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Sayajirao Gaekwad III


Sayajirao Gaekwad III (born Shrimant Gopalrao Gaekwad; 11 March 1863 – 6 February 1939) was the Maharaja of Baroda State from 1875 to 1939, and is remembered for reforming much of his state during his rule. He belonged to the royal Gaekwad dynasty of the Marathas which ruled parts of present-day Gujarat.

Sayajirao Gaekwad III
Farzand-i-Khas-i-Daulat-i-Inglishia, Shrimant Maharaja Sir , Sena Khas Khel Shamsher Bahadur Maharaja Gaekwad of Baroda, GCSI, GCIE, KIH
Sayajirao III Gaekwad, Maharaja of Baroda, 1919
King of Baroda
Reign10 April 1875 – 6 February 1939
Coronation10 April 1875 (in Maratha Baroda)
PredecessorMalhar Rao Gaekwad
Madhav Rao Thanjavurkar (de facto)
SuccessorPratap Singh Rao Gaekwad
Born(1863-03-11)11 March 1863
Died6 February 1939(1939-02-06) (aged 75)[1]
ConsortChimnabai of Tanjore
Lakshmibai Mohite
IssueShrimant Maharajkumari Bajubai Gaekwad
Shrimant Maharajkumari Putlabai Gaekwad
Yuvaraj Sahib Fatehsinhrao Gaekwad
Shrimant Maharajkumar Jaisinghrao Gaekwad
Shrimant Maharajkumar Shivajirao Gaekwad
Maharani Indira Devi
Shrimant Maharajkumar Dhairyashilrao Gaekwad
DynastyGaekwad
FatherKashirao Gaekwad
ReligionHinduism
Signature

Early life

 
Group portrait with sister Tara Bai and adoptive mother Jamna Bai (Circa 1880)

Sayajirao was born in a maratha family in the village of Kavlana in Malegaon taluka of Nashik district, as Gopalrao Gaekwad, second son of Kashirao Bhikajirao Dada Sahib Gaekwad (1832–1877) and Ummabai.[citation needed] His branch of the Gaekwad dynasty was a cadet branch descended from a morganatic marriage of the first Raja of Baroda and so was not expected to succeed to the throne.[citation needed]

Matters of succession

Following the death of Sir Khanderao Gaekwad (1828–1870), the popular Maharaja of Baroda, in 1870, it was expected that his brother, Malharrao (1831–1882), would succeed him.

However, Malharrao had already proven himself to be of the vilest character and had been imprisoned earlier for conspiring to assassinate Khanderao. As Khanderao's widow, Maharani Jamnabai (1853–1898) was already pregnant with a posthumous child, the succession was delayed until the sex of the child could be proven. The child proved to be a daughter, and so upon her birth on 5 July 1871, Malharrao ascended the throne.

Malharrao spent money liberally, nearly emptying the Baroda coffers (he commissioned a pair of solid gold cannon and a carpet of pearls, among other expenses) and soon reports reached the Resident Robert Phayre of Malharrao's gross tyranny and cruelty. Malharrao further attempted to cover up his deeds by attempting to poison Phayre with a compound of arsenic.

By order of the Secretary of State for India, Lord Salisbury, Malharrao was deposed on 10 April 1875 and exiled to Madras, where he died in obscurity in 1882.

Ascending the Throne

 
Maharani Chimnabai by Raja Ravi Varma

With the throne of Baroda now vacant, Maharani Jamnabai called on the heads of the extended branches of the dynasty to come to Baroda and present themselves and their sons in order to decide upon a successor.

Kashirao and his three sons, Anandrao (1857–1917), Gopalrao (1863–1939) and Sampatrao (1865–1934) walked to Baroda from Kavlana -a distance of some 600 kilometers- to present themselves to Jamnabai. It is reported that when each son was asked the purported reason for presenting themselves at Baroda, Gopalrao unhesitatingly stated:

"I have come here to rule".

 
H H Gaekwar of Baroda in 1889

Gopalrao was selected by the British as successor and was accordingly adopted by Maharani Jamnabai, on 27 May 1875. He was also given a new name, Sayajirao. He ascended the gadi (throne) at Baroda, 16 June 1875 but being a minor reigned under a Council of Regency until he came of age and was invested with full ruling powers on 28 December 1881. During his minority he was extensively tutored in administrative skills by Raja Sir T. Madhava Rao who groomed his young protégé into being a person with foresight and with a will to provide welfare to his people. In this period Madhava Rao restored the state to its normal conditions following the chaos in which it had been left by Malharrao.

Rule and modernization

 
Maharaja Sayaji Rao, portrait by Raja Ravi Varma.

On assuming the reins of government, some of his first tasks included education of his subjects, uplifting of the downtrodden, and judicial, agricultural and social reforms. He played a key role in the development of Baroda's textile industry, and his educational and social reforms included among others, a ban on child marriage, legislation of divorce, removal of untouchability, spread of education, development of Sanskrit, ideological studies and religious education as well as the encouragement of the fine arts.[2]

His economic development initiatives included the establishment of a railroad (see below) and the founding in 1908 of the Bank of Baroda, which still exists and is one of India's leading banks, with numerous operations abroad in support of the Gujarati diaspora.

