fbpx
Wikipedia

Princely states of Pakistan

The princely states of Pakistan (Urdu: پاکستان کی نوابی ریاستیں; Sindhi: پاڪستان جون نوابي رياستون) were princely states of the British Indian Empire which acceded to the new Dominion of Pakistan between 1947 and 1948, following the partition of British India and its independence.

The princely states of 1947 in purple

At the time of the withdrawal of British forces from the subcontinent on 15 August 1947, West Pakistan was less than half of its ultimate size. It took a year of negotiations and accidents to bring the princely states into Pakistan, and a long process of integration followed.[1]

Options of the Princes

 
Stamp of Sadeq Mohammad Khan V,
Amir of Bahawalpur, as used in 1949

With the withdrawal of the British from the Indian subcontinent, in 1947, the Indian Independence Act provided that the hundreds of princely states which had existed alongside but outside British India were released from all their subsidiary alliances and other treaty obligations to the British, while at the same time the British withdrew from their treaty obligations to defend the states and keep the peace. The rulers were left to decide whether to accede to one of the newly independent states of India or Pakistan (both formed initially from the British possessions) or to remain independent outside both.[2] As stated by Sardar Patel at a press conference in January 1948, "As you are all aware, on the lapse of Paramountcy every Indian State became a separate independent entity."[3]

Only two rulers acceded to Pakistan in the first month of its independence, August 1947, while the others considered what to do, but most of those states with a Muslim majority population had acceded to Pakistan within a year, prompted in several cases by the Indo-Pakistani War of 1947.

The Instruments of Accession made available for the rulers to sign transferred only limited powers to the Dominion of Pakistan, namely external relations, defence, and communications; in most cases signing was believed to leave the states in the position they had under the suzerainty of the British Crown. The Wali of Swat commented that the states' accession "did not change very much".[4] However, within a generation all of the princely states had lost their internal autonomy. The last to fall were Hunza and Nagar, in October 1974.[5]

Attempts by Junagadh and Bantva Manavadar to accede

The princely state of Junagadh, a coastal state on the Kathiawar peninsula, had a mostly Hindu population but a Muslim ruler, Muhammad Mahabat Khan III, and in August 1947 he decided to accede to Pakistan, the first ruler of a state to do so. The Nawab's dewan, Sir Shah Nawaz Bhutto, delivered the Instrument of Accession to Jinnah in person, and on 13 September Jinnah accepted the accession. However, some of the Hindu subjects who formed the majority of the population revolted, and seeking to force the Nawab of Junagadh to change his decision, India imposed a blockade on the state.[6] On 8 November, after giving up on all hope of assistance from Pakistan, Bhutto asked the Indian government to take over the administration of the state as a temporary measure to restore order.[7] This arrangement was pending a final settlement through negotiations and did not mean that Junagadh had acceded to India.[8] The Government of India installed a governor and arranged a referendum on the status of the state, which took place on 20 February 1948 and voted overwhelmingly for union with India.[9] This led to the integration of Junagadh into India.[10] India maintained that it had not invaded Junagadh, but had taken it over only after the Nawab’s government had completely collapsed.[11]

Ghulam Moinuddin Khanji, Khan of Bantva Manavadar, a subordinate or vassal state of Junagadh, also signed an accession to Pakistan on 24 September 1947. The Indian police invaded Manavadar on 22 October, and the Khan was arrested. Following a plebiscite, the state was merged with the newly federated state of Saurashtra on 20 February 1949. The Khan was released as a result of the Liaquat–Nehru Pact of 8 April 1950. He lived in Karachi from 1951, where he continued to be recognized as a prince. He became president of the Pakistan Hockey Federation and died in 2003.[12]

Princely states of Pakistan in order of accession

Bahawalpur

 
Bahawalpur

On 3 October 1947, after some delay, the Nawab (or Ameer) of Bahawalpur, Sadeq Mohammad Khan V, acceded his state to Pakistan, becoming the first ruler to do so successfully.[13][14] As tens of thousands of Muslim refugees flooded into the state from the new India, the Ameer of Bahawalpur Refugee Relief and Rehabilitation Fund was instituted to provide for their relief. In 1953, the Ameer of Bahawalpur represented Pakistan at the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. In 1955 he signed an agreement with the Governor-General of Pakistan, Malik Ghulam Muhammad, under which Bahawalpur became part of the province of West Pakistan, with effect from 14 October 1955, and the Ameer received a yearly privy purse of 32 lakhs of rupees, keeping his titles.[15]

Khairpur

 
Khairpur

The state of Khairpur also acceded to Pakistan on 3 October 1947.[13][16] George Ali Murad Khan (born 1934), who from 19 July 1947 to 14 October 1955 was the last Amir (or Nawab) of Khairpur, was a minor for much of his reign, so it was a Regent, Mir Ghulam Hussain Khan Talpur Baluch, who acceded to Pakistan on his behalf.[17]

In 1950 the Amir introduced a form of democracy, with universal adult franchise. In 1955 the state was integrated into Pakistan.[16] The royal privileges of the Amir were abolished in 1972.

