Jaisalmer State

Jaisalmer State
जैसलमेर रियासत
Kingdom 1156-1818
Princely State 1818-1947

1156–1947
Flag Coat of arms
Map of Jaisalmer State with important Rawlot duchies.
History
  Established 1156
  Independence of India 1947
Area
  1931 41,600 km2 (16,062 sq mi)
Population
  1931 76,255 
Density 1.8 /km2  (4.7 /sq mi)
Today part of Rajasthan, India
Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 
Flag of Jaisalmer over Royal Place

Jaisalmer State is the popular name of the kingdom established by Rawal Jaisal when he moved the capital of reminiscent of the Bhati dynasty from Ludarva to Jaisalmer because the old capital Ludarva was vulnerable. Jaisalmer continued to be ruled independently by the Bhati rajputs until 1818, when it signed treaty with the British Empire effectively making it a British Protectorate, a Princely State and enjoyed 15 gun salute.[1]

History

Jaisalmer State was a princely state during the British Raj and was entitled to a 15 gun salute.

The Jaisalmer state had its foundations in the Deogarh state. The new capital of Jaisalmer was founded in 1156 and state took its name from the capital. It was subservient to the Mughals in the late 15th century and later the Marathas until it became a British protectorate.[2]

Traditionally, in the middle ages the main source of income for the kingdom was levies on caravans, but the economy was heavily affected when Bombay emerged as a major port and sea trade replaced the traditional land routes. Maharawals Ranjit Singh and Bairi Sal Singh attempted to turn around the economic decline but the dramatic reduction in trade impoverished the kingdom. A severe drought and the resulting famine from 1895 to 1900, during the reign of Maharawal Salivahan Singh, only made matters worse by causing widespread loss of the livestock that the increasingly agriculturally based kingdom relied upon.

Maharawal Jawahir Singh’s (1914–49) attempts at modernization also failed to turn the kingdom’s economy around and it remained isolated and backward compared with other areas of Rajasthan.

Rulers

Maharawals

Dewans (chief ministers)

See also

References

External links

Coordinates: 26°55′N 70°54′E / 26.92°N 70.9°E / 26.92; 70.9

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