Fully aware of the fact that he was a Maratha ruler of Gujarat, he identified himself with the people and shaped their cosmopolitan attitude and progressive, reformist zeal. His rich library became the nucleus of today's Central Library of Baroda with a network of libraries in all the towns and villages in his state. He was the first Indian ruler to introduce, in 1906, compulsory and free primary education in his state, placing his territory far in advance of contemporary British India.[2]

To commemorate his vision and administrative skills, Baroda Management Association has instituted Sayaji Ratna Award in 2013, named after him.

Heritage and views

Though a prince of a native state, he guarded his rights and status even as this brought him into dispute with the British government. Sayajirao was often in conflict with them on matters of principle and governance, having continuous and longstanding verbal and written disputes with the Residents as well as with the Viceroy and officials in the Government of India. He was granted the title of Farzand-i-Khas-i-Daulat-i-Inglishia on 29 December 1876. He attended the Delhi Durbars of 1877, 1903 and 1911; it was at the 1911 Delhi Durbar that an incident occurred that proved to have far-reaching ramifications for Sayajirao's relations with the Raj.

 
Laxmi Vilas Palace, Vadodara, built in 1890 by Maharaja Sayajirao Gaekwad III

Delhi Durbar 1911

 
Sayajirao with Sir Richard Temple, the Governor of Bombay and other members of the court. c. 1880

At the grand and historic Delhi Durbar of 1911, attended by George V— the first time that a reigning British monarch had travelled to India, each Indian prince was expected to perform proper obeisance to the King-Emperor by bowing three times before him, then backing away without turning their back on the monarch.[2][3]

As the third-most prestigious Indian ruler, Sayajirao was third in line to approach the King-Emperor; already, he had caused consternation among the British officials by refusing to wear his full regalia of jewels and honours (it was expected that the rulers on formal occasions would present themselves in full regalia). While some accounts state that he refused to bow, Sayajirao actually did bow, albeit perfunctorily and only once before turning his back on the King-Emperor.[2] According to his granddaughter Gayatri Devi, she states in her autobiography that due to some reason he had been unable to attend the rehearsals and didn't know how to greet The King-Emperor. Other eyewitness reports state he walked away "laughing".[4]

For several years already, Sayajirao had angered the British by his open support for the Indian National Congress and its leaders; the incident before the King-Emperor proved to be the last straw. The British never fully trusted Sayajirao again, although he was openly forgiven when he was awarded a GCIE in 1919.[2]

He gave donation for the establishment of Central Library in the Banaras Hindu University which is named after him as "Sayaji Rao Gaekwad Central Library".

Public works

Railways and waterworks

During his reign a large narrow gauge railway Gaekwar's Baroda State Railway network, which was started in 1862 was expanded further with Dabhoi at its focal point, a network that still is the largest narrow gauge railway network in the world.

Sayajirao envisioned a water supply scheme for Baroda in 1892 at Ajwa that would use gravity to supply drinking water to the people of Baroda. To this day a large portion of Vadodara City gets its drinking water from this source.

Parks and universities

 
Ajwa Reservoir, with 64 gates

The large public park originally called Kamati Baug and now called Sayaji Baug was his gift to the city of Vadodara. On the Diamond Jubilee of his accession to the throne, he set apart large funds out of his personal and state funds for setting up a University in Vadodara for the benefit of students from the rural areas of his state – a task that was ultimately completed by his grandson Sir Pratapsinghrao Gaekwad, who founded the Maharaja Sayajirao University and settled the trust as desired by his grandfather. This trust is known as the Sir Sayajirao Diamond Jubilee and Memorial Trust and caters to the education and other needs of the people of the former state of Baroda.

Patronage

He recognised talent from among his people. He supported education and training of persons who in his opinion would shine in life. Those persons whom he patronised included Dr. Babasaheb alias Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar, later the head of the drafting committee of the Indian Constitution that came to force in 1950; Vitthal Ramji Shinde, the founder of the “Mission to the depressed class” and one of the most important social & religious reformers in Maharashtra;[5] and Dadabhai Naoroji, who started his public life as the Dewan (Minister) to the Maharaja in 1874 and thereafter went on to become the first Asian Member of the British House of Commons where he made no secret of the fact that he would also be representing 250 million of his fellow subjects in India. He also sent his Agriculture Commissioner Chintaman Vishnu Sane to The United States of America for research in that field. He appointed V. T. Krishnamachari as the Diwan of Vadodara.

Sayajirao used to visit England every year to select outstanding young people to join his service and in one of such visits he met 20-year-old Sri Aurobindo whom he immediately offered a job at Baroda College. Sri Aurobindo returned to India in 1893 to join the Baroda service. Another Bengali gen Syed Mujtaba Ali also taught there.

In 1895 the Maharaja is claimed to have witnessed the successful flight of an unmanned aircraft constructed by S. B. Talpade, which happened eight years before the Wright brothers took to the skies.[6]

Cultural and material interests

 
Maharaja Sayajirao Gaekwad III, Kala Ghoda Statue at Vadodara
 
Gaekwad in Chicago, United States in 1906.

The Maharaja was a noted patron of the arts. During his reign, Baroda became a hub for artists and scholars. The celebrated painter, Raja Ravi Varma, was among those who spent substantial periods of time at his court.

