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India's 'last prince' dies in obscure poverty in a mud hut

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India's 'last prince' dies in obscure poverty in a mud hut - Telegraph


He was one of the playboy princes of colonial India - a Raja who lived in a fine palace, hunted big game and travelled by elephant when he wasn’t racing one of his 25 vintage cars.

More than 500 semi-autonomous princely states lay scattered across colonial India, allowed to retain their hereditary rulers in return for accepting the supremacy of the British monarch.

Tigiria, first seized by Mahapatra’s ancestors in 1246AD, was the smallest in the eastern Indian state of Orissa, but still afforded its prince enough wealth for 30 servants, luxurious holidays and a famous collection of cars, motorbikes and horses.


File photo: Brajraj Kshatriya Birbar Chamupati Singh Mahapatra, former king of Tigiria in Cuttack district, Orissa, India

Like most of his fellow royals after Indian independence, Mahapatra merged his state into the new republic in 1947, giving in to a mixture of threats and inducements from the new government.

In a 2013 interview he recalled the day when, still in his twenties, he “left my diwan [minister]” outside the town hall and signed the document under the instructions of Vallabhbhai Patel, one of India’s founding fathers.

“The local villagers who looked after him all these years were present?The villagers of Puruna Tigiria served him meals everyday”

But his fortunes were to swiftly fade. The Raja immediately lost his state's tax revenues, given instead a privy purse of £130 pounds a year. For a man of his lavish tastes this proved insufficient, and by 1960 he was forced to sell his palace for £900.

In 1975, the late prime minister Indira Gandhi withdrew the last remaining royal privileges and he lost his annual income, which had been promised in perpetuity.

He died of a prolonged illness in a damp, asbestos-covered mud hut back in Tigiria, to which he had returned in 1987, having survived in his final years living off the charity of his former subjects.

“The local villagers who looked after him all these years were present…The villagers of Puruna Tigiria served him meals everyday,” said Jayant Mardaraj, a descendent of the neighbouring former princely state of Nilgiri.
 
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The family that claims to be the direct descendents of the Mughals also live in poverty. These people are used to enjoying life without struggle and food was always served to them without any hard work. They are like the captive animals that have lost the ability hunt and now just wait for their next meal to appear.
 
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That fellow is a 'global internet dalit', they are mostly found in neighbouring states of India, this new race lacks brain cells.

Acha and what creatures are Indians actually ????
 
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so a guy who was used to living life of luxuries on hard work of others cannot live a life of luxury on hard work of others. What prevented him from getting some education and working his way to a comfortable life? what prevented him from using his "branding" to start a company/product.
If he was that adored by his people, he could stand for elections at that place and win - a sure way to lead a comfortable life!
 
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so a guy who was used to living life of luxuries on hard work of others cannot live a life of luxury on hard work of others. What prevented him from getting some education and working his way to a comfortable life? what prevented him from using his "branding" to start a company/product.
If he was that adored by his people, he could stand for elections at that place and win - a sure way to lead a comfortable life!
He is the grasshopper of the "Ant and grasshopper" story. There is enough opportunity for people in India who want to earn a decent living.
 
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Nop, he just found another way of calling you guys 'deluded'. :lol:
Deluded about what. Moral of this story is- if you sit on your backside expecting an income for doing nothing but being born into the right family then you are going to have a horrible exsistence like this man did in the end.

It is truly heartbreaking that millions of Indians live in similar situations but most of them are damn hard working people and better yet are trying their upmost to provide better lives to their children. It is a very common stroy to hear that parants living in awful circumstances spend what little they have to ensure their children get an education which will mean a postive outcome in the long term. This guy was going around looking for, if not expecting, charity from his former subjects and contributing nothing. India and humanity as a whole did not owe him anything.


@Aminroop @Star Wars @ranjeet @Echo_419 @Bang Galore
 
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For a man of his lavish tastes this proved insufficient,
Very typical of Indian kings, and this a reason why many Indian kings volunteered to become British subjects. They wanted to earn money without having to work hard- Britishers allowed them the luxury.
 
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just proves how unreliable and deceitful these hindus were, have been, are and will be....anyone who trusts them deserves the treatment all those 500 princes/Nawbs/Rulers got from hindus


India's 'last prince' dies in obscure poverty in a mud hut - Telegraph


He was one of the playboy princes of colonial India - a Raja who lived in a fine palace, hunted big game and travelled by elephant when he wasn’t racing one of his 25 vintage cars.

More than 500 semi-autonomous princely states lay scattered across colonial India, allowed to retain their hereditary rulers in return for accepting the supremacy of the British monarch.

Tigiria, first seized by Mahapatra’s ancestors in 1246AD, was the smallest in the eastern Indian state of Orissa, but still afforded its prince enough wealth for 30 servants, luxurious holidays and a famous collection of cars, motorbikes and horses.


File photo: Brajraj Kshatriya Birbar Chamupati Singh Mahapatra, former king of Tigiria in Cuttack district, Orissa, India

Like most of his fellow royals after Indian independence, Mahapatra merged his state into the new republic in 1947, giving in to a mixture of threats and inducements from the new government.

In a 2013 interview he recalled the day when, still in his twenties, he “left my diwan [minister]” outside the town hall and signed the document under the instructions of Vallabhbhai Patel, one of India’s founding fathers.

“The local villagers who looked after him all these years were present?The villagers of Puruna Tigiria served him meals everyday”

But his fortunes were to swiftly fade. The Raja immediately lost his state's tax revenues, given instead a privy purse of £130 pounds a year. For a man of his lavish tastes this proved insufficient, and by 1960 he was forced to sell his palace for £900.

In 1975, the late prime minister Indira Gandhi withdrew the last remaining royal privileges and he lost his annual income, which had been promised in perpetuity.

He died of a prolonged illness in a damp, asbestos-covered mud hut back in Tigiria, to which he had returned in 1987, having survived in his final years living off the charity of his former subjects.

“The local villagers who looked after him all these years were present…The villagers of Puruna Tigiria served him meals everyday,” said Jayant Mardaraj, a descendent of the neighbouring former princely state of Nilgiri.

Let me rephrase your sentence, "There is enough opportunity in USA for people of India who want to earn a decent living"


He is the grasshopper of the "Ant and grasshopper" story. There is enough opportunity for people in India who want to earn a decent living.
 
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