Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Maharani Khuman Chanu Manmohini Devi was the niece and third Maharani consort of Tripura through her marriage to Maharaja Birchandra Manikya. She was one of the Meitei queens of Tripura . [ 1 ] She was a contemporary royal photographer who choreographed her self-portraits with the Maharaja, [ 2 ] and was considered the first Indian woman who ...
The maharaja of Mysore was the king and principal ruler of the Kingdom of Mysore and briefly of Mysore State in the Indian Dominion roughly between the mid- to late-1300s and 1950. The maharaja's consort was called the maharani of Mysore .
Mysore Kings (1399–present) Feudatory Monarchy (As vassals of Vijayanagara Empire) [1] (1399–1553) 1 Yaduraya Wodeyar (1399–1423) 2 Chamaraja Wodeyar I (1423–1459) 3
Maharani Sunity Devi was the daughter of the Brahmo social reformer Keshab Chandra Sen. She had two brothers, Jagaddipendra Narayan and Indrajitendra Narayan of whom Jagaddipendra Narayan became the Maharaja of Cooch Behar in his infancy after the death of their father in 1922. Thus, maternally, she was closely connected to Gaekwads of Baroda ...
The Maharaja and Maharani of Kashmir.jpg 435 × 557; 94 KB. Thiruneelakantar postcard.jpg 250 × 301; 23 KB. Thiruvalanjuli Vinayaka shrine.jpg 596 × 410; 107 KB.
The Maharani of Indore by Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1934) In the year 1924 he married Sanyogita Bai Sahib Holkar of Indore. [4] Yeshwant Rao and his wife Maharani Sanyogita both studied in England. [5] Together they traveled Europe extensively and were photographed by Man Ray in a series in 1927.
Maharaja [a] (also spelled Maharajah or Maharaj; lit. ' great ruler '; feminine: Maharani) [2] is an Indian princely title of Sanskrit origin. In modern India and medieval northern India, the title was equivalent to a prince. However in late ancient India and medieval south India, the title denoted a king. [3]
The second son, Indrajitendra, married a daughter of the Maharaja of Pithapuram estate in present-day Andhra Pradesh. They were the parents of Virajendra and also of Uttara Devi, Maharani of Kotah in Rajasthan. Indira's second daughter, Gayatri, became the third wife of the Maharaja of Jaipur, and was a noted celebrity in her own right.