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Was born on 9 February 1801. He was married to Chand Kaur, daughter
of Jaimal Singh Kanhaiya, in 1812. The Maharaja brought him up in
the family's martial tradition and assigned him to a variety of'
military expeditions. While barely six years old, he was given the
nominal command of the Sheikhpura expedition (1807); was placed
in charge of the Kanhaiya estates in 1811; and deputed in 1812 to
punish the recalcitrant chiefs of Bhisnbar and Rajauri. He was invested
with the command of Multan expedition (1818) as well as of Kashmir
(1819). He was also sent on similar campaigns undertaken by Ranjit
Singh for the conquest of Peshawar and against the Mazaris of Shikarpur.
Frail in constitution, Kharak Singh ascended
the throne in June 1839 on the death of his father. From the very
first day he had to encounter the envy of his powerful and ambitious
minister, Dhian Singh Dogra. Dhian Singh resented especially the
ascendancy of the royal favourite Chet Singh Bajva, a trusted courtier
who had also been Kharak Singh's tutor. The Dogas started a whispering
campaign against the Maharaja as well as against Chet Singh. It
was given out that both the Maharaja and his favourite were surreptitiously
planning to make over the Punjab to the British and surrender to
them six hands in every rupee of the State revenue and that the
Sikh army would be disbanded. To lend credence to these rumours,
some fake letters were prepared and discreetly intercepted. Gulab
Singh Dogra, Dhian Singh's elder brother, was charged to work upon
Kharak Singh's son, Kanvar Nau Nihal Singh, then travelling in his
company from Peshawar to Lahore. Misled by these fictitious tales,
the young prince became estranged from his father.
Matters came to a climax when, in October 1839,
Dhian Singh made a plot to assassinate Chet Singh. Early on the
morning of 9 October the conspirators entered the Maharaja's residence
in the Fort and assassinated Chet Singh in the presence of their
royal master, who vainly implored them to spare the life of his
favourite.
Kharak Singh was removed from the Fort and he
remained virtually a prisoner in the hands of Dhian Singh. Kanvar
Nau Nihal Singh took the reins of the government into his own hands,
but he was helpless against the machinations of his minister, who
continued to keep father and son separated from each other. Dhian
Singh subjected Kharak Singh to strict restraint upon the pretext
that he might not escape to the British territory. Doses of slow
poison were administered to the Maharaja, who was at last delivered
by death on 5 November 1840 from a lonely and disgraceful existence.
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