Online Encyclopedia

KOLHAPUR

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 889 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KOLHAPUR  , a native

state of India, within the Deccan division of Bombay . It is the
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fourth in importance of the Mahratta principalities, the other three being
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Baroda,
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Gwalior and
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Indore; and it is the
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principal state under the
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political control of the government of Bombay . Together with its jagirs or feudatories, it covers an
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area of 3165 sq. m . In 1901 the population was 910,011 . The estimated revenue is £300,000, Kolhapur stretches from the heart of the Western Ghats eastwards into the plain of the Deccan . Along the spurs of the main chain of the Ghats lie wild and picturesque hill slopes and valleys, producing little but
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timber, and till recently covered with rich forests . The centre of the state is crossed by several lines of low hills
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running at right angles from the main range . In the east the country becomes more open and presents the unpicturesque uniformity of a well-cultivated and treeless plain, broken only by an occasional
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river . Among the western hills are the ancient Mahratta strongholds of Panhala, Vishalgarh, Bavda and Rungna . The rivers, though navigable during the rains by boats of 2 tons burthen, are all fordable during the hot months . Iron ore is found in the hills, and smelting was formerly carried on to a considerable extent; but now the Kolhapur
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mineral cannot compete with that imported from
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Europe . There are several good stone quarries .

The principal agricultural products are

rice, millets,
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sugar-
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cane,
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tobacco, cotton, safflower and vegetables . The rajas of Kolhapur trace their descent from
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Raja Ram, a younger son of Sivaji the
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Great, the founder of the Mahratta power . The prevalence of piracy caused the
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British government to send expeditions against Kolhapur in 1765 and 1792; and in the early years of the 19th century the misgovernment of the chief compelled the British to resort to military operations, and ultimately to appoint an officer to
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manage the state . In
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recent years the state has been conspicuously well governed, on the
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pattern of British administration . The raja Shahu Chhatrapati, G.C.S.I . (who is entitled to a salute of 21 guns) was born in 1874, and ten years later succeeded to the
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throne by adoption . The principal institutions are the Rajaram college, the high school, a technical school, an agricultural school, and training-
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schools for both masters and mistresses . The state railway from
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Miraj junction to Kolhapur
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town is worked by the
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Southern Mahratta
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company . In recent years the state has suffered from both famine and plague . The town of KoLHAEUR, Or KARVIR, is the
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terminus of a branch of the Southern Mahratta railway, 30 M. from the main
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line . Pop . (1901), 54,373 .

Besides a number of handsome

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modern public buildings, the town has many evidences of antiquity . Originally it appears to have been an important religious centre, and numerous Buddhist remains have been discovered in the neighbourhood .

End of Article: KOLHAPUR
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