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Although the royal families had been allowed to retain large sums of money as their privy purse in 1947; in 1949, with the states and its revenues being entirely taken over by the Government of India, it was the Indian Government that provided the rulers and their families with privy purses that were determined by several factors such as the ...
Hindi. Satya Narayan Hari Prasad Chaurasia and Shivkumar Sharma. 2012 Chhattisgarh: Arpa Pairi Ke Dhar [7] The Streams of Arpa and Pairi: Chhattisgarhi: Nardenra Dev Verma: 2019 Gujarat: Jai Jai Garavi Gujarat [8] Victory to Proud Gujarat! Gujarati: Narmadashankar Dave: unknown: 2011 Karnataka: Jaya Bharata Jananiya Tanujate [9]
A salute state was a princely state under the British Raj that had been granted a gun salute by the British Crown (as paramount ruler); i.e., the protocolary privilege for its ruler to be greeted—originally by Royal Navy ships, later also on land—with a number of cannon shots, in graduations of two salutes from three to 21, as recognition of the state's relative status.
Royal Salute was launched by Chivas Brothers on 2 June 1953 by in tribute to Queen Elizabeth II on the day of her Coronation. [2] [3] Named after the ceremonial 21-gun salute that is fired from the Tower of London to mark special royal occasions, Royal Salute whiskies are aged for a minimum of 21 years, [4] making it the only Scotch to begin its collection at exclusively 21 years-old.
"Royal Salute" (Yemen), the national anthem of the Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen "As-Salam al-Malaki", the national anthem of Iraq from 1932 to 1958 “Salām-e Shāh”, royal and national anthem of the Qajar dynasty, Persia (1873–1909) 21-gun salute in the Commonwealth; Track #13 on The Format, 2006 rap album by AZ
The words are not to be sung when the song is played as a military royal salute and is abbreviated to the first three lines, while arms are being presented. [102] Elizabeth II stipulated that the arrangement in G major by Lieutenant Colonel Basil H. Brown be used in Canada. The authorised version to be played by pipe bands is Mallorca. [102]
The "Royal Salute", [a] also known as the "Health of the Shah", [b] was the royal and national anthem of Qajar Iran between 1873 and 1909. The French musician Alfred Jean Baptiste Lemaire composed this anthem in 1873 on the orders of Naser al-Din Shah .
Salute states were princely states, mostly in British India, whose rulers were marked out as high-ranking by the award of a gun salute, and further ranked by the number of guns Pages in category "Salute states"