The last Amir is one of the few surviving princes.[18]

Chitral

 
Chitral

The Mehtar of Chitral, Muzaffar-ul-Mulk (1901–1949), stated his intention to accede to Pakistan on 15 August 1947.[19] However, his formal accession was delayed until 6 October.[13][4] He died in January 1949. His son, Saif-ur-Rahman (1926–1954), had been exiled by the Government of Pakistan and a board of administration composed of Chitrali noblemen was to govern the state in his absence. In October 1954 Saif-ur-Rahman was allowed to return from exile to take charge of Chitral, but he died in a plane crash on the way home, leaving his four-year-old son Mohammad Saif-ul-Mulk Nasir (1950–2011) as ruler. His uncle, Shahzada Asad ur-Rahman, acted as Regent until he came of age and was invested with the full powers of Mehtar at Chitral Fort in May 1966.[20]

On 28 July 1969, President Yahya Khan announced the full integration of the states of Chitral, Dir, and Swat into Pakistan,[21] and the dispossessed young ruler, then aged nineteen, agreed to take up a diplomatic career. He joined the Foreign Service in 1973 and served as First Secretary at Ankara, 1974–1979, as Deputy Chief of Protocol in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 1979–1985, and as Assistant Consul-General in Hong Kong, 1985–1989.[20]

Swat

 
Swat

The Wāli of Swat, Miangul Abdul Wadud, acceded his state to Pakistan on 3 November 1947.[13] The last Wali, Miangul Jahan Zeb (1908–1987), continued to exercise absolute rule until Pakistan took control, when on 28 July 1969 Yahya Khan announced the full integration of the states of Swat, Chitral, and Dir into Pakistan.[21][22]

Hunza

Hunza, also known as Kanjut, was a small princely state to the north of Jammu and Kashmir, and had been subject to the suzerainty of the Maharajah of Kashmir since 1891. In 1931 its population was reported as 13,241.[23] Having once been under Chinese protection, after the departure of the British from the subcontinent in August 1947 Hunza received approaches from the Republic of China, which wished Mir to return to Chinese protection. However, on 3 November 1947, the Mir of Hunza, Mohammad Jamal Khan (1912-1976), who had been ruler only since 1946, sent a telegram to Jinnah stating that he wished to accede his state to Pakistan.[24] This action came one week after the decision by Hari Singh, Maharajah of Kashmir, to accede to India, following the invasion by Pashtun Mehsud tribals, backed by Pakistani paramilitary forces,[25] in October 1947 under the code name "Operation Gulmarg" to seize Kashmir. On 27 October Indian Army troops had moved into Kashmir. Hunza's formal accession took place on 18 November.[26] On 25 September 1973, following local protests, the Mir's rule came to an end when Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Prime Minister of Pakistan, abolished the Mir's government and annexed the state to the Northern Areas of Pakistan, under the federal government. Two years after his forced abdication the Mir died.[citation needed]

Nagar

 
Nagar

Nagar was another small valley state to the north of Kashmir and shared the language and culture of Hunza.[26] In 1931 it had a population of 13,672, much the same as that of Hunza.[23] On 18 November 1947 its ruler, Shaukat Ali Khan (1917–2003), who had come to the throne in 1940, joined his neighbour in acceding to Pakistan.[26] They did this after resisting considerable pressure from Hari Singh of Jammu and Kashmir to enter into new subsidiary alliances with him.[27]

In 1968 Syed Yahya Shah, a politician of the valley, demanded civil rights from the Mir of Nagar. On 25 September 1973, not long after the Pakistan People's Party under Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto had come to power, the new government forced the last Mir of Nagar, Brigadier Shaukat Ali Khan, to abdicate his power, as with the Mir of Hunza, and like Hunza, Nagar was merged into the Northern Areas, although the Mir of Nagar was left with some of his purely ceremonial role.[28]

Amb

 
Amb

On 31 December 1947, Muhammad Farid Khan, Nawab of Amb, acceded to Pakistan.[13][29] Amb continued to be an autonomous state within Pakistan until 1969, when following the death of the Nawab it was incorporated into the North West Frontier Province (now known as Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa). In 1971 recognition of the royal status of the Nawabs by the Government of Pakistan came to an end.

A small state, in 1958 Amb was reported to have an area of 1,520 square kilometres (585 square miles) and a population of 48,656.[30]

Phulra

 
Phulra

Phulra was a khanate near Amb, with a population of about 8,000 and an area of only 93 square kilometres (36 square miles).[30] Almost all of its people lived in ninety-eight villages.[31] Its last Khan, called Nawab abdul Latif khan. In 1949 the khanate came to an end when it was merged into the North West Frontier Province.[32]

Dir

 
Dir

The Nawab of Dir, Sir Shah Jahan Khan, sent troops to support Pakistan in the First Kashmir War of 1947, and he signed an instrument of accession to Pakistan on 8 November, but it was not until 8 February 1948 that his state's accession was accepted by Jinnah as Governor-General.[13][29] In 1961 Yahya Khan exiled Jahan Khan and replaced him as Nawab with his son Mohammad Shah Khosru Khan, who was a Major General in the Pakistan Army, but the real control passed to the state's Political Agent. On 28 July 1969, Yahya Khan announced that the states of Dir, Chitral, and Swat were being incorporated into Pakistan.[21]

