Place:Maharashtra, India

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NameMaharashtra
Alt namesGreat Nationsource: Wikipedia
Mahārāshtrasource: Getty Vocabulary Program
TypeState
Coordinates19.5°N 75.0°E
Located inIndia     (1960 - )
Contained Places
District
Ahmednagar
Akola
Amravati
Aurangabad
Beed
Belgaum
Bhandara
Buldhana
Chandrapur
Dhule
Gadchiroli
Gondia
Hingoli
Jalna
Kolhapur
Mumbai City
Mumbai suburban
Nagpur
Nanded
Nandurbar
Nashik
Osmanabad
Parbhani
Pune
Raigad
Ratnagiri
Sangli
Satara
Sindhudurg
Solapur
Thane
Wardha
Washim
Yavatmal
Inhabited place
Achalpur ( 1000 - )
Adai
Adauli
Afaspida
Agasan
Airoli
Ajanta
Akalkot
Akot
Akurli
Alandi
Alibag
Amalner
Amarnāth
Ambajogai
Amboshe
Anjangaon
Argaon
Armori
Arvi
Ashta
Aundh
Badlapur
Badnera
Balapur
Bale
Ballālpur
Bambāvi
Baramati
Barsi
Basmat
Belapurpāda
Belpāda
Bhaja
Bhal
Bhendkhal
Bhilkati
Bhimashankar
Bhiwandi
Bhokardan
Bhopar
Bhusawal
Bhutali
Bir
Bokad
Bonsari
Buldana
Burdul
CBD Belapur
Chal
Chalisgaon
Chikhli
Chincholi
Chirad
Chirle
Chopda
Chāndvad
Dabhol
Damotapāda
Darave
Darwha
Daryāpur
Dativli
Daule
Daund
Dayghar
Dehu
Deolali
Deūlgaon Rāja
Dhansar
Dharangaon
Dharmābād
Dhārni
Dighode
Diglur
Digras
Diva
Dive
Dombivli
Dondaicha
Dwarli
Eirauli
Ellora ( 200 - )
Funde
Gangapur
Ganpatipule
Gethaoli
Ghafe
Ghansoli
Ghesar
Ghārāpuri
Gokak
Gāvanpāda
Harnai
Hedutne
Hinganghat
Ichalkaranji
Igatpuri
Jalgaon
Jasai
Jaskhar
Jui
Kalamb
Kalamboli
Kalhe
Kalyan
Kalyan-Dombivali
Kannad
Kanpoli
Kantalvi
Karad
Karanja
Karave
Karjat
Karli
Karmala
Kashid
Katai
Katol
Kausa
Khairna
Khamgaon
Khandala
Khed
Khoni
Khārghar
Kirkee
Kirloskarwadi
Kopar Khairane
Kopargaon
Koparkhairna
Koparpāda
Kopri
Koyna Nagar
Kurduvadi
Kālundri
Kālva
Kāmthi
Latur
Lonar
Lonavala
Lonāvale
Mahabaleshwar
Mahabaleswar
Mahad
Mahape
Mahur
Malegaon
Malkapur
Malvan
Mangalvedha
Mangrul Pir
Manmad
Manwat
Matheran
Mehekar
Mhasvad
Miraj
Mora
Morsi
Mukhed
Mul
Mumbai
Mumbra
Murtajapur
Murud
Nandura
Nanoshi
Narayangaon
Narhan
Nashik Road
Naude
Navi Mumbai
Navāpur
Nerul
Nerur
Nevali
New Panvel
Nitalas
Nāndgaon
Owe
Pachora
Padeghar
Padghe
Padle
Pagote
Palghar
Panchavati
Panchgani
Pandharpur
Panje
Panvel
Parli Vaijnāth
Patipāda
Patur
Pauni
Pavne
Pendhar
Phaltan
Pimpri
Pisarve
Pulgaon
Pusad
Pāndharkawada
Pārgaon
Pārola
Pātnoli
Rahimatpur
Rajapur
Ramtek
Ravalgaon
Raver
Rohinjan
Rānsai
Rānvād
Sabe
Sagaon
Sakoli
Sakri
Sangamner
Sanpāda
Saoner
Sarsol
Satana
Selghar
Sendhwa
Sendurjana
Sevagram
Shahpur
Shegaon
Shet Bandar
Sheva Nhava
Sheva
Shil
Shiraone
Shirpur
Sholapur
Shāhābād
Sinnar
Sonari
Srivardhan
Srīrampur
Sāngole
Sāngurli
Sāvantvādi
Taloda
Taloje
Tasgaon
Thākurvādi
Tondhre
Tumsar
Turambhe
Turbhe
Udgi
Ulhasnagar
Ulva
Umargān
Umbroli
Umrer
Uran
Urun-Islāmpur
Vaijapur
Vaklan
Vala Ull
Valap
Vani
Vasai
Vasai-Virar
Vasar
Vashi
Velapāda
Vengurla
Vite
Vādi
Wani
Warud
Yeola
Yeshvi
Yāval
Region
Berar
source: Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names
source: Family History Library Catalog
the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

Maharashtra (Marathi:) is a state located in South West India. The word Maharashtra comes from the words Maha meaning Great and Rashtra meaning Nation, thus rendering the name Maharashtra (Great Nation). It is the second most populous and third largest state by area in India. It is also the richest state in India, contributing to 15% of the country's industrial output and 13.2% of its GDP in year 2005-06.

