Gangadhar Rao

Gangadhar Rao
Jhansi Naresh, Maharaja of Jhansi[1]
Maratha ruler of Jhansi
Reign 1838 - 1853
Predecessor Raghunath Rao, Raja of Jhansi (brother)[2]
Successor Laxmibai, Queen of Jhansi (wife)
Died 1853[3]
Issue Damodar Rao, Ananda Rao[3]
Full name
Jhansi Naresh Maharaja Gangadhar Rao Newalkar[1][4]
House Jhansi, Uttar Pradesh
Father Shiv Rao Bhau[2]

Maharaja Gangadhar Rao Newalkar was the Maharaja of the dominion of Jhansi (in present day Uttar Pradesh) in northern India, a vassal of Mahratta polity. He was the son of Shiv Rao Bhau and a descendent of Raghunath Hari Newalkar (who was the first governor of Jhansi).[2]

The ancestors of Gangadhar Rao hailed from Ratnagiri district of Maharashtra. Some of them moved to Khandesh, when Peshwa rule began and served important posts in the Peshwa and Holkar armies. Raghunath Hari Newalkar strengthened Maratha polity in Bundelkhand, however as he grew old, he handed over the reins of Jhansi to his younger brother Shiv Rao Bhau. On the death of Raghunath Rao III in 1838 the British rulers accepted Gangadhar Rao his son as the Raja of Jhansi in 1843.[5]

Chhatri (cenotaph) of Gangadhar Rao, the last Raja of Jhansi and husband of Rani Lakshmibai

He was an able administrator and he improved the financial condition of Jhansi, which had been deteriorated during his predecessor’s rule. He took corrective steps to ensure the growth and development of the town of Jhansi. He controlled an army of around 5,000 men. He possessed wisdom, diplomacy, and was a lover of art and culture;[6] even the British were impressed by his statesmanlike qualities. Gangadhar Rao possessed considerable taste and some scholarship; he collected a fine library of Sanskrit manuscripts and enriched the architecture of the town of Jhansi.[7]

In May 1842, Gangadhar Rao married a young woman named Manikarnika, who was renamed as Laxmibai, who later became the Queen of Jhansi and revolted against the British during the uprising of 1857.[3] Raja Gangadhar Rao adopted a child called Anand Rao, the son of his cousin, who was renamed Damodar Rao, on the day before he died. The adoption was in the presence of the British political officer who was given a letter from the raja requesting that the child should be treated with kindness and that the government of Jhansi should be given to his widow for her lifetime. After the death of the raja in November 1853 because Damodar Rao was adopted, the British East India Company, under Governor-General Lord Dalhousie, applied the Doctrine of Lapse, rejecting Damodar Rao's claim to the throne and annexing the state to its territories.

See also

References

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