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This
section provides a list of important and prominent figures
from Anglo-Sikh History which have been listed in alphabetical
order, according to ethnicity and time period.
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Spanning the years 1748 to 1849 go back to the first invasion of India
by Ahmad Shah Durrani, although he must have heard of the Sikhs when
in 1739 he accompanied Nadir Shah, the Iranian invader, as a young
staff officer. Having occupied Lahore after a minor engagement fought
on 11 January 1748 during his first invasion of India, Ahmad Shah
advanced towards Sirhind to meet a Mughal army which he was informed
Was advancing from Delhi to oppose him. On the way he had two slight
skirmishes at Sarai Nur Din and at the Vairoval ferry, both in presentday
Amritsar district, With a Sikh jatha or fighting band under Jassa
Singh Ahluvalia. While lying in wait at Sirhind between 2 and 11 March
1748 for a Mughal force, Ala Singh, leader of the Malva Sikhs, cut
off his supplies of food and fodder. Ahmad Shah, defeated in the battle
of Manupur fought on 11 March, retraced his steps homewards. Sikhs
harassed the retreating invader between the Sutlej and the Chenab,
Charhat Singh Sukkarchakkia following him even up to the Indus, relieving
him of a number of weapons, horses and camels.
Ahmad Shah's subsequent invasions in a way helped the Sikhs to increase
and consolidate their power. Anticipating a second invasion towards
the close of 1748, the new Mughal governor of the Punjab, Mir Mu'in
ul-Mulk (Mir Mannu, in shortened form in Sikh chronicles), tried to
conciliate Sikhs through his minister, Diwan Kaura Mall, and granted
them one-fourth of the revenue of the parganah of Patti, but the truce
did not last long and during the second Durrani invasion (December
1749-February 1750), the Sikhs made bold to enter and plunder Lahore
itself. During Ahmad Shah's next invasion (December 1751-March 1752),
Kaura Mall again enlisted the help of several thousand Sikh warriors
under the command of Sangat Singh and Sukkha Singh of Mari Kambo.
The latter was killed in a sudden skirmish with the invaders. As a
result of this invasion the provinces of Lahore and Multan were annexed
to the Afghan empire, although Mir Mannu remained governor of these
provinces on Ahmad Shah Durrani's behalf. This meant that Sikhs had
now to contend with Afghans as well as with Mughals.
The disorder which overtook the Punjab following the death of Mir
Mannu in November 1753 opened the way for them to establish their
sway over vast tracts in the form of rakhi (q.v.) system under which
local populations sought their protection on payment of a portion
of their land revenue. During his fourth invasion (November 1756-April
1757), the Afghan invader had reached as far as the Mughal capital,
Delhi. The Sikhs preyed upon him during his onward march and, when
his son Prince Taimur was transporting the plundered wealth of Delhi
to Lahore, Ala Singh in concert with other Sikh sardars barred his
path at Sanaur, near Patiala, and robbed him of his treasures, and
again attacked and plundered him at Malerkotla. Prince Taimur gave
vent to his chagrin by destroying Sikh shrines at Kartarpur, 15 km
northwest of Jalandhar, and subjecting its residents to indiscriminate
massacre and plunder. Ahmad Shah, during his brief stay at Lahore,
sent out troops who sacked Amritsar and desecrated the sacred pool,
besides killing a large number of Sikhs. He left his son Taimur and
his general Jahan Khan in charge of the Punjab and himself retired
to Afghanistan. The two deputies were expelled from Punjab by Sikhs
in 1758 with the help of the Marathas and of Adina Beg Khan, who was
rewarded with the governorship of the province.
During Ahmad Shah's fifth invasion (October 1759-May 1761), while
the Marathas retired from the Punjab without resistance, the Sikhs
gave a battle to the invader in the neighbourhood of Lahore in which
the Afghan lost as many as 2,000. men, with their general Jahan Khan
wounded. The Maratha's dream of supremacy in north India was shattered
in the, third battle of Panipat (14 January 1761). The Sikhs on the
other hand were emboldened to raid Lahore in November 1760. They stayed
there for eleven days and the Afghan deputy appeased them with a present
of Rs 30,000 for sacramental karah prasad. They harassed the Afghan
chief of Chahar Mahal and sacked Jalandhar, Sirhind and Malerkotla.
