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Tripura (princely state)

Tripura State, also known as Hill Tipperah,[1] was a princely state in India during the period of the British Raj and for some two years after the departure of the British. Its rulers belonged to the Manikya dynasty and until August 1947 the state was in a subsidiary alliance, from which it was released by the Indian Independence Act 1947. The state acceded to the newly independent Indian Union on 13 August 1947, and subsequently merged into the Indian Union in October 1949.[2]

Tripura State (Hill Tipperah)
Princely State of British Indian Empire
1809–1949
Flag
Coat of arms

1858 map of the Bengal Presidency and 'Independent Tipperah' in the far right
CapitalAgartala
Area 
• 1941
10,660 km2 (4,120 sq mi)
Population 
• 1941
513,000
History
History 
1809
13 August 1947
15 October 1949 1949
Preceded by
Succeeded by
'Hill Tipperah' in the Bengal Gazetteer, 1907
Neermahal Palace.
Maharaja Bir Chandra Manikya with Queen Manamohini
Queen Kanchan Prabha Devi who signed the instrument of accession as president of the Council of Regency
Kingdom of Tripura
Part of History of Tripura
Maha Manikyac. 1400–1431
Dharma Manikya I1431–1462
Ratna Manikya I1462–1487
Pratap Manikya1487
Vijaya Manikya I1488
Mukut Manikya1489
Dhanya Manikya1490–1515
Dhwaja Manikya1515–1520
Deva Manikya1520–1530
Indra Manikya I1530–1532
Vijaya Manikya II1532–1563
Ananta Manikya1563–1567
Udai Manikya I1567–1573
Joy Manikya I1573–1577
Amar Manikya1577–1585
Rajdhar Manikya I1586–1600
Ishwar Manikya1600
Yashodhar Manikya1600–1623
Interregnum1623–1626
Kalyan Manikya1626–1660
Govinda Manikya1660–1661
Chhatra Manikya1661–1667
Govinda Manikya1661–1673
Rama Manikya1673–1685
Ratna Manikya II1685–1693
Narendra Manikya1693–1695
Ratna Manikya II1695–1712
Mahendra Manikya1712–1714
Dharma Manikya II1714–1725
Jagat Manikya1725–1729
Dharma Manikya II1729
Mukunda Manikya1729–1739
Joy Manikya IIc. 1739–1744
Indra Manikya IIc. 1744–1746
Udai Manikya IIc. 1744
Joy Manikya II1746
Vijaya Manikya III1746–1748
Lakshman Manikya1740s/1750s
Interregnum1750s–1760
Krishna Manikya1760–1783
Rajdhar Manikya II1785–1806
Rama Ganga Manikya1806–1809
Durga Manikya1809–1813
Rama Ganga Manikya1813–1826
Kashi Chandra Manikya1826–1829
Krishna Kishore Manikya1829–1849
Ishan Chandra Manikya1849–1862
Bir Chandra Manikya1862–1896
Birendra Kishore Manikya1909–1923
Bir Bikram Kishore Manikya1923–1947
Kirit Bikram Kishore Manikya1947–1949
1949–1978 (titular)
Kirit Pradyot Manikya1978–present (titular)
Tripura monarchy data
Manikya dynasty (Royal family)
Agartala (Capital of the kingdom)
Ujjayanta Palace (Royal residence)
Neermahal (Royal residence)
Rajmala (Royal chronicle)
Tripura Buranji (Chronicle)
Chaturdasa Devata (Family deities)

The princely state was located in the present-day Indian state of Tripura. The state included one town, Agartala, as well as a total of 1,463 villages. It had an area of 10,660 km2 and a population of 513,000 inhabitants in 1941.

History

The predecessor state of Tripura was founded about 100 AD. According to legend the Manikya dynasty derived its name from a jewel ('Mani' in Sanskrit) that had been obtained from a frog. The first king who ruled the state under the royal title of Manikya was Maharaja Maha Manikya, who ascended the throne in 1400. The kingdom is mentioned in Ming Shilu as Di-wu-la. It is further stated that it was occupied by Da-Gu-la, a unidentified state in what is Northern Myanmar or Assam.[3] The Rajmala, a chronicle of the Kings of Tripura, was written in Bengali verse in the 15th century under Dharma Manikya I.[4] The kingdom of Tripura reached its maximum expansion in the 16th century.[citation needed]

In 1764, when the British East India Company took control of Bengal, the parts of Bengal that had been under the Mughal Empire were taken over by the British administration. In 1809, Tripura became a British protectorate, and in 1838 the Rajas of Tripura were recognised by the British as sovereigns.

