Sirmur State
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| Sirmaur State Sirmoor State Nahan State | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Princely State of British India | |||||||
| 1095–1948 | |||||||
Coat of arms
| |||||||
| File:Urdu map of Sirmur State.jpg Urdu map of Sirmur State | |||||||
| File:Punjab-Districts 1911.png Sirmur State in a 1911 map of Punjab | |||||||
| Capital | Nahan | ||||||
| Area | |||||||
| 4,039 km2 (1,559 sq mi) | |||||||
| Population | |||||||
| 135,626 | |||||||
| History | |||||||
• Established | 1095 | ||||||
| 1948 | |||||||
| |||||||
| Today part of | Himachal Pradesh, India | ||||||
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Sirmur (also spelled as Sirmor, Sirmaur, Sirmour, or Sirmoor) was a princely state of India, located in the region that is now the Sirmaur district of Himachal Pradesh. The state was also known as Nahan, after its main city, Nahan. The state ranked predominant amongst the Punjab Hill States. It had an area of 4,039 km2 and a revenue of 300,000 rupees in 1891.[citation needed]
History
[edit | edit source]Origin
[edit | edit source]According to Mian Goverdhan Singh in Wooden Temples of Himachal Pradesh, the principality of Sirmaur was founded in the 7th to 8th century by Maharaja of Parmar Rajputs, and Rathore noble.[1]
Nahan State
[edit | edit source]Nahan, the predecessor state of Sirmur, was founded by Soba Rawal in 1095 AD who assumed the name Raja Subans Prakash.[citation needed]
Near the end of the 12th century in the year 1195, a flood of the Giri River destroyed the old capital of Sirmaur-Tal, which killed Raja Ugar Chand.[1] A ruler of Jaisalmer, Raja Salivahana, thought this was an opportune time to attack the state as it was in a state of disarray due to the natural disaster and death of its ruler, so he sent his son Sobha to conquer the state.[1] The attack was successful and a new dynasty headed by Bhati Rajputs was established.[1] Sirmur was invaded by invader Jasrath's army, who also invaded fragments of Punjab and Jammu.[2]
Sirmur State
[edit | edit source]Eventually in 1621 Karm Parkash founded Nahan, the modern capital.[3] Budh Parkãsh, the next ruler, recovered Pinjaur for Aurangzeb’s foster-brother.[citation needed] Raja Mit Parkãsh gave an asylum to the Sikh Guru, Gobind Singh, permitting him to fortify Paonta in the Kiarda Dun; and it was at Bhangani in the Dun that the Guru defeated the Rajäs of Kahlur and Garhwäl in 1688.[3] But in 1710 Kirat Parkãsh, after defeating the Räja of Garhwal, captured Naraingarh, Morni, Pinjaur, and other territories from the Sikhs, and concluded an alliance with Amar Singh, Raja of Patiala, whom he aided in suppressing his rebellious Wazir; and he also fought in alliance with the Raja of Kahlür when Ghuläm Kãdir Khan, Rohilla, invaded that State.[4]
Rulers
[edit | edit source]The rulers of Sirmur bore the title "Maharaja" from 1911 onward [citation needed]
| Name | Portrait | Ruled from | Ruled until | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subhansh Prakash | 1095 | 1099 | ||
| Mahe Prakash | 1099 | 1117 | ||
| Udit Prakash | 1117 | 1127 | ||
| Kaul Prakash | 1127 | 1153 | ||
| Sumer Prakash | 1153 | 1188 | ||
| Suraj Prakash | 1188 | 1254 | ||
| Bhagat Prakash I | 1254 | 1336 | ||
| Jagat Prakash | 1336 | 1388 | ||
| Bir Prakash | 1388 | 1398 | ||
| Naket Prakash | 1398 | 1398 | ||
| Ratna Prakash | 1398 | 1413 | ||
| Garv Prakash | 1413 | 1432 | ||
| Brahm Prakash | 1432 | 1446 | ||
| Hams Prakash | 1446 | 1471 | ||
| Bhagat Prakash II | 1471 | 1538 | ||
| Dharam Prakash | 1538 | 1570 | ||
| Deep Prakash | 1570 | 1585 | ||
| Budh Prakash | 1605 | 1615 | ||
| Bhagat Prakash III | 1615 | 1620 | ||
| Karam Prakash I | File:Raja Karam Pragash of Sirmur (1616-30) with his son and two nobles (6124585105).jpg | 1621 | 1630 | |
| Mandhata Prakash | File:Painting of Raja Mandhata Prakash of Sirmur State, Punjab Hills, possibly Bilaspur, ca.1720.jpg | 1630 | 1654 | |