Las Bela

 
Las Bela

Las Bela's ruler Ghulam Qadir Khan (1920–1988) acceded to Pakistan on 7 March 1948, and the accession was accepted by Pakistan on 17 March.[13][33] The state was a member of the Baluchistan States Union from 3 October 1952 to 14 October 1955, but it retained its internal autonomy. That came to an end in 1955, when Las Bela was incorporated into the new West Pakistan province and became part of the Kalat division. In 1962, Las Bela was detached from West Pakistan and merged with the Federal Capital Territory to form Karachi-Bela. In 1970, it became the Lasbela District of the new province of Balochistan.

Kharan

 
Kharan

With an area of 47,940 square kilometres (18,508 square miles) and a population reported in 1951 as 33,833,[34] Kharan was one of the princely states of Balochistan which retained some degree of their independence for several years. Its last Nawab was Habibullah Khan Nausherwani a Baloch chief (1897–1958), who was in power from 1911 until 1955.[35]

The state acceded to Pakistan on 17 March 1948, which was accepted on the same day.[13] On 21 March 1948, the rulers of Kharan, Makran, and Las Bela all announced that they were acceding their states to the Dominion of Pakistan.[33]

Makran

 
Makran

Also on 17 March 1948, Makran acceded to Pakistan,[13][33] and on 3 October 1952 it formed the Baluchistan States Union with Kalat, Kharan and Las Bela. Makran was dissolved on 14 October 1955, when it was merged into the province of West Pakistan. In 1970, the area of the former state was organized as the Makran District (later the Makran Division) of the province of Baluchistan.

Khanate of Kalat

 
Kalat

The Khanate of Kalat, which covered the substantial area of 139,850 km2 (53,995 sq mi), was reported in 1951 to have a population of 253,305.[34] It remained fully independent from 15 August 1947 until 27 March 1948, when its ruler, Ahmad Yar Khan (1904–1979), finally acceded to Pakistan. On 3 October 1952 the state of Kalat entered into the Baluchistan States Union with three neighbouring states, Kharan, Las Bela, and Makran, with the Khan of Kalat at the head of the Union with the title of Khan-e-Azam. The Khanate came to an end on 14 October 1955, when it was incorporated into West Pakistan.[36]

On 20 June 1958, Mir Sir Ahmad Yar Khan Ahmedzai, the Khan of Kalat, declared Baluchistan independent.[37] On 6 October 1958, the Balochistan police captured the Kalat Palace and arrested the Khan for sedition. The next day, Iskandar Mirza declared martial law, which led to disturbances in Balochistan lasting about a year.[38] The Khan was eventually forgiven and released.

