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Wife of Maharaja Kharak Singh, the eldest son of and successor to
Maharaja Ranjit Singh, was born the daughter of Sardar jaimal Singh
of the Kanhaiya misl in 1802 at Fatehgarh, in present-day Gurdaspur
district of the Punjab. She was married to Prince Kharak Singh in
February 1812 at the age of 10.
After the death in most tragic circumstances
of her husband, then Maharaja of the Punjab, as well as of her son,
Kanvar Nau Nihal Singh, in November 1840, she staked her claim to
the throne of Lahore. She had won the support of the Sandhanvalia
collaterals - Atar Singh, Lahina Singh and Ajit Singh, and of other
influential courtiers such as Bhai Ram Singh, Bhai Gobind Ram, Gulab
Singh Dogra and Jamadar Khushal Singh. She challenged Sher Singh,
the second son of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, on the grounds that her
daughter-in-law, Kanvar Nau Nihal Singh's widow, Sahib Kaur, was
pregnant and that she would assume regency on behalf of the unborn
legal successor to her husband's throne.
Chand Kaur's ambition was matched by her courageous
spirit. She would, she declared, cast aside her veil and come out
of the zenana, don a turban like a sardar, and like a monarch inspect
the parade of the army troops. "Why should I not do as Queen
Victoria does in England ?" Sher Singh, winning support of
a rival group at the court and of a section of the army, marched
upon Lahore.
A compromise was, however, arrived at between
the two factions by which Chand Kaur became regent and Raja Dhian
Singh principal minister of the State. The truce, however, did not
last long. Dhian Singh Dogra, who wished Chand Kaur to adopt his
son, Hira Singh, as successor to the throne, became estranged when
he saw little hope of his ambition being realized.
In January 1841, he openly supported claims
of Sher Singh who was proclaimed by the army, also changing sides,
sovereign of the Punjab. Chand Kaur was pensioned off with an annual
jagir of 9,00,000 rupees, and her Sandhanvalia supporters fled across
the Sutlej into British territory. Chand Kaur retired gracefully
to the segregation of her late son's palace inside the city of Lahore.
Dhian Singh's elder brother, Gulab Singh, who looked after her property,
had absconded from the Fort with cartloads of gold and silver.
In July 1841, Nau Nihal Singh's widow,
Sahib Kaur delivered a stillborn son. This ended whatever hopes
Chand Kaur had of resurrecting her claims. But courtly intrigue
had not ceased. Dhian Singh replaced the maidservants of the Dowager
Maharani with hillwomen from his own country. The latter tried to
kill her by poisoning her food and eventually finished her off on
11 June 1842, smashing her head with wooden pikes from the kitchen.
Dhian Singh however had had their tongues cut off to prevent them
divulging the plot. In the end, they were executed under his own
orders.
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