Cambay State

Cambay State
ખંભાત રિયાસત
खंभात रियासत
Princely State of the British Raj

1730–1948

Flag

Cambay Gujarat 1896
History
  Established 1730
  Indian independence 1948
Area
  1901 906 km2 (350 sq mi)
Population
  1901 75,122 
Density 82.9 /km2  (214.8 /sq mi)
 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Cambay". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 
Mu´min Khan, Nawab of Cambay.

Cambay or Kambay was a princely state during the British Raj. The town of Khambat (Cambay) in present-day Gujarat was its capital. The state was bounded in the north by the Kaira district and in the south by the Gulf of Cambay.

Cambay was the only state in the Kaira Agency of the Gujarat division of the Bombay Presidency, which merged into the Baroda and Gujarat States Agency in 1937.

History

Cambay was founded as a state in 1730 by the penultimate Nawab of the Mughal Empire, Mirza Ja‘far Mu’min Khan I, the last of the Mughal governors of Gujarat, at the time of the dismemberment of Mughal rule in India. In 1742 Mirza Ja‘far Mu’min Khan I defeated his brother-in-law Nizam Khan, governor of Khambhat, and established himself in his place.

In 1780 Cambay was taken by the British Army, led by General Goddard Richards, but it was restored to the Marathas in 1783. Finally it was ceded to the British by the Peshwa after the Treaty of Bassein in 1803.[1] Cambay became a British protectorate in 1817. The state was provided with a railway in 1901.[2] Cambay's last ruler signed the accession to the Indian Union on 10 June 1948.[3]

Rulers

Cambay State was ruled by the Najm-i-Sani Shia' Muslim dynasty. The rulers of the state bore the title of 'Nawab' and had the privilege of an 11-gun salute.[4]

Nawabs[5]

See also

References

  1. Great Britain India Office. The Imperial Gazetteer of India. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1908.
  2. Princely States of India
  3. Cambay State - Princely State (11 gun salute)
  4. G. B. Malleson, An historical sketch of the native states of India. London 1875. Reprint Delhi 1984
  5. Cahoon, Ben. "Indian Princely States K-Z". www.worldstatesmen.org. Retrieved 2017-07-23.

Coordinates: 22°18′N 72°37′E / 22.3°N 72.62°E / 22.3; 72.62

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