Jewellery

Sayajirao had a splendid collection of jewels and jewellery. This included the 128.48 carat, 25.696g "Star of the South" diamond, the "Akbar Shah" diamond and the "Princess Eugenie" diamond.

Classical music

Sayajirao was also a patron of Indian classical music. Ustad Moula Bux founded the Academy of Indian Music (Gayan Shala) under his patronage in 1886. This Academy later became the Music College and is now the Faculty of Performing Arts of the Maharaja Sayajirao University of Vadodara. Apart from Ustad Moula Bux, Sayajirao's court boasted great artistes like Abdul Karim Khan, Inayat Khan and Ustad Faiyaz Khan. In 1916, the first All India Music Conference was held in Baroda.

Dance

The Maharaja Sayajirao University of Vadodara started the first dance programme in India in 1950. Over the centuries there had been many alliances and marriages between Baroda's kings and princesses. Musicians and Dancers were often part of cultural exchange as dancers, poets and musicians were status symbols for the royal courts and maharajas had as many artists as they could afford. In 1880 the Maharani Laksmi Bai (Chimnabai I) of Tanjore married Maharaja Sayajirao III. Chimnabai I was knowledgeable in Bharatanatyam and Carnatic music, and upon marriage, she brought a troupe with her comprising two dancers, two nattuvanars (leaders of Bharatanatyam concerts) and two teachers (Khandwani 2002). Others followed later, including Nattuvanar Appaswamy and his dancer wife Kantimati, who had studied with Kannusamy and Vadively, two members of the Tanjore Quartet. After the death of Appaswamy in 1939, Kantimati and their son, Guru Shri Kubernath Tanjorkar, left Baroda to teach in Lucknow, and then worked in the film industry in South India until Sayajirao's successor, Pratapsinhrao Gaekwad recalled the family to Baroda in 1949 to teach in the Music Department in the Kalavan Palace, later absorbed into the Maharaja Sayajirao University (Gaston 1996: 158–160). Later Guruvarya Shri Kubernath Tanjorkar established his own Institute, the Tanjore Dance Music & Art Research Centre at Baroda with his son Guru Shri Ramesh Tanjorkar and Guru Smt. Leela R. Tanjorkar (Kubernath Tanjorkar's family is devoted to Bharatnatyam dance now including their grandsons Rajesh and Ashish). So what we have here is a tradition of very distinguished Bharatanatyam dancers and teachers, members of a family considered an offshoot of the Tanjore Quartet bani (stylistic schools; Gaston 1996: 159), already established in Gujarat by the time Mrinalini set up her own academy. Yet there is a sense that what she did was not new.

Family

Maharaja Sayajirao initially married Chimnabai of Tanjore (Chimnabai I) (1864–1884) on 6 January 1880, by whom he had a son and two daughters:

  • 1. Shrimant Maharajkumari Bajubai Gaekwad (1881–1883)
  • 2. Shrimant Maharajkumari Putlabai Gaekwad (1882–1885)
  • 3. Lieutenant-Colonel Shrimant Yuvaraja Fatehsinhrao Gaekwad, Yuvaraj Sahib of Baroda (3 August 1883 – 14 September 1908). He died young, having had a son and two daughters, including:

His first wife died young from tuberculosis, and Sayajirao married on 28 December 1885 another Maratha lady from Dewas, Shrimant Lakshmibai Mohite (1871–1958), who became Chimnabai II upon her wedding. A strong proponent of rights for Indian women, she proved every bit as willful and capable as her husband for the 53 years of their marriage, becoming equally well known throughout India. They had several sons and one daughter:

  • 1. Shrimant Maharajkumar Jaisinghrao Gaekwad (12 May 1888 – 27 August 1923); no children
  • 2. Shrimant Maharajkumar Shivajirao Gaekwad (31 July 1890 – 24 November 1919); had two sons and one daughter.
  • 3. Maharani Indira Devi, Maharani and Maharani Regent of Cooch Behar (Indiraraje) (19 February 1892 – 6 September 1968). Married Jitendra Narayan of Cooch Bihar in 1911; had issue. Her descendants include the models Riya Sen and Raima Sen. She became a Maharani Regent of Cooch Behar and the mother of Gayatri Devi of Jaipur.
  • 4. Lieutenant-Colonel Shrimant Maharajkumar Dhairyashilrao Gaekwad (31 August 1893 – 5 April 1940); had three sons and two daughters.

Other descendants of Sayajirao would wed the rulers of Kolhapur, Sawantwadi, Akkalkot, Jath, Dewas Jr., Kota, Dhar, Jasdan, Sandur and Gwalior.

