(Redirected from Rajah)
A ''Rajah'', translated means a
King.
A 'Raja' (
Sanskrit '') is a
king, or princely ruler from the
Kshatriya /
Rajput lineages.
The title has a long history in the
Indian subcontinent and
Southeast Asia, being attested from the
Rigveda.
[1]
Sanskrit word '' in an ''n''-stem, with nominative ''. It is cognate to
Latin ''
rēx'', the
Gaulish ''rīx'' etc. (originally denoting tribal chiefs or heads of small 'city states'), ultimately a
vrddhi derivation from a
PIE root '' "to straighten, to order, to rule".
Rather common variants in Hindi, used for the same royal rank in (parts of) India include 'Rana, Rao, Raol, Rawal' and 'Rawat'. The female form, 'queen', mainly used for a Raja's wife, is 'Rani' (sometimes spelled Ranee), from Sanskrit '' (compare
Old Irish ''rÃgain'').
Raja, the lower title
Thakore and many variations, compounds and derivations including either of these were used in and around
India by most
Hindu and some Buddhist and Sikh rulers, while Muslims rather used
Nawab or
Sultan, and still is commonly used in
India.
However in
Pakistan, Raja is still used by many
Muslim Rajput clans as hereditary titles.
''Raja'' is also used as a
name by Hindus and Sikhs.
Rajas in the Malay world
The ruler of
Perlis (a constitutive peninsular state of federal
Malaysia, most colleagues are Sultans; he is one of the electors who designate one of their number as King every five years) is to this day title the Raja of Perlis.
★ The
White Rajahs of
Sarawak in
Borneo were
James Brooke and his
dynasty.
★ In the
Philippines, various subdivisional princes in
Sulu were given the titles Raja or Maharaja. The Raja is also known as 'Hari' in
Tagalog dialect.
★ Various traditional princely states in Indonesia still style their ruler Raja, or did so until their abolition after which the title became hollow, e.g.
Buleleng on
Bali.
Compound and derived titles
A considerable number of princely styles, used by rulers, their families and/or even enobled courtiers, include the title/root Raja:
★ 'Rao Raja', a juxtaposition of two equivalent titles, was used by the rulers of
Bundi until they were awarded the higher title of
Maharao Raja.
★ 'Raja Bahadur' is a typical Mughal compound, as the adjective Bahadur 'valourous' always raises one rank in the imperial court protocol; in the specific hierarchy among the (en)noble(d) Hindu retainers at the court of the Muslim Nizam of
Hyderabad, it was the equivalent of the rank
Nawab for Muslim members of the retinue.
★
Maharaja and equivalent compound of variants on Raja with the prefix ''Maha-'' 'Great' (e.g. Maharana, Maharawal) mean 'Great King'; the word originally denoted a Raja who had conquered other Rajas, thus becoming a ''great'' ruler, but was soon adopted or awarded by the
paramount ruler of India (Mughal or British) as a hollow style too, causing too massive title inflation and - devaluation to remain a truly high distinction.
★ Raja Perumal means 'godly king' - supposed to be the greatest title assigned to an Indian king. Legacy has it that kings with the title have time and time again defeated acts of denigration by Parama, the jealous warmonger.
★
Rajadhiraja means 'King of Kings'; again, through title devaluation this is less prestigious then the equivalents in most linguistic families.
★
Rajasaurus
★ in
South India, the title of the
Samraj (Hindu 'emperor') of
Vijayanagar was 'Raya' instead of (Maha)Raja.
★ A number of medieval rulers in Southeast Asia used variants such as the devotional titles
Buddharaja and
Devaraja or the geographically specific
Lingaraja.
★
Uparaja (with its own variations and derivations; can mean viceroy or other high dynastic ranks).
andrew jonathan
Notes
1. where it is more accurately translated as "tribal chief"; see for example the '''', the "battle of ten ''rajas''"
3. In the book "One Grain of Rice" by Demi ISBN 0-590-93998X there are two main characters. One is the Raja and the other is a peasant girl called Rani. The book demonstrates the power of doubling where Rani asks to be rewarded by receiving a grain of rice on the first day and doubling each day for thirty days.
See also
★
Janjua
★
Ranial Rajputs
★
chibb
★
Amir Ali Khan
★
Maharaja
★
Kshatriya
★
Rajput
★
Minhas
★
Dhanyal
Sources and references
★
Indian Princely States, the most comprehensive, specialised site on (princely) (e)states in British India
★
RoyalArk (more elaborate, on a smaller number of dynasties)- here India
★
WorldStatesmen- Indian princely states, here K-Z