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United Provinces, 1903
The 'United Provinces of Agra and Oudh', mainly referred to simply as the 'United Provinces', was a
province of
British India, which existed from
1902 to
1947. From
1835 to
1902, the province was known as the
North-Western Provinces. It corresponds approximately to the modern-day
Indian states of
Uttar Pradesh and
Uttarakhand.
History
By the
18th century, the once vast
Mughal Empire was collapsing, undone by internal dissension and by expansion of the
Marathas from the
Deccan, the British from
Bengal, and the
Afghans from
Afghanistan. By the middle of the century, present-day Uttar Pradesh was divided between several states:
Awadh (Oudh) in the centre and east, ruled by a
Nawab who owed allegiance to the Mughal Emperor, but was ''de facto'' independent;
Rohilkhand in the north, ruled by Afghans; the Marathas, who controlled the
Bundelkhand region in the south, and the Mughal Empire, which controlled the entire
Doab (the strip of land between the
Ganges and
Yamuna rivers) and the
Delhi region.
In
1765, the combined forces of Awadh and the Mughal Emperor met the British at the
Battle of Buxar. The British won, but they did not take any territory; the whole of Awadh was restored to the Nawab, and the Mughal emperor
Shah Alam was restored the subas of
Allahabad and Kora in the lower Doab, with a British garrison in the fort of Allahabad. Governor-General
Warren Hastings later augmented the territory of Awadh by lending the nawab a British army to conquer
Rohilkhand, and by giving Allahabad and Kora to Awadh on the ground that Shah Alam had placed himself in the power of the Marathas. At the same time the British received the province of
Benares from Awadh.
Subsequently no great change took place until the arrival of
Lord Wellesley (
Governor-General 1797-
1805) who acquired a very large accession of territory in two instalments. In
1801 he obtained from the Nawab of Oudh the cession of Rohilkhand, the lower Doab, and the
Gorakhpur Division, thus enclosing Awadh on all sides except the north. In 1804, as the result of Lord Lake's victories in the
Second Anglo-Maratha War, part of Bundelkhand and the rest of the Doab, including
Agra and the guardianship of the old and blind emperor, Shah Alam, at Delhi, were obtained from Scindia. In
1815 the
Kumaon Division was acquired after the
Gurkha War, and a further portion of Bundelkhand from the Maratha
Peshwa in
1817. These new acquisitions, known as the ceded and conquered provinces, continued to be administered by the governor-general as part of
Bengal. In
1833 an act of
Parliament was passed to constitute a new presidency (province), with its capital at
Agra. But this scheme was never fully carried out, and in
1835 another statute authorized the appointment of a lieutenant-governor for the North-Western Provinces, as they were then known.
The North-Western Provinces included the Delhi and
Gurgaon territories, transferred later, after the
Revolt of 1857 to the
Punjab; and also (after 1853) the
Saugor and Nerbudda Territories, which in
1861 became part of the
Central Provinces. Awadh remained under its nawab, who was permitted to assume the title of king in
1819. Awadh was annexed in
1856 and constituted a separate chief commissionership. Then followed the
Revolt of 1857, when all signs of British rule were for a time swept away throughout the greater part of the two provinces. The lieutenant-governor died when shut up in the fort at Agra, and Oudh was only reconquered after several campaigns lasting for eighteen months.
In
1877 the offices of lieutenant-governor of the North-Western Provinces and chief commissioner of Oudh were combined in the same person; and in
1902, when the new name of United Provinces was introduced, the title of chief commissioner was dropped, though Oudh still retained some marks of its former independence. The Raj province became
Uttar Pradesh state after
India's independence in
1947.
References
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