Family tree

  •   Sayajirao Gaekwad III
    • Bajubai Gaekwad (kanit) (1881–1883)
    • Putlabai Gaekwad (1882–1885)
    • Fatehsinhrao Gaekwad (1883–1908)
    • Jaisinghrao Gaekwad (1888–1923)
    • Shivajirao Gaekwad (1890–1919)
      • two sons and a daughter
    • Indira Devi (Indiraraje) (1892–1968)
      • Gayatri Devi and two other daughters and two sons
        • later descendant Maharani Sahiba of kota, Rajasthan Uttara Devi, Maharani of Payagpur Baharaich Udaya Raje (Pixie), Bharat Dev Burman Father of Riya Sen and Raima Sen
    • Dhairyashilrao Gaekwad (1893–1940)
      • three sons and two daughters
    • Other descendants

Death

After a long and eventful reign of 63 years, Sayajirao Gaekwad III died on 6 February 1939, one month shy of 76. His grandson and heir, Pratapsinhrao Gaekwad, became the next Maharaja of Baroda

Titles

  • 1863–1875: Shrimant Gopalrao Gaekwad
  • 1875–1876: His Highness Shrimant Maharaja Sayajirao III Gaekwad, Sena Khas Khel Shamsher Bahadur, Maharaja of Baroda
  • 1876–1887: His Highness Farzand-i-Khas-i-Daulat-i-Inglishia, Shrimant Maharaja Sayajirao III Gaekwad, Sena Khas Khel Shamsher Bahadur, Maharaja of Baroda
  • 1887–1919: His Highness Farzand-i-Khas-i-Daulat-i-Inglishia, Shrimant Maharaja Sir Sayajirao III Gaekwad, Sena Khas Khel Shamsher Bahadur, Maharaja of Baroda, GCSI
  • 1919–1939: His Highness Farzand-i-Khas-i-Daulat-i-Inglishia, Shrimant Maharaja Sir Sayajirao III Gaekwad, Sena Khas Khel Shamsher Bahadur, Maharaja of Baroda, GCSI, GCIE

Honours

See also

References

  1. ^ His Highness Sayajirao Gaekwad III
  2. ^ a b c d e Lawson, Alastair (10 December 2011). "Indian maharajah's daring act of anti-colonial dissent". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 10 December 2011.
  3. ^ "Indian maharajah's daring act of anti-colonial dissent". news.bbc.co.uk. 10 December 2011. Retrieved 10 December 2011.
  4. ^ "Indian maharajah's daring act of anti-colonial dissent". BBC News. 10 December 2011.
  5. ^ "Gayakwad- the king who assisted Ambedkar and others". 14 April 2014.
  6. ^ Hundred years after Orville Wright’s first flight, K R N SWAMY remembers Shivkur Bapuji Talpade, the Indian who flew an unmanned aircraft eight years before Wright from deccanherald.com

Further reading

  • F. A. H Elliot. The rulers of Baroda. Baroda State Press 1934. ASIN B0006C35QS.
  • Gense, James. The Gaikwads of Baroda. D.B. Taraporevala Sons & Co 1942. ASIN B0007K1PL6.
  • Kothekara, Santa. The Gaikwads of Baroda and the East India Company, 1770–1820. Nagpur University. ASIN B0006D2LAI.
  • Gaekwad, Fatesinghrao * Biography of Maharaja Sayajirao III by Daji Nagesh Apte (1989). Sayajirao of Baroda: The Prince and the Man. Popular Prakashan. ISBN 978-0-86132-214-5.
  • Gaekwar, Sayaji Rao. Speeches and addresses of Sayaji Rao III, Maharaja Gaekwar of Baroda. H. Milford 1933. ASIN B000855T0I.
  • Rice, Stanley (1931). Life of Sayaji Rao III, Maharaja of Baroda. Oxford university press 1931. ASIN B00085DDFG.
  • Clair, Edward (1911). A Year with the Gaekwar of Baroda. D. Estes & co 1911. ASIN B0008BLVV8.
  • MacLeod, John (1999). Sovereignty, Power, Control: Politics in the State of Western India, 1916–1947. Brill Academic Publishers. ISBN 978-90-04-11343-5.
  • Kamerkar, Mani. British Paramountcy: British-Baroda Relations, 1818-1848. Popular Prakashan. ASIN B000JLZE6A.
  • Kooiman, Dick (2002). Communalism and Indian Princely States: Travancore, Baroda and Hyderabad in the 1930s. Manohar Pubns. ISBN 978-81-7304-421-2.
  • Desai, Govindbhai. Forty Years in Baroda: Being Reminiscences of Forty Years' Service in the Baroda State. Pustakalaya Sahayak Sahakari Mandal 1929. ASIN B0006E18R4.
  • Maharaja of Baroda (1980). The Palaces of India. Viking Pr. ISBN 978-0-00-211678-7.
  • Doshi, Saryu (1995). The royal bequest: Art treasures of the Baroda Museum and Picture Gallery. India Book House. ISBN 978-81-7508-009-6.
  • Moore, Lucy (2005). Maharanis; the extraordinary tale of four Indian queens and their journey from purdah to parliament. Viking Press. ISBN 978-0-670-03368-3.

