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NANA FARNAVIS (1741-18o0) , the See also: great Mahratta See also: minister at See also: Poona at the end of the 18th century
.
His real name was Balaji Janardhan Bhanu; but, like many other See also: Mahrattas, he was always known by a kind of See also: nickname
.
Nana properly means a maternal grandfather; Farnavis is the official title of the See also: finance minister, derived from See also: lard = an account and navis = a writer
.
He was See also: born at See also: Satara on the 4th of May 1741, and was the son of a Chitpavan See also: Brahman, of the same class as the Peshwa, who held the hereditary office of Farnavis
.
He escaped from the fatal See also: battle of See also: Panipat in 1761; and from about 1774 was the leading personage in directing the affairs of the Mahratta confederacy, though never a soldier
.
This was the See also: period when Peshwas rapidly succeeded one another, and there was more than one disputed succession
.
It was the policy of Nana Farnavis to hold together the confederacy against both See also: internal dissensions and the growing power of the See also: British
.
He died at Poona on the 13th of See also: March 1800, just before the Peshwa placed himself in the hangs of the British and thus broke up the Mahratta confederacy
.
In an extant letter to the Peshwa, the
See also: Marquess Wellesley thus describes him: " The able minister of your See also: state, whose upright principles and honourable views and whose zeal for the welfare and prosperity both of the dominions of his own immediate superiors and of other See also: powers were so justly celebrated."
See Captain A
.
See also: Macdonald, Memoir of Nana Furnuwees (Bombay, 1851)
.
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