Monday, February 11, 2013
MAHARAJA RANJIT SINGH, THE RISE AND FALL OF THE SIKH EMPIRE - CAPT AJIT VADAKAYIL
I am afraid that this post will re-write history, in a manner which shocks the denizens of the glorious Punjab empire of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, called tongue in cheek by Western historians as " The Napoleon of the East".
To understand this
post, you must know that British East India Company ( shipping company)
owner , a German Jew Rothschild , called the shots in India and this
planet ever since they laid the hands on the gold of Tipu Sultan in 1799.
You must punch into
Google search TIPU SULTAN UNMASKED VADAKAYIL, to understand how the enormous
gold of Tipu Sultan was shipped away in British East Company ships.
This is the
base gold asset of the modern banking cartel who rules the planet via the
Bilderberg Club.
The Tipu Sultan modus
operandi was very simple.
Imagine a hyper thief
and a super thief. The hyper thief does things using his cunning and devious
brains in style. He refuses to dirty his hands. He allows the super thief to
steal from all the hundreds of banks in Mumbai, all the time watching him using
his secret agents.This work is dirty, sweaty and without honour.
Once the super
thief has looted all the banks and made a nice pile in one single place, the
hyper thief just swipes it away in a jiffy , after murdering the super thief .
Nobody even knows such a hyper thief existed .
End of story.
Maharaja Ranjit Singh
made the mistake of trusting Jewish generals ( double agents of Rothschild )
who pulled the carpet from under the feet of Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte at
battle of Waterloo in 1815.
Below: Maharaja Ranjit Singh
Below: Maharaja Ranjit Singh
Today even
Wikipedia accepts that there was indeed a Rothschild conspiracy, wherein
Napoleon was tricked . Not only that, the wealth of the not so bright John Bull Englishmen, were also swiped away overnight.
Punch into Google
search NAPOLEON , THE UNKNOWN SIDE VADAKAYIL
Just like how
Napoleon's personal Jewish doctor betrayed his trust, by medical trickery , same way Maharaja Ranjit
Singh's personal Romanian Jewish doctor in the payroll of Rothschild , and
tutored by the personal homeopathy German Jew doctor of the mighty Rothschild
himself, did away with the Maharaja.
The simple Sikhs must
know the truth. All this will cause a great deal of heart ache.
The British have accused the simple but brave Sikhs of petty politics and squabbling. This is a lie.
Every conspiracy was hatched by the owner of British East India Company, micro managed by their king pin agent, the Jewish Romanian personal doctor of Ranjit Singh.
These things will never ever be written by the main stream media , monopolized by big brother.
Every conspiracy was hatched by the owner of British East India Company, micro managed by their king pin agent, the Jewish Romanian personal doctor of Ranjit Singh.
These things will never ever be written by the main stream media , monopolized by big brother.
For people whose
knowledge of Punjab Sikh Empire history, is purely pedestrian. See below , the disgraceful fall of the glorious Sikh Empire.
1801 April 12,
Coronation of Ranjit Singh as Maharaja, formal beginning of the Sikh Empire
1801 to June 27, 1839, Reign of Maharaja Ranjit Singh . From 1801 to 1839
he lead the Sikh Khalsa Army , and expanded
the Sikh.. ( born December 1807- died
September 16, 1843)
Maharaja Ranjit Singh
died at the age on 59 , due to a 4th stroke. He had 3 strokes before that.
The following were the
naïve and gullible successors of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, who never even knew the
cunning Rothschild conspiracy to snatch their wealth and their empire.
The following ruled over the
Sikh Kingdom for a period of less than ten years from 1839 to 1849 A.D, after the death of Maharaja Ranjit Singh. :
1. Maharaja Kharak
Singh, (Elder son of Maharaja Ranjit Singh)
Birth February 20, 1801,
Accession June 27, 1839
Deposed in a coup October
8, 1839, Poisoned to death November 5, 1840
Below : Maharaja Kharak Singh
2. Maharaja Naunihal
Singh, (son of Maharaja Kharak Singh)
Birth February 11, 1820,
Became a Maharaja October 8, 1839 (De-facto ruler)
Death November 6, 1840,
( Murdered with stone pounded on his head ).
Below: Maharaja Naunihal Singh
3. Maharaja Sher Singh.,
(Second son of Maharaja Ranjit Singh)
Occupied the
throne November 9, 1840, for 23 days
only, Dethroned December 2, 1840
Below : Maharaja Sher Singh
4. Maharani Chand Kaur
., (Widow of Maharaja Kharak Singh)
Proclaimed Malika Mukaddas
December 2, 1840 or Queen Empress.