External links

  • Official Website of the Gaekwads of Baroda
  • Sayajirao Gaekwad III materials in the South Asian American Digital Archive (SAADA)
Sayajirao Gaekwad III
Born: 11 March 1863 Died: 6 February 1939
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Malhar Rao Gaekwad
and
Madhav Rao Thanjavurkar (de facto)
Maharaja of Baroda
1875–1939
Succeeded by

sayajirao, gaekwad, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citati. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations August 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sayajirao Gaekwad III news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Sayajirao Gaekwad III born Shrimant Gopalrao Gaekwad 11 March 1863 6 February 1939 was the Maharaja of Baroda State from 1875 to 1939 and is remembered for reforming much of his state during his rule He belonged to the royal Gaekwad dynasty of the Marathas which ruled parts of present day Gujarat Sayajirao Gaekwad IIIFarzand i Khas i Daulat i Inglishia Shrimant Maharaja Sir Sena Khas Khel Shamsher Bahadur Maharaja Gaekwad of Baroda GCSI GCIE KIHSayajirao III Gaekwad Maharaja of Baroda 1919King of BarodaReign10 April 1875 6 February 1939Coronation10 April 1875 in Maratha Baroda PredecessorMalhar Rao Gaekwad Madhav Rao Thanjavurkar de facto SuccessorPratap Singh Rao GaekwadBorn 1863 03 11 11 March 1863Died6 February 1939 1939 02 06 aged 75 1 ConsortChimnabai of Tanjore Lakshmibai MohiteIssueShrimant Maharajkumari Bajubai GaekwadShrimant Maharajkumari Putlabai GaekwadYuvaraj Sahib Fatehsinhrao GaekwadShrimant Maharajkumar Jaisinghrao GaekwadShrimant Maharajkumar Shivajirao GaekwadMaharani Indira Devi Shrimant Maharajkumar Dhairyashilrao GaekwadDynastyGaekwadFatherKashirao GaekwadReligionHinduismSignature Contents 1 Early life 2 Matters of succession 3 Ascending the Throne 4 Rule and modernization 5 Heritage and views 5 1 Delhi Durbar 1911 6 Public works 6 1 Railways and waterworks 6 2 Parks and universities 7 Patronage 8 Cultural and material interests 8 1 Jewellery 8 2 Classical music 8 3 Dance 9 Family 9 1 Family tree 10 Death 11 Titles 12 Honours 13 See also 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksEarly life Edit Group portrait with sister Tara Bai and adoptive mother Jamna Bai Circa 1880 Sayajirao was born in a maratha family in the village of Kavlana in Malegaon taluka of Nashik district as Gopalrao Gaekwad second son of Kashirao Bhikajirao Dada Sahib Gaekwad 1832 1877 and Ummabai citation needed His branch of the Gaekwad dynasty was a cadet branch descended from a morganatic marriage of the first Raja of Baroda and so was not expected to succeed to the throne citation needed Matters of succession EditFollowing the death of Sir Khanderao Gaekwad 1828 1870 the popular Maharaja of Baroda in 1870 it was expected that his brother Malharrao 1831 1882 would succeed him However Malharrao had already proven himself to be of the vilest character and had been imprisoned earlier for conspiring to assassinate Khanderao As Khanderao s widow Maharani Jamnabai 1853 1898 was already pregnant with a posthumous child the succession was delayed until the sex of the child could be proven The child proved to be a daughter and so upon her birth on 5 July 1871 Malharrao ascended the throne Malharrao spent money liberally nearly emptying the Baroda coffers he commissioned a pair of solid gold cannon and a carpet of pearls among other expenses and soon reports reached the Resident Robert Phayre of Malharrao s gross tyranny and cruelty Malharrao further attempted to cover up his deeds by attempting to poison Phayre with a compound of arsenic By order of the Secretary of State for India Lord Salisbury Malharrao was deposed on 10 April 1875 and exiled to Madras where he died in obscurity in 1882 Ascending the Throne Edit Maharani Chimnabai by Raja Ravi Varma With the throne of Baroda now vacant Maharani Jamnabai called on the heads of the extended branches of the dynasty to come to Baroda and present themselves and their sons in order to decide upon a successor Kashirao and his three sons Anandrao 1857 1917 Gopalrao 1863 1939 and Sampatrao 1865 1934 walked to Baroda from Kavlana a distance of some 600 kilometers to present themselves to Jamnabai It is reported that when each son was asked the purported reason for presenting themselves at Baroda Gopalrao unhesitatingly stated I have come here to rule H H Gaekwar of Baroda in 1889 Gopalrao was selected by the British as successor and was accordingly adopted by Maharani Jamnabai on 27 May 1875 He was also given a new name Sayajirao He ascended the gadi throne at Baroda 16 June 1875 but being a minor reigned under a Council of Regency until he came of age and was invested with full ruling powers on 28 December 1881 During his minority he was extensively tutored in administrative skills by Raja Sir T Madhava Rao who groomed his young protege into being a person with foresight and with a will to provide welfare to his people In this period Madhava Rao restored the state to its normal conditions following the chaos in which it had been left by Malharrao Rule and modernization Edit Maharaja Sayaji Rao portrait by Raja Ravi Varma On assuming the reins of government some of his first tasks included education of his subjects uplifting of the downtrodden and judicial agricultural and social reforms He played a key role in the development of Baroda s textile industry and his educational