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Dogra dynasty

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House of Jamwals
The Crown at the top. A katar or ceremonial dagger sat below it. Two soldiers holding the flags. An image of the sun symbolising the Suryavansha Kshatriya lineage from Lord Rama
Flag of Dogra Dynasty
CountryJammu and Kashmir (princely state)
Founded16 March 1846; 178 years ago (1846-03-16)
FounderGulab Singh
Current headKaran Singh
Final rulerHari Singh
Karan Singh (as Sadr-i-Riyasat)
Estate(s)Mubarak Mandi Palace
Amar Mahal Palace
Hari Niwas Palace
Sher Garhi Palace
Deposition1952

The Dogra dynasty[1][2] of Dogra Rajputs from the Shivalik hills created Jammu and Kashmir through the treaties with the East India Company following the First Anglo-Sikh war. Events led the Sikh Empire to recognise Jammu as a vassal state in 1820, and later the British added Kashmir to Jammu with the Treaty of Amritsar in 1846. The founder of the dynasty, Gulab Singh, was an influential noble in the court of the Sikh emperor Maharaja Ranjit Singh, while his brother Dhian Singh served as the prime minister of the Sikh Empire. Appointed by Ranjit Singh as the hereditary Raja of the Jammu principality, Gulab Singh established his supremacy over all the hill states surrounding the Kashmir Valley. After the First Anglo-Sikh War in 1846, under the terms of the Treaty of Lahore, 1846, the British East India Company acquired Kashmir from the Sikh Empire and transferred it to Gulab Singh, recognising him as an independent Maharaja. Thus, Jammu and Kashmir was established as one of the largest princely states in India,[a] receiving a 21-gun salute for its Maharaja in 1921. It was ruled by Gulab Singh and his descendants until 1947.[5][6]

The last ruling Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir was Hari Singh, who contributed troops to the British war effort in World War II and served on Churchill's Imperial War Cabinet.[7] Following the Partition of India in 1947, Hari Singh faced a rebellion in the western districts of the state and a Pakistan-supported tribal invasion, leading him to accede to the Union of India and receive military assistance. Pakistan contested the accession, giving rise to the enduring Kashmir conflict.

With India's support, the popular leader of Jammu and Kashmir, Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah, forced the Maharaja to abdicate in favour of his son, Yuvraj (Crown Prince) Karan Singh, who subsequently accepted the position of a constitutional head of state (Sadr-i-Riyasat) and voluntarily gave up the title of Maharaja.[8]

Etymology

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The term Dogra is thought to derive from Durgara, the name of a kingdom mentioned in an eleventh century copper-plate inscription in Chamba. According to Mira Seth, the Durgara region was situated between the outer hills located between the Ravi and Chenab rivers and was derived from a tribal name.[9] In medieval times the term became Dugar, which later turned into Dogra. Kalhana's Rajatarangini makes no mention of a kingdom by this name, but it could have been referred to by its capital (either Vallapura, modern Balor, or Babbapura, modern Babor). In modern times, the term Dogra turned into an ethnic identity, claimed by all those people that speak the Dogri language.[10]

The family of Raja Gulab Singh is referred to as Jamwal (or Jamuwal). According to some accounts, Raja Kapur Dev, who ruled the area of Jammu around 1560 AD had two sons named Jag Dev and Samail Dev. The two sons ruled from the Bahu and Jammu on the opposite banks of the Tawi River and their descendants came to be called Bahuwals and Jamuwals respectively.[11] The members of the family however claim descent from a legendary Suryavanshi (solar) dynasty ruler Jambu Lochan, who is believed to have founded the city of Jammu in antiquity.[12][13]

Origin

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Prior to the arrival of the Dogras in the region, the local inhabitants of the Durgara region (also known as Durgara Pradesh[9]) were likely Khasas and Kanets, who originally inhabited the Western Himalayan-range.[9] Migrations of Dogri-speaking peoples later followed.[9] The Dogras claim descent from migrants who originated from the present-day regions of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, and Bengal prior to the Islamic invasions of the Indian subcontinent.[9] Most of the ruling families of the Pahari Hill States traditionally trace their ancestry back to Ayodhya, claiming descent from Sumitra, who was the last descendant of the Suryavanshi lineage of Rama.[14] An ancestor named Jambu Lochan is said to have first moved to the Jammu region, where he established the settlement of Jammu.[14] According to local mythology, Jambu decided to construct a settelement at Jammu after he witnessed a wild goat and lion drinking from the same water-hole in a forest that was located at the site, being impressed by how two species of predator and prey could peacefully co-exist.[15] From there onwards, branches of the family spread-out to conquer the surrounding mountainous areas of the region, establishing their own dynasties.[14]

Jammu State

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History of the Jamwal rulers

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In around the year 850, the Dogras came to power in Jammu, being establshed by Raja Bhuj or Bhuj Dev.[14] The centres of power for the Dogra rulers at this era were Bahu, Babbapura (Babor), and Jammu.[14] The first historical mention to a Pahari ruler relates to two copper-plate inscription dated to the years 1056 and 1066 that eulogize the feats of Raja Sahilavarman of Chamba State (r. 920–940).[14]

The earliest type of administration in the region consisted of reigns by feudal cheiftains, referred to as a thakur or rana.[9] This form of government gradually shifted to one that was hereditary based on primogeniture, leading to the formation of dynasties.[9] These states often warred with one another, absorbing or being absorbed by other states, with the winner usually being the stronger state and the loser the smaller one.[9] By the tenth century, the following prominent Dogra states arose in the Pahari Hills region of the Western Himalayas:[9]

