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OODEYPORE UDAIPUR

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 554 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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OODEYPORE

UDAIPUR  or MEWAR, a native state of India, in the
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Rajputana agency .
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Area, 12,691 sq. m . Pop . (1901), 1,030,212 . Estimated revenue £200,000; tribute £17,000 . The greater
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part of the country is level plain . A section of the Aravalli Mountains extends over the south-western and
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southern portions, and is rich in minerals, but the mines have been long closed . The general inclination of the country is from south-west to north-east, the
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Banas and its numerous feeders flowing from the
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base of the Aravalli range . There are many lakes and tanks in the state, the finest of which is the Debar or Jaisamand, with an area, of nearly 21 sq. m.; it is considered to be the largest artificial
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sheet of
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water in the
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world . A portion of the state is traversed by the
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Malwa
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line of the Rajputana railway . A branch from Chitor towards Udaipur was taken over by the state in 1898, and was extended nearer to the capital . Like the rest of Rajputana the state suffered severely from famine in 1900 .

The

ancient coinage is of the Sasanian or Persian type, copper 'issues of this type being still in circulation .
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Modern coins bear on the
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reverse the words " Friend of
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London." The chief, whose title is maharana, is the head of the Sisodhyia clan of Rajputs, and claims to be the
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direct representative of Rama, the mythical king of
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Ajodhya . He is universally recognized as the highest in rank of all the
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Rajput princes . The dynasty offered a heroic resistance to the Mahommedans, and boast that they never gave a daughter to a Mogul emperor; They are said to have come from
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Gujarat and settled at Chitor in the 8th century . After the capture of Chitor by
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Akbar in 1568 the capital was removed to Udaipur by Maharana Udai Singh . During the 18th century the state suffered greatly from
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internal dissension and from the inroads of the
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Mahrattas . It came under
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British
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protection in 1817 . The Maharana Fateh Singh, G.C . S . I . (b . 1848), succeeded by adoption in 1884 .

The name of Mewar is derived from the Meos, or

Minas, a tribe of mixed Rajput origin, who have likewise given their name to a different tract in
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northern Rajputana, called Mewat, where they are now all Mahommedans . About 1400 a sub-division of the Mewatis, called Khanzadas, made themselves the dominant power in this tract; and at the end of the 18th century, and again during the Mutiny, they were notorious for their ravages in the Upper
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Doab, around
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Agra and
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Delhi . In 1901 the
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total number of Mewatis in Rajputana was 168,596, forming 13 % of the population in the state of Alwar . Down to 1906 the Mewar residency was the title of a
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political agency in Rajputana, comprising the four states of Udaipur, Banswara,
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Dungarpur and Partabgarh ; area, 16,970 sq. m . ; pop . (1901), 1,336,283 . But in that
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year the three last states were separated from Udaipur, and formed into the Southern Rajputana States agency . The Mewar Bhil Corps, raised as a
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local
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battalion in 1840, which was conspicuously loyal during the Mutiny, was in 1897 attached to the
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Indian army, with its headquarters at Kherwara . The city of UDAIPUR is 2469 ft. above sea-level . Pop . (1901), 45,976 . It is situated in a valley amid wooded hills, on the
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bank' of a large lake (Pichola), with palaces built of granite and marble .

The maharana's

palace, which crowns the ridge on which the city stands,
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dates originally from' about 1570, but has had additions made to it till it has become a conglomeration of various architectural styles . On Lake Pichola are two islands, on which are palaces dating respectively from the
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middle of the :7th and of the 18th centuries . In one of these the
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European residents were sheltered during the Indian Mutiny . In the neighbourhood are Eklingji (with a magnificent temple of the 15th century), and Nagda, the seat of the ancestors of the chiefs of Udaipur, with a number of temples, two of which are said to date from the 11th century . There is another UDAIPUR STATE in the Central Provinces (till 1905 one of the Chota
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Nagpur states of Bengal) . Area, 1052 sq. m.; pop . (1901), 45,391 . Its capital is Dharmjaygarh .

End of Article: OODEYPORE UDAIPUR
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