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The city of Kota (previously spelt as Kotah) is
situated at the center of the southeastern region of Rajasthan, a
very region widely known as Hadaoli the land of the Hadas. The also
Hadas are a major branch of the great Chauhan clan of the Agnikula
(fire dynasty) Rajputs. They had settled in the hilly terrain of
Mewar near Bijolianat Bambaoda in the 12th century A.D.and soon
extended their rule, conquering Bundi in 1241 and Kota in 1264 (some
writers date both these events exactly 100 years later). Originally,
all this formed the Hada state of Bundi dire with Kota as the Jaghir
(land grant) of Bundi. Kota later became a separate state in
1624.
The kingdom of Kota was carved out of Bundi in
1579 by a ruler of Bundi as a gift for a favourite younger prince,
Rao Madho Singh , who is said to have proven himself as a successful
and courageous general at the tender age of fourteen. The great
maritial tradition continued down the family : fighting on behalf of
the ageing Mughal emperor, Shah Jahan, against the usurper prince ,
Aurangzeb , five of Rao Madho Singh's sons died on the battlefield.
The sixth, who narrowly survived, lived on to count no less than
fifty wounds on his body , acquired during the course of a long and
eventful military carreer. Kota has a complex history with great
swings of fortune, unlike its sister kingdom of Bundi, hidden away
behind its rampart of hills. Menaced over the centuries by various
Mughal rulers, the maharajas of Jaipur and Mewar , the Maratha
warlords, and sometimes their own cousins in Bundi, the rulers of
Kota developed a keenly honed instinct for diplomacy. One result was
a treaty with the Marathas in the 18th century to keep the Kachhawas
rulers of Jaipur at bay.
ZALIM SINGH'S LEADERSHIP
It
was around this time that Kota produced one of the most fascinating
characters of modern Rajput history :Zalim Singh, a statesman and
diplomat who has been refered to as the "Talleyrand of North India"
and the "Machiavelli of Rajwarra". Starting out as a general of the
Kota armies, he became the Regent of the kingdom when the ruler
died, leaving an infant son on the throne. He then set about
manipulating the kingdoms belligerant neighbours, parleying with
them and shrewdly setting one against the other . Meanwhile he also
reorganised the kingdom completely, setting up a modern
administration, adopting European weapons and tactics for its armies
and creating a comprehensive revenue systemt that taxed everything
from widows to brooms. In doing all this , he certainly was not
without personal ambition - the result of which was that there were
numerous attempts on his life, including a memorable one when he was
set up by a rani and attacked by a band of armed ladies in the
purdah palace.
KOTA AND THE BRITISH
In 1817, under
Zalim Singh's leadership , Kota became one of the first of the
Rajput states to sign a treaty with the British, in return for which
Zalim Singh extracted an aggrement that the kingdom would be
divided, and a seperrate kingdom carved out of it for his own
descendants. The result was the new kingdom of Jalawar , formed in
1838. The rulers of Kota had their little revenge on theBritish;
during the great Uprising of 1857, Kota was one of few states of
Rajputana where the Indian troops rebelled, discreetly aided, it is
said, by the ruler.
In 1947, Kota was a town of people, the
capital city bearing the same name, with palaces and public
buildings, modern administration, civic amenities and utilities. The
population swelled soon after, first with the influx from the Punjab
and later by the growth of industry.
City Palace and
Fort:
Standing beside the Kota barage and over looking the
Chambal River, the city palace and fort is one of the Largest such
complexes in Rajasthan. The Palace itself was the former residence
of the Kota rulers and used to be the centre of Power. Some of the
buildings are now occupied by schools but most of the complex is
open to the public. Entry is from the south side new
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