| Sobhag Prakash | 1654 | 1664 | ||
| Budh Prakash | 1664 | 1684 | [1][5] | |
| Mat Prakash | 1684 | 1704 | [1][5] | |
| Hari Prakash | 1704 | 1712 | [5] | |
| Bijay Prakash | 1712 | 1736 | ||
| Pratap Prakash | 1736 | 1754 | ||
| Kirat Prakash | File:Painting of Raja Kirat Prakash of Sirmur State, Guler, ca.1765–70 (detail).jpg | 1754 | 1770 | |
| Jagat Prakash | File:Painting of Raja Jagat Prakash of Sirmur State worshipping Rama and Sita, ca.1790.jpg | 1770 | 1789 | |
| Dharam Prakash | 1789 | 1793 | ||
| Karam Prakash II (died 1820) | 1793 | 1803 | ||
| Ratan Prakash (installed by Gurkhas, hanged by the British in 1804) | 1803 | 1804 | ||
| Karma Prakash II (died 1820) | 1804 | 1815 | ||
| Fateh Prakash | File:Detail of Raja Fateh Prakash of Sirmur, from a painting of Lord Auckland receiving the Raja of Nahan in Durbar, by Emily Eden, watercolour, 1844 (cropped).jpg | 1815 | 1850 | |
| Raghbir Prakash | 1850 | 1856 | ||
| Shamsher Prakash | File:Painting of Raja Shamsher Prakash of Simur State with the Rani of Simur and his son Surendra Prakash, Simur, ca.1869.jpg | 1856 | 1898 | |
| Surendra Bikram Prakash | File:Portrait of Raja Surendra Bikram Prakash of Sirmur State, published in 'The Panjab, North-West Frontier Province and Kashmir' (1916).jpg | 1898 | 1911 | |
| Amar Prakash | 1911 | 1933 | ||
| Rajendra Prakash | 1933 | 1947 | ||
| Lakshraj Prakash | 2013 | [6][7] |
Demographics
[edit | edit source]| Religious group |
1901[8] | 1911[9][10] | 1921[11] | 1931[12] | 1941[13] | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pop. | % | Pop. | % | Pop. | % | Pop. | % | Pop. | % | |
| Hinduism File:Om.svg[a] | 128,478 | 94.69% | 130,276 | 94.05% | 132,431 | 94.29% | 139,031 | 93.58% | 146,199 | 93.7% |
| Islam File:Star and Crescent.svg | 6,414 | 4.73% | 6,016 | 4.34% | 6,449 | 4.59% | 7,020 | 4.73% | 7,374 | 4.73% |
| Sikhism File:Khanda.svg | 688 | 0.51% | 2,142 | 1.55% | 1,449 | 1.03% | 2,413 | 1.62% | 2,334 | 1.5% |
| Jainism File:Jain Prateek Chihna.svg | 61 | 0.04% | 49 | 0.04% | 65 | 0.05% | 52 | 0.04% | 81 | 0.05% |
| Christianity File:Christian cross.svg | 46 | 0.03% | 37 | 0.03% | 44 | 0.03% | 52 | 0.04% | 38 | 0.02% |
| Buddhism Error creating thumbnail: | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% | 10 | 0.01% | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% |
| Zoroastrianism File:Faravahar.svg | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% |
| Judaism File:Star of David.svg | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% |
| Others | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% |
| Total population | 135,687 | 100% | 138,520 | 100% | 140,448 | 100% | 148,568 | 100% | 156,026 | 100% |
| Note: British Punjab province era district borders are not an exact match in the present-day due to various bifurcations to district borders — which since created new districts — throughout the historic Punjab Province region during the post-independence era that have taken into account population increases. | ||||||||||
Artwork
[edit | edit source]Not many paintings depicting the historical rajas of Sirmur State have survived due to the Gurkha occupation of the state between 1803 and 1814, which led to the loss and destruction of much artwork, including any portraits of earlier rulers produced in Sirmur itself.[14][15]
Notes
[edit | edit source]- ^ 1931-1941: Including Ad-Dharmis
References
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Further reading
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- States and territories established in 1095
- States and territories disestablished in 1948
- Sirmaur district
- History of Himachal Pradesh
- Rajput history
- 11th-century establishments in India
- 1095 establishments in Asia
- 1948 disestablishments in India
- Princely states of Himachal Pradesh
- Gun salute princely states
- Sirmur State