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Tanjore District (Madras Presidency)

Thanjavur District was one of the districts in the erstwhile Madras Presidency of British India. It covered the area of the present-day districts of Thanjavur, Tiruvarur, Nagapattinam, Mayiladuthurai and Aranthangi taluk, Karambakkudi taluk of Pudukkottai District in Tamil Nadu. Apart from being a bedrock of Hindu orthodoxy, Tanjore was a centre of Chola cultural heritage and one of the richest and most prosperous districts in Madras Presidency.

Thanjavur District
District of the Madras Presidency
1799–1950
Flag
CapitalNagapattinam (1799-1845)
Tarangambadi (1845-1860)
Thanjavur (1860-1950)
History
History 
• Establishment of the district
1799
• Modern Thanjavur District
1950

Tanjore district was constituted in 1799 when the Thanjavur Maratha ruler Serfoji II ceded most of his kingdom to the British East India Company in return for his restitution on the throne. Tanjore district, which is situated on the Cauvery Delta, is one of the richest rice-growing regions in South India. It was scarcely affected by famines such as the Great Famine of 1876–78.

Geography

The Tanjore District was bounded by the districts of South Arcot in the north, Trichinopoly to the west and south and the Pudukkottai State and Madura and later, Ramnad districts to the south-east. The Kollidam River formed the long northern boundary with South Arcot. The Bay of Bengal bounded it on the east.

The district was made of four well-marked physical tracts - the fertile plains to the north between the Kollidam and the Kaveri known as the "Old Delta" which was naturally irrigated by the rivers through a system of anaicuts and comprising the whole of the taluks of Shiyali, Mayavaram and Kumbakonam, the northern part of Mannargudi and Nannilam and the eastern part of Tanjore taluk; the plains to the south of the Kaveri river covering the southern part of Nannilam and Mannargudi taluks known as the "New Delta" for the reason that these tracts were only recently brought under irrigation by numerous manmade canals from the Kaveri and Kollidam and its tributaries and which were less fertile than the Old Delta; the arid Vallam plateau which covered the western part of Tanjore and Pattukkottai taluks and the Vedaranyam salt pans the largest of its kind in the Madras Presidency that extended for about thirty miles in length and four or five miles in width from Point Calimere to Adiramapatnam covering the southern portion of Thiruthiraipoondi taluk and eastern half of Pattukkottai taluk. There were two inhabited islands situated within the confines of the district - those of Devicottah situated at the mouth of the Kollidam and Vinayagateru near Kumbakonam.

Most of the landholdings in Tanjore District were inam or mirasdari land, the district had the largest proportion of land under mirasdars. There were few large zamindaris, like Ukkadai estate, Poondi estate, Kunniyur estate, Poraiyar Nadar's estate, Kabisthalam estate and Vadapadimangalam estate in the Tanjore District. Gandharvakottai estate, Kallakottai estate and Konur estate situated near the Pudukkottai border. But the bulk of land was held by mirasdars who leased it on regular tenures to pannaiyals or tenants who in turn cultivated the land with the help of labourers.

History

Tanjore District was inhabited at least since the first millennium B. C. and was the traditional homeland of the Chola Dynasty. The Early Cholas ruled Tanjore from the 3rd century B. C. to the 3rd century A. D. The town of Poompuhar or Kaveripoompattinam served as an important port trading with Rome. Following the Kalabhra interregnum, Tanjore recovered its past glory under the Pallavas and reached the zenith of its prosperity under the Medieval Cholas and Later Cholas. In the 13th century, Tanjore was annexed by the Pandyas who were later defeated by Malik Kafur. Tanjore was ruled for brief periods by the Delhi Sultanate and the Madurai Sultanate, till the 15th century, when it was conquered by the Vijayanagar kings under whom it recovered much of its glory. Tanjore was a part of the Vijayanagar Empire and its successors, the Madurai Nayaks and the Thanjavur Nayaks, until 1674, when it was conquered by Venkoji a brother of Chattrapathi Shivaji, who founded the Thanjavur Maratha kingdom. The British East India Company began to play a major part in the affairs of the region from 1749 onwards. In the 1760s and 1770s, the Thanjavur Maratha ruler, the Nawab of Carnatic and other major powers of the region were brought under the British sphere of influence. In 1799, the British East India Company assisted the deposed Thanjavur Maratha king Serfoji II in regaining his throne. In return for British assistance, Serfoji II retained his hold over Tanjore city and ceded the rest of his kingdom to the British East India Company. Tanjore city was eventually annexed by the British as per the Doctrine of Lapse in 1855 on the death of his son Shivaji without a surviving male heir. Tanjore District was created in about 1800, its limits almost the same as that of the preceding Thanjavur Maratha kingdom. Maikondan was a chief of the caste of kallans lived in 17 th-century. He was a brave warrior who ruled areas around Nandavanapatti in Thanjavur. In the year of 1662, Bijapur sultans invaded Thanjavur. During this invasion maikondan fought against sultans and saved all the inhabitants of Thanjavur.[1]

