Harrison Akins
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Jammu and Kashmir
‘The Switzerland of the East’
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This chapter provides a case study of the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir in northern India from the 1930s to the early 1950s. Among India’s princely states, the accession of Jammu and Kashmir presented one of the most strident and difficult situations, as well as one of the most well known, and served as a focal point in the enduring interstate rivalry between India and Pakistan. The chapter begins with a discussion of the tensions between the state’s Hindu Maharaja and his primarily Muslim subjects, and between the Kashmir government and Indian political leaders, underlying the state’s opposition to joining India. Following a discussion of the Maharaja’s attempts to assert Kashmir’s independence, the chapter discusses the tribal invasion of Kashmir from the neighboring North-West Frontier Province and its aftermath for the status of the princely states. The chapter concludes with a discussion of relations between Kashmir and New Delhi after the implementation of a ceasefire in early 1949 and the eruption of protests seeking to overturn Kashmir’s autonomy as enshrined in the Indian constitution.

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Conquering the maharajas

India’s princely states and the end of empire, 1930–50

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