  • Jammu – ruled by the Jamwal clan
  • Mankot – ruled by the Mankotia clan
  • Jasrota – ruled by the Jasrotia clan
  • Lakhanpur – ruled by the Lakhanpuria clan
  • Samba – ruled by the Sambial clan
  • Tirikot – ruled by the Tiri Kotia clan
  • Akhnur – ruled by the Akhnuria clan
  • Riasi – ruled by the Riasial clan
  • Dalpatpur – ruled by the Dalpatia clan
  • Bhau – ruled by the Bhauwal clan
  • Bhoti – ruled by the Bhatial clan
  • Chenehni – ruled by the Hantal clan
  • Bandralta – ruled by the Bandral clan
  • Basholi – ruled by the Balauria clan
  • Bhadrawaha – ruled by the Bhadrawahia clan
  • Bhadu – ruled by the Bhaduwal clan
  • Kashtwar – ruled by the Kashtwaria clan
  • Punch – ruled by the Manjwal clan
  • Kotli – ruled by the Mangral clan
  • Rajauri – ruled by the Jaral clan

Mahmud of Ghazni's army passed through the Punjab and invaded Poonch State, however he did not attack Jammu State and the polity was spared from fighting.[9] There is a mention in Kalhana's Rajatarangini of three Dogra rulers, namely Kirti and Vajradhara of Babbapura and Umadhara.[14] All three of these rulers are also mentioned in the Vansavali (genealogy) of the Jammu ruling house, albeit with minor variations.[14] The Jammu rulers were close with the Kashmiri rulers, such as during the reign of Kalasa and Bhikshachara.[9] The Dogra-ruler Vajradhara is said to have allied with Trigarta (Kangra), Vallapura (Balaor), Vartula (Batal), and Thakkuras of the Chandrabhaga Valley, to pledge alliegance to Bhikshachara of Kashmir.[14] Bhikshachara asceded to the throne of Kashmir in 1120.[14]

In the autobiography of Timur from 1399, known as the Malfuzat-i-Timuri, there is a reference to a ruler of Jammu ("Raja-Jammu") but no mention of their specific name is given but it would have been Raja Mal Dev of Jammu who resisted the Timurids.[note 1][14][9] This is the first mention of the region of Jammu in recorded-history.[14] According to the Timurid account, Jammu was invaded and Raja Bhim was converted to Islam.[9] The Timurid account mentions that large amounts of booty that consisted of grain and property were taken from Jammu by them.[9] However, these early contracts with Islamic polities did not leave any lasting impression on Jammu until the rule of the Mughals.[9] Raja Mal Dev was the fourth ruler of the Dev dynasty and he ruled Jammu from 1361 to 1400, establishing his headquarters at Purani Mnadi.[15] After Raja Mal Dev, between the years 1400 to 1733, ten descendants of Raja Mal Dev ruled Jammu.[15] For some centuries, the Jammu-Babbapura rulers would reign nearly independently and supported the Sultans of Delhi.[14] Raja Hamir or Bhim Dev was recorded as being a supporter of Mubarak Shah (r. 1421–1434) of the Sayyid dynasty of the Delhi Sultanate against the Khokhars of the Darvabhisara Hills.[14]

With the oncoming of the Mughal empire, the Jammuite rulers resisted their attempts overwhelm them but finally succumbed once they could reach favourable terms.[14] The Mughals were aggressive toward the small states of the Western Himalayas, with Akbar declaring himself as their soverign ruler.[9] Twenty-two of the hill states recognized the soverignty of Akbar and each dispatched a local prince to the Mughal court.[9] The princes would effectively be hostages to ensure that the small hill states would act courteous to the Mughal authority.[9] However, the hill states often resisted the Mughals and rose up in rebellion against them, such is the case with Jammu State, which rose in insurrection against the Mughals on three separate instances during this time: the first between the years 1588–9, the second between 1594–5, and the third from 1616–17.[9]

During the reign of Akbar between the years 1594–95, the Jammu ruler Raja Parasram Dev teamed-up with fellow Pahari rulers Rai Pratap of Jasrota and Rai Balbhadra of Lakhanpur in a rebellion against the Mughals, which raged from Kangra to the Jammu Hills.[14] As per the Ain-i-Akbari, Raja Sangram Dev of Jammu was against Raja Man, viceroy of Lahore, with him slaying Raja Man in 1616–17 during the reign of emperor Jahangir.[14] During the reigns of the Mughal emperors Shah Jahan and Aurangzeb, Dogra relations with the Mughals had pacified, with the vansavali recording that Rajas Bhup Dev (r. 1624–1650) and Raja Hari Dev (r. 1650–1686) were employed as mansabdars by the Mughals.[14] However, not all of the hill chiefs were amicable to the Mughals still, as the rulers of Basohli State, resisted them further between 1635–73, whilst the Mughal forces were commanded by Zain Khan Koka.[9] Raja Hari Dev died in 1686 during the Deccani campaigns of Aurangzeb.[14]

The successor of Hari Dev, who was Raja Gajai Dev (r. 1686–1707), moved toward re-establishing the independence of Jammu from the Mughals.[14] His successor, Dhruv Dev, worked toward the same ambition.[14]

