Sirohi (State)
Sirohi | |||||
1405-1949 | |||||
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Capital | Sirohi | ||||
Form of government | Princely state (15 rounds salute) | ||||
surface | 4141 km² | ||||
population | 260,000 (1941) | ||||
founding | 1405 | ||||
resolution | January 15, 1949 | ||||
State religion: Hinduism Dynasty: Deora- Chauhan |
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Princely State of Sirohi in The Imperial Gazetteer of India |
Sirohi ( Hindi : सिरोही , Sirohī ) was one of the princely states of the Rajputs in today's Rajasthan ( British India ), named after its capital of the same name . The royal house goes back to Rao Alhana, ruler of Nadol from the Rajput clan of the Deora- Chauhan . Rao Ranmal (1374–92) founded the city of Sirohi, Rao Sobhaji (1392–24) Shivpuri . Rao Sains Mal (1424–51) gave up Shivpuri and made Sirohi the capital of the princely state in 1435, which never submitted to the sovereignty of the Mughals .
In 1823 Sirohi placed itself under the protection of the British and remained a British protectorate until 1947. Rao Keshri Singh (1889–1920) was raised by the British to Maharaoh. Sirohi 1941 had an area of 4141 km² and 260,000 inhabitants. On January 15, 1949, the connection to India followed . Most of the princely state came to Rajasthan on January 26, 1950, and was dissolved on November 1, 1956.
See also
literature
- Barton, William: The princes of India , Delhi 1983
- Andreas Birken : Philatelic Atlas of British India. CD-ROM. Birken, Hamburg 2004.
- Copland, Ian: The princes of India in the endgame of empire 1917-47 , Cambridge 1997. ISBN 0-521-57179-0
- Malleson, GB: An historical sketch of the native states of India , London 1875, Reprint Delhi 1984
- Roberts, PE: Historical Geography of India , 2 vol., 1938, reprint Jaipur 1995
- Schwartzberg, Joseph E., Ed .: A historical atlas of South Asia , 2nd A., New York / Oxford 1992, ISBN 0-19-506869-6