu Nationalism in Colonial India Journal of Asian Studies Aug 2008 67 3 pp 881 915 in JSTOR Bhagavan Manu Sovereign Spheres Princes Education and Empire in Colonial India 2003 Copland Ian 2002 Princes of India in the Endgame of Empire 1917 1947 Cambridge Studies in Indian History amp Society Cambridge and London Cambridge University Press Pp 316 ISBN 978 0 521 89436 4 Ernst W and B Pati eds India s Princely States People Princes and Colonialism 2007 Harrington Jack 2010 Sir John Malcolm and the Creation of British India Chs 4 amp 5 New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 10885 1 Jeffrey Robin People Princes and Paramount Power Society and Politics in the Indian Princely States 1979 396pp Kooiman Dick Communalism and Indian Princely States Travancore Baroda amp Hyderabad in the 1930s 2002 249pp Markovits Claude 2004 ch 21 Princely India 1858 1950 A history of modern India 1480 1950 Anthem Press pp 386 409 ISBN 978 1 84331 152 2 Ramusack Barbara 2004 The Indian Princes and their States The New Cambridge History of India Cambridge and London Cambridge University Press Pp 324 ISBN 978 0 521 03989 5 Pochhammer Wilhelm von India s Road to Nationhood A Political History of the Subcontinent 1973 ch 57 excerpt Zutshi Chitralekha 2009 Re visioning princely states in South Asian historiography A review Indian Economic amp Social History Review 46 3 301 313 doi 10 1177 001946460904600302 S2CID 145521826 Gazetteers Edit Imperial Gazetteer of India vol II 1908 The Indian Empire Historical Published under the authority of His Majesty s Secretary of State for India in Council Oxford at the Clarendon Press Pp xxxv 1 map 573 online Imperial Gazetteer of India vol III 1907 The Indian Empire Economic Chapter X Famine pp 475 502 Published under the authority of His Majesty s Secretary of State for India in Council Oxford at the Clarendon Press Pp xxxvi 1 map 520 online Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1907 The Indian Empire Administrative Published under the authority of His Majesty s Secretary of State for India in Council Oxford at the Clarendon Press Pp xxx 1 map 552 onlineExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Princely states of India Sir Roper Lethbridge 1893 The Golden Book of India A Genealogical and Biographical Dictionary of the Ruling Princes Chiefs Nobles and Other Personages Titled or Decorated of the Indian Empire Full text Macmillan And Co New York Exhaustive lists of rulers and heads of government and some biographies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Princely state amp oldid 1132194716, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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