Between 1826 and 1862 the eastern part was subject to the ravages caused by Kuki invaders that plundered and destroyed villages and massacred their inhabitants.

There were troubles in every succession among the Tripura royal family members when the aspiring princes often resorted to use the services of the Kukis to cause disturbances. Thus in 1904, the British enacted a sanad that regulated permanently the succession of the royal family. Thenceforward the succession would have to be recognised by the Viceroy of India representing the British Crown.

Bir Chandra Manikya (1862–1896) modelled his administration on the pattern of British India, and enacted reforms including the foundation of the Agartala Municipal Corporation.

In 1905, Tripura became part of the new province of Eastern Bengal and Assam and was designated as 'Hill Tippera'.[5] In addition to the Hill Tippera area, which corresponds to Tripura State, the kings retained a fertile estate known as Chakla Roshanbad with an area of 1476 km2, located in the flatland of Noakhali, Sylhet and Tipperah districts; the latter is now mostly included in the Comilla District of Bangladesh.[6]

King Bir Bikram Kishore Debbarma died in May 1947, shortly before Indian Independence. His son Kirit Bikram Kishore was a minor at that time, and, so, Maharani Kanchan Prava Devi presided over the Council of Regency formed to govern the state. On 13 August 1947, the Maharani signed the Instrument of Accession, joining the Indian Union. There was turmoil in the state in the succeeding months and several changes in the administrative structure took place in quick succession. Finally, on 9 September 1949, the Maharani signed the Merger Agreement with the Dominion of India, which became effective on 15 October, and Tripura became a centrally administered Part C State (Chief Commissioner's Province) of India.[2][7]

Kirit Pradyot Deb Barman (b. 1978) was the son of the last King - and is the current titular monarch.

Rulers

The head of the royal family of Tripura held the title of 'Maharaja' from 1919 onwards. Since 1897 the rulers were entitled to a 13 gun salute by the British authorities.[citation needed]

Rajas

> 1978- (age 44 years), Pradyot Bikram Manikya Deb Barma (Last king),

  • 1684 – 1712 Ratna Manikya II (2nd time) (d. 1712)
  • 1712 – 1714 Mahendra Manikya
  • 1714 – 1732 Dharma Manikya II (1st time)
  • 1732 – 1733 Jagat Manikya
  • 1733 Dharma Manikya II (2nd time)
  • 1733 – 1737 Mukunda Manikya (d. 1739)
  • 1737 – 1739 Jai Manikya II (1st time)
  • 1739 – 174. Indrasya Manikya II (1st time)
  • 17.. – 174. Udai Manikya
  • 174. – 174. Jai Manikya II (2nd time)
  • 174. – 174. Indrasya Manikya II (2nd time)
  • 174. – 1743 Jai Manikya II (3rd time)
  • 1743 – 1760 Bijaya Manikya III
  • c. 1748 – c. 1758 Shamsher Gazi -Regent (d. c. 1758)
  • 1760 Lakshman Manikya (d. 1760)
  • 1760 – 1761 Krishna Manikya (1st time) (d. 1783)
  • 1761 – 1767 Balaram Manikya
  • 1767 – 11 July 1783 Krishna Manikya (2nd time) (s.a.)
  • 11 July 1783 – Mar 1804 Rajadhara Manikya II (d. 1804)
  • 11 July 1783 – 1786 Jahnavi Rani (RM)Mahadevayu (f) -Regent
  • Mar 1804 – 18 October 1809 Ramaganga Manikya (1st time) (b. 17.. – d. 1826)
  • 18 October 1809 – 6 April 1813 Durga Manikya (b. 17.. – d. 1813)
  • 6 April 1813 – 14 November 1826 Ramaganga Manikya (2nd time) (s.a.)
  • 14 November 1826 – 19 March 1830 Kashichandra Manikya (d. 1830)
  • 19 March 1830 – 3 April 1849 Krishna Kishor Manikya (d. 1849)
  • 3 April 1849 – 31 July 1862 Ishanachandra Manikya (b. 1829 – d. 1862)
  • 31 July 1862 – 11 December 1896 Virachandra Manikya (b. 1838 – d. 1896) (personal style Maharaja from 24 October 1877)
  • 31 July 1862 – 9 March 1870 .... - Regent
  • 11 December 1896 – 12 March 1909 Radha Kishor Manikya (b. 1857 – d. 1909)
  • 12 March 1909 – 1 January 1919 Virendra Kishor Manikya (b. 1883 – d. 1923)

