Prøve GULL - Gratis
A FEUDING ROYALTY
India Today
|February 23, 2026
The Mewar royal family's dispute over ancestral properties in Udaipur has resurfaced a year after the death of its last 'custodian' King Arvind Singh. The Delhi High Court is set to rule on the matter that has spanned four decades and countless strained filial relationships
In the opulent halls of Udaipur's City Palace, where the voices of Mahar-anas past echo alongside the rustle of silk draperies and clang of medieval crockery, a modern-day saga of legacy and litigation is unfolding.
Lakshyaraj Singh Mewar, the 41-year-old scion of the Mewar dynasty, finds himself engaged in a bitter legal battle with his own sisters over the will of their late father, Arvind Singh—a dispute that threatens to further fracture not just a family, but one of Rajasthan’s most storied and economically important royal estates.
What began as a challenge to the will has escalated into a multi-court confrontation spanning decades of unresolved inheritance claims between two dead rulers, Arvind Singh and his elder brother Mahendra Singh. The former's will, written weeks before his death in March last year, names his son, the social media-savvy Lakshyaraj, as the sole heir to the royal properties. This includes controlling stakes in temples like Eklingji and popular heritage properties like the Lake Palace, Fateh Prakash Palace and Shiv Niwas Palace. His sisters, Padmaja Kumari Parmar and Bhargavi Kumari Mewar, have taken issue with the will, citing their father’s allegedly poor mental state towards the end of his life. On January 20, the Delhi High Court formally took charge of this meandering dispute on orders from the Supreme Court, noting the many pleas in the Mumbai and Jodhpur high courts.
Justice Subramonium Prasad of the Delhi high court has issued notices to the sisters as well as Arvind Singh’s wife, Vijayraj Kumari, and directed them to file replies to Lakshyaraj’s plea that the will be probated i.e. validated and executed. The court also ordered that no asset be alienated until further hearings, effectively freezing properties valued in Parmar's suit at Rs 1,200 crore, though independent valuations put it at 10 times more. The next hearing is scheduled for February 12.
ROCKY BEGINNINGS
Denne historien er fra February 23, 2026-utgaven av India Today.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA India Today
India Today
Urea at Your Doorstep
Farmers can now order a fixed amount of fertiliser online rather than wait in long queues
3 mins
March 02, 2026
India Today
REALITY BITES
Anubhav Sinha’s puts the focus on the brutality of rape and the devastation it leaves behind
1 mins
March 02, 2026
India Today
MIND OF THE MASTER
In his latest book, grand-master and five-time world chess champion VISWANATHAN ANAND outlines 64 life lessons, one for every square on the chessboard
1 mins
March 02, 2026
India Today
THE JOURNEY WITHIN
REAL TRAVEL IS NOT ABOUT SEEING NEW PLACES BUT ABOUT HAVING NEW EYES, SUGGESTS PALLAVI AIYAR IN HER NEW BOOK
1 min
March 02, 2026
India Today
THE ROOTS OF HINDI
Using forgotten manuscripts from little- known archives, Tyler W. Williams reveals Hindi's socially complex literary past
2 mins
March 02, 2026
India Today
THE ULTIMATE GATECRASHER
ARTIST ATUL DODIYA RETURNS TO DELHI AFTER SIX YEARS WITH A SOLO EXHIBITION THAT CELEBRATES THE ART OF LOOKING
3 mins
March 02, 2026
India Today
THE HIGH COST OF MISADVENTURISM
Recent developments in the Pannun case are an embarrassment and potential diplomatic vulnerability for New Delhi
3 mins
March 02, 2026
India Today
Finding the Right Fund
Choosing the right mutual fund requires careful evaluation of factors that determine its suitability for your investment goal
4 mins
March 02, 2026
India Today
Print is Not Dead
An exhibition at New Delhi's Dhoomimal Gallery examines the heritage of printmaking and its emerging future in the age of AI
1 mins
March 02, 2026
India Today
Silence Bears Weight
TYEB MEHTA'S CENTENARY EXHIBITION REFRAMES HIS ART BEYOND VIOLENCE, TOWARD HEALING, STRUCTURE AND IMAGINATION
1 mins
March 02, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

