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'Baroda Enquiry Commission Report, 1874' [‎161r] (326/502)

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The record is made up of 1 volume (249 folios). It was created in 1 Nov 1873-14 Feb 1874. It was written in English. The original is part of the British Library: India Office The department of the British Government to which the Government of India reported between 1858 and 1947. The successor to the Court of Directors. Records and Private Papers Documents collected in a private capacity. .

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Svt
A.D
12th. The "stopping of tlie safe conduct" complaint is the same as told by
No. 1- The minor s father was imprisoned at Biiapur with the other Thakors
- , Svt. 1928 J
1371871'
ISth and 14<th. These 2 grievances are narrated in No. 1's statement, and
are the same complained of by me.
15th. One man has died without near heirs; he had cousins in my village
since iH, and the Gaekwar took possession of his property instead of allowing me
to keep it, according to old custom.
] 6th.The only toll in my village is my own one upon grain.
17th. The story of the gadi nazarana tax, the refusal to pay it, and subse
quent conduct of the Thakors and the Graekwar's Ministers is related clearly and
in detail. It corresponds exactly with what has been set down in the narrative
of No. 1.
4, Harisingh Jethuji, of Kuvadia, states:—
My village comprises about
Bighas Revenue Houses Population
1,200 Rs. 1,500 70 250
My ghas dana tribute has been raised from Rs. 246 in to Rs. 412 in
, at which rate it has since remained fixed. There has been no cause
assigned for increasing it.
2nd. My Sirpao of Rs. 10, and Meshvani, food for 5 men for 1 day, have
, . n • Svt. 1924
been stopped, since
Srd, I have giras haks in 8 Bijapur villages and one in Kadipargana. They
were settled in by reducing them fromRs. 27 to Rs. 14-2-0, exclusive of the
Kadi one, which remained unsettled. I took the reduced amount up to 2 yeai s
ago, when I refused to receive it on the same grounds as those alleged by the
other Thakors.
4th. I have arrears of Rs. 762 uncollected in the Bijapur pargana due from
before which I cannot collect, and which the Government will not help me
to collect.
6th. I had giras wanta land in 8 Bijapur villages, and 1 Kadi village, the
rent of which was received by me direct from the ryots till the last 6 or 7 years,
when they refused to pay me, declaring that Government, by imposing excessive
Salami and Inam Committee tax prevented them from being able to do so.
6th. This does not apply to me.
7th. My giras haks in Kadi, at the rate of Rs 11-4-0 for the last 10 years,
are still unpaid, owing to their never having been settled.
Sth I have grain haks of maunds of grain for every and . 0
bundles of grass from each of 200 fields in the t Durba r 6 or 7 yeiTrt
the Government has forbidden the ryots to pay to me for the last 6 or 7 years.
9th The mortgage tax of 2 annas Statement of No. 1).
10th. I have lost my authority to fine up, to Rs. lOO and imprison for 3
months, since Government Thanadars were instituted m A . D . 186 4.
12th 1 The complaints made by me in these 4 matters are identical with
ISth. ( those of the other Thakors, and have been already fully stated.
14a J , , , ■
loth. No case of a man dying without heirs has happened lately m my
village, and I cannot therefore say what the Government would do in the event
of such a thing happening. ,
Idth. Government has established its own grain toll in my village, and
deprived me of mine.
ii—2 6

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Content

Report of the Baroda Enquiry Commission on the administration of the government of Malharrao, Gaekwar of Baroda. The Commission comprised Richard John Meade (President), Edward William Ravenscroft, Mumtazul Dowlah Nawab An honorific title; an official acting as a provincial deputy ruler in South Asia; or a significant Muslim landowner in nineteenth century India. Faiz Ali Khan, Colonel Alfred Thomas Etheridge and Thomas Duncan Mackenzie (Secretary).

The report comprises a letter from the members of the Baroda Enquiry Commission to the Secretary to the Government of India, Foreign Department presenting their report on the results of the proceedings and submitting copies of correspondence, reports and statements relative to the enquiry (ff 5-19):

Appendix A, Part I

  • Schedules I-III: Complaints and grievances against the Gaekwar's Government from individuals and groups (ff 21-78).
  • Appendix B, Schedules I-III: Cases of complaint and grievance which the commission did not look into during the enquiry (ff 79-81).
  • Appendix C: Letter from Colonel Richard John Meade, President, Special Commission of Enquiry on Baroda Affairs, to Colonel Robert Phayre, Resident at Baroda, 1 November 1873 (ff 82-83).
  • Appendix D: Translation of an amended notice issued by the Resident to complainants desirous of appearing before the Baroda Enquiry Commission (ff 84-85).
  • Appendix E: Schedules presented to the Commission along with Colonel Phayre's introductory statement regarding them. (ff 86-131).
  • Appendix F: Letter No. 1128 of 1873 from Colonel Phayre to the President, Baroda Commission regarding the cases already submitted to the Commission, the List of undisposed petitions to be attended to by the Resident which could be used as additional cases if required and the statements that he had yet to make on cases under enquiry by the Commission (ff 132-133).
  • Appendix G, Schedule I: Statements from witnesses with cross examination statements from the Durbar A public or private audience held by a high-ranking British colonial representative (e.g. Viceroy, Governor-General, or member of the British royal family). on behalf of the Gaekwar and statements from the Resident as to the accuracy of the information provided (ff 134-229).

Appendix Part II (ff 231-245)

Extent and format
1 volume (249 folios)
Physical characteristics

Foliation: the main sequence of foliation consists of a small pencil number in the top front right hand corner of each folio enclosed in a circle.

There is also an original sequence of foliation which consists of larger pencil numbers also in the top front right hand corner of folios, however the sequence is not consistent and some of the numbers may be filing references rather than foliation numbers.

Written in
English in Latin script
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'Baroda Enquiry Commission Report, 1874' [‎161r] (326/502), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, Mss Eur F126/78, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023442807.0x00007f> [accessed 8 July 2026]

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