Tiloi

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Tiloi
Town
Map of Tiloi CD block
Map of Tiloi CD block
Tiloi is located in Uttar Pradesh
Tiloi
Tiloi
Location in Uttar Pradesh, India
Coordinates: 26°23′34″N 81°28′33″E / 26.392714°N 81.475942°E / 26.392714; 81.475942Coordinates: 26°23′34″N 81°28′33″E / 26.392714°N 81.475942°E / 26.392714; 81.475942[1]
Country India India
StateUttar Pradesh
DistrictAmethi
Area
 • Total5.35 km2 (2.07 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[2]
 • Total6,956
 • Density1,300/km2 (3,400/sq mi)
Languages
 • OfficialHindi
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
229308[2]
Vehicle registrationUP-35

Tiloi is a Town and tehsil headquarters in Amethi district of Uttar Pradesh, India.[2] Located near Mohanganj on the Jais-Inhauna road, Tiloi is notable as the historical seat of a major taluqdari estate held by the Kanhpurias.[3] As of 2011, its population is 6,956, in 1,257 households.[2]

Tiloi hosts a Ramlila festival annually on Dussehra, involving a dramatic reenactment of the Ramayana.[4] Vendors bring cloth, metal utensils, earthenware pottery, toys, and bangles to sell at the fair.[4] Tiloi also hosts a market twice per week, on Wednesdays and Sundays, focusing on trade in grain.[4]

History[]

Tiloi was historically the seat of a large taluqdari estate held by a branch of the Kanhpuria Rajputs.[3] At the turn of the 20th century, Tiloi was the second-largest taluqa in Raebareli district, after Khajurgaon.[3] The Kanhpurias of Tiloi were descendants of Rahas, one of the two sons of the eponymous founder Kanh (the other branch, descended from his brother Sahas, was mostly based in what is now Pratapgarh district).[3] Five generations after Rahas was Parshad Singh, who divided his lands among his three sons.[3] The oldest, Janga Singh, was based at Tiloi and ruled over what was then the entire pargana of Jais.[3] (This corresponds with the later parganas of Rokha-Jais, Simrauta, , and in what is now Sultanpur district.)[3] Janga Singh's brothers were based at and Simrauta respectively.[3]

The Tiloi estate was first divided upon the death of Janga Singh's grandson, Jagdis Rai.[3] His younger son, Indrajit, inherited the territory of Gaura-Jamun and was the ancestor of several branches of the dynasty including the rajas of Katari and taluqdars of Jamun, , Baraulia, and .[3] Jagdis Rai's elder son, Mitrajit, kept Tiloi.[3] His son, Kandhe Rai, unsuccessfully attacked the Pathans of Pahremau.[3] Kandhe Rai's two sons, Udebhan and Gulal Sah, again divided the estate, with Udebhan receiving Tiloi and Gulal Sah receiving Shahmau.[3] During Udebhan's reign, the Kurmis took up arms against the Kanhpurias and were not defeated until after his death.[3]

Surat Singh, who was blind and succeeded Udebhan as raja of Tiloi sometime between 1670 and 1680, was an energetic ruler who "thoroughly established his position as head of the entire clan".[3] He finally defeated the Kurmis and supposedly came to rule over 14 parganas.[3] He came into conflict with the of Pratapgarh district, but was defeated in battle by them at .[3] Surat Singh's successor, Gopal Singh, had a relatively unremarkable reign.[3] He favoured his younger son, Niwal Singh, which outraged his older son, the one-eyed Mohan Singh, so much that he had Gopal Singh murdered and installed himself on the Tiloi throne by force.[3] Mohan Singh was another energetic ruler who went on several military campaigns and lived to an old age before dying in 1743.[3]

Mohan Singh's son Pem Singh ruled for only five years and died in 1748.[3] His son Balbhaddar Singh, though, was a renowned warrior who joined forces with the Mughals against the Marathas and was given a mansab of 5,000, becoming one of the highest-ranking Awadhi grandees at the imperial court.[3] Balbhaddar Singh eventually died in battle while rebelling against the Nawab of Awadh; as he was childless, one of his widows invested Chhatardhari Singh of Shahmau as the next raja of Tiloi, but this was contested by the rest of the Kanhpurias.[3] Another widow of Balbhaddar Singh adopted Shankar Singh of Asni as heir to the Tiloi throne, and a 15-year-long war of succession followed.[3] This was eventually resolved by a compromise where both claimants received the title of Raja, but neither was given the throne of Tiloi.[3] However, Shankar Singh later gained control of Tiloi through peaceful means.[3]

