Surat Agency

Surat Agency
Agency of British India

1880–1933
Surat district in 1877
History
  Abolition of the Khandesh Agency 1880
  Formation of the Baroda and Gujarat States Agency 1933
Area
  1901 5,076 km2 (1,960 sq mi)
Population
  1901 179,975 
Density 35.5 /km2  (91.8 /sq mi)
Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "article name needed". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 

The Surat Agency was one of the agencies of British India in the Bombay Presidency.[1]

History

This agency was formed in the 19th century as the Khandesh Agency, after the region of Khandesh, becoming the Surat Agency in 1880.[2] Around 1900 the Dangs were incorporated and in 1933 it was abolished and became the Baroda and Gujarat States Agency.

Finally in 1944, towards the end of the British Raj, the Baroda and Gujarat States Agency was merged with the Western India States Agency to form the larger Baroda, Western India and Gujarat States Agency.

The headquarters of the Surat Agency were at Surat, where the Political Agent who reported to the Political Department office in Bombay, used to reside.[3]

States

Bansda and Dharampur, 1896

The agency included three 9-gun salute princely states and the Dangs.

Salute States

The Dangs

The Dangs were a group of small states in what is now the Dang district of Gujarat State.

State Population ('000);[4] Revenue (1881, Rs.) Ruler's title. Notes
Dang Pimpri 3,6 3106 388 km²
Dang Wadhwan 0,253 147 ca. 12 km². Not to be confused with Wadhwan State whose capital was Wadhwan.
Dang Ketak Kadupada 0,218 155
Dang Amala 5,3 2885; 1891: 5300 Raja. 307 km²
Dang Chinchli 1,67; 1891: ca. 1,4 601 ca. 70 km²
Dang Pimpladevi 0,134 120 ca. 10 km²
Dang Palasbishar (= Palasvihir) 0,223 230 ca. 5 km²
Dang Auchar ca. 500 201 < 21 km²
Dang Derbhauti 4,891; 1891: ca. 5 3649 Raja. 196 km²
Dang Gadhavi (= Gadhi) 6,309 5125 Raja.
Dang Shivbara 0,346 422 ca. 12 km²
Dang Kirli (= Kirali) 0,167 512 31 km²
Dang Wasurna 6,177 2275
Dang Dhude (= Bilbari) 1,45; 1891: 1418 85 < 5 km²
Dang Surgana 14 11469
Machhali 1.1; 4745 35

See also

References

  1. Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "article name needed". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  2. The Indian Year Book, Volume 11 by Bennett, Coleman & Company, 1924
  3. William Lee-Warner, The Native States Of India. (1910)
  4. Hunter, W. W.; Imperial Gazetteer of India; London ²1885, Vol. IV, S 115-6

Coordinates: 21°11′N 72°50′E / 21.18°N 72.83°E / 21.18; 72.83

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