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Was the second of the five sons of Misr Divan Chand, a general in
Maharaja Ranjit Singh's army. He joined the Maharaja's treasury
in 1809 and within seven years rose to occupy the highest position
in it. Besides, he received numerous jagirs, including that of Ranghar
Nangal worth 30,000 rupees a year. Beli Ram maintained strict discipline.
He annoyed Raja Dhian
Singh, the prime minister, by declining him to show a rare piece
of jewellery in the toshakhana, royal treasury, without the Maharaja's
permission. When during his last illness, the Maharaja, on the astrologers'
suggestion, desired the famous Koh-i-Nur diamond to be sent to the
Jagannath Puri temple,. Bell Rdm refused to accede to the royal
wishes declaring that the diamond was not the property of the Maharaja
but that of the State.
He made an enemy of
Kanvar Nau Nihal Singh by disallowing him entry into the toshakhana
without a written order from the Maharaja. In January 1840, Nau
Nihal Singh fined Misr Beli Ram 500,000 rupees and imprisoned him
along with his five brothers. When Maharaja Sher Singh ascended
the throne, Misr Beli Ram and his brothers were restored to their
old positions. When Hira Singh Dogra became the prime minister after
the assassination of Maharaja Sher Singh, he had Misr Bell Ram and
his
brothers arrested. Beli Ram was handed over to Shaikh Imam ud-Din,
who kept him in chains in his stables, before strangling him to
death on 17 September 1843.
Beli Ram had three sons, Ram Das and Thakur
Das born to his Brahman wife, and Khurram Rai to his Muslim wife.
Ram Das escaped to Firozpur, and others to Ludhiana. They returned
to Lahore after Hira Singh's death on 21 December 1844. After annexation,
Ram Das got from the British a pension of 2,000 rupees per mensem.
Bell Ram's wives Gulab Devi and Misranl Begam received a pension
of 1,387 rupees each.
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