enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Madhya Pradesh High Court - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madhya_Pradesh_High_Court

    The Madhya Pradesh High Court is the High Court of the state of Madhya Pradesh which is located in Jabalpur. It was established as the Nagpur High Court on 2 January 1936 by Letters Patent dated 2 January 1936, issued under Section 108 the Government of India Act, 1935. This Letters Patent continued in force even after the adoption of the ...

  3. Jayajirao Scindia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jayajirao_Scindia

    The erstwhile Maharaja of Gwalior, Jankojirao II, died in 1843 without leaving an heir leading his widow Tara Bai to adopt Bhagirath Rao. Bhagirath Scindia succeeded the Gwalior gaddi under the name of Jayajirao Sindhia on 22 February 1843. Mama Sahib, the maternal uncle of Jankojirao II, was chosen as regent.

  4. Madhya Pradesh High Court Bench at Indore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madhya_Pradesh_High_Court...

    Madhya Pradesh High Court Bench at Indore is a permanent bench of Madhya Pradesh High Court in Indore. Hon’ble the Chief Justice, vide order dated 1 November 1956 constituted temporary benches of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Indore and Gwalior. Later, by a Presidential Notification Dated 28 November 1968, issued in the exercise of the ...

  5. Gwalior State - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gwalior_State

    The Gwalior State was a state within the Maratha Confederacy located in Central India.It was ruled by the House of Scindia (anglicized from Sendrak), a Hindu Maratha dynasty. . Following the dissolution of the Confederacy, it became part of the Central India Agency of the Indian Empire under British protect

  6. Gwalior Residency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gwalior_Residency

    The court was a moving camp until 1810, when Mahadji's successor Daulat Rao Sindhia permanently fixed his headquarters near the fortress of Gwalior, on the spot where Lashkar city now stands. Daulat Rao Sindhia was forced to sign a treaty of subsidiary alliance with the government of British India in 1817 at the conclusion of the Third Anglo ...

  7. Jiwajirao Scindia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jiwajirao_Scindia

    Jivajirao Scindia as a child; Hand-coloured photograph, c. 1930 Jiwajirao was a scion of the Scindia family, descended from the Maratha general Ranojirao Scindia.Ranojirao was the head of the Maratha armies in Malwa during the first part of the 18th century, as the Maratha Empire was expanding rapidly at the expense of the Mughal Empire.

  8. Madhavrao Scindia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madhavrao_Scindia

    Scindia was born in a Maratha Kunbi family, to the last ruling Maharaja of Gwalior, Jiwajirao Scindia and his mother was Rajmata Vijay Raje Scindia.He married Madhavi Raje Scindia, a daughter of army general of Madhesh Province, Nepal, and a great-granddaughter of Prime Minister of Nepal and Maharaja of Kaski and Lamjung, Juddha Shamsher Jang Bahadur Rana, a patrilineal descendant of Sardar ...

  9. House of Scindia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Scindia

    House of Scindia or earlier known as the Sendrak was a Hindu Maratha Royal House that ruled the erstwhile Gwalior State in central India. It had the Patil-ship of Kanherkhed in the district of Satara and was founded by Ranoji Scindia, who was sardar of maratha empire and real maratha warrior clan appointed by chattrapati shahuji maharaj-1's servant family from kokan worked as prime minister ...