Dhruv Dev

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Painting of Raja Anand Dev of Bahu State seated with Raja Dhruv Dev of Jammu State, by Patak Chand, ca.1770

Jammu was a small principality until the decline of Mughal authority in the early 18th century, where-after it arose to became a regional powerhouse during the reign of Raja Dhruv Dev.[16][9] Jammu was ruled by the Dev Dynasty, which descends from Raja Mal Dev.[15] Raja Dhruv Dev laid down the foundations of the Jamwal rulers of Jammu in 1703.[citation needed] During the reign of Dhruv Dev, Jammu was unified and it established authority and dominance over the other surrounding Hill States.[16][9] The other hill states of Jasrota, Basohli, Mankot, and Bandralta were brought under Jammu's writ under Raja Dhruv Dev.[9]

Raja Ranjit Dev had four sons: Ranjit Dev, Ghansar Dev, Surat Dev, and Balwant Dev.[note 2][16] Ranjit Dev was the successor to the Jammu throne whilst Balwant Dev was given control over the jagir of Sarunisar.[16] Balwant Dev was the patron of Pahari artists, such as Nainsukh.[16] Surat Dev, the third son of Dhruv Dev, was married to two women, one from the Slahria clan of Bara Pind, and the other from the Chibs of Batala.[16] Surat Dev would go-on to produce four sons with these two wives: Zorawar Singh, Mian Mota, Bhulla, and Dulla.[16] Zorawar Singh was granted the jagir of Deval.[16] Zorawar Singh would later marry a Jit Rajput women of Charhai whilst Mian Mota married into the family of Raja Jai Singh Jaswal.[16] Zorawar Singh's son was named Kishore Singh, with Kishore later marrying a Bhadwal woman from Marhta in Basohli tehsil.[16] Kishore's son was Gulab Singh.[16]

Ghansar Dev

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Ghansar Dev, also known as Ghansar Chand, was the second son of Dhruv Dev and was born in ca.1715 (or perhaps earlier).[17] He occupied the regency of Jammu State from 1735–1747, as Ranjit Dev had been arrested and imprisoned at Lahore between the years 1735–1747 due to the Mughals suspecting him of being disloyal to their governor of the hill region, therefore Ghansar served as regent in his elder brother's absence.[17] Traditionally, the region of Jammu was divided into two states that were based on either side of the Tawi river: Bahu State and Jammu State.[17] During the reign of Ghansar, Bahu State ceased to be an independent entity for unclear reasons and was absorbed into Jammu State.[17]

Ranjit Dev

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Painting of Raja Amrit Pal of Basohli State with Raja Ranjit Dev of Jammu State and two of his sons, Jammu, ca.1765. Brij Raj Dev, the future successor, is wearing red and holding a hawk, and Dalel Singh is on the far-left wearing an indigo Kashmiri shawl with poppy border.

Dhruv Dev's successor Raja Ranjit Dev (1735–1781[17][9]) introduced social reforms such as a ban on sati (immolation of the wife on the pyre of the husband) and female infanticide.[citation needed] Between the years 1735–1747, Ranjit Dev was imprisoned by the Mughals at Lahore as they believed he was disloyal to the Mughal regime.[9] After Nadir Shah invaded the Mughal Empire in 1739, it allowed Raja Ranjit Dev to further develop the independence of Jammu.[9] During the reign of Raja Ranjit Dev, Jammu dominated twenty-two surrounding Hill States, with them becoming tributaries of Jammu, such as formerly powerful states such as Basohli, Bhadarwah, Kishtwar, and Chinaini states.[16][9] This reality led to the coining of a local phrase: bāyaṅ vīch Jammu sirdār hai (meaning "Jammu is the chief of the twenty-two hill states").[9] Ranjit Dev had five ranis (queens), with polygamy being the norm for wealthy Dogra families.[9]

Painting of a begum out hawking with her maids, possibly a depiction of Begum Malka Zamani, attributed to Nainsukh, Jammu, ca.1735–40[9]

Ranjit Dev, like his brother Balwant Dev, was a patron of the arts.[14][9] During Ranjit's reign, Jammu's local economy benefited, as trading developed, which was noted by the English traveller George Forster in 1783.[9] Forster also noted that the Jammuite rulers were tolerant on the matter of religion.[9] Many refugees from other areas of India settled in Jammu during this period, such as Malka Zamani, Mughlani Begum (widow of Mir Mannu), Hari Singh (s/o Kaura Mal, the diwan of Mir Mannu), and Dalpat Rai (s/o Lakhpat Rai)[9]

The downfall of the Mughals led the Sikh Misls to arise in the Punjab in the subsequent power-vacuum that followed, with this change having repercussions on the Hill States.[16][9] Towards the end of Ranjit Dev's rule, the Sikh clans of Punjab (misls) gained ascendency, and Jammu began to be contested by the Bhangi, Kanhaiya and Sukerchakia misls. Around 1770, the Bhangi misl attacked Jammu and forced Ranjit Dev to become a tributary.[18][19] Other sources state that Ranjit Dev was able to successfully fend-off the Sikh attacks on Jammu that occurred later-on in his reign and that it was his successors that succumbed to the Sikhs.[9]

Braj Dev

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Painting of Raja Brij Raj Dev of Jammu State smoking hookah