Capituated January 17,
1841, Deposed January 18, 1841, Killed
June 9, 1842
Below: Maharani Chand Kaur
5. Maharaia Sher Singh,
(Again returned to power)
Birth 1807
Accession January 18, 1841, Killed September 15, 1843
6. Maharaja Duleep
Singh, (Youngest son of Maharaja Ranjit Singh)
Birth September 6, 1838, Mounted the throne.
September 15, 1843
* Deposed March 29,
1849. * Exiled to England December 21, 1849
Death (in Paris-France)
October 22, 1893
Below: Boy king Maharaja Duleep Singh with his mother Jindan Kaur.
Boy king at the age of
5, Maharaja Duleep Singh’s godmother was Kohinoor snatching Queen Victoria of
England .
Below : the priceless Kohinoor diamond ( presented to the English Queen by Jew Rothschild , the owner of British East India Company )
Below: Queen Victoria
Maharaja Duleep Singh was
converted to Christianity married twice--first to a honey pot Bamba Müller ( half German Jew -
half Ethiopian ) and then to a honey pot
chambermaid Ada Douglas Wetherill .
He had eight children
in total, six from his first marriage to Bamba, the half breed daughter of a
German banker.:
Prince Victor Duleep
Singh
Prince Frederick Duleep
Singh
Prince Albert Edward
Duleep Singh
Princess Bamba Duleep
Singh
Princess Catherine
Duleep Singh
He also had two
children from his second marriage to Ada Douglas Wetherill:
Princess Pauline
Alexandra Duleep Singh
Princess Ada Irene
Beryl Duleep Singh
Below: Duleep Singh's attractive daughter Pauline Alexandra
Below: Duleep Singh's attractive daughter Pauline Alexandra
All
the above eight children of
Maharaja Duleep Singh died without children, (which is astonishing and
quite mysterious), ending the direct line of the Sikh Royalty.
WHEN A INDIAN YUV-RAJ IN
WAITING MARRIES A WHITE CHRISTIAN FOREIGNER OUT OF LOVE ( SIC) , IN A FOREIGN LAND , IT IS USUALLY MADE TO
HAPPEN, BY POWERFUL FORCES.
SUCH A WOMAN IS CALLED A HONEY POT. ( KNOW OF
ANY SUCH RECENT LIVING HONEY POT ?!?)
And Maharaja Duleep
Singh is allegedly NOT Ranjit Singh’s biological child..
Below: Maharaja Duleep Singh
Maharaja Ranjit Singh , who just recovered
from his 3rd stroke , was paralysed below the waist, and was NOT in
a any prime physical condition to have a boner and penetrate and seed Rani
Jindan Kaur , when Duleep Singh was conceived, as per his doctor.
His attractive mother
Maharani Jindan Kaur was accused of having a torrid affair with the handsome Raja Lal
Singh, behind Ranjit Singh’s back.
Below-Jindan Kaur
Maharani Jindan Kaur, did NOT have royal blood.
She was
the daughter of Sardar Manna Singh Aulak, the Royal Kennel Keeper at the Court
of Lahore. She was the ninth and the last regular wife he married, according to
Sikh customs in 1835, and who bore him his last son Duleep Singh ( sic ) in 1838, just 10 months before his death in
1839.
The British called her
the Messalina of the Punjab-- comparing her to
Messalina, the wife of the Roman Emperor, Claudius, who was a wanton and licentious
seductress
Manna used to perch his pretty girl child Jindan kaur on his shoulder, and run alongside the
Maharaja’s palki. He used to joke with Ranjit Singh, whenever ever he saw him ogling his attractive
but underage daughter “ Sir, when will you
marry my daughter and make her your queen?”
One day to his utter surprise
Ranjit Singh relied “Very well, bring
her to my palace !”
She made all the
other women of Ranjit Singh very jealous. Till the age of 13, his Prime minister Dhian
Singh was in charge of her.
In the Memoirs of
Alexander Gardner” Ranjit Singh took
Jindan into his harem where the little smouldering beauty used to gambol, and
frolic and tease and captivated the Maharaja in a way that smote the real wives
with jealousy.
In 1830, with the object of calming the jealousy of his wives, the Maharaja sent Jindan, then thirteen, to her godfather at Amritsar where her "amorous flirtatious glances and coquettish pranks continued attracting lustful attentions of no small number of erotic truants”.
In 1830, with the object of calming the jealousy of his wives, the Maharaja sent Jindan, then thirteen, to her godfather at Amritsar where her "amorous flirtatious glances and coquettish pranks continued attracting lustful attentions of no small number of erotic truants”.
A lot of Sikhs are very proud of this Maharani-- whose shady history is alleged to be a pack of lies.
