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Modern Baroda is a great
and fitting memorial to its late ruler, Sayaji Rao Gaekwad III (1875-1939 AD).
It was the dream of this able administrator to make Baroda an educational,
industrial and commercial centre and he ensured that his dream would come
true.
Baroda is situated on the
banks of the river Vishwamitri (whose name is derived from the great saint
Rishi Vishwamitra). The city was once called Chandravati, after its ruler Raja
Chandan, then Viravati, the abode of the brave, and then Vadpatra because of
the abundance of banyan trees on the banks of the Vishwamitri. From Vadpatra
it derived its present name Baroda or Vadodara.
Baroda has a rich
historical background. The ardent historian can trace Baroda’s history over
2000 years and more. However, the recent threads can be picked up when the
Moghul rule over the city came to an end in 1732, when Pilaji brought the
Maratha activities in Southern Gujarat to a head and captured it. Except for a
short break, Baroda continued to be in the hands of the Gaekwads from 1734 to
1949.
The greatest period in the
Maratha rule of Baroda started with the accession of Maharaja Sayajirao III in
1875. It was an era of great progress and constructive achievements in all
fields.
Maharaja Sayajirao was one
of the foremost administrators and reformers of his times. He initiated a
series of bold socio-economic reforms. He attached great importance to
economic development and started a number of model industries to encourage
initiative, and then handed back the working industries to private enterprise.
He started model textile and tile factories. It is as a result of his policy
of industrial development that Baroda is today one of the most important
centres for textile, chemical and oil industries today. He introduced a number
of social reforms. In no department of administration has the far-sighted
policy of this wise ruler been more conspicuous than in education, and in none
have the results been more real and tangible. He boldly introduced compulsory
primary education and a library movement (the first of its kind in India) to
augment his adult education scheme.
It was he who visualised a
general scheme of development in all branches of knowledge at different
stages, with the Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda at the apex. Modern
Baroda owes its beauty, its educational institutions and its masterpieces of
architecture to the insight and vision of this great ruler.
There is a saying that
nothing grows under the banyan tree, but this is not true of Baroda. Having
witnessed the rise and fall of the empires and kingdoms of the Hindus, Pathans,
Moghuls and Marathas, it now occupies a unique position on the educational,
cultural and industrial map of India. Yet, it has been fortunate enough to
retain the beauty of its rich and varied past. And it is one of the few cities
in India which is still influenced by the lost might of its ruling dynasties.
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