Datarpur Explained

Native Name:दातारपुर ਦਾਤਾਰਪੁਰ
Conventional Long Name:Datarpur State
Common Name:Datarpur
Nation:British India
Status Text:Princely State
Year Start:1550
Event Start:Foundation of the state
Year End:1818
Event End:Annexation by the Sikh Empire
P1:Guler State
S1:Sikh Empire
Flag S1:Sikh Empire flag.svg
Image Map Caption:Detail of Datarpur from a map of the various Hill States of the Punjab Hills region, copied in 1852

Datarpur is a village situated in Mukerian Tehsil, Hoshiarpur District, Punjab (India). Datarpur State was a small precolonial Indian hill state in the Lower Himalayas. The state was founded around 1550 and was annexed by the Sikh Empire in 1818.[1]

Nearest city to the village is Talwara, famous for a hydro power project owned by BBMB. From ancient times Datarpur has been the center of business and education in the area.

Datarpur is famous for its spiritual centers, ancient Dushera Festival and market.

Spiritual places

Datarpur has spiritual centers including:

History

Datarpur State was founded in the middle of the sixteenth century by Raja Datar Chand, a scion of the princely families of Siba and Guler who named the state after himself. From 1786 the state was a feudatory of Kangra State until Raja Govind Chand made an alliance with the Gurkha invaders from Nepal in 1806, securing his complete independence.Govind Chand was succeeded by his son Jagat Chand when Datarpur was conquered by Ranjit Singh of Lahore in 1818 and annexed to the Sikh Empire of Pañjab (Punjab), although a jagir was granted to Jagat Chand as compensation. In 1848, Jagat Chand joined a rebellion against the British and was deposed, dispossessed and exiled to Almora. The territory of Datarpur was added to Siba State and annexed by the British Raj in 1849 as Dada-Siba. The descendants of Jagat Chand were given no jagir, but the royal house still exists.[2]

Rulers

They bore the title 'Raja'.

Rajas

See also

External links

31.82°N 75.66°W

Notes and References

  1. Great Britain India Office. The Imperial Gazetteer of India. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1908.
  2. Mark Brentnall, ed. The Princely and Noble Families of the Former Indian Empire: Himachal Pradesh pg. 301