Demographics

 
Vaishnavite Brahmin students at a Gurukulam in Tanjore, c.a. 1909
Historical population
YearPop.±%
1871 1,973,731—    
1881 2,130,383+7.9%
1891 2,228,114+4.6%
1901 2,245,029+0.8%
1911 2,362,239+5.2%
Sources:
  • Imperial Gazetter of India, Volume 23. Clarendon Press. 1908.

Tanjore District covered a total area of 9,600 square kilometres (3,710 sq mi). It had a population of 2,245,029 in 1901. The population density was 234 inhabitants per square kilometre (605/sq mi). As per the 1901 census statistics, Tanjore was the fifth most populous district in the Madras Presidency and the second most densely populated after Madras city. It also had the third highest adult literacy rate (10%) in the Presidency after Madras and Nilgiris, second highest male literacy rate (21%) after Madras city and the seventh highest female literacy rate.

According to the 1901 census, 91 percent of the population was Hindu, 5 percent Muslim and 4 percent Christian. Among Hindus, Paraiyars (310,391), Vanniyars (235,406), Vellalars (212,168), Kallars (188,463), Devendrakula Velalar (159,855), Muthurajas (137,216), and Brahmins (118,882) were the most numerous. Kallars were mainly found in the western part of Tanjore and Pattukkottai taluks. Kallar served in the armies of the Chola kings. The Thanjavur kallar today largely engage in agriculture.[2] Tanjore had the third highest Brahmin population in the Madras Presidency (more than 6%) after South Canara and Ganjam and the highest among the Tamil-speaking districts. Most of the Muslims were Rowthers concentrated in Kumbakonam taluk where they formed the majority in the towns of Ayyampettai, Rajagiri and Pandaravadai apart from Koothanallur in Mannargudi taluk. They were also found in large numbers in the Negapatam and Pattukkottai taluks. More than a third of the total Christian population of the district lived in Tanjore taluk. There were a total of about 600 Jains chiefly concentrated in the Tanjore and Mannargudi taluks. The district was known for its Hindu orthodoxy and several historic Chola temples dedicated to Agamic gods and most of the Padal Petra Sthalams, shrines sung about in the devotional hymns of the Saivite Nayanmars were located here. There was an Advaitic Sankara mutt in Kumbakonam and Saivite mutts in Thiruvaduthurai, Thiruppanandal and Dharmapuram apart from many Veda pathashalas. The chief Muslim places of worship were located in Tanjore and Muttupet apart from the Nagore dargah.

Tamil was spoken as mother tongue by an overwhelming majority of the population while Telugu was spoken by about 3%. Other languages spoken include Marathi (13,651) and Saurashtra.

Taluks

 
A 1928 Map of the Thanjavur Maratha kingdom. The boundaries correlate almost exactly with that of the Thanjavur District of British India.

As of 1901, Thanjavur District was made up of nine taluks.

