Udaybhanu Singh

Udaybhanu Singh GCIE KCSI KCVO (12 February 1893 – 22 October 1954) was the ruler of Dholpur state from 1911–1949, after which the State acceded to the Union of India. He was from the Bamraulia gotra of Jats. Udaybhanu succeeded his brother Rana Ram Singh, who died without issue in 1911. Udaybhanu received full ruling rights on 9 October 1913.

Udaybhanu Singh
Maharaja Rana of Dholpur
Reign1911-1949 CE
PredecessorRam Singh
SuccessorHemant Singh
SpouseMalvender Kaur
IssueUrmila Kumari
HouseBamraulia Dynasty
FatherRana Nihal Singh
ReligionHindu
Chhatri of Maharaj Rana Udaybhanu Singh at Dholpur

He was educated at Mayo College, Ajmer and later joined the Imperial Cadet Corps at Dehradun.

Last ruler of Dholpur

He was the last ruler of Dholpur, and served as a delegate to the Round Table Conference in 1931. After India's independence in 1947, Maharaj Rana Udaybhanu Singh acceded Dholpur to the Union of India on 7 April 1949. Dholpur was merged with three neighbouring states to form the Matsya Union within the union of India, of which he was made Rajpramukh, but the union was later merged with several other such unions to form the present-day state of Rajasthan.

Singh died on 22 October 1954 after a 43-year reign, aged 61. He was succeeded by his grandson, Hemant Singh , who was the titular Maharaja of Dholpur.

Personal life

In April 1911, Singh married Malvender Kaur (15 January 1893 – 12 December 1981), daughter of Shamsher Singh, the Sardar or Chieftain of Badrukhan in the state of Jind. The couple had an only daughter:

  • Urmila Devi (1924–1997). Married in 1944 Pratap Singh Nabha (1919–1995; r. 1928-1971). and had three sons and one daughter, including the second son:

Honours

References

    • Ajay Kumar Agnihotri (1985) : "Gohad ke jaton ka Itihas" (Hindi)
    • Natthan Singh (2004) : "Jat Itihas"
    • Jat Samaj, Agra: October–November 2004
    • Natthan Singh (2005): Sujas Prabandh (Gohad ke Shasakon ki Veer gatha – by Poet Nathan), Jat Veer Prakashan Gwalior
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.