and social reforms included among others a ban on child marriage legislation of divorce removal of untouchability spread of education development of Sanskrit ideological studies and religious education as well as the encouragement of the fine arts 2 His economic development initiatives included the establishment of a railroad see below and the founding in 1908 of the Bank of Baroda which still exists and is one of India s leading banks with numerous operations abroad in support of the Gujarati diaspora Fully aware of the fact that he was a Maratha ruler of Gujarat he identified himself with the people and shaped their cosmopolitan attitude and progressive reformist zeal His rich library became the nucleus of today s Central Library of Baroda with a network of libraries in all the towns and villages in his state He was the first Indian ruler to introduce in 1906 compulsory and free primary education in his state placing his territory far in advance of contemporary British India 2 To commemorate his vision and administrative skills Baroda Management Association has instituted Sayaji Ratna Award in 2013 named after him Heritage and views EditThough a prince of a native state he guarded his rights and status even as this brought him into dispute with the British government Sayajirao was often in conflict with them on matters of principle and governance having continuous and longstanding verbal and written disputes with the Residents as well as with the Viceroy and officials in the Government of India He was granted the title of Farzand i Khas i Daulat i Inglishia on 29 December 1876 He attended the Delhi Durbars of 1877 1903 and 1911 it was at the 1911 Delhi Durbar that an incident occurred that proved to have far reaching ramifications for Sayajirao s relations with the Raj Laxmi Vilas Palace Vadodara built in 1890 by Maharaja Sayajirao Gaekwad III Delhi Durbar 1911 Edit Sayajirao with Sir Richard Temple the Governor of Bombay and other members of the court c 1880 At the grand and historic Delhi Durbar of 1911 attended by George V the first time that a reigning British monarch had travelled to India each Indian prince was expected to perform proper obeisance to the King Emperor by bowing three times before him then backing away without turning their back on the monarch 2 3 As the third most prestigious Indian ruler Sayajirao was third in line to approach the King Emperor already he had caused consternation among the British officials by refusing to wear his full regalia of jewels and honours it was expected that the rulers on formal occasions would present themselves in full regalia While some accounts state that he refused to bow Sayajirao actually did bow albeit perfunctorily and only once before turning his back on the King Emperor 2 According to his granddaughter Gayatri Devi she states in her autobiography that due to some reason he had been unable to attend the rehearsals and didn t know how to greet The King Emperor Other eyewitness reports state he walked away laughing 4 For several years already Sayajirao had angered the British by his open support for the Indian National Congress and its leaders the incident before the King Emperor proved to be the last straw The British never fully trusted Sayajirao again although he was openly forgiven when he was awarded a GCIE in 1919 2 He gave donation for the establishment of Central Library in the Banaras Hindu University which is named after him as Sayaji Rao Gaekwad Central Library Public works EditRailways and waterworks Edit During his reign a large narrow gauge railway Gaekwar s Baroda State Railway network which was started in 1862 was expanded further with Dabhoi at its focal point a network that still is the largest narrow gauge railway network in the world Sayajirao envisioned a water supply scheme for Baroda in 1892 at Ajwa that would use gravity to supply drinking water to the people of Baroda To this day a large portion of Vadodara City gets its drinking water from this source Parks and universities Edit Ajwa Reservoir with 64 gates The large public park originally called Kamati Baug and now called Sayaji Baug was his gift to the city of Vadodara On the Diamond Jubilee of his accession to the throne he set apart large funds out of his personal and state funds for setting up a University in Vadodara for the benefit of students from the rural areas of his state a task that was ultimately completed by his grandson Sir Pratapsinghrao Gaekwad who founded the Maharaja Sayajirao University and settled the trust as desired by his grandfather This trust is known as the Sir Sayajirao Diamond Jubilee and Memorial Trust and caters to the education and other needs of the people of the former state of Baroda Patronage EditHe recognised talent from among his people He supported education and training of persons who in his opinion would shine in life Those persons whom he patronised included Dr Babasaheb alias Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar later the head of the drafting committee of the Indian Constitution that came to force in 1950 Vitthal Ramji Shinde the founder of the Mission to the depressed class and one of the most important social amp religious reformers in Maharashtra 5 and Dadabhai Naoroji who started his public life as the Dewan Minister to the Maharaja in 1874 and thereafter went on to become the first Asian Member of the British House of Commons where he made