Nabha State

Nabha State,[1] with its capital at Nabha, was one of the Phulkian princely states of Punjab during the British Raj in India.[2]

Nabha State
Princely State
1763–1947
Coat of arms

Nabha State in a 1911 map of Punjab
Area 
 1901
2,502 km2 (966 sq mi)
Population 
 1901
297,949
Historical eraNew Imperialism
 Established
1763
 Accession to India
1947
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Mughal Empire
India
Today part ofIndia
Sir Hira Singh, Raja of Nabha (c.1843-1911).

Demography

According to the 1901 census the state had a population of 297,949 and contained four towns and 488 villages. Its population at the previous two enumerations were: 282,756 (1891) and 261,824(1881).

Nabha was divided into three nizamats: Amloh and Bawal, with their headquarters at the town from which each is named; and Phul, with its headquarters at Dhanaula.[3]

More than 54 per cent of the population were Hindus, only 26 per cent being Sikhs — although Nabha was one of the principle Sikh states of the Punjab, the remainder of the population were Muslim.[4]

gollark: Yes, I agree social media is kind of problematic. I think technology, in the very general sense of "human-built tools" and whatnot instead of the weird new one of "only computer-based stuff", is a net positive, considering.
gollark: Well, yes, you can live without importing extra technological stuff for a bit, sure.
gollark: But people would probably be unhappy if they also didn't have access to stuff like... tents, nice modern clothes, medicine, GPS, all that stuff, while camping.
gollark: I don't see how sometimes doing things not involving that makes those things *bad*.
gollark: People like nature. Camping has nature.

See also

References

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