Maharajas

Dewans (chief ministers)

  • 1850 – 1857? Balaram Hazari
  • 18.. – 18.. Braja Mohan Thakur
  • 18.. – 1873 Dinabandhu Thakur
  • Jul 1873 – 1877 Nilmoni Das
  • 1877 – 1880 Sambhu Chandra Mukherjee
  • 1880 – 1883 ....
  • 1883 Prince Radakishore
  • 1883 – 1886 Dhanajaya Thakur
  • 1886 (3 months) Babu Dinanath Sen
  • 1886 – November 1888 Rai Bahadur Mohini Mohan Bardhan
  • November 1888 – 1890? the Raja
  • 1890 – 1892 Rai Umakanta Das Bahadur (1st time)
  • 1892 – 1901? Dinabandhu Thakur
  • 1901 – 1905 Rai Umakanta Das Bahadur (2nd time)
  • November 1905 – February 1907 Shri Ramani Mohan Chattopadhyaya
  • February 1907 – December 1908 Rai Umakanta Das Bahadur (3rd time)
  • December 1908 – 7 November 1909 Sirjukta Babu Annada Charan Gupta
  • November 1909 – 1914 Nabadwip Chandra Deb Barma (b. 1854 – d. 1931)
  • 1914 – 1915 Brajendra Kishore Deb Barma (b. 1880 – d. 19..) (1st time)
  • 1915 – 1923 Srijut Babu Prasanna Kumar Deb Barma
  • 9 December 1923 – 19 August 1927 Nabadwipchandra Dev Burma (s.a.) (1st time)
  • 1927 – 1929 Jyotis Chandra Sen (1st time)
  • 17 May 1929 – 1931? Nabadwipchandra Dev Burma (s.a.) (2nd time)
  • 1931 – 28 August 1932 B.K. Sen
  • 28 August 1932 – 20 November 1932 Manyabara Rana Bodhjung Bahadur (b. 1894 – d. 1946)
  • 20 Nov 1932 – 1939/40 Jyotis Chandra Sen (2nd time)
  • 1939/40 – 18 November 1946 Manyabara Rana Bodhjung Bahadur
  • November 1946 – 1947 Brajendra Kishore Deb Barma (s.a.) (2nd time)
  • 1947 S.V. Mukherjee
  • 20 December 1947 – 15 October 1949 Abani Bushan Chatterjee

British political agents

  • 3 July 1871 – February 1874 Ambrose William Bushe Power (b. 18.. – d. 1907)
  • 11 February 1874 – May 1875 Edward Gordon Lillingston
  • 27 May 1875 – February 1876 W.L. Samuels
  • 22 August 1876 – April 1877 Thomas Edward Coxhead (b. 1842 – d. 1890)
  • February 1877 – April 1877 James Francis Bradbury (acting for Coxhead)
  • 26 April 1877 – 28 October 1878 C.W. Bolton
  • 1878 – 1879 F. Jones
  • 1879 – 1882 G. Toynbee

Symbols

Flag

The flag features the coat of arms, on a background of saffron and red.

Coat of Arms

The motto is "Bir ta Saramekam" (Courage is the one thing most needed or nothing is better than a warrior).

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Tripura".
  2. ^ a b Nag, Sajal (2007), Making of the Indian Union: Merger of princely states and excluded areas, Akansha Pub. House, p. 321, ISBN 978-81-8370-110-5
  3. ^ "The MSL records that the territory of this polity was in the early 15th century occupied by Da Gu-la (Tai-zong 269.3a-b), which suggests an area near Assam, There seems little doubt that it refers to Tripura, which lies south of the Brahmaputra and north of Bengal"(Wade 1994:253)
  4. ^ Hill Tippera – History The Imperial Gazetteer of India, 1909, v. 13, p. 118.
  5. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Hill Tippera" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 469.
  6. ^ https://indianculture.gov.in/survey-and-settlement-roshanbad-estate-districts-tippera-and-noakhali-1892-99
  7. ^ Das, J. K. (2001), Human Rights and Indigenous Peoples, APH Publishing, pp. 224–225, ISBN 978-81-7648-243-1

References

  • Wade, Geoffrey (1994), The Ming Shi-lu (Veritable Records of the Ming Dynasty) as a Source for Southeast Asian History -- 14th to 17th Centuries, Hong Kong