See also

References

  1. ^ Yaqoob Khan Bangash, A Princely Affair: The Accession and Integration of the Princely States of Pakistan, 1947-1955 (Oxford University Press, 2015), introduction.
  2. ^ Ishtiaq Ahmed, State, Nation and Ethnicity in Contemporary South Asia (London & New York, 1998), p. 99
  3. ^ R. P. Bhargava, The Chamber of Princes (Northern Book Centre, 1991) p. 313
  4. ^ a b Axmann, Back to the Future (2008), p. 273.
  5. ^ Lindsay Brown, Paul Clammer, Rodney Cocks, Pakistan & the Karakoram Highway (2008), p. 296
  6. ^ "Junagadh" in John Mcleod, Historical Dictionary of the British Empire, Volume 1, p. 614: "In order to compel Mahabatkhanji to reverse his accession, India sent troops to the surrounding states and imposed a blockade"
  7. ^ Achyut Yagnik, Shaping of Modern Gujarat (Penguin UK, 2005, ISBN 8184751850)
  8. ^ Cheema, Iqtidar Karamat (2006). Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah as Governor-General of Pakistan. Pakistan Study Centre, University of the Punjab. p. 42. ISBN 978-969-8181-03-1.
  9. ^ Srinath Raghavan, War and Peace in Modern India (2010), p. 63
  10. ^ Rajmohan Gandhi, Patel: A Life (India: Navajivan, 1992), p. 292
  11. ^ Accession of Junagadh: Farce of History, revisitingindia.com, 28 Aug 2013.
  12. ^ KARACHI: Nawab Moinuddin laid to rest, dawn.com, 15 Feb 2003, accessed 29 October 2020
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i Wilcox, Pakistan: The Consolidation (1963), p. 82
  14. ^ Umbreen Javaid, Politics of Bahawalpur: From State to Region, 1947-2000 (2004), p. 115
  15. ^ The All Pakistan Legal Decisions, vol. 30, part 2 (1978), p. 1,171
  16. ^ a b Siddiqi, The Politics of Ethnicity in Pakistan (2012), p. 130.
  17. ^ Pakistan Constituent Assembly Debates: Official report, vol. 1 (issues 1-1950, 1947), p. 152
  18. ^ Roger D. Long, Gurharpal Singh, Yunas Samad, Ian Talbot, State and Nation-Building in Pakistan: Beyond Islam and Security (Routledge, 2015, ISBN 9781317448204) pp. 94–95
  19. ^ Kuldip Singh Bajwa, Jammu and Kashmir War, 1947-1948 (2003), p. 141
  20. ^ a b Brief History of Ex Mehter Chitral HH Prince Saif ul Mulk Nasir, chitraltimes.com, accessed 31 October 2020
  21. ^ a b c Muhammad Sher Ali Khan, The elite minority, the princes of India (1989), p. 98: "On 28 July 1969, President Yahya Khan announced in a broadcast to the nation... that his administration had decided that the time has come to merge the states of Chitral, Dir and Swat in West Pakistan"
  22. ^ Brown, Clammer, & Cocks (2008), p. 209
  23. ^ a b Census of India, 1931, Volume XXIV: Jammu & Kashmir State, Part 1 – Report (India Census Commissioner Manager of Publications, 1933), p. 59
  24. ^ Z. H. Zaidi, ed., Jinnah Papers: The states: Historical and Policy Perspectives and Accession to Pakistan, vol. VIII (Quaid-i-Azam Papers Project, Government of Pakistan, 2003), p. 113
  25. ^ Haroon, Sana (1 December 2007). Frontier of faith: Islam in the Indo-Afghan borderland. Columbia University Press. pp. 179–180. ISBN 978-0-231-70013-9. Retrieved 26 February 2012.
  26. ^ a b c Pakistan Horizon, vol. 56, Issues 1-2, p. 57: "Hunza and Nagar acceded to Pakistan on November 18, 1947, but the northern regions have not been merged into Pakistan proper, pending the determination of the status of Jammu and Kashmir."
  27. ^ William Brown, Gilgit Rebellion: The Major Who Mutinied Over Partition of India (2014), pp. 66–68
  28. ^ Pakistan Pictorial Issue 1 (Pakistan Publications, 1973), p. 8: "The Rajas of Punial, Ishkoman, and Gupis, as also the Mir of Nagar, have been allowed to retain their ceremonial rights but the economic privileges, like levy of taxes for the entertainment of their guests, and other such, have been cancelled."
  29. ^ a b Z. H. Zaidi, CHRONOLOGY OF ACCESSION OF STATES TO PAKISTAN in Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah Papers: The States (Quaid-i-Azam Papers Project, 1993), p. xxxix
  30. ^ a b Amiya Ranjan Mukherjee, Current Affairs (1958), p. 337
  31. ^ Memoranda on the Indian States (Published by Authority, 1939), p. 215
  32. ^ Sir Terence Creagh Coen, The Indian Political Service: A Study in Indirect Rule (1971), p. 144
  33. ^ a b c Siddiqi (2012), p. 60: "The rulers of the states of Kharan, Makran and Lasbela announced their decision to join the Pakistan dominion on 21 March 1948 and their respective rulers signed the official documents."
  34. ^ a b Joseph Whitaker, Whitaker's Almanack 1951, vol. 83 (1951), p. 754: "the following States have also acceded to Pakistan : ]Kalat, area 53,995 square miles [139,850 square kilometres], pop. 253.305; Kharan, area 18,508 square miles [47,940 square kilometres], pop. 33,83a; Las Best, 7,043 square miles [18,240 square kilometres], pop 69,067; The North West Frontier States of Amb, Chitral, Dir."
  35. ^ M. Epstein, ed., The Statesman's Year-Book: Statistical and Historical Annual of the States of the World for the Year 1942 (1942), p. 166; West Pakistan District Gazetteers: Kharan (Printed at the West Pakistan Government Press, 1966), pp. 30–32
  36. ^ Farhan Hanif Siddiqi, The Politics of Ethnicity in Pakistan: The Baloch, Sindhi and Mohajir Ethnic Movements (Routledge, 2012), pp. 58–62
  37. ^ James Minahan, Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations: A-C, vol. 1 (Greenwood Publishing, 2002, ISBN 978-0313321092), p. 258
  38. ^ Mohammed Yousuf, Balochistan Tango at despardes.com

Bibliography

  • Martin Axmann (2008), Back to the Future: The Khanate of Kalat and the Genesis of Baloch Nationalism, 1915-1955, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-547645-3
  • Bangash, Yaqoob Khan (2015), A Princely Affair: The Accession and Integration of the Princely States of Pakistan, 1947-1955, Oxford University Press, USA, ISBN 978-0-19-906649-0
  • 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. 76–100, ISBN 978-1-317-44820-4
  • Behera, Navnita Chadha (2007), Demystifying Kashmir, Pearson Education India, ISBN 978-8131708460
  • Copland, Ian (February 1991), "The Princely States, the Muslim League, and the Partition of India in 1947", The International History Review, 13 (1): 38–69, doi:10.1080/07075332.1991.9640572, JSTOR 40106322
  • Copland, Ian (2005), State, Community and Neighbourhood in Princely India, c. 1900–1950, Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 0230005985
  • Siddiqi, Farhan Hanif (2012). The Politics of Ethnicity in Pakistan: The Baloch, Sindhi and Mohajir Ethnic Movements. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-33697-3.
  • Wilcox, Wayne Ayres (1963), Pakistan: The Consolidation of a Nation, Columbia University Press, ISBN 978-0-231-02589-8

