
Last modified: 2024-05-11 by ian macdonald
Keywords: india | princely states | 
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Below, the states are ordered alphabetically, including those for which the number of guns is unknown.
The main source is A. Filcher (1984), Drapeaux et Armoiries des Etats princiers de l'Empire des Indies (Flags and Arms of the Princely States of the Empire of the Indies), Dreux, 1984, Neubecker (1992), Ziggioto (1998)
Other sources of information on the Indian princely states include:
Charles Allen and Sharada
	Dwivedi
Lives of the Indian Princes
London: Century
	Publishing, 1984
ISBN 0-7126-0910-5
or, if you crave a set of more
	"academic" things:
Robin Jeffrey, ed.
People:
	Princes, and Paramount Power: Society and Politics in the Indian
	Princely States
Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1978
ISBN ???
	19-560886-0 
	
When it comes out, the volume on the Princes by Barbara Ramusack in the New Cambridge History of India (Cambridge Univ. Press, sometime "soon"?) will be good.
As a more general background, the choices are mostly all bad. The whole "Dissipate Maharaja" genre is dominant and useless (unless you want unfounded tales of sex and degradation, but we learn little about the states).
Ed Haynes, 3 April 1996, 9 July 1996
Other sources are:
http://www.indianrajputs.com/list/ 
http://www.royalark.net/India/salute.htm 
https://sites.google.com/site/theprincelystates/ 
https://www.facebook.com/bharatiyariyasat/?ref=page_internal 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_princely_states_of_British_India_(alphabetical) 
https://cbkwgl.wordpress.com/2013/06/26/list-of-princely-states-of-india/
http://self.gutenberg.org/articles/eng/List_of_princely_states_of_India_(alphabetical) 
http://dimplecoins1.blogspot.com/2011/09/alphabetical-list-of-former-british.html
http://www.almanach.be/search/i/index.htm 
https://www.worldstatesmen.org/India_princes_A-J.html 
And several 
books I have in PDF
"A Gazetteer of the Territories under the Government of the 
East India Company and of the Native States on the Continent of India" by Edward 
Thornton Esq. [1858]
"An Historical Sketch of the Native States of India 
in Subsidiary Alliance with the British Government" by Colonel G.B. Malleson 
C.S.I. [1875]
"Ancient and Modern India" by W. Cooke Taylor L.L.D. and 
revised Third Edition by P.J. MacKenna Esq. [1857]
"Geography or First 
Division of The English Cyclopaedia" Volume III by Charles Knight [1867]
"Memorandum on the Census of British India of 1871-1872" [1875]
"Report 
on the Census of British Burma taken in August 1872" [1875]
"The British 
Colonies - British India" by R. Montgomery Martin Esq. [no year is given, but it 
is after 1853]
"The Modern History of the Indian Chies, Rajas, Zamindars 
etc. - Native States" by Loke Nath Ghose [1879]
"The Native Chiefs and 
their States in 1877" by G.R. Aberigh-MacKay [1878]
The books are not 
flags or heraldry collections, but I used them for better understanding the 
system and for historical or political facts.
Vanja Poposki, 29 
October 2020
Definitions of terms:
JAGIR
A jagir was technically a feudal 
life estate, as the grant reverted to the state upon the jagirdar's death. 
However, in practice, jagirs became hereditary to the male lineal heir of the 
jagirdar. The family was thus the de facto ruler of the territory, earned income 
from part of the tax revenues and delivered the rest to the treasury of the 
state during the Islamic rule period, and later in parts of India that came 
under Afghan, Sikh and Rajput rulers. The jagirdar did not act alone, but 
appointed administrative layers for revenue collection. 
This feudal system 
of land ownership is referred to as the jagirdar system. The system was 
introduced by the Sultans of Delhi from the 13th century onwards, was later 
adopted by the Mughal Empire, and continued under the British East India 
Company. 
Some Hindu jagirdars were converted into Muslim vassal states under 
Mughal imperial sway, such as the Nawwabs of Kurnool. Most princely states of 
India during the colonial British Raj era were jagirdars. Shortly following 
independence from the British Crown in 1947, the jagirdar system was abolished 
by the Indian Government in 1951.
The Supreme Court of India used the 
following definition of jagir in a 15 April 1955 judgment:
The word 'jagir' 
connoted originally grants made by Rajput Rulers to their clansmen for military 
services rendered or to be rendered. Later on grants made for religious and 
charitable purposes and even to non-Rajputs were called jagirs, and both in its 
popular sense and legislative practice, the word jagir came to be used as 
connoting all grants which conferred on the grantees rights in respect of land 
revenue, and that is the sense in which the word jagir should be construed in 
Article 31-A.
THIKANA
The territory of land under the control of a 
Thakur was called thikana. Thakur is a historical feudal title of the Indian 
subcontinent. It is also used as a surname in the present times. The female 
variant of the title is Thakurani or Thakurain, also used to describe the wife 
of a Thakur. the title Thakur was used to refer to "a man of intermediate but 
mid–level caste, usually implying a landowning caste". Wadley further notes that 
Thakur was viewed as a "more modest" title in comparison to Raja (King). Some 
academics have suggested that Thakur was merely a title and not an office 
whereby a holder was entitled to wield some power in the state". However, some 
other academics have noted that this title had been used by "petty chiefs" in 
the western areas of Himachal Pradesh. 
The title was used by rulers of 
several princely states, Some Thakurs were recognised with hereditary 9-gun 
salutes.
ZAMINDARI
A zamindar, zomindar, zomidar, or jomidar, was 
an autonomous or semiautonomous ruler of a state who accepted the suzerainty of 
the Emperor of Hindustan. The term means land owner in Persian. Typically 
hereditary, zamindars held enormous tracts of land and control over their 
peasants, from whom they reserved the right to collect tax on behalf of imperial 
courts or for military purposes.
In the 19th and 20th centuries, with the 
advent of British imperialism, many wealthy and influential zamindars were 
bestowed with princely and royal titles such as Maharaja (Great King), Raja 
(King) and Nawab.
During the Mughal Empire, zamindars belonged to the 
nobility and formed the ruling class. Under British Colonial rule, the permanent 
settlement consolidated what became known as the zamindari system. The British 
rewarded supportive zamindars by recognising them as princes. Many of the 
region's princely states were pre-colonial zamindar holdings elevated to a 
greater protocol. However, the British also reduced the land holdings of many 
pre-colonial princely states and chieftaincy, demoting their status to a 
zamindar from previously higher ranks of nobility.
The system was abolished 
during land reforms in East Pakistan (Bangladesh) in 1950, India in 1951 and 
West Pakistan in 1959. 
Unlike the autonomous or frontier chiefs, the 
hereditary status of the zamindar class was circumscribed by the Mughals, and 
the heir depended to a certain extent on the pleasure of the sovereign. Heirs 
were set by descent or a times even adoption by religious laws. Under the 
British Empire, the zamindars were to be subordinate to the crown and not act as 
hereditary lords, but at times family politics was at the heart of naming an 
heir. At times, a cousin could be named an heir with closer family relatives 
present; a lawfully wedded wife could inherit the zamindari if the ruling 
zamindar named her as an heir. 
Valentin Poposki, 1 November 2020