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Indore, Madhyapradesh

Valentine Blacker1819

Kalakriti Archives

Kalakriti Archives
Hyderabad, India

The present map is one of the earliest surviving plans of the city of Indore, which was then a major center (although not the capital) of the territory of the Holkar Maharajas of Indore, which since 1721 had been one of the main constituencies of the Maratha Confederacy. The city is shown along the banks of the Saraswati and Khan rivers and consists of a conurbation of several large uneven built-up blocks.

In 1811, the Indore court degenerated into a bewilderingly complex den of intrigue and violent infighting. By 1817 the state was technically led by an 11-year old Maharaja, supported by 20-year old generals, who opposed the British, while other Indore court factions were allied to the EIC.

To settle matters, Lieutenant-General Sir Thomas Hislop leading 5,500 troops defeated the child maharaja’s force of over 35,000 men at the Battle of Mahidpur on December 20, 1817. As referenced on the map, Hislop, for a time, made Indore his headquarters, before moving on to continue his campaign.

Following the war, the kingdom of Indore lost much of its territory but was preserved as a princely state, although the city of Indore was upgraded to become the state’s capital.

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  • Title: Indore, Madhyapradesh
  • Creator: Valentine Blacker
  • Date Created: 1819
  • Date Published: 1821
  • Location Created: India
  • Physical Dimensions: 28 x 47
  • Type: Map
  • Publisher: The Book titled on " Memoirs of the operations of the British Army in India during The Mahratta War of 1817, 1818, and 1819", Valentine Blacker, Londan, 1821.
  • Medium: Manuscript, in pen and ink with water colour on paper
  • Title (Original): Plan of the environs of Indoor
  • Creator's Lifetime: 1778/1826
  • Creator's Bio: Valentine Blacker was a lieutenant colonel who served in the British East India Company during the first half of the 19th century. Blacker was born in 1778 in Armagh, Ireland, and came to India and joined in the Madras army in 1798, then started his career with the Mysore campaign. Later, he was employed in Wayanad district under Col. Stevenson in 1800 and given charge of cavalry troops; he was then under Col. Agnew, and in 1802 acted as the secretary to the Col. Pater, who was then commanding the southern divisions. In the subsequent years, due to his sheer merit, he commanded and participated in many campaigns. Finally, he was appointed as the Surveyor General of India. Valentine Blacker died in 1826 and was buried in the city of Calcutta.
Kalakriti Archives

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