  • Kumbakonam (Area: 890 square kilometres (342 sq mi); Headquarters: Kumbakonam)
  • Mannargudi (Area: 780 square kilometres (301 sq mi); Headquarters: Mannargudi)
  • Mayiladuthurai (Area: 730 square kilometres (283 sq mi); Headquarters: Mayavaram)
  • Nannilam (Area: 760 square kilometres (293 sq mi); Headquarters: Nannilam)
  • Nagapattinam (Area: 620 square kilometres (240 sq mi); Headquarters: Negapatam)
  • Pattukkottai (Area: 2,350 square kilometres (906 sq mi); Headquarters: Pattukkottai)
  • Sirkazhi (Area: 440 square kilometres (171 sq mi); Headquarters: Shiyali)
  • Thanjavur (Area: 1,780 square kilometres (689 sq mi); Headquarters: Tanjore)
  • Thiruthuraipoondi (Area: 1,260 square kilometres (485 sq mi); Headquarters: Thiruthuraipoondi)

Administration

The administration of the district was under a District Collector who was from the Indian Civil Service. The District Collector of Tanjore resided at Vallam. The district was sub-divided into six divisions, some of them administered by British civil servants and the rest by Indian Deputy-Collectors. The following were the sub-divisions of the district

  • Kumbakonam sub-division: Kumbakonam taluk
  • Mannargudi sub-division: Mannargudi and Thiruthiraipundi taluks
  • Mayavaram sub-division: Mayavaram and Shiyali taluks
  • Negapatam sub-division: Negapatam and Nannilam taluks
  • Pattukkottai sub-division: Pattukkottai taluk
  • Tanjore sub-division: Tanjore taluk.

As of 1901, there were five municipalities in the district: Kumbakonam, Tanjore, Mannargudi, Mayavaram and Negapatam. From 1800 to 1840, the District Collector of Tanjore was also the agent of Pudukkottai state. However, Pudukkottai was later transferred to the jurisdiction of Madura and then Trichinopoly.

Economy

During British times, Tanjore District was famous for its metal work. Brass, copper and silver utensils were manufactured in large quantities. The South Indian Railway Workshops were established at Negapatam in the 1860s. The chief centres of land trade were Tanjore, Kumbakonam, Mannargudi and Mayavaram, while the chief centres of sea trade were Nagapattinam and Adirampattinam. The town of Kumbakonam was known for its silk sarees and rice and flour mills. It was also one of the leading producers of betel leaves and nuts. Tanjore city was known for silk-weaving, lace, embroidery, jewellery, pithwork and manufacture of metal work and musical instruments.

List of Collectors

The list of district collectors of Tanjore from its formation in December 1799 till the abolition of Madras Province and its conversion to a state on 26 January 1950 is given below:

  • Charles Harris (December 1799 - May 1804)
  • John Cotton (May 1804-October 1804)
  • J. Wallace (Oct 1804-April 1811)
  • J. Cotton (May 1811-February 1814)
  • James Hapbrew (February 1814-December 1816)
  • J. Thackeray (December 1816-September 1817)
  • James Hapbrew (September 1817-September 1819)
  • G. M. Ogilive (September 1819-February 1820)
  • J. Cotton (February 1820-October 1826)
  • A. S. Chair (October 1826-February 1827)
  • A. D. Campbell (February 1827-January 1828)
  • R. Nelson (January - February 1828)
  • N. W. Kindersley (February 1828 - July 1839)
  • S. Scott (July - August 1839)
  • H. C. Montgomery (August 1839-August 1841)
  • S. Scott (August 1841)
  • J. F. Bishop (January 1842-January 1843)
  • S. Scott (January 1843)
  • J. F. Bishop (February 1843-May 1844)
  • J. J. Cotton (May 1844- September 1844)
  • H. C. Montgomery (September 1844-October 1846)
  • J. J. Cotton (October 1846-February 1847)
  • G. Ellis (July–August 1847)
  • J. Bird(November 1847-January 1850)
  • I. W. Goodwyr (July 1851-May 1852)
  • P. G. Rant (November–December 1852)
  • W. M. Cadell (March–April 1853)
  • Henry Forbes (April 1853-May 1856)
  • W. M. Cadell (May–June 1856)
  • J. W. Cherry (June 1856-January 1857)
  • H. D. Phillips (January 1857-January 1859)
  • G. A. Ballard (February 1859-April 1862)
  • G. L. Morris (April 1862-May 1863)
  • G. Barbery (May 1863-September 1866)
  • W. L. Hathway (February 1870-May 1870)
  • H. D. Arbuthnot (April 1873-October 1874)
  • H. S. Thomas (October 1874-March 1877)
  • F. R. H. Sharp (March 1877-June 1877)
  • E. F. Webster (April 1878-June 1881)
  • C. S. Crob (June–October 1881)
  • F. E. Gibson (October 1881-November 1881)
  • D. Brick (November 1881-March 1882)
  • F. E. Gibson (April–June 1882)
  • W. S. Whiteside (June–August 1882)
  • H. E. Stokes (August 1882-June 1883)
  • J. B. Penning (June 1883-August 1886)
  • E. Gibson (September 1886-September 1889)
  • V. A. Happel (September 1889-January 1890)
  • E. Gibson (January–May 1890)
  • D. Murdack (May 1890)
  • J. Thomson (May 1890-July 1891)
  • R. N. Campbell (July 1891)
  • L. M. Winter (July 1891-August 1893)
  • R. B. Clegg (August 1893)
  • J. Strooch (August–October 1893)
  • L. M. Winter (October 1893-September 1894)
  • J. Thomson (September 1894-January 1895)
  • R. B. Clegg (January–July 1895)
  • E. C. Rovson (July–November 1895)
  • Gabriel Stokes (November 1895-May 1896)
  • H. Moberly (May–July 1896)
  • Gabriel Stokes (July–October 1896)
  • J. Andrew (October 1896-June 1897)
  • W. B. Agling (June–July 1897)
  • J. Andrew (July 1897-March 1898)
  • W. B. Agling (April–June 1898)
  • J. Twigg (June 1898-April 1900)
  • J. Andrew (April 1900-June 1902)
  • F. D. P. Oldfield (June–December 1902)
  • J. Andrew (December 1902-February 1903)
  • H. D. Taylor (February 1903-February 1904)
  • R. F. Grimby (March 1904-February 1905)
  • E. B. Ellwin (February -December 1905)
  • Lionel Davidson (December 1905-November 1906)
  • T. P. Bedford (November 1906-June 1910)
  • R. F. Austin (June 1910-June 1911)
  • N. R. Brodie (November 1911-March 1912)
  • J. N. Roy (March–June 1912)
  • R. B. Wood (June 1912-August 1916)
  • J. R. Huggins (September 1916-April 1920)
  • P. C. Dutt (April 1920-July 1921)
  • C. E. Jones (July 1921-April 1923)
  • H. S. Shield (April 1923-March 1924)
  • H. M. Hood (March 1924-December 1925)
  • H. S. Shield (December 1925-September 1927)
  • S. V. Ramamurthy (September 1927-January 1928)
  • Charles Hilton Brown (January–March 1928)
  • J. Gray (March 1928-January 1929)
  • D. H. Boulton (January–July 1929)
  • J. A. Throne (July 1929-June 1931)
  • W. Scott Brown (June 1931-March 1932)
  • Charles Hilton Brown (April 1932-June 1933)
  • A. G. Leach (June–July 1933)
  • M. V. Vellodi (July 1933)
  • E. R. Wood (July 1933-April 1935)
  • M. V. Vellodi (4 April 1935 – 1 June 1936)
  • Zinda Sahib Mohazir (2 June 1936 – 8 August 1936)
  • Subbiah Naidu (9 August 1936 – 1 April 1937)
  • D. D. Warren (1 April 1937 – 25 February 1938)
  • H. R. Uzielli (26 February – 1 April 1938)
  • Zinda Sahib Mohazir (2 April – 29 August 1938)
  • Diwan Bahadur V. N. Viswanatha Rao (30 August 1938 – 25 February 1939)
  • R. M. Sundaram (25 February – 7 October 1939)
  • C. K. Vijayaraghavan (9 October 1939 – 22 April 1942)
  • S. Venkateswaran (23 April 1942 – 10 August 1942)
  • M. S. Sivaraman (11 August 1942 – 15 February 1943)
  • J. W. Pritchard (16 February 1943 – 22 April 1944)
  • Rao Sahib R. D. Paul (24 April 1944 – 31 July 1944)
  • Khan Bahadur Mohammad Ismail Saheb Bahadur (1 August 1944 – 20 January 1947)
  • J. R. Bett (27 January 1947 – 2 March 1947)
  • H. C. McLanghlin (3 March 1947 – 9 April 1949)
  • T. K. Sankaravadivelu (10 April 1949 – 26 January 1950)

