Bastar State | |||||||
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Princely State ofBritish India | |||||||
1324–1948 | |||||||
Flag | |||||||
![]() Bastar State in theImperial Gazetteer of India | |||||||
Capital | Jagdalpur | ||||||
Area | |||||||
• 1901 | 33,831 km2 (13,062 sq mi) | ||||||
Population | |||||||
• 1901 | 306,501 | ||||||
History | |||||||
• Established | 1324 | ||||||
1948 | |||||||
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Bastar Princely State |
Bastar state was aprincely state in India during theBritish Raj. It was founded in the early 13th century by Annamaraja, a brother of the last ruler of theKakatiya dynasty,Prataparudra II.
It is today used to refer to the same region, calledBastar division inChhattisgarh state.[1]
In the early 19th century, the state became part ofCentral Provinces and Berar under theBritish Raj, and acceded to the Union of India on 1 January 1948, to become part of theMadhya Pradesh in 1956, and later part of theBastar district ofChhattisgarh state in 2000. The current ceremonial ruler is Maharaja Kamal Chandra Bhanj Deo, of theKakatiya andBhanj dynasty.
Bastar state was situated in the south-eastern corner of the Central Provinces and Berar, bounded north by theKanker State, south by the Godavari district ofMadras States Agency, west byChanda District,Hyderabad State, and theGodavari River, and east by theJeypore Estate inOdisha.
It had an area of 13,062 square miles (33,830 km2)[2] and a population of 306,501 in 1901, when its capital city atJagdalpur, situated on the banks ofIndravati River, had a population of 4,762.[2]
Traditionally the area is mentioned asDandakaranya in the epicRamayana, and part of theKosala Kingdom in theMahabharata. Around 450 AD, the Bastar area was ruled by aNala king called Bhavadatta Varman, who is recorded as having invaded the neighbouringVakataka kingdom during the reign of its king,Narendrasena (440-460)[3]
A brother ofPrataparudra II, Annamaraja, has been associated with ruling what eventually became the state of Bastar. This appears likely to be historical revisionism, dating from a genealogy published by the ruling family in 1703, because the document records only eight generations spanning almost four centuries of rule. Such revisionism and tenuous claims of connection to the Kakatiyas was not uncommon because it was perceived as legitimising the right to rule and a warrior status. Talbot notes that there is a record of a brother called Annamadeva and that:
He is said to have left Warangal for the northeast after anointing Prataparudra's son as king. Thus, the founder of the family fortunes in Bastar may very well have been a Telugu warrior from Telangana who was familiar with the prevalent legends about the Kakatiyas.[4]
According to this chronology, the state was established around 1324 CE and the founder established his kingdom at Bastar under the tutelage of a local goddess, Danteshwari. That goddess remains the tutelary deity of Bastar region and theDanteshwari Temple stands today atDantewada.[5] He ruled till 1369 when he was followed successively by Hamir Deva (r. 1369-1410), Bhaitai Deva (1410–1468), Purushottama Deva (1468–1534), Pratapa Raja Deva (1602–1625) and Dikpala Deva (1680–1709), after which the Bastar branch of the dynasty became extinct in the third generation with him, after which a descendant of the younger brother of Prataparaja Deva, Rajapala Deva became the next King in 1709. Rajapala Deva had two wives, first a Baghela princess, married, who had a son, Dakhin Singh, secondly, aChandela Princess, who has two sons, Dalapati Deva and Pratap, trouble however struck again when after the death of Rajapala Deva in 1721, the elder queen ousted other claimants and placed her brother on the throne of Bastar, Dalapati Deva took refuge in the neighbouringkingdom of Jeypore and finally regained his throne a decade later in 1731.[6][7]
Its capital was Jagdalpur, where Bastar royal palace built by its ruler, when its capital was shifted here from old capital Bastar.[6]
Later at some point in the 15th century Bastar was divided into two kingdoms, one based in Kanker and the other ruled from Bastar.[8] The present Halba Tribe claims to descend from the military class of these kingdoms.
Until the rise of theMarathas, the state remained fairly independent until the 18th century. In 1861, Bastar became part of the newly formed Central Provinces and Berar, and in 1863, after years of feud, over theKotapad region, it was given over to the neighbouringJeypore state in 1863, on the condition of payment of tribute of Rs. 3,000, two-thirds of which sum was remitted from the amount payable by Bastar. By virtue of this arrangement the tribute of Bastar was, reduced to a nominal amount.
H H Maharaja Pravir Chandra Bhanj Deo (1929–1966), the 20th and the last ruling head of the Bastar state, ascended the throne in 1936, before it acceded to India in 1948 during thepolitical integration of India.[9]
H H Maharaja Pravir Chandra Bhanj Deo was immensely popular among the tribals. He was shot dead in a "police action" on 25 March 1966 while leading a tribal movement against encroachment of land by outsider in concert with the authorities in Bastar. He was executed on the steps of his own Palace in Jagdalpur. Scores of other tribals and courtiers too were murdered by the police.[citation needed]
This article incorporates text from a publication now in thepublic domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bastar".Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.