Raghogarh State

Raghogarh State
Raghugarh / Khichiwara
राघोगढ़ रियासत
Princely State of British India
1673–1947
Raghogarh State in the Imperial Gazetteer of India
History
  Established 1673
  Independence of India 1947
Area
  1901 109 km2 (42 sq mi)
Population
  1901 19,446 
Density 178.4 /km2  (462.1 /sq mi)
Today part of Guna district, Madhya Pradesh, 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. 
Raja Dhiraj Singh of Raghogarh (1697/1726).
Certain arts were patronized by the states's rulers and flourished. One of the Ragamala paintings produced in Raghogarh.

Raghogarh State, also known as Raghugarh and as Khichiwara, was a princely state of the Gwalior Residency, under the Central India Agency of the British Raj. It was a Thikana state of about 109 km2 with a population of 19,446 inhabitants in 1901. The Parbati River marked the western border of the state.[1] The capital was at Raghogarh[1] in present-day Guna district of Madhya Pradesh.

History

Raghogarh State was established in 1673 by Lal Singh Khichi, a Rajput of the Khichi clan, a branch of the clan to which Prithvi Raj the founder of Delhi belonged. The state took its name from the fort of Raghogarh, founded in 1673 by Raja Lal Singh himself in 1677. Raghogarh state prospered for a century, but saw its fortune wane owing to Maratha attacks led by Mahadaji Shinde around 1780.[1]

By 1818 there were disputes regarding succession in Raghogarh, which were settled through the intervention of the British authorities.[1]

Rulers

The ruling family were members of the Khichi Chauhan Dynasty of Rajputs.[2] The rulers used the title of Raja.[1]

See also

References

External links

Coordinates: 25°26′N 77°15′E / 25.433°N 77.250°E / 25.433; 77.250

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