- History of Madhya Pradesh
History of
Madhya Pradesh state inIndia can be divided in three periods.Ancient
The city of
Ujjain (also known as Avanti) arose as a major center in the second wave of Indian urbanization in the sixth century BC, and served as the chief city of the kingdom ofMalwa or Avanti. Further east, the kingdom of Chedi lie in Bundelkhand.Chandragupta Maurya united northern India c. 320 BCE, establishing theMaurya empire (321 to 185 BCE), which included all of modern-day Madhya Pradesh. King Ashoka's wife was said to come fromVidisha - a town north of today's Bhopal. The Maurya empire went into decline after the death ofAsoka , and Central India was contested among theSaka s,Kushana s, and local dynasties during the 3rd to 1st centuries BCE. Ujjain emerged as the predominant commercial center of western India from the first century BCE, located on the trade routes between theGanges plain and India'sArabian Sea ports. It was also an importantHindu andBuddhist center. TheSatavahana dynasty of the northernDeccan and the Saka dynasty of theWestern Satraps fought for the control of Madhya Pradesh during the 1st to 3rd centuries CE.Northern India was conquered by the
Gupta empire in the 4th and 5th centuries, which became known as India's "classical age". TheVakataka dynasty were the southern neighbors of the Guptas, ruling the northernDeccan plateau from the Arabian Sea to the Bay of Bengal. These empires collapsed towards the end of the 5th century.Medieval
The attacks of the
Hephthalite s or White Huns brought about the collapse of the Gupta empire, and India broke up into smaller states. A kingYasodharman of Malwa defeated the Huns in 528, ending their expansion. KingHarsha ofThanesar reunited northern India for a few decades before his death in 647. The Medieval period saw the rise of theRajput clans, including theParamara s of Malwa and theChandela s of Bundelkhand. The Paramara kingBhoj (c. 1010-1060) was a brilliantpolymath and prolific writer. The Chandelas created the temple city ofKhajuraho between c. 950 and c. 1050.Gond kingdoms emerged in Gondwana and Mahakoshal. Northern Madhya Pradesh was conquered by theMuslim Delhi Sultanate in the 13th century. After the collapse of the Delhi Sultanate at the end of the 14th century, independent regional kingdoms reemerged, including theTomara Rajput kingdom ofGwalior and the Muslim Sultanate of Malwa, with its capital atMandu . The Malwa Sultanate was conquered by the Sultanate ofGujarat in 1531.Modern
Most of Madhya Pradesh came under Mughal rule during the reign of the emperor
Akbar (1556–1605). Gondwana and Mahakoshal remained under the control of Gond kings, who acknowledged Mughal supremacy but enjoyed virtual autonomy. After the death of the Mughal emperorAurangzeb in 1707 Mughal control began to weaken, and theMaratha s began to expand from their base in central Maharashtra. Between 1720 and 1760 the Marathas took control of most of Madhya Pradesh, and Maratha clans were established semi-autonomous states under the nominal control of the MarathaPeshwa . TheHolkar s ofIndore ruled much of Malwa, and theBhonsle s ofNagpur dominatedMahakoshal andGondwana as well asVidarbha in Maharashtra.Jhansi was founded by a Maratha general. Bhopal was ruled by a Muslim dynasty descended from the Afghan GeneralDost Mohammed Khan . Maratha expansion was checked at theThird Battle of Panipat in 1761.The British were expanding their Indian dominions from bases in
Bengal ,Bombay , andMadras , and the threeAnglo-Maratha Wars were fought between 1775 and 1818. TheThird Anglo-Maratha War left the British supreme in India. Most of Madhya Pradesh, including the large states of Indore, Bhopal, Nagpur,Rewa , and dozens of smaller states, becameprincely state s ofBritish India , and the Mahakoshal region became a British province, theSaugor and Nerbudda Territories . In 1853 the British annexed the state ofNagpur , which included southeastern Madhya Pradesh, eastern Maharashtra and most ofChhattisgarh , which were combined with the Saugor and Nerbudda Territories to form theCentral Provinces in 1861. The princely states of northern Madhya Pradesh were governed by theCentral India Agency .After Indian independence
Madhya Pradesh was created in 1950 from the former British
Central Provinces and Berar and theprincely states ofMakrai and Chhattisgarh, withNagpur as the capital of the state. The new states ofMadhya Bharat ,Vindhya Pradesh , and Bhopal were formed out of the Central India Agency. In 1956, the states of Madhya Bharat, Vindhya Pradesh, and Bhopal were merged into Madhya Pradesh, and theMarathi -speaking southern regionVidarbha , which included Nagpur, was ceded toBombay state . Bhopal became the new capital of the state. In November 2000, as part of the Madhya Pradesh Reorganization Act, the southeastern portion of the state split off to form the new state ofChhattisgarh .
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