Raja Ranjit Dev was succeeded by Raja Braj Dev who killed his brother and nephew to become king.[citation needed] Brij Lal Dev, Ranjit Dev's successor, was defeated by the Sukerchakia chief Mahan Singh, who sacked Jammu and plundered it. Maha Singh is said to have taken loot worth two crore rupees from Jammu.[9] Thus Jammu lost its supremacy over the surrounding country. In the Battle of Rumal, the Jammu ruler was killed by Sikhs.[18][19] Raja Braj Dev was killed during the Sikh invasion of Jammu in 1787.[20]

Sampuran Dev

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Painting of a Jammu State royal smoking hookah and watching dancing girls, ca.1790

After the death of Raja Braj Dev, the state of Jammu was heavily under the sway of the Punjabi court.[16] His infant son Raja Sampuran Dev (1787–1797) succeeded with Jammu becoming an autonomous tributary under the Sikh Confederacy Misls.[note 3][21] The young Sampuran Singh was declared as the feudal lord but would be under the watch of his uncle Mian Mota.[16] Sampuran Singh died at the age of eleven with no issue.[16] Thus, he was succeeded by Raja Jit Singh, who was the son of Dalel Singh.[16][note 4]

Jit Dev

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During the reign of Jit Singh, Mian Mota was granted the jagir of Purmandal.[16] Jit Singh was involved in another conflict with the Sikh empire, which he lost and was exiled into British territory.[citation needed] With Jammu fully annexed by the Sikhs around 1808, Ranjit Singh first allotted it to his son Kharak Singh.[citation needed] Other sources give the year 1812 as when Jammu was annexed by the Sikhs.[9]

List of rulers of Jammu

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Ruler Portrait Reign
Raja Sangram Dev 1600 – 1625[22]
Raja Bhupat Dev 1625 – 1650[22]
Raja Hari Dev 1660 – 1690[22][9]
Raja Gajai Dev 1690 – 1703[22][9]
Raja Dhruv Dev 1703 – 1735[22][9]
Mian Ghansar Dev 1735 – 1747[22]
Raja Ranjit Dev 1747 – 1781[22]
Raja Braj Dev 1781 – 1787[22]
Raja Sampuran Dev 1787 – 1797[22]
Raja Jit Dev 1797 – 1808 or 1812[22][9]
Direct Sikh Rule 1808 or 1812 – 1820
Raja Kishore Singh 1820 – 1822
Raja Gulab Singh 1822 – 1846

Under Sikh-rule

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Direct rule

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Jammu State was annexed by the Sikh Empire in 1808 or 1812, the smaller states of Basohli and others soon followed and fell to the Sikhs.[9] Kharak Singh's agents were unable to maintain law and order, with locals led by Mian Dedo rebelling against the Sikh jagirdar (governor).[23][24] In 1812, the Dogra commander Gulab Singh led the Sikh forces against Kashmir and assisted their attacks on Multan in 1819 and against the Pashtun Yousafzai.[9]

Hereditary fiefdom

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In 1820, Ranjit Singh then bestowed the territory as a hereditary fiefdom to Gulab Singh's father Kishore Singh, a distant kinsman of Raja Jit Singh.[25][9] Ranjit Singh bestowed the place as a jagir on Kishore Singh, who belonged to the Jamwal Rajput clan that ruled Jammu. Kishore Singh was introduced to Ranjit Singh by his son Gulab Singh, who had joined Ranjit Singh's army in 1809.[9] Upon this introduction, Ranjit Singh employed Kishore Singh and two brothers of Gulab Singh, Suchet Singh and Dhian Singh.[9] During Sikh-rule, the three Dogra brothers Suchet Singh, Gulab Singh, and Dhian Singh played prominent roles in the Sikh court, with all of them being descended from Surat Dev.[9]

Maharaja Gulab Singh, the founder of princely state of Jammu and Kashmir

On his father's death in 1821 or 1822, Jammu passed to Gulab Singh.[26][9] Gulab Singh was the son of Kishore Singh, grandson of Zorawar Singh, great-grandson of Surat Dev, and great-great-grandson of Raja Dhruv Dev of Jammu.[16] Dhian Singh eventually worked his way up and reached the position of prime minister of the Sikh Empire in 1828.[9] Dhian Singh was given control over Poonch State and was bestowed the jagirs of Jasrota, Basholi, and Bhadu.[9] Suchet Singh was given Ramnagar as a raja.[9] At various points, Gulab Singh was bestowed with the jagirs of Bhera, Miani, Qadirabad, Dangi, Pind Dadda Khan, Jhelum, and Gujarat.[9]

'A battle scene' (second), from a painted scroll documenting the invasions of Ladakh, Baltistan, and Western Tibet, ca.1840's

As a jagirdar (governor) for the Sikhs, Gulab Singh extended the boundaries of the Sikh Empire to western Tibet with the help of his fine General Zorawar Singh.[9] Gulab Singh conquered the states of Kashtwar, Mankotia, Chenehni, Bandralta, and Padar (a minor province of Chamba State).[9] The Sikh rule was then extended beyond the Jammu Region and the Kashmir Valley to include the Tibetan Buddhist kingdom of Ladakh (conquered in 1834[9]) and the Emirates of Hunza, Gilgit and Nagar.

