Kishangarh State

Kishangarh State
किशनगढ़ रियासत
Princely State of British India
1611–1948
Flag Coat of arms
Kishangarh State in the Imperial Gazetteer of India
History
  Established 1611
  Indian independence 1948
Area
  1931 2,210 km2 (853 sq mi)
Population
  1931 85,744 
Density 38.8 /km2  (100.5 /sq mi)
Today part of Rajasthan, India
Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "article name needed". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 

Kishangarh State was a princely state of India from 1611 to 1948. It was founded by the Jodhpur prince Kishan Singh in 1609.Prior to Kishan Singh this area was ruled by Maharaja Samokhan Singh[1] who was a distant relative of Kishan Singh's family and grandfather of Naubat Khan.[2] Maharaja Samokhan Singh a Jodhpur prince[3] lost to the forces of Akbar and his grandson Naubat Khan was kept under house arrest.Naubat Khan later accepted Islam.

Kishangarh State was located between 25*49' and 26*59' in the north, and 70*49' and 75*11' east. Bordered on the North and northwest by Jodhpur; on the east by Jaipur; on the west and southeast by the Ajmer District and on the extreme south by Shahpura.

History

The chiefs of Kishangarh belong to the Rathore clan of Rajputs. Kishen Singh. descended from Udai Singh of Jodhpur whose second son left Jodhpur for Ajmer in 1596. From Akbar he received the district of Hindaun (now in Jaipur); and later, the grant of Setholao along with certain other districts. In 1611, he founded the town of Kishangarh which name was then also given to the state. The 13th Chief succeeding Udai Singh was Kalyan Singh (1797-1832) and in his time, on 26 March 1818, Kishangarh was brought under British Protection.

Savant Singh (reigned 1748-1757) and Bani Thani in the Guise of Krishna and Radha Cruising on Lake Gundalao, Kishangarh
Portrait of Naubat Khan Kalawant Raja of Kishangarh prior to Kishan Singh.Portrait by Ustad Mansur, Mughal School, towards 1600,British Museum,London
Maharaja Kalyan Singh of Kishangarh state (Reigned 1798-1838)

Kishangarh was the capital of the princely state during the British Raj, which was located in the Rajputana Agency. It had an area of 2210 km² (858 miles²) and a population in 1901 of 90,970. This figure for population represented a decrease of 27% over the census figure of 1891, something presumably attributable to the famine of 1899-1900. Population was 85,744 in 1931. The state enjoyed an estimated revenue of Rs.34,000/- and paid no tribute to the British Raj. In 1840, Prithvi Singh, became the 15th Maharaja of Kishangarh, and reigned till his death in 1879, after which he was succeeded by his son, Sardul Singh.[4]

Maharaja Madan Singh ascended the throne in 1900 at the age of sixteen, at a time when the state was reeling from the impact of a devastating drought. The administration under him and his diwan was widely deemed worthy of approbation; irrigation from tanks and wells was extended and factories for ginning and pressing cotton were started. A social reform movement for discouraging excessive expenditure on marriages made remarkable impact during his reign.

The present descendant of the Maharajas is Brijraj Singhji. The town of Kishangarh has a beautiful palace-hotel known as PhoolMahal and a massive Fort. The city also has a large lake known as the Gond Talav. There are many picnic and religious places situated at the banks of Gond Talav such as Mukham Vilas and Bhairu Ghat. The city also have a small temple of nine planets known as Navgrah. The Kishangarh Fort is surrounded by a canal that was built by Kishan Singh.

Rulers

The rulers of Kishangarh who belonged to the Rathor dynasty took the title of 'Maharaja'.

See also

References

  1. Tareekh-e-Rohela by Nafees Siddiqui
  2. http://collection.britishmuseum.org/resource?uri=http://collection.britishmuseum.org/id/object/RFI3094
  3. The Life and work of Wazir Khan of Rampur, and the prominent disciples of Wazir Khan,Research by Rati Rastogi, RohilKhand University, Barailey
  4. Kishangarh British Library.

Coordinates: 26°34′N 74°52′E / 26.57°N 74.87°E / 26.57; 74.87

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