References

  1. ^ Tamilaham In The 17th Century (1956). p. 71.
  2. ^ Historical Dictionary of the Tamils (2nd ed.). The Scarecrow Press. 2007. p. 105. ISBN 9780810864450.

Sources

  • The Imperial Gazetteer of India, Volume 23. London: Clarendon Press. 1908.

tanjore, district, madras, presidency, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, tanjore, district, madras, pr. 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 Tanjore District Madras Presidency news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Thanjavur District was one of the districts in the erstwhile Madras Presidency of British India It covered the area of the present day districts of Thanjavur Tiruvarur Nagapattinam Mayiladuthurai and Aranthangi taluk Karambakkudi taluk of Pudukkottai District in Tamil Nadu Apart from being a bedrock of Hindu orthodoxy Tanjore was a centre of Chola cultural heritage and one of the richest and most prosperous districts in Madras Presidency Thanjavur DistrictDistrict of the Madras Presidency1799 1950FlagCapitalNagapattinam 1799 1845 Tarangambadi 1845 1860 Thanjavur 1860 1950 HistoryHistory Establishment of the district1799 Modern Thanjavur District1950Preceded by Succeeded byThanjavur Maratha kingdom Thanjavur DistrictTanjore district was constituted in 1799 when the Thanjavur Maratha ruler Serfoji II ceded most of his kingdom to the British East India Company in return for his restitution on the throne Tanjore district which is situated on the Cauvery Delta is one of the richest rice growing regions in South India It was scarcely affected by famines such as the Great Famine of 1876 78 Contents 1 Geography 2 History 3 Demographics 4 Taluks 5 Administration 6 Economy 7 List of Collectors 8 References 9 SourcesGeography EditThe Tanjore District was bounded by the districts of South Arcot in the north Trichinopoly to the west and south and the Pudukkottai State and Madura and later Ramnad districts to the south east The Kollidam River formed the long northern boundary with South Arcot The Bay of Bengal bounded it on the east The district was made of four well marked physical tracts the fertile plains to the north between the Kollidam and the Kaveri known as the Old Delta which was naturally irrigated by the rivers through a system of anaicuts and comprising the whole of the taluks of Shiyali Mayavaram and Kumbakonam the northern part of Mannargudi and Nannilam and the eastern part of Tanjore taluk the plains to the south of the Kaveri river covering the southern part of Nannilam and Mannargudi taluks known as the New Delta for the reason that these tracts were only recently brought under irrigation by numerous manmade canals from the Kaveri and Kollidam and its tributaries and which were less fertile than the Old Delta the arid Vallam plateau which covered the western part of Tanjore and Pattukkottai taluks and the Vedaranyam salt pans the largest of its kind in the Madras Presidency that extended for about thirty miles in length and four or five miles in width from Point Calimere to Adiramapatnam covering the southern portion of Thiruthiraipoondi taluk and eastern half of Pattukkottai taluk There were two inhabited islands situated within the confines of the district those of Devicottah situated at the mouth of the Kollidam and Vinayagateru near Kumbakonam Most of the landholdings in Tanjore District were inam or mirasdari land the district had the largest proportion of land under mirasdars There were few large zamindaris like Ukkadai estate Poondi estate Kunniyur estate Poraiyar Nadar s estate Kabisthalam estate and Vadapadimangalam estate in the Tanjore District Gandharvakottai estate Kallakottai estate and Konur estate situated near the Pudukkottai border But the bulk of land was held by mirasdars who leased it on regular tenures to pannaiyals or tenants who in turn cultivated the land with the help of labourers History Edit