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Sohan Lal Suri is famous for his monumental work in Persian, ' Umdat
ut-Twarikh, a chronicle of Sikh times comprising five daftars or volumes.
Little is known about Sohan Lal's early life except that he was the
son of Lala Ganpat Rai, a munshi or clerk successively under Sardar
Charhat Singh and Sardar Mahan Singh of the Sukkarchakkia misl. Ganpat
Rai had kept a record of important events of his own time which he
passed on to his son around 1811 enjoining upon him to continue the
work of writing a history of the Punjab.
Lala Sohan Lal who, according to his own statement,
was well versed in Persian, Arabic, mathematics, astronomy and numerology,
was inspired to take to historiography by, besides the example of
his father, Sujan Rai Bhandari's Khulasat ut Twarikh which covers
the period from Hindushahi rulers of the tenth and eleventh centuries
to 1704 in the reign of Aurangzeb. While acknowledging his debt
to Sujan Rai Bhandari, Sohan Lal Suri mentions another motive that
prompted him to write his book. In the beginning of the first daftar
of ' Umdat ut-Twarikh, he remarked referring to himself in the third
person : "In fact the purpose and
reason for which he undertook the novel and noteworthy compilation
was that ever since the time of the Sultanate the writing of such
works was looked upon as the proof of literary ability, which distinguished
a scholar from an ordinary man. Learned men received due recognition
and encouragement from the rulers of the time. . . "
The sources for his voluminous Twarikh, 7,000 pages of manuscript
in shikasta or running Persian script covering the period from the
birth of Guru Nanak in 1469 to the annexation of the Punjab in 1849,
are his own knowledge of contemporary events, the notes bequeathed
to him by his father and the historical or legendary material bearing
on the subject available to him.
Besides his magnum opus, the ' Umdat ut-Twarikh,
Lala Sohan Lal Suri wrote 'Ibrat Namah, lit. an account that teaches
a lesson. It is a small poetical composition on the tragic murders
of Maharaja Sher Singh, Raja Dhian Singh and the Sandhanvalia Sardars
and their associates in September 1843. The title of another work
of his, Selections from Daftar II, is deceptive. The manuscript
contains brief notes on courtiers, rajas, diwans, learned men, saints
and ascetics living in the year 1831 ; a genealogical table of the
author's family up to 1836 ; a funeral oration on the death of his
father, an account of the Sutlej chiefs, a description of the institutions
of the English; a brief description of the author's meeting with
Captain Wade, later Colonel Sir Claude Martin Wade, British political
agent at Ludhiana, and copies of certain letters and testimonials.
He is also said to have written treatises on mathematics, astronomy
and geometry.
Faqir 'Aziz ud-Din, Maharaja Ranjlt Singh's
favoured minister, introduced Sohan Lal to Captain Wade as a historian
of the Sikh court. At Captain Wade's request the Maharaja allowed
Sohan Lal to visit Ludhiana, where he used to read out to his host
from the ' Umdat ut-Twarikh twice a week. He also presented the
latter with a copy of the work which is still preserved in the Royal
Asiatic Society Library in London.
After the annexation of the Punjab to British
dominions in 1849, Lala Sohan Lal Suri was awarded a jagir worth
Rs. 1,000 per annum in the village of Manga, in Amritsar district,
to which he probably retired to pass his remaining years.
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