Maharadja
Maharadja (also spelled maharaja or maharadja) is a royal title derived from Sanskrit mahā- “great” and rājā “king.” It denotes a sovereign ruler of high status and was used across South Asia and parts of Southeast Asia. In India and the broader Indian cultural sphere, maharaja was adopted by many princely states and kingdoms to designate a ruler who exercised substantial territory and authority, often subordinate to an empire or to a higher overlord. The title could be held by rulers who were autonomous in their domains under colonial suzerainty, and in the modern era it is largely ceremonial, used in historical references and by some royal families.
In Southeast Asia, Indianization spread the title to Malay and Indonesian polities. In Malay and Indonesian
In contemporary usage, the term continues to appear in literature, encyclopedias, and popular media as a stylistic