The Brihadeeswarar Temple Thanjavur c 2007 Tanjore District was inhabited at least since the first millennium B C and was the traditional homeland of the Chola Dynasty The Early Cholas ruled Tanjore from the 3rd century B C to the 3rd century A D The town of Poompuhar or Kaveripoompattinam served as an important port trading with Rome Following the Kalabhra interregnum Tanjore recovered its past glory under the Pallavas and reached the zenith of its prosperity under the Medieval Cholas and Later Cholas In the 13th century Tanjore was annexed by the Pandyas who were later defeated by Malik Kafur Tanjore was ruled for brief periods by the Delhi Sultanate and the Madurai Sultanate till the 15th century when it was conquered by the Vijayanagar kings under whom it recovered much of its glory Tanjore was a part of the Vijayanagar Empire and its successors the Madurai Nayaks and the Thanjavur Nayaks until 1674 when it was conquered by Venkoji a brother of Chattrapathi Shivaji who founded the Thanjavur Maratha kingdom The British East India Company began to play a major part in the affairs of the region from 1749 onwards In the 1760s and 1770s the Thanjavur Maratha ruler the Nawab of Carnatic and other major powers of the region were brought under the British sphere of influence In 1799 the British East India Company assisted the deposed Thanjavur Maratha king Serfoji II in regaining his throne In return for British assistance Serfoji II retained his hold over Tanjore city and ceded the rest of his kingdom to the British East India Company Tanjore city was eventually annexed by the British as per the Doctrine of Lapse in 1855 on the death of his son Shivaji without a surviving male heir Tanjore District was created in about 1800 its limits almost the same as that of the preceding Thanjavur Maratha kingdom Maikondan was a chief of the caste of kallans lived in 17 th century He was a brave warrior who ruled areas around Nandavanapatti in Thanjavur In the year of 1662 Bijapur sultans invaded Thanjavur During this invasion maikondan fought against sultans and saved all the inhabitants of Thanjavur 1 Demographics Edit Vaishnavite Brahmin students at a Gurukulam in Tanjore c a 1909 Historical populationYearPop 18711 973 731 18812 130 383 7 9 18912 228 114 4 6 19012 245 029 0 8 19112 362 239 5 2 Sources Imperial Gazetter of India Volume 23 Clarendon Press 1908 Tanjore District covered a total area of 9 600 square kilometres 3 710 sq mi It had a population of 2 245 029 in 1901 The population density was 234 inhabitants per square kilometre 605 sq mi As per the 1901 census statistics Tanjore was the fifth most populous district in the Madras Presidency and the second most densely populated after Madras city It also had the third highest adult literacy rate 10 in the Presidency after Madras and Nilgiris second highest male literacy rate 21 after Madras city and the seventh highest female literacy rate According to the 1901 census 91 percent of the population was Hindu 5 percent Muslim and 4 percent Christian Among Hindus Paraiyars 310 391 Vanniyars 235 406 Vellalars 212 168 Kallars 188 463 Devendrakula Velalar 159 855 Muthurajas 137 216 and Brahmins 118 882 were the most numerous Kallars were mainly found in the western part of Tanjore and Pattukkottai taluks Kallar served in the armies of the Chola kings The Thanjavur kallar today largely engage in agriculture 2 Tanjore had the third highest Brahmin population in the Madras Presidency more than 6 after South Canara and Ganjam and the highest among the Tamil speaking districts Most of the Muslims were Rowthers concentrated in Kumbakonam taluk where they formed the majority in the towns of Ayyampettai Rajagiri and Pandaravadai apart from Koothanallur in Mannargudi taluk They were also found in large numbers in the Negapatam and Pattukkottai taluks More than a third of the total Christian population of the district