Junāgadh
See Rajgor D.,
(1999), Numismatic Records of Junagadh State, in
Oriental Numismatic Studies, Vol 2 pp125-142. Ed Devendra
Handa. Sundeep Prakashan, New Delhi
|
Extract from the Imperial Gazetteer (early
1900s): |
Native State in the Kathiawar Political
Agency, Bombay, lying between 20° 44' and 210 53' N. and 70° and 720 E., with
an area of 3,284 square miles. It is bounded on the north by Barda and Halar, on the east by
Gohelwar, and on the west and south by the Arabian
Sea. The only elevation rising above the general level of the plains is the Girnar group of hills, the highest peak of which, Gorakhnath, is about 3,666 feet above sea-level. All the
hills are volcanic and consist of trap and basalt, but the summit of the Girnar is composed of syenite.
The principal rivers are the Bhadar and the Saraswatl. The Bhadar is the
largest river in the State, and much irrigation is carried on along its banks
and those of its tributaries. The Saraswatl, or
sacred river of Prabhas Patan, is famous in the
sacred annals of the Hindus. There is also a densely wooded tract called the Gir, hilly in some parts, but in others so low as to be
liable to floods during the rainy season. The climate is fairly healthy; but,
except on the Girnar hill, the heat is excessive
from the beginning of April to the middle of July. The annual rainfall
averages 40 to 50 inches. Until 1472, when it was conquered by Sultan Mahmud Begara of Ahmadabad, Junagarh
was a Rajput State, ruled by chiefs of the Chudasama
tribe. During the reign of the emperor Akbar it became a dependency of Delhi,
under the immediate authority of the Mughal viceroy of Gujarat.
About 1735, when the representative of the Mughals had lost his authority in Gujarat, Sher Khan Babi, a soldier
of fortune, expelled the Mughal governor, and established his own rule. Sher
Khan’s son Salabat Khan
appointed his heir chief of Junagarh, assigning to his younger sons the lands
of Bantwa. The ruler of Junagarh first entered into
engagements with the British Government in 1807. The chief bears the title of
Nawab, and is entitled to a salute of 1 r guns. The
present chief is tenth in succession from Sher Khan
Babi, the founder of the family. He holds a sanad
guaranteeing any succession according to Muhammadan law, and the succession
follows the rule of primogeniture. He was created a K .C .S.I. in 1899. The
population at the last four enumerations was: (1872) 380,92r, (1881) 387,499,
(1891) 484,190, and (1701) 395,428, dwelling in 7 towns and 811 villages. The
decrease in the last decade (19 per cent«) was due to the famine of
1899-1900. Distributed according to religion, the population includes 301,773
Hindus, 85,684 Muhammadans, and 7,842 Jains. The capital is Junagarh Town.
Places of interest include the sacred mountain of Girnar , crowned with Jain
temples ; the port of Veraval; and the ruined
temple of Somnaih. The soil is generally black,
with scattered tracts of the lighter kind. Irrigation is mainly from wells
worked with the Persian wheel and the leathern bag.
In 1903—4 the area of cultivated land was 859 square miles, of which 108
square miles were irrigated. Four stallions are maintained for horse
breeding. Agricultural products comprise cotton, shipped in considerable
quantities from the port of Veraval to Bombay,
wheat, the ordinary varieties of pulse and millet, oilseeds, and sugar-cane,
of both the indigenous and Mauritius varieties. The Gir
district contains about 1,200 square miles of good forest. The principal
trees are teak, black-wood, jambu, and babul, all
of which are used for building purposes locally and are a source of revenue
to the State. The forest, however, is not able to meet all the demands for
building timber of the whole peninsula, as large quantities are imported by
sea from the Malabar coast. Stone of good quality is obtainable for building.
The coast-line is well supplied with fair-weather harbours, suited for native
craft, the chief being Veraval, Nawabandar,
Sutrapaia, and Mangrol.
These ports supply grain, timber, and other necessaries to the greater part
of Sorath. The State has its own postal
arrangements. The Bhavnagar-Gondal-Junagarh-Porbandar Railway passes through the territory. The main
roads are from Junagarh town towards Jetpur and Dhoraji, and from Junagarh to Veraval.
The ordinary country tracks serve in the fair season for the passage of
carts, pack-bullocks, and horses. Oil and coarse cotton cloth are the
principal manufactures. Junagarh ranks as a first-class State in Kathiawar.
The chief has powrer of life and death over his own
people, the trial of British subjects for capital offences requiring the
previous permission of the Agent to the Governor. Though himself paying a
tribute of Rs. 65,604 to the Gaikwâr
of Baroda and to the British Government, the Nawâb
of Junâgarh receives contributions called zortalbi, amounting to Rs.
92,421, from a large number of chiefs in Kâthiâwàr.
This levy, which is collected and paid to the Nawâb
by British officers of the Kàthiâwâr Agency, is a
relic of the days of Muhammadan supremacy. The gross revenue in 1903-4 was
about 26J lakhs, chiefly derived from land (19 lakhs). Junâgarh has a mint issuing
coin which is current only in the State. The British rupee is also current.
Revenue survey operations are in progress in the State, the total area
surveyed up to 1904 being 2,612 square miles. The chief has entered into
engagements to prohibit satt, and to exempt from
duty vessels entering his ports through stress of weather. Of the eighteen
municipalities, the largest is Junâgarh, with an
income of about Rs. 18,000. The State maintains a
military force of 161 men; of these 99 are Imperial Service Lancers, and the
[lom.iimni»] 62 are also mounted men. The total
strength of the police is 1,760 men, of whom 144 are mounted. There are 9
jails, with a daily average of 51 prisoners in 1903-4. Besides one Arts College attended by 181
students, the State contains one high school, and 124 other schools, with
8,800 pupils. The State maintains 21 medical institutions,
including one hospital, which afforded relief to 121,000 persons in 1903-4.
There is also a leper asylum containing 61 inmates. In the same year nearly
10,000 persons were vaccinated |