The granddaughter of Maharaja Ranjit Singh and god- daughter of Queen Victoria had taken to the streets in the early 1900s to campaign for the right of women to be able to vote.
On the day of the King's Speech to Parliament in 1911, she threw herself in front of the car of the then prime minister Herbert Asquith with a poster that read "Give women the vote".
Their efforts led women who were householders over the age of 30 to get the vote by an act of UK Parliament the Representation of the People Act in 1918, which was extended to women over 21 in 1928.
"Those who fought to establish their right my right, every woman's right to vote in elections, to stand for office and to take their full and rightful place in public life did so in the face of fierce opposition.
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Born in 1876, the princess grew up at Elveden Hall in Suffolk, where her father lived in exile.
In 1894, she moved to Hampton Court Palace at the invitation of the Queen and became known as a socialite in royal circles.
However, after a trip to India, she returned to London transformed and joined other suffragettes like Emmeline Pankhurst and Millicent Fawcett in their fight for the right to vote.
There are growing calls for the suffragette women, many of whom were jailed for their efforts, to be pardoned posthumously.
Opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has called on the government to apologise to suffragettes and have their criminal records overturned.
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