lived in Tanjore taluk There were a total of about 600 Jains chiefly concentrated in the Tanjore and Mannargudi taluks The district was known for its Hindu orthodoxy and several historic Chola temples dedicated to Agamic gods and most of the Padal Petra Sthalams shrines sung about in the devotional hymns of the Saivite Nayanmars were located here There was an Advaitic Sankara mutt in Kumbakonam and Saivite mutts in Thiruvaduthurai Thiruppanandal and Dharmapuram apart from many Veda pathashalas The chief Muslim places of worship were located in Tanjore and Muttupet apart from the Nagore dargah Tamil was spoken as mother tongue by an overwhelming majority of the population while Telugu was spoken by about 3 Other languages spoken include Marathi 13 651 and Saurashtra Taluks Edit A 1928 Map of the Thanjavur Maratha kingdom The boundaries correlate almost exactly with that of the Thanjavur District of British India As of 1901 Thanjavur District was made up of nine taluks Kumbakonam Area 890 square kilometres 342 sq mi Headquarters Kumbakonam Mannargudi Area 780 square kilometres 301 sq mi Headquarters Mannargudi Mayiladuthurai Area 730 square kilometres 283 sq mi Headquarters Mayavaram Nannilam Area 760 square kilometres 293 sq mi Headquarters Nannilam Nagapattinam Area 620 square kilometres 240 sq mi Headquarters Negapatam Pattukkottai Area 2 350 square kilometres 906 sq mi Headquarters Pattukkottai Sirkazhi Area 440 square kilometres 171 sq mi Headquarters Shiyali Thanjavur Area 1 780 square kilometres 689 sq mi Headquarters Tanjore Thiruthuraipoondi Area 1 260 square kilometres 485 sq mi Headquarters Thiruthuraipoondi Administration EditThe administration of the district was under a District Collector who was from the Indian Civil Service The District Collector of Tanjore resided at Vallam The district was sub divided into six divisions some of them administered by British civil servants and the rest by Indian Deputy Collectors The following were the sub divisions of the district Kumbakonam sub division Kumbakonam taluk Mannargudi sub division Mannargudi and Thiruthiraipundi taluks Mayavaram sub division Mayavaram and Shiyali taluks Negapatam sub division Negapatam and Nannilam taluks Pattukkottai sub division Pattukkottai taluk Tanjore sub division Tanjore taluk As of 1901 there were five municipalities in the district Kumbakonam Tanjore Mannargudi Mayavaram and Negapatam From 1800 to 1840 the District Collector of Tanjore was also the agent of Pudukkottai state However Pudukkottai was later transferred to the jurisdiction of Madura and then Trichinopoly Economy EditDuring British times Tanjore District was famous for its metal work Brass copper and silver utensils were manufactured in large quantities The South Indian Railway Workshops were established at Negapatam in the 1860s The chief centres of land trade were Tanjore Kumbakonam Mannargudi and Mayavaram while the chief centres of sea trade were Nagapattinam and Adirampattinam The town of Kumbakonam was known for its silk sarees and rice and flour mills It was also one of the leading producers of betel leaves and nuts Tanjore city was known for silk weaving lace embroidery jewellery pithwork and manufacture of metal work and musical instruments List of Collectors EditThe list of district collectors of Tanjore from its formation in December 1799 till the abolition of Madras Province and its conversion to a state on 26 January 1950 is given below Charles Harris December 1799 May 1804 John Cotton May 1804 October 1804 J Wallace Oct 1804 April 1811 J Cotton May 1811 February 1814 James Hapbrew February 1814 December 1816 J Thackeray December 1816 September 1817 James Hapbrew September 1817 September 1819 G M Ogilive September 1819 February 1820 J Cotton February 1820 October 1826 A S Chair October 1826 February 1827 A D Campbell February 1827 January 1828 R Nelson January February 1828 N W