Miniature painting of Udham Singh, son of Gulab Singh, leaning against a bolster with an attendant

Gulab Singh had been a loyal and faithful subject of Ranjit Singh during the ruler's life, however after the death of Ranjit in 1839, conspiracies, rivalries, and intrigues arose in the Sikh court, with varying factions vying against one another for their own benefit.[9] In the turmoil for succession of the Sikh empire that followed Maharaja Ranjit Singh's death in 1839, two of Gulab Singh's sons Udham Singh, and Sohan Singh were killed in the feuding between the Sikh heirs. His youngest brother Suchet Singh, was killed by his own nephew Hira Singh, the Vizir (prime minister) of the Sikh empire. Hira Singh, was a great favourite of Maharaja Ranjit Singh[27] and Gulab Singh once even aspired to have him installed as the Sikh emperor.[28] Hira Singh had become prime minister aged 24, after his father and Gulab Singh's brother Vizir Dhian Singh was assassinated in his blotched September 1843 coup d'état against Sikh emperor Sher Singh in Lahore. During the regency of Maharani Jind Kaur, Hira Singh was killed by the Sikh army in December 1844. Another son of Gulab Singh, named Randhir Singh, was killed during this time.[9] During this period of turmoil, the Sikh Khalsa Army invaded Jammu and brought Gulab Singh back to Lahore as a prisoner, partly because Gulab Singh had taken precious treasures and resources from the Punjab when he shifted to Jammu after he defended Chand Kaur from Sher Singh.[9] Gulab Singh managed to survive this time and returned to Jammu.[9]

Gulab Singh, came into possession of the Koh-i-noor diamond, after Maharaja Kharak Singh's mysterious death in prison in 1840, and had previously presented the famous stone to Maharaja Sher Singh to win his favour.[28]

After the First Anglo-Sikh War in 1846, Sir Henry Lawrence was appointed British Resident and Vizir Lal Singh on behalf of infant emperor Duleep Singh was asked to surrender Kashmir.[29] Vizir Lal Singh was also a Dogra, and along with Gulab Singh colluded with the British to deliberately break the Sikh army and facilitate the British victory.[30][31]

Under the terms of the Treaty of Amritsar that followed in March 1846, the British government sold Kashmir for a sum of 7.5 million Nanakshahee rupees to Gulab Singh, hereafter bestowed with the title of Maharaja. Thus the Princely State of Jammu and Kashmir came into being under Gulab Singh, as per the treaty of Lahore, signed between the British and the Sikhs. Gulab Singh had to pay a large indemnity to the British on behalf of the Sikhs.[9]

Jammu and Kashmir State

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Maharaja Partab Singh (enthroned in 1885) saw the construction of Banihal Cart Road (B.C. Road) mainly to facilitate telegraph services. During WWI he provided one Mountain Battery and three Infantry Battalions to fight for the British in East Africa, Palestine and Mesopotamia.[32] For the services of his troops the state was awarded a hereditary 21-guns salute.

One of the main residences of the maharajas was the Sher Garhi Palace in their summer capital Srinagar.

Maharaja Hari Singh

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Maharaja Hari Singh, the last monarch from the Royal House of Jammu and Kashmir.

The last ruler of Jammu and Kashmir was Maharaja Hari Singh, who ascended the throne in 1925. He made primary education compulsory in the State, introduced laws prohibiting child marriage and allowed low castes to go to places of worship.[citation needed] Hari Singh was as a member of Churchill's British War Cabinet in WWII, and supplied troops for the Allies.[7]

Singh's reign saw the accession of Jammu and Kashmir to the newly independent Indian Union in 1947. He originally manoeuvered to maintain his independence by playing India and Pakistan off against each other. There was an armed movement against the Maharaja's rule, especially in the Poonch district of Jammu, where his troops were unable to control the fighters and retreated to Jammu. In October 1947, Singh appealed to India for help and acceded Jammu to India, although there is considerable controversy over exactly at what point,[33] and whether or not his accession included the sovereignty of the state.[34][35]

In June 1952, Singh's rule was terminated by the state government of Indian-administered Kashmir.[36][37] His son Yuvraj (Crown Prince) Karan Singh too abdicated and was elected Sadr-e-Riyasat ('President of the Province') and Governor of the state in 1964.

List of Maharajas of Jammu and Kashmir (1846–1952)

[edit]
3rd ruler of the dynasty, Maharaja Pratap Singh

Family tree

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  • I. Gulab Singh, Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir (1792–1857; Maharaja: 1846 (abdicated 1856))
    • II. Ranbir Singh, Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir GCSI, CIE (1830–1885; r. 1856–1885)
      • III. Pratap Singh, Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir GCSI, GCIE, GBE (1848–1925; r. 1885–1925)
      • Raja Amar Singh KCSI (1864–1909)
        • IV. Hari Singh, Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir GCSI, GCIE, GCVO (1895–1961; r. 1925–1947; titular Maharaja: 1952–1961)
          • V. Karan Singh, President of Jammu and Kashmir (b. 1931; Regent of Jammu and Kashmir: 1949–1952; Sadar-e-Riyasat (President) of Jammu and Kashmir: 1952–1965; Governor of Jammu and Kashmir: 1965–1967;
            • Vikramaditya Singh (born 1964)
              • Martand Singh (b. 1992)
            • Ajatshatru Singh (born 1966)
              • Ranvijay Singh (born 1992)

[citation needed]

