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Encyclopedia > Baghelkhand

Bagelkhand (or Bagelkhand) is a region in central India, in northeastern Madhya Pradesh state.


Bagelkhand agency was a collection of princely states in British India. The agency was established in March 1871. Until that date Bagelkhand was under the Bundelkhand agency, with which it is geographically and historically connected. The Bagelkhand agency was under the political superintendence of the Governor-General's agent for Central India, and under the direct jurisdiction of a political agent who is also superintendent of the Rewa state, residing ordinarily at Sutna or Rewa. The agency consisted of Rewa state and eleven minor states and estates, of which the more important are Maihar, Nagode and Sohawal. The total area was 14,323 sq. m., and the population in 1901 was 1,555,024, a decrease of 11% over the previous decade, due to the results of famine. The rainfall was very deficient in 1895-1897, causing famine in 1897; and in 1899-1900 there was drought in some sections. According to Horace Hayman Wilson, in his Glossary of Indian Terms, the Bagheli, who give their name to this tract of country, are a branch of the Sisodhyia Rajputs who migrated eastward and once ruled in Gujarat.


After Indian independence in 1947, the princely states that made up the Bagelkhand Agency were merged into Vindhya Pradesh state, which was merged into Madhya Pradesh on November 1, 1956.





This article incorporates text from the public domain 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Visvarupa - Report Vol. IV  Page 1 (4251 words)
In Later Kalacuri inscriptions Bilhari, in the Jabalpur /District of Madhya Pradesh, in the Baghelkhand region, was known as Puspavati; it possessed temples, at least one large mater reservoir, and a fort, which was destroyed during the Mutiny in 1857.
The area is famous for the quality of its stone; Puspavati probably supplied the stone for the temples and sculptures of the Later Kalacuri capital, Tripuri (modern Tevar) on the Narmad¡.
Thus in the kalacuri kingdom of the 10th/11th century, the boundary between the Vaiku¸¶ha and Vi¿var£pa cults respectively ran north-south between Tripuri and Puspavati on the west, and Antara and Shahdol on the east.
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