Bhagvat Singh

Bhagvat Singh
Maharaja of Gondal

H.H. Maharaja Thakore Shri Sir Bhagwat Singhji Sagramji Sahib Bahadur, Maharaja of Gondal GCSI, GCIE (then only a GCIE),a 1911 photograph, during his visit to London, for the Coronation of King George V.
Born (1865-10-24)24 October 1865
Dhoraji, Gujarat, India
Died 5 March 1944(1944-03-05) (aged 78)
Gondal, India
Religion Hindu

Bhagvatsingh Sahib GCSI GCIE (24 October 1865 – 9 March 1944) was the ruling Maharaja of the princely state of Gondal from 1869 till his death in 1944, in whose reign the state was raised to 11-gun salute state.[1] He was the only Maharaja to take a medical degree and other degrees.

Early life

Bhagvatsingh was born as Kumar Sri Bhagvatsinghji Sangramsinhji Sahib, Yuvaraja Sahib of Gondal, on 24 October 1865 at Dhoraji, the third and the youngest but only surviving son of Thakurani Bai Shri Monghiba Sahiba, daughter of Jhala Shri Rartansinhji Sahib of Minapur,[2] the third wife of Thakore Sagramji II, the Thakore Sahib, or chieftain, of Gondal, a small third-class princely state that was an offshoot of the great Jadeja dynasty.

Background

The Gondal branch of the dynasty had split off from the dynasty ruling Rajkot in the early 17th century. During the reign of Sagramji II, modern schools, courts and police force were established. In 1869, Sagramji II died, and Bhagvatsingh succeeded his father at the age of four.[3]

Bhagvatsingh was educated at The Rajkumar College, Rajkot[2] followed by the University of Edinburgh in 1892, where he graduated as a medical doctor in 1895 and became a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh, the only princely ruler ever to do so. In 1894, he became the President of the Organising Committee of the 8th International Congress of Hygiene and Demography at Budapest. He later rose to become Vice-President of the Indian Medical Association.[3]

Reign

Bhagvatsingh reformed the state administration, developed its resources, erected schools, colleges and hospitals, provided free and compulsory education for both men and women through university, built technical schools for engineers and training facilities for labourers.[3] As well, Bhagvatsingh improved the regional livestock through modern animal husbandry, built dams and irrigation networks and introduced sewage, plumbing, rail systems, telegraphs, telephone cables and electricity, becoming also a champion for women's rights.[3] Bhagvatsingh also published the first ever dictionary of Gujarati and a Gujarati encyclopedia, the "Bhagavadgomandal" in 1928.[3]

Bhagvatsingh's four surviving sons were all educated abroad. The eldest son, Bhojirajsingh, studied at Eton School and Balliol College, Oxford, where he took an engineering degree. His second, Bhupatsingh, was educated at Harrow School and at Trinity College, Cambridge and became a doctor like his father, going on to the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine at the University of London to become a Doctor of Tropical Medicine, Member of the Royal College of Physicians and LRCP. After returning to Gondal, Bhupatsingh became its chief medical officer. The youngest two sons, Kiritsingh and Natwarsingh, were both educated at the University of Edinburgh, and became directors of the state railways.[4]

Only four years after his formal accession in 1888, Gondal was raised to the rank of a first-class state with an 11-gun salute; in 1887, Bhagvatsingh became "Sir Bhagvatsingh" after he was knighted that year.[4]

Personal life

On 3 June 1881, Bhagvatsingh married Maharani Shri Nand Kunverbaiji Sahiba, CI (1867-9 March 1936). The couple had six sons and three daughters:

  1. Yuvraj Sahib Bhojirajsinhji Bhagvatsinhji (8 January 1883 – 31 July 1952, r. 1944–1952), who succeeded as Maharaja of Gondal
  2. Maharajkumari Bai Shri Nanba Kunverba Sahiba (1884–?)
  3. Rajkumar Shri Ajitsinhji Bhagvatsinghji Sahib (January–May 1887)
  4. Rajkumar Shri Ranjitsinhji Bhagvatsinghji Sahib (16 September 1887 – 1890)
  5. Maharajkumar Shri Dr. Bhupatsinhji Bhagvatsinghji Sahib, LRCP, MRCS, DTM (25 May 1888 – 1945?)
  6. Maharajkumari Bai Shri Leilaba Kunverba Sahiba, later the Rani of Jubbal (14 February 1891 – 7 March 1975); had issue.
  7. Maharajkumar Shri Kiritsinhji Bhagvatsinghji Sahib (13 February 1894–?)
  8. Maharajkumar Shri Natwarsinhji Bhagvatsinghji Sahib (29 May 1895 – 28 October 1937) (mauled by an Asiatic lion at Junagadh)
  9. Maharajkumari Bai Shri Taraba Kunverba Sahiba (4 March 1900 – 1958)

(Although Bhagvatsingh married three other wives, they do not seem to have provided him with children) [4]

Later years

During his reign, Bhagvatsingh abolished all rates, taxes, customs, octroi, and export duties in the state making Gondal the only state to be tax-free.[5] He not just removed the purdah system for women,[6] but 'Zananas' or restricted women's wing were no longer built in subsequent palaces.[3][7]

By 1918, Gondal was the only state in the Western India States Agency to have compulsory education for girls in all villages[5][8] In October 1934, on the 50th anniversary of his accession to the throne he gave his weight in gold to charity.[9] Bhagvatsingh died on 9 March 1944 in his eightieth year after a 75-year reign, cementing his reputation as one of the most progressive monarchs in Indian history.[4]

Titles

Coat of Arms of princely Gondal, 1893.

[4]

Honours

Bhagvatsingh received numerous honours, both academic and political, through his reign. Here is a full list of his honours and academic degrees:

Academic Degrees

Honours

Decorations

Medals

Honorary degrees

Academic societies

[4]

Works

References

  1. Salute states
  2. 1 2 Bhagvatsinghji Sangramsinhji Victoria and Albert Museum.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 The Royal Ark-India-Salute-Gondal
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 The Royal Ark-India-Salute-Gondal
  5. 1 2 Gondal Gealogy at Queensland University.
  6. Purdah Women TIME, Monday, 24 November 1930.
  7. Gondal
  8. Education for Girls, Christian Science Monitor, Boston, Mass. 11 June 1918. Page 11.
  9. Gives His Weight in Gold, Chicago Daily Tribune, 21 October 1934. E7 – PART 8.
  10. Gondal state The Imperial Gazetteer of India, 1908. v. 12, p. 320
  11. Medical Work in India Dr. William Osler, New York Times, 2 September 1897.
  12. A Few Things Under the Sun: Vaccination, Anaesthesia, and Antiseptic Surgery Were in Vogue Two Thousand Years Ago. Chicago Daily Tribune, Chicago, Ill. 20 December 1896, page 25. "Modern science is robbed of the credit of several of its most boasted discoveries by the revelations made in a remarkable book issued this week from the pen of a learned Indian Prince..."


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.