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BARODA , a native See also: state of See also: India, within the See also: Gujarat province of Bombay, but in See also: direct relations with the governor-general
.
It consists of four isolated divisions, each of which is interlaced in the most intricate fashion with See also: British territory or with other native states
.
Three of these divisions—Kadi, Baroda and Nausari—are in Gujarat proper; the See also: fourth, Amreli with Okhamandal, is in the peninsula of See also: Kathiawar
.
The See also: total See also: area covers 8099 sq. m
.
In 1901 the population was 1,952,692, showing a decrease of 19 % in the See also: decade, compared with an increase of 11 % in the preceding decade
.
This decrease was due partly to the famines of 1896–1897 and 1900-1901, partly to the epidemics of cholera and fever which accompanied them, and partly to the plague which attacked the state in as See also: great measure as the surrounding See also: presidency:
The princes of Baroda were one of the chief branches of the Mahratta confederacy, which in the 18th century spread devastation and terror over India
.
About 1721 one Pilaji See also: gaekwar carved a fertile slice of territory out of Gujarat, and afterwards received the title of " See also: Leader of the Royal Troops " from the peshwa
.
During the last See also: thirty-two years of the century the See also: house See also: fell a prey to one of those bitter and unappeasable See also: family feuds which are the ruin of great See also: Indian families
.
In 1800 the See also: inheritance descended to a See also: prince feeble in See also: body and almost idiotic in mind
.
British troops were sent in defence of the hereditary ruler against all claimants; a treaty was signed in 1802, by which his independence of the peshwa and his dependence on British See also: government were secured
.
Three years later these and various other engagements were consolidated into a systematic See also: plan for the administration of the Baroda territory, under a prince with a revenue of three-quarters of a million sterling, perfectly See also: independent in all See also: internal matters, but practically kept on his See also: throne by subsidiary British troops
.
For some See also: time the See also: history of the gaekwars was very much the same as that of most territorial houses in India: an occasional able See also: minister, more rarely an able prince; but, on the other See also: hand, a long dreary See also: list of incompetent heads, venal advisers and taskmasters oppressive to the See also: people
.
At last a fierce family See also: feud came to a See also: climax
.
In 1873 an See also: English committee of inquiry was appointed to investigate various complaints of oppression against the gaekwar, Malhar Rao, who had recently succeeded to the throne after being for a long time kept in prison by his See also: brother, the former gaekwar
.
No real reform resulted, and in 1874 an attempt at poisoning the British See also: resident led to the gaekwar being formally accused of the See also: crime and tried by a mixed commission
.
The result of the trial (1875) was a failure to obtain a unanimous verdict on the See also: charge of poisoning; the See also: viceroy, See also: Lord Northbrook, however, decided to depose Malhar Rao on the ground of See also: gross misgovernment, the widow of his brother and predecessor, Khande Rao, being permitted to adopt an heir from among the descendants of the founder of the family
.
This heir, by name Sayaji Rao, then a boy of twelve years in the humble home of a Deccani See also: cultivator, was educated by an English tutor, the administration being meanwhile placed for eight years under the charge of See also: Sir T
.
Madhava Rao, formerly diwan of See also: Travancore, one of the ablest and most enlightened of Indian statesmen
.
The result was a conspicuous success
.
The gaekwar showed himself a See also: model prince, and his territories
became as well governed and prosperous as a British See also: district
.
He repeatedly visited See also: Europe in See also: company with his wife
.
In 1887 the See also: queen-empress conferred upon him at Windsor the insignia of G.C.S.I., and in r89z upon his wife the Imperial See also: order of the See also: crown of India
.
The gross revenue of the state is more than a million sterling
.
In 1901 the state currency of Babashai rupees was withdrawn, and the British rupee was introduced
.
The See also: regular military force consists of a See also: field battery, with several regiments of cavalry and battalions of
See also: infantry
.
In addition, there is an irregular force of See also: horse and See also: foot
.
Compulsory See also: education has been carried on experimentally since 1893 in the Amreli division with apparent success; the compulsory age being 7 to 12 for boys and 7 to 10 for girls
.
See also: Special See also: measures are also adopted for the education of low castes and aboriginal tribes
.
There is a See also: female training See also: college under a Christian lady See also: superintendent
.
The KalaBhavan, or technical school, has departments for See also: drawing, See also: carpentry, dyeing, See also: weaving and See also: agriculture
.
There is also a state museum under a See also: European director, and a state library
.
Portions of the state are crossed by the Bombay & Baroda and the See also: Rajputana See also: railways
.
In addition, the state has constructed three railways of its own, on three different gauges
.
Other railways are in contemplation
.
The state possesses a. See also: cotton See also: mill
.
The city of Baroda is situated on the
See also: river Viswamitri, a station on the Bombay & Baroda railway, 245 m, N. of Bombay by See also: rail
.
Pop . (1901) 103,790 . The whole aspect of the city has been changed by the construction of handsome public buildings, the laying-out of parks and the widening of the streets . An excellent See also: water-supply is provided from the Ajwa lake
.
The cantonments, garrisoned by a native infantry regiment, are under British jurisdiction, and have a population of 4000
.
The city contains a college and many See also: schools
.
The chief hospitals are called after the countess of See also: Duff See also: erin, Sayaji Rao and Janmabai, the widow of Khande Rao
.
See Baroda Gazetteer, 1908
.
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