princely, states, pakistan, princely, states, pakistan, urdu, پاکستان, کی, نوابی, ریاستیں, sindhi, پاڪستان, جون, نوابي, رياستون, were, princely, states, british, indian, empire, which, acceded, dominion, pakistan, between, 1947, 1948, following, partition, bri. The princely states of Pakistan Urdu پاکستان کی نوابی ریاستیں Sindhi پاڪستان جون نوابي رياستون were princely states of the British Indian Empire which acceded to the new Dominion of Pakistan between 1947 and 1948 following the partition of British India and its independence The princely states of 1947 in purple At the time of the withdrawal of British forces from the subcontinent on 15 August 1947 West Pakistan was less than half of its ultimate size It took a year of negotiations and accidents to bring the princely states into Pakistan and a long process of integration followed 1 Contents 1 Options of the Princes 2 Attempts by Junagadh and Bantva Manavadar to accede 3 Princely states of Pakistan in order of accession 3 1 Bahawalpur 3 2 Khairpur 3 3 Chitral 3 4 Swat 3 5 Hunza 3 6 Nagar 3 7 Amb 3 8 Phulra 3 9 Dir 3 10 Las Bela 3 11 Kharan 3 12 Makran 3 13 Khanate of Kalat 4 See also 5 References 6 BibliographyOptions of the Princes Edit Stamp of Sadeq Mohammad Khan V Amir of Bahawalpur as used in 1949 With the withdrawal of the British from the Indian subcontinent in 1947 the Indian Independence Act provided that the hundreds of princely states which had existed alongside but outside British India were released from all their subsidiary alliances and other treaty obligations to the British while at the same time the British withdrew from their treaty obligations to defend the states and keep the peace The rulers were left to decide whether to accede to one of the newly independent states of India or Pakistan both formed initially from the British possessions or to remain independent outside both 2 As stated by Sardar Patel at a press conference in January 1948 As you are all aware on the lapse of Paramountcy every Indian State became a separate independent entity 3 Only two rulers acceded to Pakistan in the first month of its independence August 1947 while the others considered what to do but most of those states with a Muslim majority population had acceded to Pakistan within a year prompted in several cases by the Indo Pakistani War of 1947 The Instruments of Accession made available for the rulers to sign transferred only limited powers to the Dominion of Pakistan namely external relations defence and communications in most cases signing was believed to leave the states in the position they had under the suzerainty of the British Crown The Wali of Swat commented that the states accession did not change very much 4 However within a generation all of the princely states had lost their internal autonomy The last to fall were Hunza and Nagar in October 1974 5 Attempts by Junagadh and Bantva Manavadar to accede EditMain article Indian integration of Junagadh The princely state of Junagadh a coastal state on the Kathiawar peninsula had a mostly Hindu population but a Muslim ruler Muhammad Mahabat Khan III and in August 1947 he decided to accede to Pakistan the first ruler of a state to do so The Nawab s dewan Sir Shah Nawaz Bhutto delivered the Instrument of Accession to Jinnah in person and on 13 September Jinnah accepted the accession However some of the Hindu subjects who formed the majority of the population revolted and seeking to force the Nawab of Junagadh to change his decision India imposed a blockade on the state 6 On 8 November after giving up on all hope of assistance from Pakistan Bhutto asked the Indian government to take over the administration of the state as a temporary measure to restore order 7 This arrangement was pending a final settlement through negotiations and did not mean that Junagadh had acceded to India 8 The Government of India installed a governor and arranged a referendum on the status of the state which took place on 20 February 1948 and voted overwhelmingly for union with India 9 This led to the integration of Junagadh into India 10 India maintained that it had not invaded Junagadh but had taken it over only after the Nawab s government had completely collapsed 11 Ghulam Moinuddin Khanji Khan of Bantva Manavadar a subordinate or vassal state of Junagadh also signed an accession to Pakistan on 24 September 1947 The Indian police invaded Manavadar on 22 October and the Khan was arrested Following a plebiscite the state was merged with the newly federated state of Saurashtra on 20 February 1949 The Khan was released as a result of the Liaquat Nehru Pact of 8 April 1950 He lived in Karachi from 1951 where he continued to be recognized as a prince He became president of the Pakistan Hockey Federation and died in 2003 12 Princely states of Pakistan in order of accession EditBahawalpur Edit Bahawalpur Main article Bahawalpur princely state On 3 October 1947 after some delay the Nawab or Ameer of Bahawalpur Sadeq Mohammad Khan V acceded his state to Pakistan becoming the first ruler to do so successfully 13 14 As tens of thousands of Muslim refugees flooded into the state from the new India the Ameer of Bahawalpur