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History of Wardha District Hindu Kingdom of Berar Little
or nothing is known of the early history of the District, but we have
a mention of the river Wardha so for back as the 2nd century B.C. The
early mention goes to Wardha
with the rest of Copper-plate
grants belonging to this dynasty have been found at Multai in Betul and
at Deoli in Wardha. The Deoli plate is dated A. D. 940 in the reign of
the king Krishna III; it records the grant of a village named Talapurumshaka
in the Nagapura-Nandivardhan District to a Kanarese Brahman. The Wardha
was subsequently included in the territories of the Bahmani kings of Gul
barga near Solapur and Bidar, who established an independent principality
in 1351, and were so called because the founder of their line, elected
after the revolt from Muhammad Tughlak, was either a Brahman or a Brahman's
servant. Mr. Sir A. Lyall says : 'We may venture to describe roughly the
Bahmani The Imad Shahi Dynasty There
is and early mention of an invasion of The Mughal Empire The
Ellichpur kingdom was crushed out of being by the king of Ahmadnagar in
1572 after a separate existence of ninety years, and in about 1594 The Maratha Invasion The
tract west of the Wardha included in The Bhonsla kingdom In
1765 the allied armies of the Peshwa and the Nizam marched through Wardha
plundering the adjoining country, and burnt Formation of the District Wardha
continued to form part of the Nagpur District until 1862 under the British,
when it was made a separate charge chiefly on the ground that Nagpur as
it then stood was too large for a single District, and that the interests
of the vary valuable cotton industry in this part of the Wardha valley
needed special supervision. The District headquarters were first located
at Kaotha, near Pulgaon, but in 1866 they were removed to their present
site, and the town of |