Maharashtra is bordered by the Arabian Sea to the west, Gujarat and the Union territory of Dadra and Nagar Haveli to the northwest, Madhya Pradesh to the northeast, Chhattisgarh to the east, Karnataka to the south, Andhra Pradesh to the southeast, and Goa to the southwest. The state covers an area of or 9.84% of the total geographical area of India. Mumbai, the capital city of the state, is India's largest city and the financial capital of the nation. Marathi is the language of Maharashtra.

In the 17th Century, the Marathas rose under the leadership of Chhatrapati Shivaji against the Mughals who were ruling a large part of India. After the third Anglo-Maratha war, the empire ended and most of Maharashtra became part of Bombay state under a British Raj. After Indian independence, Samyukta Maharashtra Samiti demanded unification of all Marathi speaking regions under one state. At that time Bharat Ratna Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar was of opinion that linguistic reorganizaion of states should be done with - "One state - One language" principle and not with "One language - One state" principle. He submitted a memorandum to the reorganization commission stating that, " Single Government can not administer such a huge state as United Maharashtra". The first state reorganization committee created the current Maharashtra state on 1 May 1960 (known as Maharashtra Day). The Marathi-speaking areas of Bombay state, Deccan states and Vidarbha (which was part of Central Provinces and Berar) united, under the agreement known as Nagpur Pact, to form the current state.

Contents

History

the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

The Nāsik Gazetteer states that in 246 BCE Maharashtra is mentioned as one of the places to which mauryan emperor Asoka sent an embassy, and Mahārashtraka is recorded in a Chālukyan inscription of 580 CE as including three provinces and 99,000 villages. The name Maharashtra also appeared in a 7th century inscription and in the account of a Chinese traveler, Hiuen-Tsang. In 90 A.D. Vedishri, son of the Satavahana king Satakarni, the "Lord of Dakshinapatha, wielder of the unchecked wheel of Sovereignty", made Junnar, thirty miles north of Pune, the capital of his kingdom. In the early fourteenth century the Yadava dynasty was overthrown by the northern Muslim powers. Then on, the region was administered by various kingdoms called Deccan Sultanates.

Pre-Medieval history

Not much is known about Maharashtra's early history, and its recorded history dates back to the 3rd century B.C.E., with the use of Maharashtri Prakrit, one of the Prakrits derived from Sanskrit. Later, Maharashtra became a part of the Magadha empire, ruled by emperor Ashoka. The port town of Sopara, north of present day Mumbai, was the centre of ancient India's commerce, with links to Eastern Africa, Mesopotamia, Aden and Cochin.

With the disintegration of the Mauryan Empire, a local dynasty called Satavahanas came into prominence in Maharashtra between 230 BCE and 225 CE The period saw the biggest cultural development of Maharashtra. The Satavahana's official language was Maharashtri, which later developed into Marathi. The great ruler Gautamiputra Satkarni (also known as "Shalivahan") ruled around 78 CE He started the Shalivahana era, a new calendar, still used by Maharashtrian populace and as the Indian national calendar. The empire gradually disintegrated in the third century.

During (250 CE – 525 CE), Vidarbha, the eastern region of Maharashtra, came under the rule of Vakatakas. During this period, development of arts, religion and technology flourished. Later, in 753 CE, the region was governed by the Rashtrakutas, an empire that spread over most of India. In 973 CE, the Chalukyas of Badami expelled the Rashtrakutas, then the region came under the Yadavas of Devagiri.

Islamic rule

Maharashtra came under Islamic influence for the first time after the Delhi Sultanate rulers Ala-ud-din Khalji, and later Muhammad bin Tughluq conquered parts of the Deccan in the 13th century. After the collapse of the Tughlaqs in 1347, the Bahmani Sultanate of Gulbarga took over, governing the region for the next 150 years. After the breakup of the Bahamani sultanate, in 1518, Maharashtra split into and was ruled by five Shahdoms: namely Nizamshah of Ahmednagar, Adilshah of Bijapur,Qutubshah of Govalkonda, Bidarshah of Bidar and Imadshah of Berar.

Rise of the Marathas

By the early seventeenth century, the Maratha Empire began to take root. Shahaji Bhosale, an ambitious local general in the employ of the Mughals and Adil Shah of Bijapur, at various times attempted to establish his independent rule. The attempts succeeded through his son Shivaji Bhosale. Marathas were led by Chhatrapati Shivaji Raje Bhosale, who was crowned king in 1674. Shivaji constantly battled with the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb and Adil Shah of Bijapur. By the time of his death in 1680, Shivaji had created a kingdom covering most of Maharashtra and nearly half of India today (except the Aurangabad district which was part of the Nizam's territory) and Gujarat in very small life span.