External links

  • Kings & Royal Families of Tripura
  • Manipuri Queens in the Royal House of Tripura – A Historical Study
  • Tripura ruling dynasty

Coordinates: 23°50′N 91°17′E / 23.833°N 91.283°E / 23.833; 91.283

tripura, princely, state, this, article, about, princely, state, year, 1949, state, india, tripura, tripura, state, also, known, hill, tipperah, princely, state, india, during, period, british, some, years, after, departure, british, rulers, belonged, manikya,. This article is about the princely state up to the year 1949 For the state of India see Tripura Tripura State also known as Hill Tipperah 1 was a princely state in India during the period of the British Raj and for some two years after the departure of the British Its rulers belonged to the Manikya dynasty and until August 1947 the state was in a subsidiary alliance from which it was released by the Indian Independence Act 1947 The state acceded to the newly independent Indian Union on 13 August 1947 and subsequently merged into the Indian Union in October 1949 2 Tripura State Hill Tipperah Princely State of British Indian Empire1809 1949Flag Coat of arms1858 map of the Bengal Presidency and Independent Tipperah in the far rightCapitalAgartalaArea 194110 660 km2 4 120 sq mi Population 1941513 000HistoryHistory British protectorate1809 Accession to India13 August 1947 Merger Agreement15 October 1949 1949Preceded by Succeeded byTwipra Kingdom Dominion of India Hill Tipperah in the Bengal Gazetteer 1907 Ujjayanta Palace Neermahal Palace Maharaja Bir Chandra Manikya with Queen Manamohini Tagore with Maharaja Radha Kishore in 1900 Queen Kanchan Prabha Devi who signed the instrument of accession as president of the Council of Regency Kingdom of TripuraPart of History of TripuraKings of TripuraMaha Manikyac 1400 1431Dharma Manikya I1431 1462Ratna Manikya I1462 1487Pratap Manikya1487Vijaya Manikya I1488Mukut Manikya1489Dhanya Manikya1490 1515Dhwaja Manikya1515 1520Deva Manikya1520 1530Indra Manikya I1530 1532Vijaya Manikya II1532 1563Ananta Manikya1563 1567Udai Manikya I1567 1573Joy Manikya I1573 1577Amar Manikya1577 1585Rajdhar Manikya I1586 1600Ishwar Manikya1600Yashodhar Manikya1600 1623Interregnum1623 1626Kalyan Manikya1626 1660Govinda Manikya1660 1661Chhatra Manikya1661 1667Govinda Manikya1661 1673Rama Manikya1673 1685Ratna Manikya II1685 1693Narendra Manikya1693 1695Ratna Manikya II1695 1712Mahendra Manikya1712 1714Dharma Manikya II1714 1725Jagat Manikya1725 1729Dharma Manikya II1729Mukunda Manikya1729 1739Joy Manikya IIc 1739 1744Indra Manikya IIc 1744 1746Udai Manikya IIc 1744Joy Manikya II1746Vijaya Manikya III1746 1748Lakshman Manikya1740s 1750sInterregnum1750s 1760Krishna Manikya1760 1783Rajdhar Manikya II1785 1806Rama Ganga Manikya1806 1809Durga Manikya1809 1813Rama Ganga Manikya1813 1826Kashi Chandra Manikya1826 1829Krishna Kishore Manikya1829 1849Ishan Chandra Manikya1849 1862Bir Chandra Manikya1862 1896Birendra Kishore Manikya1909 1923Bir Bikram Kishore Manikya1923 1947Kirit Bikram Kishore Manikya1947 19491949 1978 titular Kirit Pradyot Manikya1978 present titular Tripura monarchy dataManikya dynasty Royal family Agartala Capital of the kingdom Ujjayanta Palace Royal residence Neermahal Royal residence Rajmala Royal chronicle Tripura Buranji Chronicle Chaturdasa Devata Family deities vteThe princely state was located in the present day Indian state of Tripura The state included one town Agartala as well as a total of 1 463 villages It had an area of 10 660 km2 and a population of 513 000 inhabitants in 1941 Contents 1 History 2 Rulers 2 1 Rajas 2 2 Maharajas 2 3 Dewans chief ministers 2 3 1 British political agents 3 Symbols 3 1 Flag 3 2 Coat of Arms 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditSee also Twipra Kingdom The predecessor state of Tripura was founded about 100 AD According to legend the Manikya dynasty derived its name from a jewel Mani in Sanskrit that had been obtained from a frog The first king who ruled the state under the royal title of Manikya was Maharaja Maha Manikya who ascended the throne in 1400 The kingdom