Kindersley February 1828 July 1839 S Scott July August 1839 H C Montgomery August 1839 August 1841 S Scott August 1841 J F Bishop January 1842 January 1843 S Scott January 1843 J F Bishop February 1843 May 1844 J J Cotton May 1844 September 1844 H C Montgomery September 1844 October 1846 J J Cotton October 1846 February 1847 G Ellis July August 1847 J Bird November 1847 January 1850 I W Goodwyr July 1851 May 1852 P G Rant November December 1852 W M Cadell March April 1853 Henry Forbes April 1853 May 1856 W M Cadell May June 1856 J W Cherry June 1856 January 1857 H D Phillips January 1857 January 1859 G A Ballard February 1859 April 1862 G L Morris April 1862 May 1863 G Barbery May 1863 September 1866 W L Hathway February 1870 May 1870 H D Arbuthnot April 1873 October 1874 H S Thomas October 1874 March 1877 F R H Sharp March 1877 June 1877 E F Webster April 1878 June 1881 C S Crob June October 1881 F E Gibson October 1881 November 1881 D Brick November 1881 March 1882 F E Gibson April June 1882 W S Whiteside June August 1882 H E Stokes August 1882 June 1883 J B Penning June 1883 August 1886 E Gibson September 1886 September 1889 V A Happel September 1889 January 1890 E Gibson January May 1890 D Murdack May 1890 J Thomson May 1890 July 1891 R N Campbell July 1891 L M Winter July 1891 August 1893 R B Clegg August 1893 J Strooch August October 1893 L M Winter October 1893 September 1894 J Thomson September 1894 January 1895 R B Clegg January July 1895 E C Rovson July November 1895 Gabriel Stokes November 1895 May 1896 H Moberly May July 1896 Gabriel Stokes July October 1896 J Andrew October 1896 June 1897 W B Agling June July 1897 J Andrew July 1897 March 1898 W B Agling April June 1898 J Twigg June 1898 April 1900 J Andrew April 1900 June 1902 F D P Oldfield June December 1902 J Andrew December 1902 February 1903 H D Taylor February 1903 February 1904 R F Grimby March 1904 February 1905 E B Ellwin February December 1905 Lionel Davidson December 1905 November 1906 T P Bedford November 1906 June 1910 R F Austin June 1910 June 1911 N R Brodie November 1911 March 1912 J N Roy March June 1912 R B Wood June 1912 August 1916 J R Huggins September 1916 April 1920 P C Dutt April 1920 July 1921 C E Jones July 1921 April 1923 H S Shield April 1923 March 1924 H M Hood March 1924 December 1925 H S Shield December 1925 September 1927 S V Ramamurthy September 1927 January 1928 Charles Hilton Brown January March 1928 J Gray March 1928 January 1929 D H Boulton January July 1929 J A Throne July 1929 June 1931 W Scott Brown June 1931 March 1932 Charles Hilton Brown April 1932 June 1933 A G Leach June July 1933 M V Vellodi July 1933 E R Wood July 1933 April 1935 M V Vellodi 4 April 1935 1 June 1936 Zinda Sahib Mohazir 2 June 1936 8 August 1936 Subbiah Naidu 9 August 1936 1 April 1937 D D Warren 1 April 1937 25 February 1938 H R Uzielli 26 February 1 April 1938 Zinda Sahib Mohazir 2 April 29 August 1938 Diwan Bahadur V N Viswanatha Rao 30 August 1938 25 February 1939 R M Sundaram 25 February 7 October 1939 C K Vijayaraghavan 9 October 1939 22 April 1942 S Venkateswaran 23 April 1942 10 August 1942 M S Sivaraman 11 August 1942 15 February 1943 J W Pritchard 16 February 1943 22 April 1944 Rao Sahib R D Paul 24 April 1944 31 July 1944 Khan Bahadur Mohammad Ismail Saheb Bahadur 1 August 1944 20 January 1947 J R Bett 27 January 1947 2 March 1947 H C McLanghlin 3 March 1947 9 April 1949 T K Sankaravadivelu 10 April 1949 26 January 1950 References Edit Tamilaham In The 17th Century 1956 p 71 Historical Dictionary of the Tamils 2nd ed The Scarecrow Press 2007 p 105 ISBN 9780810864450 Sources EditThe Imperial Gazetteer of India Volume 23 London Clarendon Press 1908 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tanjore District Madras Presidency amp oldid 1128368364, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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