Online Encyclopedia

KOTAH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 919 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KOTAH  , a native

state of India, in the
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Rajputana agency, with an
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area of 5684 sq. m . The country slopes gently north-wards from the high table-
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land of
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Malwa, and is drained by the
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Chambal with its tributaries, all flowing in a northerly or north-easterly direction . The Mokandarra range, from 1200 to 1600 ft. above sea-level, runs from south-east to north-west . The Mokandarra Pass through these hills, in the neighbourhood of the highest
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peak (1671 ft.), has been rendered memorable by the passage of Colonel Monson's army on its disastrous retreat in 1804 . There are extensive
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game preserves, chiefly covered with grass . In addition to the usual
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Indian grains, wheat, cotton,
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poppy, and a little
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tobacco of good quality are cultivated . The manufactures are very limited . Cotton fabrics are
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woven, but are being rapidly superseded by the cheap products of Bombay,''and Manchaster . Articles of wooden furniture are also constructed . The chief articles of export are opium and grain; salt, cotton and woollen
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cloth are imported . Kotah is an offshoot from Bundi state, having been bestowed upon a younger son of the Bundi
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raja by the emperor Shah Jahan in return for services rendered him when the latter was in rebel-lion against his
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father Jahangir . In 1897 a considerable portion of the area taken to form
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Jhalawar (q.v.) in 1838 was restored to .

Kotah . In 19o1 the

population was 544,879, showing a decrease of 24% due to the results of famine . The estimated revenue is £206,000; tribute, £28,000 . The maharao Umad Singh, wasborn in 1873, and succeeded in 1889 . He was educated at the Mayo College, Ajmere, and became a major in the
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British army . A continuation of the branch
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line of the Indian Midland
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rail-way from Goona to Baran passes through Kotah, and it is also traversed by a new line, opened in 1909 . The state suffered from drought in 1896–1897, and again more severely in 1899–1900 . The
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town of Kotah is on the right
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bank of the Chambal . Pop . (1901), 33,679 . It is surrounded and also divided into three parts by massive walls, and contains an old and a new palace of the maharao and a number of
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fine temples . Muslins are the chief articles of manufacture, but the town has no
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great trade, and this and the unhealthiness of the site may account for the decrease in population .

End of Article: KOTAH
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