🙏बुशहर राजवंश और राजा वीरभद्र सिंह 🇮🇳|Bushahr Dynasty And Raja Virbhadra Singh🔥|सिंहासन से संसद तक 🤴

Описание к видео 🙏बुशहर राजवंश और राजा वीरभद्र सिंह 🇮🇳|Bushahr Dynasty And Raja Virbhadra Singh🔥|सिंहासन से संसद तक 🤴

Originally this video was made in English language by Dr.Suneela Sharma and Snow Leopard Productions Film and their team.We recreated this video with little change and dubbed this video into Hindi language . Because most of the people can understand hindi language very well .We are trying to aware our people to know about the history of where they are living and roots of their ancestors.The purpose of recreating this video just educational.We are also thankful to the Snow Leapord Productions Film who gave us the permission to recreate this video.we did this work by their permission

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Original video link
   • Icon of an Era "Raja Virbhadra Singh"  



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बुशहर राजवंश और राजा वीरभद्र सिंह
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Voiceover Pawan kumar


Rampur Bushahr is known as the Bushahr State ,which is one among the oldest hill state in Himachal Pradesh.This town is 130 Km far from State Capital Shimla .This town is also known as the Gateway To Kinnnaur Distt of Himachal Pradesh
This is the biggest town of Upper Shimla area






Bushahr, also spelt as 'Bashahr' and 'Bussahir' or 'Bushair' was a princely state in India during the British Raj. It was located in the hilly western Himalaya promontory bordering Tibet in the northern part of colonial Punjab region.

Bushahr State
Princely State of British India
1412–1948
Punjab-Districts 1911.png
Bashahr in a map of Punjab, 1911
Area

• 1941
8,907 km2 (3,439 sq mi)
Population

• 1941
115,000
History

• Established
1412
• Independence of India
1948
Succeeded by
India
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bushahr". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
The territory of this former state is now part of Kinnaur and Shimla districts of the present Himachal Pradesh state. The erstwhile Bushahr state was traversed by the Sutlej river. It was bordered on the west by the Kulu, Lahaul and Spiti states and by Tehri Garhwal on the east. It had an area of 8,907 km².

History Edit

Map of the Bashahr state, 1911

Bashahr and Tehri Garhwal shown in yellow in an 1863 map of Eastern Punjab
The erstwhile Bushahr state was occupied by a Gorkha king from central Nepal from 1803 to 1815. Ranjit Singh, the ruler of the Sikh state in the Punjab, intervened in 1809 and drove the Nepalese army east of the Satluj river. A rivalry between Nepal and the British East India Company over the annexation of minor states bordering Nepal eventually led to the Anglo-Nepalese War (1815–16) or the Gurkha War. Both parties eventually signed the Treaty of Sugauli, following which the Gurkhas were expelled from Kamru, the capital of Bushahr.[citation needed]

In 1898, Bushahr state was taken over by the British administration, although the Râja remained nominally in charge. After British occupation, the Bushahr state was by far the largest of the 28 Simla Hills States. There was a tax revolt by Bushahr's peasants in 1906.[citation needed]

Heads of State Edit
The original seat of the rulers of the erstwhile Bushahr state was at the Kamru Fort, in the village of Kamru at the banks of the Baspa River at Sangla in Kinnaur. The fort is currently abandoned and houses an idol of Kamakhya Devi (Kamakshi Dev), which is believed to have been brought several centuries ago from Kamakhya temple in Guwahati. The rulers subsequently moved to Sarahan. The Palace of the "Raja of Bushahr state" at Sarahan ("The Srikhand view") was built by order of Raja Padam Singh for his lodging in September 1917. The current residence of the "Raja of Bushahr state" is at the Padam Palace at Rampur, Shimla district. The town of Rampur may have been founded by Raja Kehri Singh in the 17th century or by Raja Ram Singh in the 18th. The rulers moved down from their traditional seat in Sarahan to the banks of the river Sutlej. Bushair was one of the richest princely states in the hills and was an important center for trade between Tibet, Kinnaur and the lower areas.[citation needed]

With a personal gun salute of 9 guns, the ruler of Bashahr was the only Hills "Raja" amongst India's upper class of princely salute states, but was not entitled to the style of His Highness until independence in 1947.


Himachal Outlook

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