Kerajaan kecil India

Kerajaan-kerajaan kecil yang ada dalam India British (princely states) terdiri daripada kerajaan naungan[1] pemerintah setempat atau kawasan yang bersekutu dengan Raj British. Walaupun kerajaan sebegini telah wujud dari sekurang-kurangnya zaman klasik sejarah India, istilah kerajaan kecil khusus merujuk ke kerajaan dalam benua kecil India sewaktu zaman Raj British yang separa berdaulat diperintah secara tidak langsung oleh British tetapi lebih daripada pemerintah setempat dan tertakluk kepada suatu pemerintahan tidak langsung atau perkara lainnya. Hal ini membenarkan kerajaan British campur tangan dalam hal ehwal dalam kerajaa-kerajaan ini serta menggubal undang-undang yang dikuatkuasakan ke atas sepelusuk India jika perlu.

Kerajaan-kerajaan ini tiba di penghujungnya apabila jajahan India merdeka pada tahun 1947. Pada tahun 1950, hampir semua kerajaan-kerajaan ini telah bersetuju menyertai baik negara pecahan India mahupun Pakistan.[2] Penyatuan politik ini sebahagian besarnya dilakukan secara aman, kecuali beberapa kes tertentu seperti Kashmir (memerdekakan diri, namun memilih bergabung dengan India setelah diserang tentera Pakistan),[3] Hyderabad (memerdekakan diri pada tahun 1947, kemudiannya diserang pasukan polis dan diilhak India), Junagadh (kerajaannya bersetuju bergabung dengan Pakistan, tetapi diilhak India dalam suatu pungutan suara)[4] dan Kalat (memerdekakan diri tahun 1947, diilhak pada tahun berikutnya).[5][6][7]

Sejarah

Pembentukan

Hubungan dengan pihak British

Gelaran dan pangkat

Para penguasa kerajaan-kerajaan ini mempunyai berbagai gelaran tersendiri tanpa mengira asal-usul kerajaan yang dibentuk sebelum tibanya pihak British. Antara gelaran ini termasuklah:

  • Raja
  • Maharaja - gelaran lebih tinggi daripada "Raja" ("Maharani" adakala digunakan jika pewaris takhta tunggal berlainan jantina)
  • Sultan
  • Nawab (نواب) - khusus digunakan kerajaan-kerajaan diperintah pembesar Islam, ia sebelum ini setaraf "gabenor" dalam Empayar Mughal.
  • Wāli
  • Amir (أمير)
  • Chhatrapati - khusus dipakai 3 dinasti Bhonsle Maratha
  • Raje,
  • Nizam,
  • Wadiyar - khusus digunakan kerajaan Mysore,
  • Agniraj Maharaj - khusus digunakan Bhaddaiyan Raj,
  • Chogyal,
  • Nayak,
  • Inamdar,[8]
  • Saranjamdar[9]

Suatu sistem didasarkan bilangan tembakan hormat meriam turut digunakan untuk membezakan antara para pembesar semasa berhadapan Syarikat Hindia Timur British, das tembakan ini sering dalam bilangan ganjil antara 3 hingga 21 das. "Kerajaan-kerajaan hormat" (salute states) ini sering mendapat keistimewaan tertentu daripada pihak British berbanding kerajaan-kerajaan biasa dalam India.