Refugee Relief and Rehabilitation Fund was instituted to provide for their relief In 1953 the Ameer of Bahawalpur represented Pakistan at the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II In 1955 he signed an agreement with the Governor General of Pakistan Malik Ghulam Muhammad under which Bahawalpur became part of the province of West Pakistan with effect from 14 October 1955 and the Ameer received a yearly privy purse of 32 lakhs of rupees keeping his titles 15 Khairpur Edit Khairpur Main article Khairpur princely state The state of Khairpur also acceded to Pakistan on 3 October 1947 13 16 George Ali Murad Khan born 1934 who from 19 July 1947 to 14 October 1955 was the last Amir or Nawab of Khairpur was a minor for much of his reign so it was a Regent Mir Ghulam Hussain Khan Talpur Baluch who acceded to Pakistan on his behalf 17 In 1950 the Amir introduced a form of democracy with universal adult franchise In 1955 the state was integrated into Pakistan 16 The royal privileges of the Amir were abolished in 1972 The last Amir is one of the few surviving princes 18 Chitral Edit Chitral Main article Chitral princely state The Mehtar of Chitral Muzaffar ul Mulk 1901 1949 stated his intention to accede to Pakistan on 15 August 1947 19 However his formal accession was delayed until 6 October 13 4 He died in January 1949 His son Saif ur Rahman 1926 1954 had been exiled by the Government of Pakistan and a board of administration composed of Chitrali noblemen was to govern the state in his absence In October 1954 Saif ur Rahman was allowed to return from exile to take charge of Chitral but he died in a plane crash on the way home leaving his four year old son Mohammad Saif ul Mulk Nasir 1950 2011 as ruler His uncle Shahzada Asad ur Rahman acted as Regent until he came of age and was invested with the full powers of Mehtar at Chitral Fort in May 1966 20 On 28 July 1969 President Yahya Khan announced the full integration of the states of Chitral Dir and Swat into Pakistan 21 and the dispossessed young ruler then aged nineteen agreed to take up a diplomatic career He joined the Foreign Service in 1973 and served as First Secretary at Ankara 1974 1979 as Deputy Chief of Protocol in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs 1979 1985 and as Assistant Consul General in Hong Kong 1985 1989 20 Swat Edit Swat Main article Swat princely state The Wali of Swat Miangul Abdul Wadud acceded his state to Pakistan on 3 November 1947 13 The last Wali Miangul Jahan Zeb 1908 1987 continued to exercise absolute rule until Pakistan took control when on 28 July 1969 Yahya Khan announced the full integration of the states of Swat Chitral and Dir into Pakistan 21 22 Hunza Edit Main article Hunza princely state Hunza also known as Kanjut was a small princely state to the north of Jammu and Kashmir and had been subject to the suzerainty of the Maharajah of Kashmir since 1891 In 1931 its population was reported as 13 241 23 Having once been under Chinese protection after the departure of the British from the subcontinent in August 1947 Hunza received approaches from the Republic of China which wished Mir to return to Chinese protection However on 3 November 1947 the Mir of Hunza Mohammad Jamal Khan 1912 1976 who had been ruler only since 1946 sent a telegram to Jinnah stating that he wished to accede his state to Pakistan 24 This action came one week after the decision by Hari Singh Maharajah of Kashmir to accede to India following the invasion by Pashtun Mehsud tribals backed by Pakistani paramilitary forces 25 in October 1947 under the code name Operation Gulmarg to seize Kashmir On 27 October Indian Army troops had moved into Kashmir Hunza s formal accession took place on 18 November 26 On 25 September 1973 following local protests the Mir s rule came to an end when Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Prime Minister of Pakistan abolished the Mir s government and annexed the state to the Northern Areas of Pakistan under the federal government Two years after his forced abdication the Mir died citation needed Nagar Edit Nagar Main article Nagar princely state Nagar was another small valley state to the north of Kashmir and shared the language and culture of Hunza 26 In 1931 it had a population of 13 672 much the same as that of Hunza 23 On 18 November 1947 its ruler Shaukat Ali Khan 1917 2003 who had come to the throne in 1940 joined his neighbour in acceding to Pakistan 26 They did this after resisting considerable pressure from Hari Singh of Jammu and Kashmir to enter into new subsidiary alliances with him 27 In 1968 Syed Yahya Shah a politician of the valley demanded civil rights from the Mir of Nagar On 25 September 1973 not long after the Pakistan People s Party under Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto had come to power the new government forced the last Mir of Nagar Brigadier Shaukat Ali Khan to abdicate his power as with the Mir of Hunza and like Hunza Nagar was merged into the Northern Areas although the Mir of Nagar was left with some of his purely ceremonial role 28 Amb Edit Amb Main article Amb princely state On 31 December 1947 Muhammad Farid Khan Nawab