Piploda State Explained

Conventional Long Name:Piploda State
Common Name:Piploda
Nation:British India
Status Text:Princely State
Year Start:1547
Year End:1948
Event End:Independence of India
S1:India
Flag S1:Flag of India.svg
Stat Area1:155
Stat Year1:1901
Stat Pop1:11441

Piploda State was an estate in India at the time of the British Raj. It belonged to the Malwa Agency, part of the Central India Agency. The state was initially a tributary of Jaora State. In 1924 Piploda became an independent non-gun salute state through British mediation.

History

One of the ancestors called Kaluji migrated to Malwa and captured the fort of Sabalgarh in 1285. The Sixth son of Kaluji who was called Shardul Singh extended his domains and founded the village of Piploda. During the rise of the Marathas in Malwa, Piploda was reduced to a great extent and fell under Jaora State during British rule. Piploda became a separate state in 1924 due to the mismanagement of the Jaora nawabs who had a debt of 16 lakhs and couldn't pay back to the British. Piploda state was thus under direct rule of the British empire. The state had 28 villages, a population of 11,441 (1901) and a revenue of Rs.95,000 (1901).[1] The last ruler acceded to the Government of India on 15 June 1948, and Piploda became part of Ratlam District of Madhya Bharat state.

Thakurs

See also

External links

23.6°N 131°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Imperial Gazateer2 of India, Volume 20, page 149 – Digital South Asia Library. dsal.uchicago.edu. https://web.archive.org/web/20100304120123/https://dsal.uchicago.edu/reference/gazetteer/text.html?objectid=DS405.1.I34_V20_155.gif. March 4, 2010. December 20, 2023.