Oudh Awadh | |||||||||||||
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1572–1856 | |||||||||||||
![]() The Kingdom of Oudh in 1856 (red) | |||||||||||||
Capital | |||||||||||||
Common languages | Hindustani, Persian (official), Awadhi (regional), English, Sanskrit, Marathi | ||||||||||||
Religion | Shia Islam (official), Hinduism (majority), Sunni Islam, Jainism, Buddhism, Sikhism, Christianity | ||||||||||||
Government |
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Nawab/Padshah | |||||||||||||
• 1722–1739 | Saadat Ali Khan I (first) | ||||||||||||
• 1847–1856 | Wajid Ali Shah (last) | ||||||||||||
Subedar | |||||||||||||
• 1722 | Girdhar Bahadur (last) | ||||||||||||
History | |||||||||||||
• Independence from Mughal Empire | 26 January 1722 | ||||||||||||
• Annexation of Oudh | 1856 | ||||||||||||
5 – 25 June 1857 | |||||||||||||
3 March 1858 | |||||||||||||
• Merger of Oudh to North-Western Provinces | 1859 | ||||||||||||
Area | |||||||||||||
62,072 km2 (23,966 sq mi) | |||||||||||||
Currency | Indian Rupee | ||||||||||||
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The Kingdom of Awadh (Hindustani: /ˈaʊd/,[1] also Oudh State, Kingdom of Oudh, Awadh Subah, or Awadh State) was a Mughal subah, then an independent kingdom, and lastly a British protectorate in the Awadh region of North India until its annexation by the British Indians in 1856. The name Oudh, now obsolete, was once the anglicized name of the state, also written historically as Oudhe.
As the Mughal Empire declined and decentralized, local governors in Oudh began asserting greater autonomy, and eventually Oudh matured into an independent polity governing the fertile lands of the Central and Lower Doab.
The capital of Oudh was in Faizabad, but the Company's Political Agents, officially known as "Residents", had their seat in Lucknow. At par existed a Maratha embassy, in the Oudh court, led by the Vakil of the Peshwa, until the Second Anglo-Maratha War. The Nawab of Oudh, one of the richest princes, paid for and erected a Residency in Lucknow as a part of a wider programme of civic improvements.[2]
Oudh joined other Indian states in an upheaval against British rule in 1858 during one of the last series of actions in the First Indian Revolution. In the course of this uprising, detachments of the Bombay Army of the East India Company overcame the disunited collection of Indian states in a single rapid campaign. Determined rebels continued to wage sporadic guerrilla clashes until the spring of 1859. This rebellion is also historically known as the Oudh campaign.[3]
After the British Indian annexation of Oudh by the Doctrine of Lapse, the North Western Provinces became the North Western Provinces and Oudh.[4]