Kamta-Rajaula State
Kamta-Rajaula was a princely state in India during the British Raj.
Kamta-Rajaula State कामता-राजुला रियासत | |||||||
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Princely Estate (Jagir) | |||||||
1812–1948 | |||||||
The area of the Chaube Jagirs in the Imperial Gazetteer of India | |||||||
Area | |||||||
• 1901 | 34 km2 (13 sq mi) | ||||||
Population | |||||||
• 1901 | 1,232 | ||||||
History | |||||||
• Established | 1812 | ||||||
• Independence of India | 1948 | ||||||
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History
It was one of the Chaube Jagirs, part of the Bagelkhand Agency which was merged into the Indian state of Vindhya Pradesh in 1948.
Kamta-Rajaula was a place of pilgrimage, for according to legend it was one of the places where Rama had been.[1] The capital was the village of Rajaula, located at 15 km from Karwi railway station.
Rulers
The rulers of Kamta-Rajaula were titled 'Rao'.[2][3]
Raos
- 1812 - 1873 Gopal Lal
- 1873 - 18.. Bharat Prasad
- 1892 - 1906* Ram Prasad
- 1928 - 1946 Radha Kishan
- 1946 - 1947 Rajiv Nandan Prasad
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gollark: Fascinating.
gollark: This is why AMD was basically irrelevant for many years until Zen back in 2017 or so.
gollark: Each pair of "cores" shares a bunch of resources, so it isn't really as fast as an actual "core" in other designs, and I think their IPC was quite bad too, so the moderately high clocks didn't do very much except burn power.
gollark: See, while the FX-4100 is allegedly a fairly high-clocked quad-core, this is misleading. AMD's Bulldozer architecture used "clustered multithreading", instead of the "simultaneous multithreading" on modern architectures and also Intel's ones at the time.
References
- Great Britain India Office. The Imperial Gazetteer of India. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1908
- Indian Princely States
- "Indian states before 1947 K-W". www.rulers.org. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
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