History of Maharashtra

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The name Maharashtra, denoting the western upland of the Deccan plateau, first appeared in a 7th-century inscription and in the account of Xuanzang, a Chinese traveler at that time. According to one interpretation, the name derives from the word maharathi (great chariot driver), which refers to a skillful northern fighting force that migrated southward into the area. The group’s language, intermingled with the speech of the earlier Naga settlers, became Maharastri, which by the 8th century had developed into Marathi. There was also a continuous influx of people from remote Greece and Central Asia.

During that early period the territory constituting the present-day state of Maharashtra was divided between several Hindu kingdoms: Satavahana, Vakataka, Kalacuri, Rashtrakuta, Chalukya, and Yadava. A succession of Muslim dynasties ruled after 1307. Persian, the court language of the Muslims, had a far-reaching effect on the Marathi language. By the mid-16th century, Maharashtra was again fragmented between several independent Muslim rulers, who fought each other endlessly. It was in the midst of that chaos that a great leader, Shivaji, was born in 1627. Shivaji showed astonishing prowess by founding a large Maratha empire that shook Delhi-based Mughal rule to its foundations.

During the 18th century almost all of western and central India, as well as large segments of the north and east, was brought under the suzerainty of the Maratha confederacy, an alliance formed after Shivaji’s kingdom had collapsed. Europeans, however, had been present along the coast since the early 16th century. Britain gained control of Bombay Island in 1661, and from the early 19th century onward the Marathas gradually succumbed to British expansion on the mainland. The British proceeded to establish an administrative province known as the Bombay Presidency. After India gained its independence in 1947, the province became Bombay state (1950). A number of former princely states (notably Baroda [now Vadodara]) subsequently were merged into the new state.

On November 1, 1956, in a major linguistic and political reorganization of the states of peninsular India, Bombay state received large parts of Madhya Pradesh, as well as the northwestern portion of the dismembered Hyderabad state (which had been formed after Indian independence from the former Hyderabad princely state). The outcome of that reorganization, however, was still a linguistically divided state, in which most of the Gujarati-speaking peoples lived in the north and most of the Marathi-speaking peoples lived in the south. Demands by the two language groups that the state be divided into two parts resulted, on May 1, 1960, in the creation of Gujarat in the north and the newly renamed Maharashtra in the south. Bombay, remaining part of Maharashtra, became the new state’s capital. The city’s name was changed to Mumbai in the mid-1990s.

Sitanshu Mookerjee Sudhir Vyankatesh Wanmali The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica

Since independence the state’s politics have been largely controlled by the Indian National Congress (Congress Party). Early chief ministers (heads of government) included Morarji Desai (served 1952–56), who later was India’s prime minister (1977–79), and Yashwantrao Balwantrao Chavan (1956–62), who was widely heralded for his efforts to modernize the state’s economic and social policies. Interruptions in the Congress Party’s rule included two years (1978–80) when Sharad Pawar put together an anti-Congress coalition (although Pawar subsequently headed Congress governments in 1988–91 and 1993–95) and four years (1995–99) when the pro-Hindu Shiv Sena (“Army of Shiva”) party (founded and long dominated by journalist Bal Thackeray) controlled the government. The dominance of Congress seemed to wane after 2014, when the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), a pro-Hindu party like the Shiv Sena, won a plurality of seats in the 2014 state legislative elections and was able to form a ruling coalition. The BJP retained its plurality after the 2019 elections but was unseated by a coalition led by the Shiv Sena and backed by Congress. That coalition proved uneasy, however, and in 2022 a rebellion within the Shiv Sena led one faction of the party to form a new coalition with the BJP instead.

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