Since 1952

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Yuvraj (Crown Prince) Karan Singh after serving as the President of Jammu and Kashmir from 1952 to 1964 went on to become the youngest cabinet minister as a leading member of the Indian Congress Party in 1967. He was also the Indian ambassador to the US in 1989. His elder son Vikramaditya Singh was a member of the Peoples Democratic Party. Currently in Congress party,[38] Karan Singh's younger son Ajatshatru Singh was a member of the National Conference (NC) headed by Omar Abdullah, grandson of Sheikh Abdullah who had abolished the monarchy in 1952. Ajatshatru Singh had served with the NC as a minister in the Jammu and Kashmir Government from 1996 to 2002. In 2014 he quit the NC to join the BJP, stating that he had done so to satisfy the "people’s desire to have a corruption and dynasty-free government".[39]

United Kingdom Crown Court order against the Secretary of State of the Foreign and Commonwealth office to address whether Jammu and Kashmir is recognised as a state

Ankit Love, son of Bhim Singh the founder of the Jammu and Kashmir National Panthers Party, claimed to be the "Emperor (Maharaja) of the Sovereign State of Jammu and Kashmir"[40] when he was a candidate in the 2016 London Mayoral Election,[41][42] and again in the 2016 Richmond Park by-election for the United Kingdom parliament.[43] In 2022, Ankit Love asserted in Southwark Crown Court in the United Kingdom, that he was the Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir and had judge Griffith issue a court order against the Secretary of State to provide under Section 21 of the State Immunity 1978 Act a certificate to address whether Jammu and Kashmir is recognised as a state.[44][45]

Patronage of the arts

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No Dogra artwork from before the Mughal-era has been found or come down to us.[9] At the height of the reign of the Dogras, artists were patronized and temples and fortresses were decorated with mural paintings, such as the temples of Krimchi, Babbor, and in the fort at Bahu.[9] Artwork flourished under the Dogras due to two main reasons: contact with the Mughals and the ascendance of the Jammu State.[9] Exchanges between the Dogras and the Mughals led to the transmission of Mughal manners, methods, and tastes regarding artwork, to the Dogras.[9] The first Pahari ruler to directly interact with the Mughals was Raja Bhupat Pal of Basohli State (r. 1598–1635), who was imprisoned by Jahangir from 1613–1627, during which he likely witnessed Mughal artwork.[9] This led to the art of painting to arise first in Basohli State, with the successors Raja Sangram Pal (r. 1635–73) and Raja Kirpan Pal (r. 1678–93) further developing Basohli as a centre of painting.[9] The tradition of painting later developed in the hill states of Jasrota, Mankot, Lakhanpur, Samba, Bhoti, Bandralta, Bhadrawaha, Poonch, and Rajauri.[9]

Portrait of the three artists Arjun, Ruldu, and Kanchu, whom were employed by the court of Ranbir Singh of Jammu and Kashmir State

As for Jammu State, the first paintings seem to date to the reign of Raja Hari Dev (r. 1660–90).[9] As Jammu became a powerful and hegemonic entity within the region above the rest, this brought upon peace, prosperity, and stability, which attracted painters to the Jammuite court, leading to the developing of Jammu State as a painting centre in the hills region.[9] Raja Dhruv Dev's four sons were all patrons of painting, especially Raja Balwant Singh of Jasrota State.[9] When Mughal officials sought refuge in Jammu State, they possibly brought Mughal miniature paintings with them and had an impact on the local fashion of Jammu, which is revealed in the miniature paintings produced after their arrival.[9] The extant wall-paintings of the territories of J&K State all date back to the reign of Gulab Singh, however there are miniature paintings that pre-date this time.[9] The brothers of Gulab Singh, Dhian Singh and Suchet Singh, were patrons of wall-paintings.[9] Gubab Singh's son and successor, Ranbir Singh, kept an atelier of artists.[9] The Dogra nobles were rich in wealth, this allowed them to pay for the patronization of artists.[9] Petty Rajputs and aristorcrats also emulated the royal-class by patronizing artists.[9] The patrons of temple construction, usually the mercantile-classes belonging to the Vaishya varna that were engaged in trade and industry, had the temple walls decorated with murals.[9]

Many of the extant Dogra wall paintings cover religious themes as this was the primary reason for executing them, to pay respect to the divinity of the deity, area, or temple.[9] Vaishnavism, Shaivism, and Shaktism (especially veneration of Vaishno Devi) were prominent streams of Hinduism amongst the Dogras and local people.[9] The worship of Vishnu and his avatars can be evinced in the early portraits of the Jammuite rulers Raja Ananta Dev and Raja Dhruv Dev, who bear Vaishnavist-orientated tilaks in their painted portraits.[9] During the Sikh-period in Jammu, the Jammuite nobles venerated the Sikh gurus and respected the Guru Granth Sahib, with them patronizing the painting of Sikh themes, such as paintings depicting Guru Nanak.[9]

However, there are secular paintings related to hunting, which was a popular past-time that involved many members of the noble-class, officials, and even the commoners.[9] Other secular themes relate to music and dance, which is evident from murals found at Ramnagar Palace.[9] Since miniature paintings often were part of dowries, artists would often travel with princesses to various royal courts of the surrounding region.[9] Commoner women acted as models for artists as noble women did not appear before artists for this purpose.[9] There are few to nil cases of other castes patronizing wall paintings, however a temple at Purmandal was constructed under the purview of a Brahmin and was decorated with murals but this Brahmin was engaged in a trading profession in Gujarat rather than traditional Brahmin customs.[9]