of Amb acceded to Pakistan 13 29 Amb continued to be an autonomous state within Pakistan until 1969 when following the death of the Nawab it was incorporated into the North West Frontier Province now known as Khyber Pakhtunkhwa In 1971 recognition of the royal status of the Nawabs by the Government of Pakistan came to an end A small state in 1958 Amb was reported to have an area of 1 520 square kilometres 585 square miles and a population of 48 656 30 Phulra Edit Phulra Main article Phulra Phulra was a khanate near Amb with a population of about 8 000 and an area of only 93 square kilometres 36 square miles 30 Almost all of its people lived in ninety eight villages 31 Its last Khan called Nawab abdul Latif khan In 1949 the khanate came to an end when it was merged into the North West Frontier Province 32 Dir Edit Dir Main article Dir princely state The Nawab of Dir Sir Shah Jahan Khan sent troops to support Pakistan in the First Kashmir War of 1947 and he signed an instrument of accession to Pakistan on 8 November but it was not until 8 February 1948 that his state s accession was accepted by Jinnah as Governor General 13 29 In 1961 Yahya Khan exiled Jahan Khan and replaced him as Nawab with his son Mohammad Shah Khosru Khan who was a Major General in the Pakistan Army but the real control passed to the state s Political Agent On 28 July 1969 Yahya Khan announced that the states of Dir Chitral and Swat were being incorporated into Pakistan 21 Las Bela Edit Las Bela Main article Las Bela princely state Las Bela s ruler Ghulam Qadir Khan 1920 1988 acceded to Pakistan on 7 March 1948 and the accession was accepted by Pakistan on 17 March 13 33 The state was a member of the Baluchistan States Union from 3 October 1952 to 14 October 1955 but it retained its internal autonomy That came to an end in 1955 when Las Bela was incorporated into the new West Pakistan province and became part of the Kalat division In 1962 Las Bela was detached from West Pakistan and merged with the Federal Capital Territory to form Karachi Bela In 1970 it became the Lasbela District of the new province of Balochistan Kharan Edit Kharan Main article Kharan princely state With an area of 47 940 square kilometres 18 508 square miles and a population reported in 1951 as 33 833 34 Kharan was one of the princely states of Balochistan which retained some degree of their independence for several years Its last Nawab was Habibullah Khan Nausherwani a Baloch chief 1897 1958 who was in power from 1911 until 1955 35 The state acceded to Pakistan on 17 March 1948 which was accepted on the same day 13 On 21 March 1948 the rulers of Kharan Makran and Las Bela all announced that they were acceding their states to the Dominion of Pakistan 33 Makran Edit Makran Main article Makran princely state Also on 17 March 1948 Makran acceded to Pakistan 13 33 and on 3 October 1952 it formed the Baluchistan States Union with Kalat Kharan and Las Bela Makran was dissolved on 14 October 1955 when it was merged into the province of West Pakistan In 1970 the area of the former state was organized as the Makran District later the Makran Division of the province of Baluchistan Khanate of Kalat Edit Kalat Main article Khanate of Kalat The Khanate of Kalat which covered the substantial area of 139 850 km2 53 995 sq mi was reported in 1951 to have a population of 253 305 34 It remained fully independent from 15 August 1947 until 27 March 1948 when its ruler Ahmad Yar Khan 1904 1979 finally acceded to Pakistan On 3 October 1952 the state of Kalat entered into the Baluchistan States Union with three neighbouring states Kharan Las Bela and Makran with the Khan of Kalat at the head of the Union with the title of Khan e Azam The Khanate came to an end on 14 October 1955 when it was incorporated into West Pakistan 36 On 20 June 1958 Mir Sir Ahmad Yar Khan Ahmedzai the Khan of Kalat declared Baluchistan independent 37 On 6 October 1958 the Balochistan police captured the Kalat Palace and arrested the Khan for sedition The next day Iskandar Mirza declared martial law which led to disturbances in Balochistan lasting about a year 38 The Khan was eventually forgiven and released See also EditFormer administrative units of Pakistan Divisions of PakistanReferences Edit Yaqoob Khan Bangash A Princely Affair The Accession and Integration of the Princely States of Pakistan 1947 1955 Oxford University Press 2015 introduction Ishtiaq Ahmed State Nation and Ethnicity in Contemporary South Asia London amp New York 1998 p 99 R P Bhargava The Chamber of Princes Northern Book Centre 1991 p 313 a b Axmann Back to the Future 2008 p 273 Lindsay Brown Paul Clammer Rodney Cocks Pakistan amp the Karakoram Highway 2008 p 296 Junagadh in John Mcleod Historical Dictionary of the British Empire Volume 1 p 614 In order to compel Mahabatkhanji to reverse his accession India sent troops to the surrounding states and imposed a blockade Achyut Yagnik Shaping of Modern Gujarat Penguin UK 2005 ISBN 8184751850 Cheema Iqtidar Karamat 2006 Quaid i Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah as Governor General of Pakistan Pakistan Study Centre University of the Punjab p 42 ISBN 978 969 