Bilbari State
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| Bilbari State | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Princely State of British India | |||||||
| 1948 | |||||||
Location of Bilbari in the Dang region | |||||||
| Area | |||||||
• 1931 | 4.27 km2 (1.65 sq mi) | ||||||
| Population | |||||||
• 1931 | 27 | ||||||
| |||||||
Bilbari State (or Dhude[1] or Dudhe [2]) was a minor princely state during the British Raj in what is today Gujarat State India. It was initially administered by the Surat Agency[3] and then by the Western India States Agency, and with a population of 27 and an area of 1.65 sq miles[4] it was potentially the smallest Princely State in India.[5] possibly only beaten by Vijanones. It was more specifically classified as one of the 14 minor princely states of the Dangs, in the Dang district, India.[6]
Whenever Bilbari was referenced in print, it was almost always to mention its small area and minuscule population. So for example did the Marion Star (1948-02-09) lament its passing on the abolition of the Indian Princely States in 1948:
The world never heard of Bilbari and there were few to mark its passing. Its government must have operated on the Jeffersonian precept that the government is best which governs least.[7]