Vala State

Vala State
Vallabhipura
વલ્લભીપુર
Princely State
1948

Flag

History
  Established Enter start date
  Indian independence 1948
Area
  1921 492 km2 (190 sq mi)
Population
  1921 11,386 
Density 23.1 /km2  (59.9 /sq mi)

Vala State or Vallabhipura (Gujarati: વલ્લભીપુર, Hindi वाला) was a non-salute princely state in India during the British Raj until 1948. The centre was the city of Vallabhi. The last ruler of the state signed the state's accession to the Indian Union on 15 February 1948.

History

For the region's early history, see Vallabhi.

Vala (Vallabhipura) princely state was founded in 1740 by Thakore Sahib Akherajji of nearby Bhavnagar (also in Gohelwar prant; later a salute state under a Maharaja), a Gohil Rajput of the Suryavanshi clan, for his twin brother Visaji, who became the first Thakore. It was one of the many states in Saurashtra, mostly petty states. It comprised 40 villages, covering 492 Square Kilometers km². In 1921 it had a population of 11,386 (13.285 in 1903-4). Its state revenue was 225,000 Rupees (in 1903-4, mainly from land; later 341,773 Rupees), and it paid 9,202 Rupees tribute to the Gaekwar Baroda State and to Junagadh State.

It was a native Third Class state of British India in charge of the colonial (originally Eastern -) Kathiawar Agency of the Bombay Presidency.,[1] later merged into the Western India States Agency.

It ceased to exist by accession to freshly independent India's then state Saurashtra (now part of Gujarat) on 15 February 1948. The privy purse was fixed at 520,000 Rupees.

Ruling Thakurs

The rulers were Gohel Rawal Rajputs, with the title of Thakore Sahib alias Thakur Sahib.

The line was nominally continued.

References

  1. Columbia-Lippincott Gazetteer p. 1417.

Coordinates: 21°53′16″N 71°52′46″E / 21.8878°N 71.8795°E / 21.8878; 71.8795

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.