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Nem Shah Mukne

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Nemshahji Jayabhaji Mukane
Second Raja of Jawhar State
Royal Mukne family
1343
Reign1343 - ......
PredecessorJayaba Mukne
SuccessorBhimraoji Mukne (Bhimshahji)
BornDhulabarao Mukne
Unknown
Jail Vilas Palace, Jawhar, Jawhar state
DiedJahwar State
IssueBhimraoji Mukne (Bhimshahji)
Names
Meharban Shrimant Raja Nemshahji Jayabhaji Mukane of Jawhar state
Regnal name
Bhau Saheb
Posthumous name
Gaudharam Pratipalak
Temple name
Mahalakshmi Temple
HouseJail Vilas Palace of Jawhar
DynastyMukne dynasty
FatherJayaba Mukne
MotherMohanabai Mukne
ReligionHindu

The Nemshah Jayaba Mukne (also spelled as Nim Shah)[1] was second Koli ruler of Jawhar State and elder son of Jayaba Mukne who founded the Jawhar state, Mukne dynasty and Mahalakshmi Temple of Dahanu.[2] on 5 June 1343, Muhammad bin Tughluq, Sultan of Delhi Sultanate bestowed the title of Shah to the Nemshah Mukane.[3]

After succeeding his father,[4] Nemshah Mukane won 22 forts in Konkan region and increased the annual revenue to 89,96,539.50 rupees (90,000 pounds).[5] Nim Shah Mukane was second Raja of Jawhar and first Shah of State because he was given the title of Shah by Delhi Sultanate.[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ The Hind Rajasthan, Or, The Annals of the Native States of India. New Delhi, India, Asia: Usha Publications. 1985. p. 141.
  2. ^ Lethbridge, Sir Roper (2005). The Golden Book of India: A Genealogical and Biographical Dictionary of the Ruling Princes, Chiefs, Nobles, and Other Personages, Titled Or Decorated of the Indian Empire. New Delhi, India, Asia: Aakar Books. pp. 212: Patangshah Vikramshah Mukni, Raja of Jawhar was Born 1855 and succeeded to the gadi 29th June 1866 as a minor. Belongs to a Koli (Hindu) family, descended from Jaya Mukni, a freebooter who possessed himself of this territory about 1335. His son, Nim Shah, obtained the title of Rájá from the Emperor of Delhi in the year 1341. The late Rájá Vikrámshah died in 1865, and his widow, the Rani Lakshmibai Saheb, adopted the present RAJA, who was then called Malhar Rao, son of Madhav rao Dewrao Mukni, a descendant of Rájá Krishná Shah, ninth Rájá of Jawhár. The State has an area of 534 square miles, and a population of 48, 556, chiefly Hindus. ISBN 978-81-87879-54-1.
  3. ^ Elison, William (2018). The Neighborhood of Gods: The Sacred and the Visible at the Margins of Mumbai. New Delhi, India, Asia: University of Chicago Press. p. 169. ISBN 978-0-226-49490-6.
  4. ^ Sen, Surendra Nath (1977). Foreign Biographies of Shivaji. New Delhi, India, Asia: K. P. Bagchi Publications. p. 117.
  5. ^ Solanki, A. N. (1976). The Dhodias: A Tribe of South Gujarat Area. New Delhi, India, Asia: Maria Enzersdorf : Elisabeth Stiglmayr. p. 31.
  6. ^ Lethbridge, Sir Roper (1985). Prominent Indians of Victorian Age: A Biographical Dictionary. New Delhi, India, Asia: Archives Rare Prints. p. 212.