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Baghel Singh succeeded
in 1765 Karora Singh as leader of the Karorsinghia misl or chiefship,
is celebrated in Sikh history as the vanquisher of Mughal Delhi.
Baghel Singh arose from the village of Jhabal, in Amritsar district,
to become a formidable force in the Sutlej region. According to
Syad Muhammad Latif, he had under him 12,000 fighting men. As well
as being a soldier, he was an adept in political negotiation and
was able to win over many an adversary to his side. The Mughas,
the Ruhilas, the Marathas and the English sought his friendship.
In the wake of the decay of Mughal authority in the Punjab owing
to Ahmad Shah Durrani's successive invasions during the latter half
of the eighteenth century, the Sikhs began extending their influence.
Baghel Singh took possession of portions
of the Jalandhar Doab and established himself at Hariana, near Hoshiarpur.
Soon after the Sikh conquest of Sirhind in January 1764, he extended
his arms towards Karnal, occupying a number of villages including
Chhalaudi which he later made his headquarters.
In February 1764, Sikhs in a body of 40,000
under the command of Baghel Singh and other leading warriors crossed
the Yamuna and captured Saharanpur. They overran the territory of
Najib ud-Daulah, the Ruhila chief, realizing from him a tribute
of eleven lakh of rupees.
In April 1775, Baghel Singh with two other
sardars, Rai Singh Bhangi and Tara Singh Ghaiba, crossed the Yamuna
to occupy that country, then ruled by Zabita Khan, son and successor.
of Najib ud-Daulah. Zabita Khan in desperation offered Baghel Singh
large sums of money and proposed an alliance jointly to plunder
the crown-lands.
The combined forces of Sikhs and Ruhilas
looted villages around the present site of New Delhi. In March 1776,
they defeated the imperial forces near Muzaffarnagar. The whole
of the Yamuna Gangetic Doab was now at their mercy.
When in the autumn of 1779, a large Mughal
army under the command of Prince Farkhanda Bakht and Wazir Abdul
Ahad Khan led an expedition against the Sutlej Sikhs, Baghel Singh
along with Rai Singh of Buria and Bhailga Singh of Thanesar joined
hands with the imperial forces at Karnal and encircled Patiala.
Raja Amar Singh visited Baghel Singh in his camp at the village
of Lahal and made peace with him and had his son, Sahib Singh, receive
the rites. of Khalsa initiation at his hands.
Meanwhile, Amar Singh had invited trans-Sutlej
Sikhs for help. Baghel Singh outwitted his imperial allies who sought
safety in flight suffering heavy losses. When in April 1781, Mirza
Shafi, a close relative of the Mughal prime minister, captured the
Sikh military post at Indri, 10 km south of Ladva, Baghel Singh
retaliated by attacking Khalil Beg Khan of Shahabad who surrendered
with 300 horse, 800 foot and 2 pieces of cannon. When on 11 March
1783, Sikhs entered the Red Fort in Delhi and occupied the Diwan-i-Am,
the Mughal emperor, Shah Alam II, made a settlement with them agreeing
to allow Baghel Singh to raise gurdwaras on Sikh historical sites
in the city and realize six annas in a rupee (37.5%) of all the
octroiduties in the capital. Baghel Singh stayed in Sabzi Mandi,
with 4000 troops, and took charge of the police station in Chandni
Chowk.

Bhagel Singh
takes Dehli 1781
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He located seven sites connected with the
lives of the Gurus and had shrines raised thereon within the space
of eight months, from April to November 1783. Gurdwara Sis Ganj
marked the spot in the main Mughal street of Chandni Chowk where
Guru Tegh Bahadur had been executed under the fiat of the emperor
and Gurdwara Rikabganj, near modern-day Parliament House, where
the body was cremated. Bangla Sahib and Bala Sahib commemorated
the Eighth Guru, Guru Har Krishan. Three other gurdwaras built were
at Majnu ka Tilla, Mod Bagh and Telivara.
Baghel Singh died probably in 1802, at Hariana,
in present-day Hoshiarpur district. A samadh enshrining the memory
of one of the more picturesque misl sardars still stands in the
town.
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