Benares State
Benares State | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1911–1948 | |||||||
Benares State in yellow in the Imperial Gazetteer of India; Benares city and Sarnath are in British India, which is shown in pink. | |||||||
| Capital | Benares | ||||||
| Common languages | Bhojpuri, Hindi-Urdu, English | ||||||
| Religion | Hinduism (official), Islam, Jainism, Buddhism, Christianity | ||||||
| Raja | |||||||
• 1740 – 1770 (first) | Balwant Singh | ||||||
• 1939 – 1947 (last) | Vibhuti Narayan Singh | ||||||
| History | |||||||
• Established | 1911 | ||||||
| 1948 | |||||||
| |||||||
| Today part of | Varanasi and Chakia in Uttar Pradesh, India | ||||||
Benares State, earlier Benares Estate, was an estate, or hereditary jagir, comprising the family domains of the Maharaja of Benares under the Nawabs of Oudh, East India Company rule, and the British Raj that from 1911 to 1948 was recognized as a princely state.
The estate was founded by the zamindar, Balwant Singh, who assumed the title of "Raja of Benares" in the mid 18th century, taking advantage of the Mughal Empire's disintegration. His descendants had zamindari privileges in an area around Benares city, but not in the city, which the East India Company had annexed under the Treaty of Faizabad in the later 1760s. In 1911, Benares became a princely state of India. In 1948, the year after Indian independence, the ruler Sir Vibhuti Narayan Singh signed the accession to the Indian Union.