Kalsia

Kalsia State
Princely State of British India
1763–1948
Kalsia in a 1911 map of Punjab
Capital Chhachhrauli
History
  Established 1763
  Independence of India 1948
Area
  1901 435 km2 (168 sq mi)
Population
  1901 67,132 
Density 154.3 /km2  (399.7 /sq mi)
Today part of Punjab & Haryana, India
Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 

Kalsia was a princely state in Punjab, British India, one of the former Cis-Sutlej states. It was founded by Gurbaksh Singh in 1760. After India's independence, it was included in PEPSU and later in the Indian East Punjab after the States Reorganisation Act, 1956. The area of Kalsia is now located in the modern day Indian states of Punjab and Haryana. In 1940 the population of Kalsia was 67,393.[1]

Geography

The area of Kalsia was 435 km² (168 sq mi), consisting of 20 detached pieces of territory in the Ambala and Ferozepur districts, lying mainly between 30° 12 and 30° 25 N and 77° 21 and 77° 35 E.[2] It was divided into 3 major parts: two tehsils, Chhachhrauli and Basi, and a sub-tehsil named Chirak, in Ferozepur district. It had contained 181 villages in 1903. The capital of Kalsia state was Chhachhrauli.

History

The state of Kalsia was founded by Gurbaksh Singh in 1760. He was a Jat who joined the Kroria Misl Sikh confederacy. Maharaja Ranjit Singh had granted the estate of Chhachhrauli to Gurbaksh Singh, a commander of his troops and a resident of Kalsia village. Goorbaksh Singh named the state "Kalsia" and Chhachhrauli became its capital city.

Gurbaksh Singh was not famous, but his successor and son, Jodh Singh was an able person. At that time the area of Kalsia state comprised the territory between the Yamuna and the Markanda stream. Jodh Singh captured Dera Basi from Sardar Khajan Singh and also acquired territories of Lohal and Achrak. When Maharaja Ranjit Singh attacked and occupied Naraingarh in the Shivaliks in 1807, Jodh Singh was with him. In recognition of his services, Ranjit Singh presented him territories of Badala, Kameri and Chhabbal. Jodh Singh died in Multan in 1818. After his death, his son Sobha Singh assumed charge of Kalsia state and held it until his death in 1858. Lahna Singh, his successor sided with the British in crushing the revolt of 1857.

After 1858, a period of peace started. When Lahna Singh assumed power, the Kalsia territory was intact as a British protectorate. The state's annual income was nearly Rs 300,000 per annum, and the population was around 62,000. After Lahna Singh, came Ranjit Singh Kalsia, then his son Ravi Sher Singh, and finally Ravi Karan Singh. Ravisher Singh in 1916 gave himself the title of Raja. The Kalsia rajas held their estate until 1947, when it was merged with the Indian Union.

Both Ranjit Singh Kalsia and Ravi Sher Singh built several public utility buildings, including a charity hospital and schools. Raja Ravi Sher Kalsia Hospital was inaugurated in 1910 by Lt Governor of the Punjab, Sir Luis William Daney. The old court building still exists at Chhachhrauli. The dewan of the state used to live in an impressive building known as ‘Janak Niwas’. The Kalsias were undoubtedly staunch Nanakpanthis.

In volume XIX (Part 1) of the Census of India 1891, E. D. Maclagan, the Provincial Superintendent of Census Operation, records: "Some eighty years ago (i.e., in 1811 AD) the grandfather of the present Lambardar of Jainpur village was carried off by the Sikh chief of Kalsia, and had all his fingers burnt off, because he refused to acknowledge that Nanak was the true Guru."[3]

The state was under the political control of the commissioner of the Delhi division.

Rulers

The rulers of Kalsia State bore the title of 'Sardar', although from 1916 they adopted the title of 'Raja', including the last head of the state.[4]

Sardars

(1818 - 14 Feb 1858 Sobha Singh (d. 1858)

Rajas

See also

References

  1. Columbia-Lippincott Gazeteer, p. 900
  2. Imperial Gazetteer of India, v. 14, p. 320.
  3. A glossary of the tribes and castes of the Punjab and North-West, H.A. Rose, 1997, 532 pages, p. 340, web: BooksG-Th: notes "carried off by the Sikh chief of Kalsia, and had... fingers burnt off, because he refused to acknowledge...Nanak".
  4. Princely States of India

Coordinates: 30°15′N 77°22′E / 30.25°N 77.37°E / 30.25; 77.37

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