Some prominent artisan families that were employed by the Dogra rulers are the Seu-Nainsukh family.[9] The Seu-Nainsukh family was the dominant artisan family in the hill states of the Western Himalayas during the 18th and 19th centuries, including in Jammu.[9] Seu's son, Nainsukh, was directly employed by Balwant Singh of Jasrota, whom was the youngest son of Raja Dhruv Dev of Jammu State.[9] Nainsukh later moved to Basohli to work under that state's patronage.[9] Nainsukh and his son Ranjha (also an artist) worked under Raja Amrit Pal of Basohli State in the mid-18th century.[9] Ranjha's sons, Gur Sahai and Sukh Dayal, went to Jammu State to work as artists.[9] Three artists named Arjun, Ruldu, and Kanchu worked under the patronage of Ranbir Singh's court.[9] A prominent artist of late 19th century Jammu was Jagat Ram Dube, who was nicknamed as Chuniya and was of a Brahmin background.[9] Another artist was Haricharan, possibly a member of the family of the artist Sajnu who worked under Mandi State patronage.[9] As per lore, a Tarkhan artist named Hiru mistri of Suneeta village was the one who carried out the painting work of the walls of Ramnagar Palace.[9] Three artisan families based out of the Kangra region had sent their sons to work under Jammuite patronage but there is no evidence that they carried-out mural work.[9]

The Dogra wall paintings of that era were likely painted by more than one person, with the artisan families possibly travelling from place-to-place in a nomadic fashion, such as by working in one house and then moving to another to work when the work is completed.[9] The walls of the Ram-Ji-Ka-Mandir were painted by artists who hailed from Jaipur.[9] The local Radhakrishna temple of Mule Chak, Jammu region were painted by Muslims, with a Muslim painter named Aziz known to have worked in the vicinity.[9] Traditional architects tended to have knowledge of executing wall paintings.[9] Artists were paid in the form of grain for their services but ones attached to the royal-courts were paid in-cash.[9] Examples of land deeds bestowed upon any particular artists have not been found in this region.[9] When the Jammuite rulers would leave for religious pilgramages, such as the tirth-yatra, such as to Prayag, Haridwar, or Gaya, their artists would accompany them, as evidenced by the genealogical registers present at popular religious destinations, such as the bahis of the pandas in Haridwar.[9]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Raja Mal Dev's name is also rendered as 'Raja Maldev'.
  2. ^ Balwant Dev is commonly known as 'Balwant Singh'.
  3. ^ Raja Sampuran's name is alternatively appended with the Singh title, as 'Sampuran Singh', rather than as 'Sampuran Dev'.
  4. ^ Raja Jit Singh's name is alternatively spelt as 'Jeet Singh'.
  1. ^ Jammu and Kashmir was the largest among the princely states by land area and third largest by the amount of annual revenue.[3][4]

