Pataudi State
Pataudi State
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Pataudi State

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Pataudi State

Pataudi State was a small princely state in India, established in 1804 by the East India Company rule in India.

The state formed a part of the Delhi Territory in the Ceded and Conquered Provinces. It was under the suzerainty of the Commissioner of Delhi. It had an area of 52 square miles and included one town, Pataudi, which was its capital, and 40 villages, ruled by the Pataudi family.

The ruling family traces their origin from a saintly Afghan family, which initially settled near Samana in Patiala in 16th century, during the period of the Lodi dynasty.

A descendant, Faiz Talab Khan, an Afghan Pashtun warlord of the Barech tribe, who was closly connected with Jhajjar ruling family by marriage was in service with the Maratha Empire and also received the fief of Rohtak. However after the defeat of the Marathas in 1803, he was subsequently employed under the British general, Lord Lake. Subseqently, he aided the East Indian Company Forces in their battle against the Maratha Empire during the Second Anglo-Maratha War. He was also severely injured during the war, thereafter in 1806, in recognition of his services, he was awarded a land grant of perpetual jagir comprising 40 villages, from Lord Lake, and thus became the first Nawab of Pataudi state.. Faiz Talab Khan in 1806, he took part in the Seige of Bharatpur by the British East India Company forces. His son, Akbar Ali was loyal to the British forces during Indian Rebellion of 1857.

Pataudi town the capital of Pataudi State was founded in 13th-century, the time of Jalaluddin Khilji, Sultan of Delhi (r. 1290 – 1296 CE), by a Mewati named Pata, from whom the town derives its name. By 1901, it has a population of 4171.

The 8th Nawab, Iftikhar Ali Khan Pataudi, played cricket for both England and India and captained the latter. His son the last Nawab also captained the Indian cricket team.

At the end of the British Raj and with the political integration of India in 1948, the princely state of Pataudi was absorbed into the new Dominion of India (later Republic of India). In 1971, by virtue of the 26th amendment to the Constitution of India, the Government of India abolished all official symbols of princely India, including titles, privileges, and remuneration (privy purses).

The former Pataudi Palace was a hotel for some time, but is now owned privately by Saif Ali Khan, the current patriarch of the Pataudi family.

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