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Was one of the two main divisions of Dal Khalsa, the confederated
army of the Sikhs during the eighteenth century, the other one being
the Buddha Dal (army of the elders). These Dals came into existence
in 1734 when, during a truce with Zakariya Khan, the Mugh_al governor
of the Punjab, different roving bands of the Sikhs were concentrated
in Amritsar.
Taruna Dal was subdivided into five jathas or
fighting groups of approximately 1300 to 2,000 men each, mostly
mounted. The first was commanded by Bhai Deep Singh, commonly known,
after he met with a martyr's death, as Baba Deep Singh Shahid. It
was called Shahidanvala Jatha. The second, commanded by Bhai Karam
Singh and Dharam Singh of Amritsar, came to be known as Amritsarian
da Jatha. The third led by Baba Binod Singh and his son Baba Kahn
Singh was called Sahibzadian da Jatha or Guru-Ansi Jatha. The fourth
Jatha was commanded by Bhai Dasaundha Singh of Kot Buddha and the
fifth by Bhai Bir Singh Ranghreta. Both Buddha and Taruna Dals accepted
Nawab Kapur Singh as their overall commander. It was determined
that while Buddha Dal remained at Amritsar to look after the shrines,
Taruna Dal would be available for action where needed.
However, Zakariya Khan ended the peace pact
in 1735 and resumed his repressive policy against the Sikhs so that
both Dals had to abandon Amritsar and seek safety in distant hills
and forests. Taruna Dal retired into the Sivalik hill states of
Kahlur, Hindur and Sirmur which fell within the jurisdiction of
Sirhind sarkar in the Subah of Delhi. From there it launched out
intermittently to raid the territory of Manjh Rajputs of Jalandhar
Doab. Once during 1736, crossing into the Majha country, it defeated
the gashti fauj (roving army) sent from Lahore, and pillaging the
Riarki area (present district of Gurdaspur) went back to its hilly
haunts.
During the summer of 1739, the Taruna Dal harassed
and plundered the richly laden baggage train of the Persian invader
Nadir Shah who, while returning home after a hearty plunder of Delhi
and the Punjab, was keeping close to the hills with a view to avoiding
the heat of the plains. The Sikhs followed the invaders up to Akhnur
on the River Chenab where they rescued from their hands a large
number of Hindu girls and safely restored them to their families.
This chivalrous act and their daring attacks on Nadir Shah, contrasting
with the abject surrender of the rulers of Delhi and Lahore, endeared
the Sikhs to the general populace. The two Dals now returned to
the Punjab and started assembling at Amritsar on the occasions of
Baisakhi and Divali. At the Sarbatt (lit. entire) Khalsa meeting
on Baisakhi, 29 March 1748, a major reorganization of the Dal Khalsa
was put in hand. The entire force was divided into 11 misls or divisions.
Six of these misls were assigned to the Buddha Dal while the rest
formed the Taruna Dal. The latter comprised Sukkarchakkia misl under
Sardar Charhat Singh (grandfather of Maharaja Ranjit Singh) Bhangis
under Sardar Hari Singh ; Kanhaiyas under Sardar Jai Singh; Nakais
under Sardar Hira Singh ; and Ramgarhias under Sardar Jassa Singh
Ramgarhia, as distinguished from his namesake of the Ahluvalia clan,
who was chosen as commander-in-chief of the Dal Khalsa as a whole.
Taruna Dal continued to participate in joint expeditions of the
two Dals, but its specific sphere of operation lay to the north
of the Rivers Sutlej and Beas.
After the conquest of Sirhind in January 1764,
the misls divided the territory among themselves and started adding
to their respective domains. From among the Taruna Dal only one
sarkar of the Bhangi misl, Rai Singh, had participated in the partition
of Sirhind territory. He had occupied 204 villages around Buria
and Jagadhri. The remaining sardars of the Taruna Dal had their
eyes fixed on the northern Doabs of the Punjab proper. The Bhangis
controlled a major part of the city of Lahore and extended their
hegemony over Multan and subsequently occupied Jhang, Khushab and
Chiniot in the West and Sialkot and Gujrat in the east. The Kanhaiyas
ruled over the area comprising a major part of the present Gurdaspur
district and Mukeriati tahsil of Hoshiarpur district. The territory
of the Ramgarhias lay on both sides of the River Beds and included
villages around Miani and Urmur Tanda in Jalandhar Doab. They also
held sway over the hill states of Chamba, Nurpur Jasvan and Haripur.
In 1776, they were defeated by the combined forces of the Kanhaiya
misl and Raja Sansar Chand Katoch of Kangra.
The Sukkarchakkia misl under Sardar Charhat
Singh established itself around Gujranwala which they made their
headquarters and extended their territory up to Rolntas beyond the
River jehlum ; Charhat Sifgh's grandson, Maharaja Ranjit Singh (1780-1839)
subdued the other misls and became the ruler of the entire Punjab
from the Satluj to the Khaibar.
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