Online Encyclopedia

BUNDI, or BOONDEE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 798 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BUNDI, or BOONDEE  , a native state of India, in the
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Rajputana agency, lying on the north-east of the
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river
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Chambal, in a hilly tract historically known as Haraoti, from the Hara
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sept of the
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great clan of Chauhan Rajputs, to which the maharao
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raja of Bundi belongs . It has an
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area of 2220 sq. m . Many parts of the state are wild and hilly, inhabited by a large Mina population, formerly notorious as a
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race of robbers . Two rivers, the Chambia and the Mej,
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water the state; the former is navigable by boats . In 1901 the population was 171,227, showing a decrease of 4.2% due to the effects of famine . The estimated revenue is £46,000, the tribute £800o . There is no railway, but the metalled road from
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Kotah to the
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British cantonment of Deoli passes through the state . The
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town of Bundi had a population in 1g01 of 19,313 . A school for the
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education of boys of high rank was opened in 1897 . The state of Bundi was founded about A.D . 1342 by the Hara chief Rao Dewa, or Deoraj, who captured the town from the Minas . Its importance, however,
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dates from the time of Rao Surjan, who succeeded to the chieftainship in 1554 and by throwing in his lot with the
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Mahommedan emperors of
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Delhi (1569) received a considerable accession of territory .

From this time the rulers of Bundi

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bore the title of rao raja . In the 17th century their power was curtailed by the division of Haraoti into the two states of Kotah and Bundi; but they continued to
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play a prominent
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part in
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Indian
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history, and the title of maharao raja was conferred on Budh Singh for the part played by him in securing the imperial
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throne for Bahadur Shah I. after the
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death of Aurangzeb in 1707 . In 1804 the maharao raja Bishan Singh gave valuable assistance to Colonel Monson in his disastrous retreat before
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Holkar, in revenge for which the Mahratas and
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Pindaris continually ravaged his state up to 1817 . On the loth of
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February 1818, by a treaty concluded with Bishan Singh, Bundi was taken under British
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protection . In 1821 Bishan Singh was succeeded by his son Ram Singh, who ruled till 1889 . He is described as a
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grand specimen of the
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Rajput gentleman, and " the most conservative prince in conservative Rajputana." His
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rule was popular and beneficent; and though during the mutiny of 1857 his attitude was equivocal, he continued to enjoy the favour of the British government, being created G.C.S.I. and a counsellor of the
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empire in 1877 and C.I.E. in 1878 . He was succeeded by his son Raghubir Singh, who was made a K.C.S.I. in 1897 and a G.C.I.E. in 1g01 .

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