History, asked by sushkrish9, 9 months ago

write in tabular column details filled with
1. name of the state and union territories
2. capital
3. which year it formed as state
4. who was ruler in that region before british rule

Answers

Answered by kabraarchita
1

Answer:

1.  8 Union Territories of India

ANDAMAN & NICOBAR.

CHANDIGARH.

DADRA & NAGAR HAVELI and DAMAN & DIU (Will come into effect on 26th January 2020)

NATIONAL CAPITAL TERRITORY OF DELHI.

JAMMU & KASHMIR.

LADAKH.

LAKSHADWEEP.

PUDUCHERRY (PONDICHERRY)

29 states

1. Andhra pradesh:

Capital - Hyderabad(De jure- 2 June 2024)Amaravati(proposed)

2. Arunachal pradesh:

Capital-itanagar

3.Assam:

Capital-Dispur

4. Bihar:

Capital -Patna

5. Chattisgarh:

Capital-Raipur

6.Goa:

Capital - panaji

7.Gujarat :

Capital-Gandhinagar

8. Haryana:

Capital- Chandigarh(shared with punjab)

9. Himachal pradesh:

Capital - shimla

10. Jammu and Kashmir :

Capital-Srinagar(summer), Jammu(winter)

11. Jharkhand:

Capital-Ranchi

12.Karnataka:

Capital - Bengaluru(formerly - Bangalore)

13. Kerala:

Capital - Thiruvananthapuram

14. Madhya pradesh:

Capital - Bhopal

15. Maharashtra:

Capital - Mumbai

16. Manipur:

Capital - Imphal

17. Meghalaya:

Capital - Shillong

18. Mizoram:

Capital - Aizawl

19. Nagaland :

Capital - kohima

20. Odisha:

Capital - Bhuvaneswar

21. Punjab:

Capital - Chandigarh

22. Rajasthan :

Capital - Jaipur

23.Sikkim:

Capital - Gangtok

24.Tamil Nadu:

Capital - Chennai

25. Telangana:

Capital - Hyderabad (from June 2nd, 2014 shared with Andhra pradesh)

26. Tripitaka: kookaburra

Capital - Agartala

27. Uttar pradesh:

Capital - Lucknow

28. Uttarkhand:

Capital - Dehradun

29.West Bengal:

Capital - kolkata.

4.  A princely state, also called native state, feudatory state or Indian state (for those states on the subcontinent), was a vassal state under a local or indigenous or regional ruler in a subsidiary alliance with the British . Though the history of the princely states of the subcontinent dates from at least the classical period of Indian history, the predominant usage of the term princely state specifically refers to a semi-sovereign principality on the Indian subcontinent during the British that was not directly governed by the British, but rather by a local ruler, subject to a form of indirect rule on some matter.

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