British During the
British Raj], the term is often applied to the colonial
Districts of British India (which were British possessions). At the same time, the agency exercising indirect rule over the
princely states in
Kathiawar on
Saurashtra peninsula in Gujarat (which were not British possessions) grouped them in four prants (now quarters, absorbing six historical ones above) :
Gohelwad,
Halar,
Jhalawar and Sorath.
Native However a Raj-age prant can also still be a native term for a 'province' of a large
princely state in a
subsidiary alliance with the British. Thus, the Rajput
Gaekwad Rajput dynasty organised its
Baroda State into four administrative prants, equivalent to British Districts (like much of its institutions), namely Baroda itself, Kadi (the largest), Navsari and Amreli, the smallest. == External links and Sources ==