In November 1761, they captured Lahore and struck their own coin.
Ahmad Shah, on hearing of these developments, hurried to the relief
of his deputies. Sikhs retreated as he marched upon them, but were
overtaken near Kup and Rahira villages, near Malerkotla, on the morning
of 5 February 1762. About 25,000 Sikhs were killed in the day-long
battle known in Sikh annals as Vadda Ghallughara or the great holocaust.
On his return he blew up the holy Harimandar at Amritsar with gunpowder.
The Sikhs retaliated with attacks on Sirhind in May 1762. They freely
roamed around Lahore during July-August 1762 and celebrated Divali
at Amritsar in defiance of the Shah who was still present in the Punjab.
After the departure of the Durrani in December 1762, Sikhs sacked
the Afghan principality of Kasur in May 1763, overran Jalandhar Doab
during June, defeated in November near Waziabad an expeditionary force
sent by Ahmad Shah and invested Malerkotla, killing its Afghan chief,
Bhikhan Khan (December 1763). They followed these successes with the
reduction of Morinda and Sirhind in January 1764. Zain Khan, the faujdar
or governor of Sirhind, was killed, and the territories of Sirhind
sarkar or district were appropriated by various Sikh misls or chiefships.
The Dal Khalsa Jio, as the confederated Sikh force was called, then
fell upon the territories of Najib ud-Daulah, a powerful Ruhila Afghan
chief and Ahmad Shah Durrani's regent in India. Ransacking Saharanpur
on 20 February 1764, they pushed on seizing Shamli, Kandhla, Muzaffarnagar,
Moradabad, Najibabad and several other towns. Najib ud-Daulah, unable
to meet the Sikhs in battle, paid them Rs 11,00,000, inducing them
to return to Punjab by the end of February 1764. While the Buddha
Dal, a division of the Dal Khalsa under Jassa Singh Ahluvalia, was
thus engaged in the Gangetic Doab, its younger counterpart, the Taruna
Dal, was active in the central and western Punjab. Lahore was attacked
in February 1764 and its governor, Kabuli Mall, saved it from plunder
only by paying a large sum to the Sikhs, by accepting a nominee of
Hari Singh of the Bhangi misl as a resident at his court and allowing
an agent of Sobha Singh of the Kanhaiya misl to receive customs duty
on all goods coming from the side of Multan. During April June 1764,
the Bhangi and Nakal sardars captured the Lamma country lying between
Lahore and Multan, and Charhat Singh Sukkarchakkia took Rohtas in
the north. Ahmad Shah Durrani came out again, in December 1764, but
harassed by Sikhs, he was forced to return homewards without reaching
Delhi. On his way back; realizing the futility of appointing his own
governors in the Punjab, he recognized Ala Singh of Patiala as the
ruling chief in Sirhind territory and bestowed upon him the title
of Raja, with tabl-o-'alam (drum and banner). He, however, sent back
Kabuli Mall to resume governorship of Lahore, but before the latter
could reach the city, the Sikhs had occupied it (17 April 1765). Ahmad
Shah made yet another (his last) bid to regain Punjab and Delhi during
the winter of 1766-67, but failed. He died at Qandahar on 23 October
1772.
Ahmad Shah's son and successor, Taimur Shah (1746-93), attempted five
successive incursions, but could not reach Lahore. His successor,
Shah Zaman, also made several attempts to regain a foothold in India
and did enter Lahore twice (January 1797; December 1798) but was forced
to evacuate it within a few weeks on each occasion.
Ranjit Singh, the chief of the Sukkarchakkia misl of the Dal Khalsa
was destined finally to clear Punjab of the Afghans. He became master
of Lahore on 7 July 1799. The provinces of Kashmir and Multan were
still ruled by Afghans satraps and Peshawar across the Indus was directly
under Kabul which, however, was weakened by internal dissensions.