8181 03 1 Srinath Raghavan War and Peace in Modern India 2010 p 63 Rajmohan Gandhi Patel A Life India Navajivan 1992 p 292 Accession of Junagadh Farce of History revisitingindia com 28 Aug 2013 KARACHI Nawab Moinuddin laid to rest dawn com 15 Feb 2003 accessed 29 October 2020 a b c d e f g h i Wilcox Pakistan The Consolidation 1963 p 82 Umbreen Javaid Politics of Bahawalpur From State to Region 1947 2000 2004 p 115 The All Pakistan Legal Decisions vol 30 part 2 1978 p 1 171 a b Siddiqi The Politics of Ethnicity in Pakistan 2012 p 130 Pakistan Constituent Assembly Debates Official report vol 1 issues 1 1950 1947 p 152 Roger D Long Gurharpal Singh Yunas Samad Ian Talbot State and Nation Building in Pakistan Beyond Islam and Security Routledge 2015 ISBN 9781317448204 pp 94 95 Kuldip Singh Bajwa Jammu and Kashmir War 1947 1948 2003 p 141 a b Brief History of Ex Mehter Chitral HH Prince Saif ul Mulk Nasir chitraltimes com accessed 31 October 2020 a b c Muhammad Sher Ali Khan The elite minority the princes of India 1989 p 98 On 28 July 1969 President Yahya Khan announced in a broadcast to the nation that his administration had decided that the time has come to merge the states of Chitral Dir and Swat in West Pakistan Brown Clammer amp Cocks 2008 p 209 a b Census of India 1931 Volume XXIV Jammu amp Kashmir State Part 1 Report India Census Commissioner Manager of Publications 1933 p 59 Z H Zaidi ed Jinnah Papers The states Historical and Policy Perspectives and Accession to Pakistan vol VIII Quaid i Azam Papers Project Government of Pakistan 2003 p 113 Haroon Sana 1 December 2007 Frontier of faith Islam in the Indo Afghan borderland Columbia University Press pp 179 180 ISBN 978 0 231 70013 9 Retrieved 26 February 2012 a b c Pakistan Horizon vol 56 Issues 1 2 p 57 Hunza and Nagar acceded to Pakistan on November 18 1947 but the northern regions have not been merged into Pakistan proper pending the determination of the status of Jammu and Kashmir William Brown Gilgit Rebellion The Major Who Mutinied Over Partition of India 2014 pp 66 68 Pakistan Pictorial Issue 1 Pakistan Publications 1973 p 8 The Rajas of Punial Ishkoman and Gupis as also the Mir of Nagar have been allowed to retain their ceremonial rights but the economic privileges like levy of taxes for the entertainment of their guests and other such have been cancelled a b Z H Zaidi CHRONOLOGY OF ACCESSION OF STATES TO PAKISTAN in Quaid i Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah Papers The States Quaid i Azam Papers Project 1993 p xxxix a b Amiya Ranjan Mukherjee Current Affairs 1958 p 337 Memoranda on the Indian States Published by Authority 1939 p 215 Sir Terence Creagh Coen The Indian Political Service A Study in Indirect Rule 1971 p 144 a b c Siddiqi 2012 p 60 The rulers of the states of Kharan Makran and Lasbela announced their decision to join the Pakistan dominion on 21 March 1948 and their respective rulers signed the official documents a b Joseph Whitaker Whitaker s Almanack 1951 vol 83 1951 p 754 the following States have also acceded to Pakistan Kalat area 53 995 square miles 139 850 square kilometres pop 253 305 Kharan area 18 508 square miles 47 940 square kilometres pop 33 83a Las Best 7 043 square miles 18 240 square kilometres pop 69 067 The North West Frontier States of Amb Chitral Dir M Epstein ed The Statesman s Year Book Statistical and Historical Annual of the States of the World for the Year 1942 1942 p 166 West Pakistan District Gazetteers Kharan Printed at the West Pakistan Government Press 1966 pp 30 32 Farhan Hanif Siddiqi The Politics of Ethnicity in Pakistan The Baloch Sindhi and Mohajir Ethnic Movements Routledge 2012 pp 58 62 James Minahan Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations A C vol 1 Greenwood Publishing 2002 ISBN 978 0313321092 p 258 Mohammed Yousuf Balochistan Tango at despardes comBibliography EditMartin Axmann 2008 Back to the Future The Khanate of Kalat and the Genesis of Baloch Nationalism 1915 1955 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 547645 3 Bangash Yaqoob Khan 2015 A Princely Affair The Accession and Integration of the Princely States of Pakistan 1947 1955 Oxford University Press USA ISBN 978 0 19 906649 0 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 76 100 ISBN 978 1 317 44820 4 Behera Navnita Chadha 2007 Demystifying Kashmir Pearson Education India ISBN 978 8131708460 Copland Ian February 1991 The Princely States the Muslim League and the Partition of India in 1947 The International History Review 13 1 38 69 doi 10 1080 07075332 1991 9640572 JSTOR 40106322 Copland Ian 2005 State Community and Neighbourhood in Princely India c 1900 1950 Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0230005985 Siddiqi Farhan Hanif 2012 The Politics of Ethnicity in Pakistan The Baloch Sindhi and Mohajir Ethnic Movements Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 33697 3 Wilcox Wayne Ayres 1963 Pakistan The Consolidation of a Nation Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 02589 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Princely states of Pakistan amp oldid 1125691065, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.