References

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  1. ^ "Dogra dynasty | India | Britannica.com". britannica.com. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  2. ^ Shome, Ayan (1 November 2014), Dialogue & Daggers: Notion of Authority and Legitimacy in the Early Delhi Sultanate (1192 C.E. – 1316 C.E.), Vij Books India Pvt Ltd, pp. 184–, ISBN 978-93-84318-46-8
  3. ^ Ernst, Waltraud; Pati, Biswamoy (2007). India's Princely States: People, Princes and Colonialism. Routledge. p. 68. ISBN 9781134119882.
  4. ^ Kaminsky, Arnold P.; Ph.D, Roger D. Long (2011). India Today: An Encyclopedia of Life in the Republic [2 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 378. ISBN 9780313374630.
  5. ^ Yakub (1 September 2009). "TREATY OF AMRITSAR" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 August 2014. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  6. ^ Rai, Mridu (2004). Hindu Rulers, Muslim Subjects: Islam, Rights, and the History of Kashmir. Princeton University Press. pp. 27, 133. ISBN 0-691-11688-1.
  7. ^ a b Schofield, Kashmir in Conflict 2003, p. 22.
  8. ^ Lyon, Peter (2008), Conflict Between India and Pakistan: An Encyclopedia, ABC-CLIO, pp. 150–151, ISBN 978-1-57607-712-2
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da Seth, Mira. "1: Background". Dogra Wall Paintings in Jammu and Kashmir (illustrated ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 1–9. ISBN 9780195615494.
  10. ^ Hāṇḍā, Omacanda (1998), Textiles, Costumes, and Ornaments of the Western Himalaya, Indus Publishing, pp. 178–179, ISBN 978-81-7387-076-7
  11. ^ Charak, Sukh Dev Singh (1971), Maharaja Ranjitdev and the Rise and Fall of Jammu Kingdom, from 1700 A.D. to 1820 A.D., Dogra-Pahari Itihas Kendra, p. 141
  12. ^ Sufi, G. M. D. (1949), Kashīr, being a history of Kashmīr from the earliest times to our own, Univ. of Panjab, p. 35
  13. ^ Singh, Jasbir (2004). The economy of Jammu & Kashmir. Radha Krishan Anand & Co. ISBN 9788188256099.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Charak, Sukh Dev Singh; Billawaria, Anita K. (1998). "1: The Backdrop of Pahari Murals". Pahari Styles of Indian Murals. Abhinav Publications. pp. 5–29. ISBN 9788170173564.
  15. ^ a b c d Seth, Chander M. (1 May 2018). "Jammu: The City of Temples – Chapter 2: Founder of the City". Cities' Identity Through Architecture and Arts: Proceedings of the International Conference on Cities' Identity through Architecture and Arts (CITAA 2017), May 11-13, 2017, Cairo, Egypt. Anna Catalani, Zeinab Nour, Antonella Versaci, Dean Hawkes, Hocine Bougdah, Adolf Sotoca, Mahmoud Ghoneem, Ferdinando Trapani. Routledge. ISBN 9781351680325. Raja Maldev, fourth King of the Dev dynasty, ruled Jammu from AD 1361 to 1400 (Goswami, 2015) and is believed to be the founder of present day Jammu city. He was a very tall and powerful king of his times. Several legends and ballads in the Dogri language exist in local folk art and depict his bravery, administration and governance. Raja Maldev established his headquarters at Purani Madi in the centre of the city. From 1400 to 1733, ten descendants of Maldev ruled the territory of Jammu. The eleventh ruler of the Maldev dynasty was Raja Ranjit Dev, who ruled from 1733 to 1782. He was known as an apostle of justice, chivalry and administration. He was the most secular and religiously tolerant king. His period is remembered as an era of prosperity, peace and coexistence. In his time, Jammu was the largest state in northern India.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Jeratha, Aśoka (1998). Dogra Legends of Art & Culture. Indus Publishing. pp. 187–189. ISBN 9788173870828.
  17. ^ a b c d e Galloway, Francesca (2020). Paintings for the Pahari Rajas (PDF). pp. 14–16.
  18. ^ a b Sukhdev Singh Charak (1978). Indian Conquest of the Himalayan Territories. Ajaya Prakashan, Jammu. p. 37.
  19. ^ a b Panikkar, K. M., Gulab Singh (1930), p. 10–12. London: Martin Hopkinson Ltd.
  20. ^ Sukhdev Singh Charak (1978). Indian Conquest of the Himalayan Territories. Ajaya Prakashan, Jammu. p. 37.
  21. ^ Charak, Sukh Dev Singh; Billawaria, Anita K. (1998). Pahāṛi Styles of Indian Murals. Abhinav Publications. p. 29. ISBN 9788170173564.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Randhawa, M. S. (2013). Basohli Painting (2nd reprint ed.). Lodhi Road, New Delhi: Additional Director General, Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India. p. 102. ISBN 9788123018065.
  23. ^ Chhabra, G. S. (1 January 2005). Advance Study in the History of Modern India (Volume-2: 1803-1920). Lotus Press. p. 184. ISBN 9788189093075.
  24. ^ Grewal, J. S. (8 October 1998). The Sikhs of the Punjab. Cambridge University Press. p. 106. ISBN 9780521637640. jit singh jammu.
  25. ^ Seth, Mira (1987). Dogra wall paintings in Jammu and Kashmir. Oxford University Press. p. 3. ISBN 9781956154924.
  26. ^ Choudhry, Dr Shabir (28 November 2016). Kashmir Dispute Terrorism and Pakistan. AuthorHouse. ISBN 9781524664213.
  27. ^ Snedden, Christopher (15 September 2015). Understanding Kashmir and Kashmiris. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9781849046220.
  28. ^ a b Amini, Iradj (1 June 2013). The Koh-i-noor Diamond. Roli Books Private Limited. ISBN 9789351940357.
  29. ^ Raja Lal Singh Archived 14 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  30. ^ Jawandha, Major Nahar Singh (2010). Glimpses of Sikhism. Sanbun Publishers. pp. 63, 64. ISBN 9789380213255.
  31. ^ "Sikh Wars & Annexation of the Panjab". Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  32. ^ Khajuria, Manu. "Why we must not forget J&K state forces who fought World War I". Daily O. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  33. ^ "Kashmir: The origins of the dispute". BBC. 16 January 2002. Retrieved 17 October 2015.
  34. ^ Ganai, Naseer (5 December 2016). "Maharaja Wanted Kashmir To Be An Independent Country, Says Farooq". Outlook India. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  35. ^ Anand, Utkarsh (17 December 2016). "Supreme Court rejects HC ruling: No sovereignty for J-K outside Constitution of India". The Indian Express. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  36. ^ "J&K terminates hereditary monarchy - This Day in India". thisdayinindia.com. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
  37. ^ "dated June 14, 1952: Rulership of Kashmir". The Hindu. 14 June 2002. Retrieved 18 October 2015.[dead link]
  38. ^ "Karan Singh's elder son to join Mufti's PDP - The Times of India". The Times of India. 8 August 2014. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
  39. ^ "After Ajatshatru's switch, family has a member each in BJP, Cong, PDP". The Indian Express. 13 November 2014. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
  40. ^ Bose, Adrija (2 May 2016). "Meet Ankit Love, The 32-Year-Old 'Maharaja Of Jammu & Kashmir' Running For London Mayor". HuffPost. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
  41. ^ "London mayoral polls: 'Maharaja' with message of peace". The Indian Express. 2 May 2016. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
  42. ^ "Is this the most regal election ever? Exiled emperor Ankit Love is running in the London mayoral elections, and wants to ban cars from the capital". CityAM. 11 April 2016. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
  43. ^ "A Dogra bids to make it in UK politics – again". Hindustan Times. 1 November 2016. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
  44. ^ "Bhim Singh's son claims sovereignty over J&K. A UK court is hearing his case". The Dispatch. 14 December 2022. Retrieved 9 October 2024.
  45. ^ Krishnankutty, Pia (16 December 2022). "House of Yolk — J&K leader's son seeks diplomatic immunity as 'Kashmir Maharaja' in UK egging case". ThePrint. Retrieved 9 October 2024.

Bibliography

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