Shah Zaman, was deposed and blinded in 1800 and the throne was seized
by his brother, Mahmud Shah, with the help of a Barakzai chief, Fateh
Khan who emerged as the king-maker. In 1803, Fateh Khan discarded
Mahmud in favour of Shuja' ul-Mulk, better known as Shah Shuja', another
brother of Shah Zaman, but in 1809 Mahmud was reinstated and Shah
Shuja' shifted to Peshawar. The latter met Maharaja Ranjit Singh at
Khushab in 1810 in the hope of obtaining Sikh help. He tried to recover
his kingdom with the help of 'Ata Muhammad Khan, governor. of Kashmir,
who had not accepted the authority of Wazir Fateh Khan and had been
ruling the province independently since 1809. The attempt failed and
ended in Shah Shuja' taken captive in Kashmir and his family including
the ill-fated Shah Zaman seeking refuge in Lahore. Wafa Begam, the
senior wife of Shah Shuja', approached Ranjit Singh through his trusted
courtiers, Diwan Mohkam Chand and Faqir 'Aziz ud-Din to have her husband
rescued from Kashmir. Wazir Fateh Khan also solicited the Maharaja's
aid in the reduction of Kashmir promising him one-third of the spoils.
The joint expedition launched in 1812 was not a complete success.
Fateh Khan refused to part with the promised share of the booty, but
the Sikh general Mohkam Chand succeeded in bringing Shah Shuja' to
Lahore and Ranjit Singh acquired the coveted diamond, Koh-i-Nur. Kashmir
too was conquered and annexed to the Sikh kingdom in 1819.
Multan which had been retaken from the Sikhs by Taimur Shah in 1780
had been placed under his nephew Nawab Muzaffar Khan. Repeated expeditions
sent by Ranjit Singh against him (in 1802,1805,1807,1810, 1812 and
1815) had proved abortive. Multan ultimately fell to the Sikhs in
June 1818. On 19 November of that year, Maharaja Ranjit
Singh entered Peshawar, the eastern citadel o£ the rulers of
Kabul. With the conquest of Dera Ghazi Khan in 1820 and Dera Isma'il
Khan in 1821, the frontiers of the Sikh kingdom had been pushed far
to the west of the River Indus. The Pathans (Afghans) of this frontier
region, however, had not fully accepted Sikh authority. In 1826, they
under the leadership of Sayyid Ahmad, a Wahabi fanatic, rose in jihad
or holy war against the Sikhs. The campaign, a prolonged one, came
to an end with the death of the Sayyid in May 1831. In 1835, Dost
Muhammad Khan, the youngest and the most energetic of the Barakzai
brothers, who had supplanted the Durrani dynasty and become Amir (lord,
chief or king) of Kabul in 1825, advanced up to Khaibar. Pass threatening
to recover Peshawar. In 1836 Hari Singh Nalva, the Sikh general who
along with Prince Nau Nihal Singh was guarding that frontier, built
a chain of forts including one at Jamrud at the eastern end of the
Khaibar Pass to defend it. Dost Muhammad erected a fort at 'Ali Masjid
at the other end. In the beginning of 1837, as Prince, Nau Nihal Singh
returned to Lahore to get married and the Maharaja and his court got
busy with preparations for the wedding, Dost Muhammad Khan sent a
25,000-strong force, including a large number of local irregulars
and equipped with 18 heavy guns, to invest Jamrud. The Sikh garrison
there had only 600 men and a few light artillery pieces. The Afghans
besieged the fort and cut off its water supply while a detachment
was sent to the neighbouring Sikh fort of Shabqadar to prevent any
help from that direction. Maha Singh, the garrison commander of Jamrud,
kept the invaders at bay for four days and managed meanwhile to send
a desperate appeal for help to Hari Singh Nalva at Peshawar. Nalva
rose from his sickbed and rushed to Jamrud. In the final battle fought
on 30 April 1837, the Afghans were driven away, but Hari Singh Nalva
was mortally wounded. In 1838, the Sikh monarch became a party to
the Tripartite Treaty as a result of which Shah Shuja' was reinstalled
on the throne of Kabul in August 1889 with British help. Dost Muhammad
Khan was exiled to Calcutta in November 1839, but was restored to
his former position after the murder of Shah Shuja' in April 1842.
He thereafter maintained cordial relations with the Lahore Darbar.
The second Anglo-Sikh war reawakened Dost Muhammad's ambition to seize
Peshawar and the trans-Indus territories, although overtly he sympathized
with the Sikhs and even hired out an irregular Afghan contingent of
1500 horse to Chatar Singh, leader of Sikh resistance against the
British.
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