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Was born on 5 Baisakh
1879 Bk/15 April 1822, at Laungoval, a village in present-day Sangrur
district of the Punjab. Gian Singh claimed descent from the brother
of Bhai Mani Singh Shahid, Nagahia Singh. His father's name was
Bhag Singh and mother's Desah. He learnt Gurmukhi in his village
from Bhai Bhola Singh and Sanskrit from Pandit Atma Ram. He was
gifted with a melodious voice and recitation of gurbani earned him
popularity in the village. At the age of twelve, he was taken to
Lahore by his maternal uncle, Karam Singh, who was a Subahdar in
the army of Maharaja Ranjit Singh. Dhanna Singh Malvai introduced
him to the Maharaja who employed him to recite the Sukhmani to him
every morning.
At Lahore Gian Singh
was able to continue his studies under the guidance of Giani Ram
Singh. After the death of his patron, he returned to his village
and received appointment in the revenue office in Patiala state
in place of his uncle, Hari Singh, who had died childless in 1841
fighting in Maharaja Karam Singh's army. During the first Anglo-Sikh
war, when Patiala was an ally of the British, Gian Singh was sent
to Mudki where he was assigned to distributing mail. In 1849, as
Patiala troops were engaged in an anti-rebel operations in aid of
Jind state, Giani Gian Singh who was among them was seriously wounded
in the leg and had to quit service. His true calling in life began
when he resigned his position as a granthi in Patiala and set out
on an extensive peregrination across India visiting places of pilgrimage,
especially those commemorating events in Sikh history. Returning
to the Punjab owing to the upheaval of 1857, he came in touch with
Pandit Tara Singh Narotam, a renowned scholar of the Nirmala school,
whom he acknowledges in his writings as his literary mentor. He
helped Tara Singh in preparing his lexicon of the Guru Granth Sahib,
Guru Granth Girarath Kos, by sending to him in Patiala notes he
took of the religious discourses of Giani Chanda Singh Surama, the
blind, another celebrated scholar of the day, whose seat was in
Amritsar.
Giani Gian Singh was
launched on his own distinguished career as a writer with the publication
in 1880 of his Panth Prakash, a history of the Sikhs in Braj verse.
He now planned another ambitious work, the Twarikh Guru Khalsa,
which was to be published in five parts. The first three parts were
lithographed in 1892 by Baba Rajinder Singh, proprietor Guru Gobind
Singh Press, Sialkot. Urdu editions of these three volumes entitled
Twarikh Guru Khalsa, Shamsher Khalsa and Raj Khalsa, respectively,
were also published.
Suffering a prolonged
illness in Amritsar, Giani Gian Singh transferred his unpublished
manuscripts as well as his rights in published books to the Khalsa
Tract Society for a subsistence allowance of Rs 12 per month. He
survived his illness, and returned to Patiala where he received
ready patronage of the ruling family. He solemnized the first wedding
of the young Maharaja Bhupinder Singh on 9 March 1908.
Giani Gian Singh remained
celibate. He adopted Giani Hamir Singh, the son of his niece, Pradhan
Kaur, as his heir. In 1916 he drew up a new will in which he nominated
a committee to arrange the publication of his works. The members
of the committee were Bhai Sahib Bhai Arjan Singh of Bagarian, Sardar
Bahadar General Gurnam Singh, Bhai Kahn Singh and Sardar Gajjan
Singh of Ludhiana.
On 15 August 1916,
the Maharaja of Patiala approved the constitution of a History Society,
with Hamir Singh as its secretary, for the publication of historical
works by Giani Gian Singh and others. He also sanctioned a grant
of Rs 135,000 for the Society and authorized the publication through
the state press. But a dispute which arose between the states of
Patiala and Nabha hampered the work of the committee. Gian Singh
himself became a pawn in this feud. He was a native of Patiala state
and had stayed for long periods at Patiala, but the ruler of Nabha,
Maharaja Ripudaman Singh, considered him a relation, the Maharaja's
mother being a daughter of his village, Laungoval. Both the states
thus claimed him. One night he was whisked away in a car from Patiala
to Nabha. He died there on 9 Assu 1978 Bk/24 September 1921.
The Panth Prakash and
Twarikh Guru Khalsad are the most important but not the only works
of Giani Gian Singh. His other books are: Suraj Prakash Vartak,
an abridged version in prose of Bhai Santokh Singh's Sri Gur Pratap
Suraj Granth; Ramayan Bhai Mani Singh Ji Di; Twarikh Amritsar (Urdu);
Twarikh Lahore (Urdu); Patit Pavan; Gurdham Sarigrah; Bhupendranand;
Itihas Bagarian and Ripudaman Prakash.
Twarikh Guru Khalsa
a voluminous prose narrative delineating the history of the
Sikhs from their origin to the time when they lost the Punjab to
the British. The author, Giani Gian Singh (1822-1921), claimed descent
from the brother of Bhai Mani Singh, the martyr, who was a contemporary
of Guru Gobind Singh. The work is divided into five parts Janam
Sakhi Dasan Guraan, Shamsher Khalsa, Raj Khalsa, Sardar Khalsa,
and Panth Khalsa.
In the first part the author presents biographies
of the Ten Gurus and sketches the evolution of the community culminating
in the emergence of the Khalsa. The second part deals with the career
of Banda Singh Bahadur, the sustained struggle Sikhs waged against
the Mughals in face of fierce persecution, their reorganization
in the form of the Dal Khalsa and the running battle between Ahmad
Shah Durrani and the Sikhs. The third part describes the rise of
the twelve misls or independencies and of the sovereign kingdom
of Maharaja Ranjit Singh and ends with the annexation of the Punjab
by the British. The fourth part contained accounts of Sikh principalities
which did not form part of Ranjit Singh's kingdom. The fifth part
treats of Sikh sects, gurdwaras and preaching centres.
As Giani Gian Singh himself relates in the book,
he spent more than fifteen years collecting information, mainly
verbal. His sources were his own elders, Nagahia Singh, Raghu Singh
and Bakhta Singh who had served Guru Gobind Singh, Banda Singh Bahadur
and the eighteenth-century sardars such as Nawab Kapur Singh and
Baba Ala Singh. Besides, he travelled extensively in quest of materials.
Two of the older works he admits to having made use of were those
by Ratan Singh Bhangu and Bate Shah. He received encouragement from
his mentor, Tara Singh Narotam, a Nirmala scholar, and completed
in 1867 his first work, the famed Panth Prakash which was a connected
history of the Sikhs in Punjabi verse. The Twarikh Guru Khalsa was
its expansion in prose.
The first edition of the Twarikh comprising
the first three parts was printed in 1891 at Guru Gobind Singh Press,
Sialkot, with the help of Mahant Prem Singli, Bhai Hari Singh of
Sialkot and Bata Singh of Rawalpindi. Gian Singh made over the rights
of publication of his Twarikh to the Khalsa Tract Society, Amri.tsar.
Besides all the copies of the published first three parts of the
Twarikh, the manuscripts of the remaining two unpublished parts
were also handed over to the Society. The Panth Khals5 (the fifth
part) was published in Urdu as late as 1919 and the Sardar Khalsa
(the fourth part) was never published.
The first three parts severally and collectively
of this monumental work ran into several editions in Urdu as well
as in Punjabi. They were last published in two volumes in Punjabi
by the Languages Department, Punjab, Patiala, in 1970.
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