is mentioned in Ming Shilu as Di wu la It is further stated that it was occupied by Da Gu la a unidentified state in what is Northern Myanmar or Assam 3 The Rajmala a chronicle of the Kings of Tripura was written in Bengali verse in the 15th century under Dharma Manikya I 4 The kingdom of Tripura reached its maximum expansion in the 16th century citation needed In 1764 when the British East India Company took control of Bengal the parts of Bengal that had been under the Mughal Empire were taken over by the British administration In 1809 Tripura became a British protectorate and in 1838 the Rajas of Tripura were recognised by the British as sovereigns Between 1826 and 1862 the eastern part was subject to the ravages caused by Kuki invaders that plundered and destroyed villages and massacred their inhabitants There were troubles in every succession among the Tripura royal family members when the aspiring princes often resorted to use the services of the Kukis to cause disturbances Thus in 1904 the British enacted a sanad that regulated permanently the succession of the royal family Thenceforward the succession would have to be recognised by the Viceroy of India representing the British Crown Bir Chandra Manikya 1862 1896 modelled his administration on the pattern of British India and enacted reforms including the foundation of the Agartala Municipal Corporation In 1905 Tripura became part of the new province of Eastern Bengal and Assam and was designated as Hill Tippera 5 In addition to the Hill Tippera area which corresponds to Tripura State the kings retained a fertile estate known as Chakla Roshanbad with an area of 1476 km2 located in the flatland of Noakhali Sylhet and Tipperah districts the latter is now mostly included in the Comilla District of Bangladesh 6 King Bir Bikram Kishore Debbarma died in May 1947 shortly before Indian Independence His son Kirit Bikram Kishore was a minor at that time and so Maharani Kanchan Prava Devi presided over the Council of Regency formed to govern the state On 13 August 1947 the Maharani signed the Instrument of Accession joining the Indian Union There was turmoil in the state in the succeeding months and several changes in the administrative structure took place in quick succession Finally on 9 September 1949 the Maharani signed the Merger Agreement with the Dominion of India which became effective on 15 October and Tripura became a centrally administered Part C State Chief Commissioner s Province of India 2 7 Kirit Pradyot Deb Barman b 1978 was the son of the last King and is the current titular monarch Rulers EditThe head of the royal family of Tripura held the title of Maharaja from 1919 onwards Since 1897 the rulers were entitled to a 13 gun salute by the British authorities citation needed Rajas Edit See also Kings of Tripura gt 1978 age 44 years Pradyot Bikram Manikya Deb Barma Last king 1684 1712 Ratna Manikya II 2nd time d 1712 1712 1714 Mahendra Manikya 1714 1732 Dharma Manikya II 1st time 1732 1733 Jagat Manikya 1733 Dharma Manikya II 2nd time 1733 1737 Mukunda Manikya d 1739 1737 1739 Jai Manikya II 1st time 1739 174 Indrasya Manikya II 1st time 17 174 Udai Manikya 174 174 Jai Manikya II 2nd time 174 174 Indrasya Manikya II 2nd time 174 1743 Jai Manikya II 3rd time 1743 1760 Bijaya Manikya III c 1748 c 1758 Shamsher Gazi Regent d c 1758 1760 Lakshman Manikya d 1760 1760 1761 Krishna Manikya 1st time d 1783 1761 1767 Balaram Manikya 1767 11 July 1783 Krishna Manikya 2nd time s a 11 July 1783 Mar 1804 Rajadhara Manikya II d 1804 11 July 1783 1786 Jahnavi Rani RM Mahadevayu f Regent Mar 1804 18 October 1809 Ramaganga Manikya 1st time b 17 d 1826 18 October 1809 6 April 1813 Durga Manikya b 17 d 1813 6 April 1813 14 November 1826 Ramaganga Manikya 2nd time s a 14 November 1826 19 March 1830 Kashichandra Manikya d 1830 19 March 1830 3 April 1849 Krishna Kishor Manikya d 1849 3 April 1849 31 July 1862 Ishanachandra Manikya b 1829 d 1862 31 July 1862 11 December 1896 Virachandra Manikya b 1838 d 1896 personal style Maharaja from 24 October 1877 31 July 1862 9 March 1870 