|
Was born in 1835. He was the son of Raja
Nihal Singh of Kapurthala. As he grew up, he developed interest in
classical learning and music. He received several honours and distinctions
from the British government. During the 1857 uprising, he commanded
a Kapurthala contingent of 300 men, horse and foot, and 2 guns to
defend Hoshiarpur. He also assisted in the subjugation of Oudh at
the head of a Kapurthala contingent. He was awarded the title of Sardar
Bahadur and a large jagir in land, with a khill'at. He was an honorary
magistrate at Jalandhar and in 1879 was appointed an honorary assistant
commissioner and was decorated with the title of Companion of the
Star of India (C.S.I.). He also served as president of the newly created
Municipal Board of Jalandhar for a term.
Well versed in English, Persian, Sanskrit, and
Punjabi, Kaflvar Bikrama Singh was a strong advocate of Western
learning. He equally supported the cause of women's education. In
1882, he initiated the proposal for the establishment of a Khalsa
college. He also felt concerned about the state of Sikh faith in
his day and was one of the three original founders of the Singh
Sabha established at Amritsar on 1 October 1873, the other two being
Sardar Thakur Singh Sandhanvalia and Baba Khem Singh.
His more important, though indirect, contribution
to the Singh Sabha movement was his patronage of the renowned Bhai
Gurmukh Singh. Gurmukh Singh was the promising son of one of his
family servants whom he had brought up and educated with loving
care. He now helped Bhai Gurmukh Singh with funds for setting up
Khalsa Press at Lahore. This led to the launching in 1886 of the
Punjabi weekly, Khalsa Akhbar, which played a major role in spreading
Singh Sabha ideology. Kanvar Bikrama Singh stood by Giant Ditt Singh
and helped him financially when he became involved in a defamation
case for the publication of his Svapan Natak (q.v.), a satirical
work which gave offence to the patrons of the Khalsa Diwan of Amritsar.
Kanvar Bikrama Singh, as president of the Jalandhar Singh Sabha,
always took the part of the Lahore Khalsa Diwan. Besides the patronage,
encouragement and active assistance he gave to scholars like Bhai
Gurmukh Singh and Bhai Ditt Singh, he himself wrote a book, Upma
Sar Granth. Kanvar Bikrama Singh died, after a short illness, on
8 May 1887.
|
 |