Shivaji's son and successor Chhatrapatti Sambhaji Bhosale became the ruler of the Maratha kingdom in 1680. He was captured, tortured and brutally put to death by Aurangzeb.

Rajaram's nephew & Sambhaji's son, Shahu Bhosale declared himself to be the legitimate heir to the Bhosale throne. In 1714, Shahu's Peshwa (chief minister) Balaji Vishwanath, helped him seize the Maratha throne in 1708, with some acrimony from Rajaram's widow, Tara Bai.

Peshwas

The Peshwas (prime ministers) played an important role in expanding the Maratha Empire in Northern and Central India. They were also decisive in many battles, like Moropant Pingale in 1670’s Dindori battle against the Mughals, Ramchandra Amatya in 1690’s Satara Battle against the Mughals and, the Pant Pratinidhi Peshwa. By 1760, the Maratha Empire spread across parts of Punjab (in today's Pakistan), Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Uttaranchal, Uttar Pradesh, Orissa, Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgarh and Karnataka.

Peshwa Balaji Vishwanath, of the Bhat family, and his son, Baji Rao I, bureaucratised the Maratha state. They systematised the practice of tribute gathering from Mughal territories, under the heads of sardesmukhi and chauth (the two terms corresponding to the proportion of revenue collected). They also consolidated Mughal-derived methods of assessment and collection of land revenue and other taxes. Much of the revenue terminology used in Peshwa documents derives from Persian, suggesting a far greater continuity between Mughal and Maratha revenue practice than may be politically palatable in the present day.

At the same time, the maritime Angre clan controlled a fleet of vessels based in Kolaba and other centres of the west coast. These ships posed a threat not only to the new English settlement of Mumbai, but to the Portuguese at Goa, Bassein, and Daman.

On the other hand, there emerged a far larger domain of activity away from the original heartland of the Marathas, which was given over to subordinate chiefs as fiefs. Gwalior was given to Scindia/Shinde, Indore to Holkar, Baroda to Gaekwad and Dhar to Pawar. Bhonsles remained in power in Nagpur even after loss of Marathas at Panipat in 1818, till 1853. Nagpur Kingdom was the last of the Kingdoms or Princely States in entire India to be annexed to British India in 1853.

After suffering a stinging defeat at the hands of Afghan chieftain Ahmad Shah Abdali, in the Third Battle of Panipat in 1761, the Maratha Confederacy broke into regional kingdoms.

Post-Panipat, the Peshwa's ex-generals looked after the regional kingdoms they had earned and carved out for themselves in the service of Peshwas covering north-central and Deccan regions of India. Pune continued to be ruled by what was left of the Peshwa family.

British rule and post-independence

With the arrival and subsequent involvement of the British East India Company in Indian politics, the Marathas and the British fought the three Anglo-Maratha wars between 1777 and 1818, culminating in the annexation of Peshwa-ruled territory in Maharashtra in 1819, which heralded the end of the Maratha empire.

The British governed the region as part of the Bombay Presidency, which spanned an area from Karachi in Pakistan to most of the northern Deccan. A number of the Maratha states persisted as princely states, retaining local autonomy in return for acknowledging British sovereignty. The largest princely states in the territory of present-day Maharashtra were Nagpur, Satara and Kolhapur; Satara was annexed to Bombay Presidency in 1848, and Nagpur was annexed in 1853 to become Nagpur Province, later part of the Central Provinces. Berar, which had been part of the Nizam of Hyderabad's kingdom, was occupied by the British in 1853 and annexed to the Central Provinces in 1903. A large part of present day Maharashtra called Marathwada remained part of the Nizam's Hyderabad state during British rule. The British rule was marked by social reforms and an improvement in infrastructure as well as revolts due to their discriminatory policies. At the beginning of the 20th century, the struggle for independence took shape led by Bal Gangadhar Tilak and the moderates like Justice Mahadev Govind Ranade, Gopal Krishna Gokhale, Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, Pherozeshah Mehta and Dadabhai Naoroji. In 1942, the Quit India Movement was called by Mahatma Gandhi which was marked by a non-violent civil disobedience movement and strikes.

After India's independence in 1947, the princely states were integrated into the Indian Union, and the Deccan States including Kolhapur were integrated into Bombay State, which was created from the former Bombay Presidency in 1950. In 1956, the States Reorganisation Act reorganized the Indian states along linguistic lines, and Bombay Presidency State was enlarged by the addition of the predominantly Marathi-speaking regions of Marathwada (Aurangabad Division) from erstwhile Hyderabad state and Vidarbha region (Amravati and Nagpur divisions) from Madhya Pradesh (formerly the Central Provinces and Berar). On 1 May 1960, Maharashtra came into existence when Bombay Presidency State was split into the new linguistic states of Maharashtra and Gujarat. Yashwantrao Chavan became the first Chief Minister of Maharashtra.

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