no secret of the fact that he would also be representing 250 million of his fellow subjects in India He also sent his Agriculture Commissioner Chintaman Vishnu Sane to The United States of America for research in that field He appointed V T Krishnamachari as the Diwan of Vadodara Sayajirao used to visit England every year to select outstanding young people to join his service and in one of such visits he met 20 year old Sri Aurobindo whom he immediately offered a job at Baroda College Sri Aurobindo returned to India in 1893 to join the Baroda service Another Bengali gen Syed Mujtaba Ali also taught there In 1895 the Maharaja is claimed to have witnessed the successful flight of an unmanned aircraft constructed by S B Talpade which happened eight years before the Wright brothers took to the skies 6 Cultural and material interests Edit Maharaja Sayajirao Gaekwad III Kala Ghoda Statue at Vadodara Gaekwad in Chicago United States in 1906 The Maharaja was a noted patron of the arts During his reign Baroda became a hub for artists and scholars The celebrated painter Raja Ravi Varma was among those who spent substantial periods of time at his court Jewellery Edit Sayajirao had a splendid collection of jewels and jewellery This included the 128 48 carat 25 696g Star of the South diamond the Akbar Shah diamond and the Princess Eugenie diamond Classical music Edit Sayajirao was also a patron of Indian classical music Ustad Moula Bux founded the Academy of Indian Music Gayan Shala under his patronage in 1886 This Academy later became the Music College and is now the Faculty of Performing Arts of the Maharaja Sayajirao University of Vadodara Apart from Ustad Moula Bux Sayajirao s court boasted great artistes like Abdul Karim Khan Inayat Khan and Ustad Faiyaz Khan In 1916 the first All India Music Conference was held in Baroda Dance Edit The Maharaja Sayajirao University of Vadodara started the first dance programme in India in 1950 Over the centuries there had been many alliances and marriages between Baroda s kings and princesses Musicians and Dancers were often part of cultural exchange as dancers poets and musicians were status symbols for the royal courts and maharajas had as many artists as they could afford In 1880 the Maharani Laksmi Bai Chimnabai I of Tanjore married Maharaja Sayajirao III Chimnabai I was knowledgeable in Bharatanatyam and Carnatic music and upon marriage she brought a troupe with her comprising two dancers two nattuvanars leaders of Bharatanatyam concerts and two teachers Khandwani 2002 Others followed later including Nattuvanar Appaswamy and his dancer wife Kantimati who had studied with Kannusamy and Vadively two members of the Tanjore Quartet After the death of Appaswamy in 1939 Kantimati and their son Guru Shri Kubernath Tanjorkar left Baroda to teach in Lucknow and then worked in the film industry in South India until Sayajirao s successor Pratapsinhrao Gaekwad recalled the family to Baroda in 1949 to teach in the Music Department in the Kalavan Palace later absorbed into the Maharaja Sayajirao University Gaston 1996 158 160 Later Guruvarya Shri Kubernath Tanjorkar established his own Institute the Tanjore Dance Music amp Art Research Centre at Baroda with his son Guru Shri Ramesh Tanjorkar and Guru Smt Leela R Tanjorkar Kubernath Tanjorkar s family is devoted to Bharatnatyam dance now including their grandsons Rajesh and Ashish So what we have here is a tradition of very distinguished Bharatanatyam dancers and teachers members of a family considered an offshoot of the Tanjore Quartet bani stylistic schools Gaston 1996 159 already established in Gujarat by the time Mrinalini set up her own academy Yet there is a sense that what she did was not new Family EditMaharaja Sayajirao initially married Chimnabai of Tanjore Chimnabai I 1864 1884 on 6 January 1880 by whom he had a son and two daughters 1 Shrimant Maharajkumari Bajubai Gaekwad 1881 1883 2 Shrimant Maharajkumari Putlabai Gaekwad 1882 1885 3 Lieutenant Colonel Shrimant Yuvaraja Fatehsinhrao Gaekwad Yuvaraj Sahib of Baroda 3 August 1883 14 September 1908 He died young having had a son and two daughters including Pratap Singh Rao Gaekwad who succeeded to the throne in 1939 as Maharaja of Baroda His first wife died young from tuberculosis and Sayajirao married on 28 December 1885 another Maratha lady from Dewas Shrimant Lakshmibai Mohite 1871 1958 who became Chimnabai II upon her wedding A strong proponent of rights for Indian women she proved every bit as willful and capable as her husband for the 53 years of their marriage becoming equally well known throughout India They had several sons and one daughter 1 Shrimant Maharajkumar Jaisinghrao Gaekwad 12 May 1888 27 August 1923 no children 2 Shrimant Maharajkumar Shivajirao Gaekwad 31 July 1890 24 November 1919 had two sons and one daughter 3 Maharani Indira Devi Maharani and Maharani Regent of Cooch Behar Indiraraje 19 February 1892 6 September 1968 Married Jitendra Narayan of Cooch Bihar in 1911 had issue Her descendants include the models Riya Sen and Raima Sen She became a Maharani Regent of Cooch Behar and the mother of Gayatri Devi of Jaipur 4 Lieutenant Colonel Shrimant Maharajkumar Dhairyashilrao Gaekwad 31 August 1893 5 April 1940 had three sons and two daughters Other descendants of Sayajirao would wed the rulers of Kolhapur Sawantwadi Akkalkot Jath Dewas Jr Kota Dhar Jasdan Sandur and Gwalior Family tree Edit