The only use of Rajah/Raja I know would be the king or monarch in the Indian subcontinent.
the leaders in ancient India were mainly the kings (rajahs). They had their own palaces where everyone would get togather to make decisions on laws. After they king dies his oldest son becomes the next king. If he has two sons then the second son would become the king when the first sons dies.
The Taj Mahal is in Agra India
India is not a continent. India is part of Asia.
Mumbai is a city in India
in India
For American Indians 'Chiefs' For Indians from India 'Shahs, 'Maharajahs, 'Mughal emperors', 'Rajahs'.
for rajahs rice
Ranis
rani :P
rajahs
white rajahs
There was 36,893,488,147,419,103,232 grains of rice.
The opulent lifestyle of the rajahs of India is still evident in the surviving palaces. The first class passengers on the Titanic shared an opulent gallery and dining area.
hey dude your right villages are rulers of hereditary
they were the two rajahs who ruled the maynilad
the leaders in ancient India were mainly the kings (rajahs). They had their own palaces where everyone would get togather to make decisions on laws. After they king dies his oldest son becomes the next king. If he has two sons then the second son would become the king when the first sons dies.
The political conditions in British India prior to the 1947 Independence and partition were complex in terms of governance and nationality questions. Geographically, what is today India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Burma. Governance was between Indian Rajahs and other British instruments. The years prior to 1947 were marked by a growing and ultimately irreconcilable split among Gandhi and Nehru's Congress Party and Jinnah's Muslim League which culminated in the forced migration, ethnic/sectarian cleansing and the atrocities of the during the Partition of India.