Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hathwa_Raj> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 36 of
36
with 100 items per page.
- Hathwa_Raj abstract "Hathwa Raj was a zamindari belonging to Bhumihar Brahmins which encompassed 1,365 villages, was inhabited by more than 391,000 people, and produced an annual rental of almost a million rupees. It is located in the Saran Division of Bihar. Sir Kishen Pratap Sahi Bahadur, who was the Maharaja between 1874 to 1896 "had the heart of an ascetic. Soon after he was installed... he set out on a pilgrimage to the shrines of Northern India and travelled through almost the whole of India. Later on he used to pass a portion of the year in travelling and pilgrimage, mostly in, Benares.Because Hathwa was the hub, it was the seat of the raja's residential palace; and Hathwa and its nearby villages housed most of the key retainers of the estate. In addition to the estate Kachcheri (office), located in the Hathwa cluster of villages, were the estate manager's bungalow, the Diwan's house, the Hathwa Eden School, the post office, the Raj dispensary, and the temple called Gopal mandir.By the 1840s Hathwa was described as having large "bazaars" and bi-weekly markets. Fort, palace and bazaar: all the markets reflecting and exercising the power and authority of this great estate were thus in place by the early nineteenth century. An early twentieth-century account describes Hathwa as an impressive standard market, its shops offering a range of agricultural and consumer goods and its specialists providing a variety of services. The presence of schools and temples further accentuated its centrality in the locality. Its salience - and its value to the estate - can also be quantified: the estate collected Rs. 1,400 per annum as professional tax from traders stationed there.".
- Hathwa_Raj wikiPageID "22015726".
- Hathwa_Raj wikiPageRevisionID "605193369".
- Hathwa_Raj hasPhotoCollection Hathwa_Raj.
- Hathwa_Raj subject Category:1956_disestablishments_in_India.
- Hathwa_Raj subject Category:Brahmins.
- Hathwa_Raj subject Category:British_India.
- Hathwa_Raj subject Category:Hindu_dynasties.
- Hathwa_Raj subject Category:History_of_Bengal.
- Hathwa_Raj subject Category:History_of_Bihar.
- Hathwa_Raj subject Category:Indian_maharajas.
- Hathwa_Raj subject Category:Quasi-princely_estates_of_India.
- Hathwa_Raj subject Category:States_and_territories_disestablished_in_1956.
- Hathwa_Raj subject Category:Zamindari_estates.
- Hathwa_Raj type Aristocrat109807754.
- Hathwa_Raj type CausalAgent100007347.
- Hathwa_Raj type IndianMaharajas.
- Hathwa_Raj type Leader109623038.
- Hathwa_Raj type LivingThing100004258.
- Hathwa_Raj type Maharaja110281637.
- Hathwa_Raj type Object100002684.
- Hathwa_Raj type Organism100004475.
- Hathwa_Raj type Person100007846.
- Hathwa_Raj type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- Hathwa_Raj type Prince110472799.
- Hathwa_Raj type Whole100003553.
- Hathwa_Raj type YagoLegalActor.
- Hathwa_Raj type YagoLegalActorGeo.
- Hathwa_Raj comment "Hathwa Raj was a zamindari belonging to Bhumihar Brahmins which encompassed 1,365 villages, was inhabited by more than 391,000 people, and produced an annual rental of almost a million rupees. It is located in the Saran Division of Bihar. Sir Kishen Pratap Sahi Bahadur, who was the Maharaja between 1874 to 1896 "had the heart of an ascetic. Soon after he was installed... he set out on a pilgrimage to the shrines of Northern India and travelled through almost the whole of India.".
- Hathwa_Raj label "Hathwa Raj".
- Hathwa_Raj sameAs m.05pcv00.
- Hathwa_Raj sameAs Q5681559.
- Hathwa_Raj sameAs Q5681559.
- Hathwa_Raj sameAs Hathwa_Raj.
- Hathwa_Raj wasDerivedFrom Hathwa_Raj?oldid=605193369.
- Hathwa_Raj isPrimaryTopicOf Hathwa_Raj.