Kerajaan kecil utama pada tahun 1947

Yang berhubung dengan Pemerintah Pusat

Lima kerajaan kecil berhubungan politik terus dengan Kerajaan Pusat India[10][11][12][13]
Nama kerajaan Keluasan (batu persegi) Populasi pada tahun 1941 Pendapatan kerajaan dianggarkan (dalam ratus ribu Rupee) Gelaran, bangsa, dan agama raja Bil. das tembakan hormat Pegawai setempat yang bertanggungjawab
Templat:Country data Kerajaan Baroda 13,866 3,343,477 (majoriti Hindu) 323.26 Maharaja, Maratha, Hindu 21 Residen Baroda
Templat:Country data Kerajaan Hyderabad 82,698 16,338,534 (Hindu dengan minoriti Muslim) 1582.43 Nizam, Turki, Islam Sunni 21 Residen Hyderabad
Templat:Country data Jammu dan Kashmir 84,471 4,021,616 termasuk Gilgit, Baltistan (Skardu), Ladakh, dan Punch (majoriti Muslim, dengan populasi beragama Hindu dan Buddha) 463.95 Maharaja, Dogra, Hindu 21 Residen Jammu & Kashmir
Templat:Country data Kerajaan Mysore 29,458 7,328,896 1001.38 Maharaja, Kannadiga, Hindu 21 Residen Mysore
Templat:Country data Gwalior State 26,397 4,006,159 (banyak beragama Hindu) 356.75 Maharaja, Maratha, Hindu 21 Residen Gwalior
Jumlah 236,890 35,038,682 3727.77

Lihat juga

Nota

Rujukan

  1. ^ Ramusack 2004, halaman 85 Quote: "The British did not create the Indian princes. Before and during the European penetration of India, indigenous rulers achieved dominance through the military protection they provided to dependents and their skill in acquiring revenues to maintain their military and administrative organisations. Major Indian rulers exercised varying degrees and types of sovereign powers before they entered treaty relations with the British. What changed during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries is that the British increasingly restricted the sovereignty of Indian rulers. The [[Syarikat Hindia Timur InggerisCompany] set boundaries; it extracted resources in the form of military personnel, subsidies or tribute payments, and the purchase of commercial goods at favourable prices, and limited opportunities for other alliances. From the 1810s onwards as the British expanded and consolidated their power, their centralised military despotism dramatically reduced the political options of Indian rulers." (p. 85)
  2. ^ Ravi Kumar Pillai of Kandamath in the Journal of the Royal Society for Asian Affairs, pages 316–319 https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03068374.2016.1171621
  3. ^ Bajwa, Kuldip Singh (2003). Jammu and Kashmir War, 1947–1948: Political and Military Perspectiv. New Delhi: Hari-Anand Publications Limited.
  4. ^ Aparna Pande (16 Mac 2011). Explaining Pakistan’s Foreign Policy: Escaping India. Taylor & Francis. m/s. 31–. ISBN 978-1-136-81893-6.
  5. ^ Jalal, Ayesha (2014), The Struggle for Pakistan: A Muslim Homeland and Global Politics, Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-74499-8 More than one of |authorlink= dan |author-link= specified (bantuan); More than one of |ISBN= dan |isbn= specified (bantuan)
    "Equally notorious was his high-handed treatment of the state of Kalat, whose ruler was made to accede to Pakistan on threat of punitive military action."
  6. ^ Samad, Yunas (2014). "Understanding the insurgency in Balochistan". Commonwealth & Comparative Politics. 52 (2): 293–320. doi:10.1080/14662043.2014.894280.: "When Mir Ahmed Yar Khan dithered over acceding the Baloch-Brauhi confederacy to Pakistan in 1947 the centre’s response was to initiate processes that would coerce the state joining Pakistan. By recognising the feudatory states of Las Bela, Kharan and the district of Mekran as independent states, which promptly merged with Pakistan, the State of Kalat became land locked and reduced to a fraction of its size. Thus Ahmed Yar Khan was forced to sign the instrument of accession on 27 March 1948, which immediately led to the brother of the Khan, Prince Abdul Karim raising the banner of revolt in July 1948, starting the first of the Baloch insurgencies."
  7. ^ Harrison, Selig S. (1981), In Afghanistan's Shadow: Baluch Nationalism and Soviet Temptations, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, ISBN 978-0-87003-029-1 More than one of |ISBN= dan |isbn= specified (bantuan): "Pakistani leaders summarily rejected this declaration, touching off a nine-month diplomatic tug of war that came to a climax in the forcible annexation of Kalat.... it is clear that Baluch leaders, including the Khan, were bitterly opposed to what happened."
  8. ^ Great Britain. Indian Statutory Commission; Viscount John Allsebrook Simon Simon (1930). Report of the Indian Statutory Commission ... H.M. Stationery Office. Dicapai pada 9 June 2012.
  9. ^ All India reporter. D.V. Chitaley. 1938. Dicapai pada 9 June 2012.
  10. ^ Imperial Gazetteer of India vol. IV 1907, halaman 92
  11. ^ "Mysore," Indian States and Agencies, The Statesman's Year Book 1947, pg 173, Macmillan & Co.
  12. ^ "Jammu and Kashmir," Indian States and Agencies, The Statesman's Year Book 1947, pg 171, Macmillan & Co.
  13. ^ "Hyderabad," Indian States and Agencies, The Statesman's Year Book 1947, pg 170, Macmillan & Co.

