Hindol State

Hindol State was one of the princely states of India during the period of the British Raj. Its former territory is now part of Dhenkanal district. The state's former capital was the town of Hindol, Odisha. Until 1947, it was not part of British India but was subject to the suzerainty of the British crown, under the Orissa States Agency.

Hindol State
ହିନ୍ଦୋଳ
Princely State of British India
1554–1948

Hindol State in the Imperial Gazetteer of India
Area 
 1891
808 km2 (312 sq mi)
Population 
 1891
47180
History 
 Established
1554
 Accession to the Indian Union
1948
Succeeded by
India

History

The state Hindol was founded from Dudurkote(Established before 800 AD) in 1554 by two brothers named Lakshman Mahratta and Bharat Mahratta belonging to the family of the Khimedi Raja of Ganjam, which also ruled over areas in the Madras region.[1] After the East India Company occupied Orissa in September–October 1803 treaties were signed with estates of the region, including Hindol.

After the independence of India in 1947 Hindol merged into Republic of India on 1 January 1948.[2] Thereafter in 1948, once the all princely states including Dhenkanal, Talcher, Athmallik, Pal Lahara and Hindol formally merged with the province of Orissa, the present Dhenkanal district was created.[3]

Rulers

The rulers of Hindol were of Rajput origin and had the title of Raja.[4][5]

Rajas

TenureName
1691 - 1701Achyuta Singh Narendra
1701 - 1733Bhagabat Singh Narendra
1733 - 1770Damodar Singh Narendra
1770 - 1781Radhakant Singh Mardraj Jagadeb
1781 - 1786Ram Chandra Singh Mardraj Jagadeb
1786 - 1829Kishan Chandra Mardraj Jagadeb
1829 - 1841Harihar Singh Mardraj Jagadeb
1841 - 1874Ishwar Singh Mardraj Jagadeb
1874 - 1877Phokar Singh Mardraj Jagadeb
18 Jul 1877 – 10 Feb 1906Janardan Mardraj Jagadeb (b. 1853 - d. ....)
10 Feb 1906 – 15 Aug 1947Naba Kishor Chandra Mardraj Jagadeb (b. 1891 - d. 19...)

1917 - 1994 : Yuvraj Pratap Chandra SinghDeo

1963 - Till Date : Raj Shaheb Shailendra Narayan SinghDeo

Sarbarakar & Chief Administrative & Royal Responsibilities

TenureName & Details
800 - 1800Father and Forehead grandfather of Satyabadi Pratap Singh Garnaik
1800 - 1840Satyabadi Pratap Singh Garnaik
1840 - 1875Madhu Sardar Singh Garnaik son of Satyabadi Pratap Singh Garnaik
1875 - 1890Ghasia Sardar Singh Garnaik son of Satyabadi Pratap Singh Garnaik
1890 - 1906Champetar Sardar Singh Garnaik son of Madhu Sardar Singh Garnaik
1906 - 1938Sana Adhyaksh Senapati Nakula Samant Sinhar son of Ghasia Sardar Singh Garnaik
1909 - 1969Sarbarakar Fakira Charan Garnaik son of Ghasia Sardar Singh Garnaik
1930 - 2003Sadananda Garnaik son of Sena Adhyaksh Senapati Nakula Samanta Sinhara
1936 - 1986Baikuntha Bihari Garnaik(Sarash House Chief-Incharge) son of Sarbarakar Fakira Charan Garnaik
1943 - 2001Kedar Kishor Garnaik son of Sarbarakar Fakira Charan Garnaik
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gollark: You can copy it from stackoverflow fine?
gollark: `&dyn Fn(u64,u64)->u64` is, if I remember right, a type-erased trait object thingy.
gollark: It might optimize it. I said "may".
gollark: Passing a function pointer MAY be mildly less efficient.

References

  1. David P. Henige (2004). Princely states of India: a guide to chronology and rulers. Orchid Press. ISBN 978-974-524-049-0. Retrieved 18 July 2013.
  2. Dr. Bhagyalipi Malla (August 2007). "Amalgamation of Princely States" (PDF). Orissa Review. p. 94,98. Retrieved 18 July 2013.
  3. Subrata K. Mitra (31 January 2002). Power, Protest and Participation: Local Elites and Development in India. Taylor & Francis. pp. 63–. ISBN 978-0-203-22168-6. Retrieved 18 July 2013.
  4. Indian Princely States
  5. Rajput Provinces of India - Hindol

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