Digvijai Das

Raja Mahant Digvijay Das was the ruler of the former princely state of Nandgaon State in the present-day Rajnandgaon district of Chhattisgarh Pradesh, India. He was a Bairagi Ruler.[1]

Digvijay Das
Raja of Nandgaon State
Raja of Nandgaon State
Reign1940 - 1947
PredecessorSarveshvara Das
Born(1933-04-25)25 April 1933
Died(1958-01-22)22 January 1958
SpouseSanyukta Devi
FatherSarveshvara Das
ReligionHinduism

Early life

Digvijay Das was born on 25 April 1933 to Sarveshvara Das king of Nandgaon State. He completed his primary education from Rajkumar College, Raipur then he went to London for higher education. He visited whole Europe. Here he observed the social life. He succeeded to throne of Nandgaon State upon death of his father, Sarveshvara Das in 1940. When he was only seven years old.[2]

Sports

Raja Digvijay was dedicated to sports. He established the Lalbagh Club. He was founder president of All India Hockey Association.[3] There is also Digvijay Stadium in Rajnandgaon, India named on name of Raja Digvijay.

Educational Field

Raja Digvijay was educated person. He was fully dedicated to education. He realised the need of higher education for children. So he donated his huge fort to educational department. There is running a college named Digvijay College in the fort.[4]

Personal life

He got married with Sanyukta Devi princess of Baria State in 1953. Raja Digvijay Das died on 22 January 1958. When he was only 25 years old.[5]

gollark: That would probably be a decent approach, I suppose.
gollark: Freedom of religion does *not* mean "freedom to do whatever stuff is involved in your religion regardless of anything else", and any nonvital grouping is probably a bad idea.
gollark: In a sense, almost nobody is native to anywhere because humanity evolved someplace in Africa and moved around a lot.
gollark: Perhaps 50% of the time according to Iceland's data.
gollark: Ah, but you don't *know* who's infected because it's often asymptomatic.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.