Daphlapur State

Daphlapur State
दफलपुर संस्थान
Princely State of British India

1686–1917
Daphlapur State in the Imperial Gazetteer of India
History
  Established 1686
  Annexation by Jath State 1917
Area
  1881 249 km2 (96 sq mi)
Population
  1881 6,006 
Density 24.1 /km2  (62.5 /sq mi)
Today part of Maharashtra, India
Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "article name needed". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 

Daphlapur State, also spelled Daflepur, was a Hindu petty princely state of British India. It was a former Maratha territory, one of the former Southern Maratha Jagirs (feudal estates).

Daphlapur State and neighbouring Jath State were the only two states belonging to the Bijapur Agency under the Bombay Presidency,[1] which later would become part of the colonial Deccan States Agency.

The state had six villages with an area of only 249 km² and a population of 6,006 inhabitants in 1881.[1]

History

The state was founded in 1680 as Daphlapur.[2] Following British rule in the area it came under the collector of Bijapur District, together with larger Jath State. The third widow of the last ruler, Ranibai Lakshmibai Saheb, died without succession and the dynasty line of the state became extinguished. Then Daphlapur ended up being annexed by Jath State on 27 January 1917.[2]

Rulers

The rulers of the state belonged to the Daphle dynasty and bore the (rarely modest) title of Deshmukh.

On 27 January 1917, the state was incorporated into Jath, whose rulers (also styled Deshmukh) shared the same Daphle bloodline, owing to lack of succession[2] and were awared a Privy Purse of 49,924 Rupees. The joint state ceased to exist on 8 March 1948 by accession to Bombay state.

Deshmukhs

See also

References

Coordinates: 17°0′N 75°07′E / 17.000°N 75.117°E / 17.000; 75.117

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