Sayajirao Gaekwad III Bajubai Gaekwad kanit 1881 1883 Putlabai Gaekwad 1882 1885 Fatehsinhrao Gaekwad 1883 1908 Pratap Singh Rao Gaekwad and two daughters Fatehsinghrao Gaekwad 1930 1988 Mrunalini Devi Puar 1931 2015 a daughter Premila Raje Gaekwad 1933 a son and a daughter Sarla Raje Gaekwad 1935 a son and a daughter Vasundharadevi Raje Gaekwad 1936 three sons and a daughter Ranjitsinh Pratapsinh Gaekwad 1938 2012 Samarjitsingh Gaekwad 1967 Alaukika Raje 1988 Anjana Raje 1999 Lalitadevi Raje Gaekwad 1939 Sangramsinhrao Gaekwad 1941 Pratapsinhrao Gaekwad 1970 Priyadarshini Raje Sahib Gaekwad 1975 Sayajirao Gaekwad 1945 1985 Jaisinghrao Gaekwad 1888 1923 Shivajirao Gaekwad 1890 1919 two sons and a daughter Indira Devi Indiraraje 1892 1968 Gayatri Devi and two other daughters and two sons later descendant Maharani Sahiba of kota Rajasthan Uttara Devi Maharani of Payagpur Baharaich Udaya Raje Pixie Bharat Dev Burman Father of Riya Sen and Raima Sen Dhairyashilrao Gaekwad 1893 1940 three sons and two daughters Other descendantsDeath EditAfter a long and eventful reign of 63 years Sayajirao Gaekwad III died on 6 February 1939 one month shy of 76 His grandson and heir Pratapsinhrao Gaekwad became the next Maharaja of BarodaTitles Edit1863 1875 Shrimant Gopalrao Gaekwad 1875 1876 His Highness Shrimant Maharaja Sayajirao III Gaekwad Sena Khas Khel Shamsher Bahadur Maharaja of Baroda 1876 1887 His Highness Farzand i Khas i Daulat i Inglishia Shrimant Maharaja Sayajirao III Gaekwad Sena Khas Khel Shamsher Bahadur Maharaja of Baroda 1887 1919 His Highness Farzand i Khas i Daulat i Inglishia Shrimant Maharaja Sir Sayajirao III Gaekwad Sena Khas Khel Shamsher Bahadur Maharaja of Baroda GCSI 1919 1939 His Highness Farzand i Khas i Daulat i Inglishia Shrimant Maharaja Sir Sayajirao III Gaekwad Sena Khas Khel Shamsher Bahadur Maharaja of Baroda GCSI GCIEHonours EditPrince of Wales s Gold Medal 1875 Empress of India Gold Medal 1877 Knight Grand Commander of the Order of the Star of India GCSI 1887 Delhi Durbar Gold Medal 1903 Delhi Durbar Gold Medal 1911 Knight Grand Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire GCIE 1919 Hon LLD Benares Hindu University 1924 Bailiff Grand Cross of the Order of St John GCStJ 1932 King George V Silver Jubilee Medal 1935 King George VI Coronation Medal 1937See also EditAtlas the Barbary lion versus the Bengal tiger of Simla Bank of Baroda Baroda Museum and Picture Gallery Sayaji Rao Gaekwad Library Central Library BHU Princely State Maratha Empire Sayaji Ratna AwardReferences Edit His Highness Sayajirao Gaekwad III a b c d e Lawson Alastair 10 December 2011 Indian maharajah s daring act of anti colonial dissent Bbc co uk Retrieved 10 December 2011 Indian maharajah s daring act of anti colonial dissent news bbc co uk 10 December 2011 Retrieved 10 December 2011 Indian maharajah s daring act of anti colonial dissent BBC News 10 December 2011 Gayakwad the king who assisted Ambedkar and others 14 April 2014 Hundred years after Orville Wright s first flight K R N SWAMY remembers Shivkur Bapuji Talpade the Indian who flew an unmanned aircraft eight years before Wright from deccanherald comFurther reading EditF A H Elliot The rulers of Baroda Baroda State Press 1934 ASIN B0006C35QS Gense James The Gaikwads of Baroda D B Taraporevala Sons amp Co 1942 ASIN B0007K1PL6 Kothekara Santa The Gaikwads of Baroda and the East India Company 1770 1820 Nagpur University ASIN B0006D2LAI Gaekwad Fatesinghrao Biography of Maharaja Sayajirao III by Daji Nagesh Apte 1989 Sayajirao of Baroda The Prince and the Man Popular Prakashan ISBN 978 0 86132 214 5 Gaekwar Sayaji Rao Speeches and addresses of Sayaji Rao III Maharaja Gaekwar of Baroda H Milford 1933 ASIN B000855T0I Rice Stanley 1931 Life of Sayaji Rao III Maharaja of Baroda Oxford university press 1931 ASIN B00085DDFG Clair Edward 1911 A Year with the Gaekwar of Baroda D Estes amp co 1911 ASIN B0008BLVV8 MacLeod John 1999 Sovereignty Power Control Politics in the State of Western India 1916 1947 Brill Academic Publishers ISBN 978 90 04 11343 5 Kamerkar Mani British Paramountcy British Baroda Relations 1818 1848 Popular Prakashan ASIN B000JLZE6A Kooiman Dick 2002 Communalism and Indian Princely States Travancore Baroda and Hyderabad in the 1930s Manohar Pubns ISBN 978 81 7304 421 2 Desai Govindbhai Forty Years in Baroda Being Reminiscences of Forty Years Service in the Baroda State Pustakalaya Sahayak Sahakari Mandal 1929 ASIN B0006E18R4 Maharaja of Baroda 1980 The Palaces of India Viking Pr ISBN 978 0 00 211678 7 Doshi Saryu 1995 The royal bequest Art treasures of the Baroda Museum and Picture Gallery India Book House ISBN 978 81 7508 009 6 Moore Lucy 2005 Maharanis the extraordinary tale of four Indian queens and their journey from purdah to parliament Viking Press ISBN 978 0 670 03368 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sayajirao Gaekwad III Official Website of the Gaekwads of Baroda Sayajirao Gaekwad III materials in the South Asian American Digital Archive SAADA Sayajirao Gaekwad IIIGaekwad dynastyBorn 11 March 1863 Died 6 February 1939Regnal titlesPreceded byMalhar Rao Gaekwad and Madhav Rao Thanjavurkar de facto Maharaja of Baroda1875 1939 Succeeded byPratap Singh Rao Gaekwad Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sayajirao Gaekwad III amp oldid 1133732837, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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