Regent 11 December 1896 12 March 1909 Radha Kishor Manikya b 1857 d 1909 12 March 1909 1 January 1919 Virendra Kishor Manikya b 1883 d 1923 Maharajas Edit 1 January 1919 13 August 1923 Virendra Kishor Manikya 17 August 1923 17 May 1947 Vira Vikrama Kishor Manikya born 1908 died 1947 after 3 June 1935 called Sir Vira Vikrama Kishor Manikya 17 May 1947 15 October 1949 Manikya Kirit Bikram Kishore Deb Burman a minor born 1933 died 2006 reigned as a titular ruler until his death but unrecognised after 1971 by the Indian government 17 May 1947 15 October 1949 Maharani Kanchan Prabhavati Mahadevi Regent born 1914 died 1973 Dewans chief ministers Edit 1850 1857 Balaram Hazari 18 18 Braja Mohan Thakur 18 1873 Dinabandhu Thakur Jul 1873 1877 Nilmoni Das 1877 1880 Sambhu Chandra Mukherjee 1880 1883 1883 Prince Radakishore 1883 1886 Dhanajaya Thakur 1886 3 months Babu Dinanath Sen 1886 November 1888 Rai Bahadur Mohini Mohan Bardhan November 1888 1890 the Raja 1890 1892 Rai Umakanta Das Bahadur 1st time 1892 1901 Dinabandhu Thakur 1901 1905 Rai Umakanta Das Bahadur 2nd time November 1905 February 1907 Shri Ramani Mohan Chattopadhyaya February 1907 December 1908 Rai Umakanta Das Bahadur 3rd time December 1908 7 November 1909 Sirjukta Babu Annada Charan Gupta November 1909 1914 Nabadwip Chandra Deb Barma b 1854 d 1931 1914 1915 Brajendra Kishore Deb Barma b 1880 d 19 1st time 1915 1923 Srijut Babu Prasanna Kumar Deb Barma 9 December 1923 19 August 1927 Nabadwipchandra Dev Burma s a 1st time 1927 1929 Jyotis Chandra Sen 1st time 17 May 1929 1931 Nabadwipchandra Dev Burma s a 2nd time 1931 28 August 1932 B K Sen 28 August 1932 20 November 1932 Manyabara Rana Bodhjung Bahadur b 1894 d 1946 20 Nov 1932 1939 40 Jyotis Chandra Sen 2nd time 1939 40 18 November 1946 Manyabara Rana Bodhjung Bahadur November 1946 1947 Brajendra Kishore Deb Barma s a 2nd time 1947 S V Mukherjee 20 December 1947 15 October 1949 Abani Bushan ChatterjeeBritish political agents Edit 3 July 1871 February 1874 Ambrose William Bushe Power b 18 d 1907 11 February 1874 May 1875 Edward Gordon Lillingston 27 May 1875 February 1876 W L Samuels 22 August 1876 April 1877 Thomas Edward Coxhead b 1842 d 1890 February 1877 April 1877 James Francis Bradbury acting for Coxhead 26 April 1877 28 October 1878 C W Bolton 1878 1879 F Jones 1879 1882 G ToynbeeSymbols EditFlag Edit The flag features the coat of arms on a background of saffron and red Coat of Arms Edit The motto is Bir ta Saramekam Courage is the one thing most needed or nothing is better than a warrior See also EditEastern States Agency Political integration of India Tripura Merger Agreement Tripura BuranjiNotes Edit Tripura a b Nag Sajal 2007 Making of the Indian Union Merger of princely states and excluded areas Akansha Pub House p 321 ISBN 978 81 8370 110 5 The MSL records that the territory of this polity was in the early 15th century occupied by Da Gu la Tai zong 269 3a b which suggests an area near Assam There seems little doubt that it refers to Tripura which lies south of the Brahmaputra and north of Bengal Wade 1994 253 Hill Tippera History The Imperial Gazetteer of India 1909 v 13 p 118 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Hill Tippera Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 469 https indianculture gov in survey and settlement roshanbad estate districts tippera and noakhali 1892 99 Das J K 2001 Human Rights and Indigenous Peoples APH Publishing pp 224 225 ISBN 978 81 7648 243 1References EditWade Geoffrey 1994 The Ming Shi lu Veritable Records of the Ming Dynasty as a Source for Southeast Asian History 14th to 17th Centuries Hong KongExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tripura State Kings amp Royal Families of Tripura Manipuri Queens in the Royal House of Tripura A Historical Study Tripura ruling dynasty Coordinates 23 50 N 91 17 E 23 833 N 91 283 E 23 833 91 283 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tripura princely state amp oldid 1127706364, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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