, the Rana of Udaipur of
Porbandar State. The Jethwa rulers of Porbandar used the title Rana as well "Rana" was formerly used as a title of martial
sovereignty by
Rajput kings in
India.
Sisodia rulers of
Mewar used the title of Mahārāṇā (महाराणा) extensively in their royal charters. Today, members of some
Rajput clans in
Indian subcontinent use it as a hereditary title. In
Pakistan, mostly
Muslims—but also some
Hindus in
Sindh (present-day Pakistan)—use it as a hereditary title.
Amarkot, a state in Sindh, has a Hindu Thakur Sodha Rajput ruler who uses the title. In the 16th century,
Rana Prasad, the monarch of
Amarkot, gave refuge to the
Mughal prince
Humayun and his wife,
Hamida Banu Begum, who had fled from military defeat at the hands of
Sher Shah Suri. Their son
Akbar was born in the fort of the Rana of Amarkot. Maharaj Jung Bahadur Kunwar Ranaji at London in 1850 The head of the Kunwar nobles of Nepal,
Jung Bahadur Kunwar, took the title of Rana(ji) and
Shree Teen Maharaja after consolidation of his post of
Prime Minister of Nepal. This dynasty controlled administration of the
Kingdom of Nepal from 1846 until 1951, reducing the
Shah monarch to a figurehead and making
Prime Minister and other government positions hereditary. == As a title ==