Bibliografi

  • Bhagavan, Manu. "Princely States and the Hindu Imaginary: Exploring the Cartography of Hindu Nationalism in Colonial India" Journal of Asian Studies, (Aug 2008) 67#3 pp 881–915 in JSTOR
  • Bhagavan, Manu. Sovereign Spheres: Princes, Education and Empire in Colonial India (2003)
  • Templat:Cite booktitle=Princes of India in the Endgame of Empire, 1917–1947
  • Ernst, W. and B. Pati, eds. India’s Princely States: People, Princes, and Colonialism (2007)
  • Templat:Citationtitle=Sir John Malcolm and the Creation of British India, Chs. 4 & 5.
  • Jeffrey, Robin. People, Princes and Paramount Power: Society and Politics in the Indian Princely States (1979) 396pp
  • Kooiman, Dick. Communalism and Indian Princely States: Travancore, Baroda & Hyderabad in the 1930s (2002), 249pp
  • Markovits, Claude (2004). "ch 21: "Princely India (1858–1950)". A history of modern India, 1480–1950. Anthem Press. m/s. 386–409. ISBN 978-1-84331-152-2.
  • Ramusack, Barbara (2004), The Indian Princes and their States, The New Cambridge History of India, Cambridge & London: Cambridge University Press, m/s. 324, ISBN 0-521-03989-4
  • von Pochhammer, Wilhelm (1973), India's Road to Nationhood: A Political History of the Subcontinent Unknown parameter |chpater= ignored (bantuan)excerpt
  • Zutshi, Chitralekha (2009), "Re-visioning princely states in South Asian historiography: A review", Indian Economic & Social History Review', 3 (46), m/s. 301–313, doi:10.1177/001946460904600302

Gazet

  • Imperial Gazetteer of India vol. II (1908), The Indian Empire, Historical, Published under the authority of His Majesty's Secretary of State for India in Council, Oxford at the Clarendon Press. Pp. xxxv, 1 map, 573. talian
  • Imperial Gazetteer of India vol. III (1907), The Indian Empire, Economic (Chapter X: Famine, pp. 475–502, Published under the authority of His Majesty's Secretary of State for India in Council, Oxford at the Clarendon Press. Pp. xxxvi, 1 map, 520. talian
  • Imperial Gazetteer of India vol. IV (1907), The Indian Empire, Administrative, Published under the authority of His Majesty's Secretary of State for India in Council, Oxford at the Clarendon Press. Pp. xxx, 1 map, 552. talian

Pautan luar

  • Indian Princely states and their History and detailed Genealogy – Royalark
  • Sir Roper Lethbridge (1893). The Golden Book of India: A Genealogical and Biographical Dictionary of the Ruling Princes, Chiefs, Nobles, and Other Personages, Titled or Decorated, of the Indian Empire (Full text). Macmillan And Co., New York.
Cite book
URL
https://archive.org/stream/goldenbookofindi00lethuoft/goldenbookofindi00lethuoft_djvu.txt
Title
The Golden Book of India: A Genealogical and Biographical Dictionary of the Ruling Princes, Chiefs, Nobles, and Other Personages, Titled or Decorated, of the Indian Empire (Full text)
Last name
Sir Roper Lethbridge
Publisher
Macmillan And Co., New York
Year of publication
1893
Author link
Roper Lethbridge
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