The messy succession meant that the Tiloi estate had become broken up, and Shankar Singh's successor Bunyad Singh inherited "only a fraction" of the large territory once held by Balbhaddar Singh.[3] His adopted nephew Raja Jagpal Singh at first joined the Indian Rebellion of 1857 but later switched sides and joined the British, and was later rewarded with a large grant of confiscated lands.[3] The hereditary title of Raja was confirmed by the British in 1877, and then in 1882 this was further elaborated to Raja Bahadur.[3]

At the turn of the 20th century, Tiloi was described as a market village whose importance mainly derived from its status as the estate capital.[3] The market was small but of some significance, and it was held twice per week on Wednesdays and Sundays.[3] There was also a primary school and the taluqdar's residence.[3] Its population in 1901 was 2,768 people, including 359 Muslims and a fair number of Banias.[3]

The 1961 census recorded Tiloi (as "Teoli") as comprising 16 hamlets, with a total population of 2,205 people (1,070 male and 1,136 female), in 492 households and 481 physical houses.[4] The area of the village was given as 1,366 acres.[4] It had a medical practitioner and a post office at that time, as well as a government-run dispensary.[4] The S.P.N. Higher Secondary School in Tiloi, founded in 1953, had in 1961 a faculty of 14 teachers (all male) and a student body of 341 males and 9 females.[4] Average attendance of the biweekly market was given as about 1,000 people at the time, while attendance of the annual Ramlila festival was about 15,000.[4]

The 1981 census recorded Tiloi as having a population of 3,682 people, in 874 households, and having an area of 552.41 hectares.[5]

Villages[]

Tiloi CD block has the following 83 villages:[2]

Village name Total land area (hectares) Population (in 2011)
303.5 2,707
43.1 99
Semrauta 617.2 6,243
28.6 228
311.5 1,990
367 1,469
292.6 2,747
289.2 2,188
Ramnagar 166.9 1,389
63.6 374
76.8 478
630.5 3,816
Chingahi 736.6 1,768
Bhadmar 288.7 2,038
90.3 671
559.4 3,716
Bhadsana 426.2 1,862
295.4 2,026
225.6 1,544
103.1 474
96.4 378
203.8 518
272 1,210
272 2,115
393.9 1,632
283.2 996
216.4 1,484
Pure Manimanohar 133.5 959
Pure Manga 57.2 294
260.3 1,291
189.4 1,263
67.4 507
86.6 191
72.4 349
Satwa 93.6 743
395.1 2,529
Pakar Gaon 1,054.5 6,266
105.3 384
426.8 3,836
195.3 960
472.5 2,420
180.4 1,053
373.3 2,428
158.8 849
166.3 1,042
242.4 1,127
Tiloi (block headquarters) 535 6,956
98 742
132.8 3,477
189.9 736
220.4 3,120
113.7 1,026
88.2 1,052
181.2 2,073
177.9 2,437
139.1 747
178 1,069
64.6 570
334.5 3,482
342 3,530
133.2 781
Rajamau 256.5 2,171
458.4 3,085
41.4 435
672.1 4,533
63.9 436
77.4 533
394 2,326
Asni 241.9 2,244
447.8 3,586
271.9 1,618
Ahuri 741.1 4,606
212.1 1,350
270.4 2,195
912.4 4,722
133.2 467
Shah Mau 144.4 1,647
111.5 437
249.5 2,221
442.3 2,478
302.1 2,743
148.3 1,577
Belwa Hasanpur 400 2,224

References[]

  1. ^ Search for "Tiloi" here https://geonames.nga.mil/namesgaz/. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Census of India 2011: Uttar Pradesh District Census Handbook – Rae Bareli, Part A (Village and Town Directory)" (PDF). Census 2011 India. pp. 142–58. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Nevill, H.R. (1905). Rai Bareli: A Gazetteer, Being Volume XXXIX Of The District Gazetteers Of The United Provinces Of Agra And Oudh. Allahabad: Government Press. pp. 81–5, 197, 230. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Census 1961: District Census Handbook, Uttar Pradesh (39 – Raebareli District) (PDF). Lucknow. 1965. pp. 144, 147, 166–7, 173, xxiv-xxv of section "Maharajganj Tahsil". Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  5. ^ Census 1981 Uttar Pradesh: District Census Handbook Part XIII-A: Village & Town Directory, District Rae Bareli (PDF). 1982. pp. 58–9. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
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