Daphlapur State
| Daphlapur State डफळापूर संस्थान | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Princely State of British India | |||||||||
| 1686–1917 | |||||||||
| Daphlapur State in the Imperial Gazetteer of India | |||||||||
| Area | |||||||||
| • 1881 | 249 km2 (96 sq mi) | ||||||||
| Population | |||||||||
| • 1881  | 6,006 | ||||||||
| • Type | Jagir (until 1849) Princely state (from 1849) | ||||||||
| History | |||||||||
| • Established  | 1686 | ||||||||
| • Annexation by Jath State  | 1917 | ||||||||
| 
 | |||||||||
| Today part of | Maharashtra, India | ||||||||
Daphalapur State, also spelled Dafalapur, was a Hindu petty princely state of British India. It was a former Maratha territory, one of the former Southern Maratha Jagirs (feudal estates).
Daphlapur State and neighbouring Jath State were the only two states belonging to the Bijapur Agency under the Bombay Presidency, which later would become part of the colonial Deccan States Agency.
The state had six villages with an area of only 249 square kilometres (96 sq mi) and a population of 6,006 inhabitants in 1881.