Lal Singh was a Brahmin from Jhelum and entered
the service of the Sikh Darbar in 1832 as a lowly writer in the treasury, on the recommendation of the Dogra Prime
minister Dhian Singh.
Below - Lal Singh
It is alleged that in December 1844, Maharani
Jindan Kaur broke all pretense and appointed her lover Lal Singh as a member of the
Council of Regency under her. He was
made Wazir on 8 November 1845.
He was also personally teaching his own son Duleep
Singh, as per his mother Jindan Kaur’s her wishes. Lal Singh had designs for his son to be the future
emperor of Punjab and Kashmir, and hence he mollycoddled the British, who used
him like the proverbial curry leaf ..
One
fine day he got careless and the British caught him . They found his letter giving secret
instructions to Shaikh Imam ud Din, the governor of Kashmir, to thwart the
occupation by Gulab Singh Dogra ( brother of Dhian Singh ) of the valley granted him by the British under
a treaty signed on 16 March 1846.
Below : Gulab Singh Dogra
Lal
Singh was formally tried by a British Court of Inquiry and found guilty. He was
removed from his high office and expelled from the Punjab with a pension of
12,000 rupees per annum.
He was sent to
Agra and then to Dehra Dun, where he died in 1866.
I will NOT eulogize Ranjit
Singh, but will attempt to shed true light.
As a child Ranjit Singh
suffered from smallpox as a child which resulted in the loss of one eye, and
his face was deeply pitted , and it was NOT a pretty sight.
He was also a short man, considering Sikhs are
tall and huge people. But was was
extremely athletic and fast. He was uneducated, could neither read nor write, but
had a marvellous memory.
He was a born leader
and evoked intense loyalty among his subjects and his army consisting of Sikhs,
Rajputs, Hindus and Muslims. He never admitted the possibility of failure, and
hence held the "awe factor".
Ranjit Singh’s father
Mahan Singh rose to head the Sukerchakya Misl and by marrying Raj Kaur, daughter
of Chief of Jind, Gajpat Singh, made a powerful alliance.
Ranjeet Singh saw action at the battle front, when he was hardly 12 years old, when he accompanied his father Mahan Singh on a campaign. During the long siege Mahan Singh fell seriously ill, and knowing very well that his end was approaching, anointed his son Ranjeet Singh as his successor and chief of the Sukerchakia Misl, by applying saffron paste on his forehead.
The army of Sukerchakia
Misl commanded by young Ranjeet Singh, achieving an astonishing victory against all
odds, that amazed everybody. The news of
the sons victory reached the ailing Mahan Singh who heaved a sigh of relief
just before he breathed his last in 1792. .
Once while on a hunting
expedition, Ranjit Singh was attacked by one of his father's enemies Hashmat
Khan, who had old scores to settle with his father. Out of fear Ranjeet Singh's
horse stopped in its tracks, and Khan took the opportunity and wounded Ranjit
Singh with his sword. In spite of being wounded Ranjeet Singh moved like greased
lightning and with a powerful stroke of his sword cut off Khan's head.
13 year old Ranjeet
Singh then picked up the severed head of Hashmat Khan with his spear while on
horse back – and this was a tale while would be told a million times from a
thousand lips.
Much later he would
demonstrate his prowess in “tent pegging” to the British ladies , ( on popular
request ) , by making a soldier hold a lime in his palm. He galloped past at full
speed and speared the tiny lime with the sharp tip of his long spear. All noted that the soldier’s palm was
unharmed, nor was he in a state of fear. The horse was literally an extension of his body.
Thus
Ranjeet Singh had
demonstrated his prowess as an excellent horseman and skilled fighter at
a
relatively young age, and his fame spread far and wide. He was a master
in guerilla
tactics, night attacks with very little men , pursuing withdrawing
forces, and inflicting crushing and morale shattering defeats.
Maharaja Ranjit Singh
is included in the list of "Undefeated Military Commanders"
Ranjit Singh mobilized
an army of 25,000 men that included Sikhs, Hindus as well as Muslims, and
marched towards Lahore . In the morning
of July 7, 1799, Ranjeet Singh breached the
walls of the city, and occupied a large part of it without any
resistance. The Afghan forces and their
allies either surrendered or were killed.
Immediately after taking possession of the city, Ranjeet Singh paid an
visit to the Badshahi Mosque, to pay his respects, a gesture that won the
hearts of the Muslims of the City. Thus Ranjeet Singh at the age of 21 was
crowned the Maharajah of the Punjab on April 12, 1801. The coronation being
conducted by Sahib Singh Bedi, a descendant of Guru Nanak Dev, the founder of
the Sikh religion.
Ranjit Singh made Lahore the capital of his kingdom. In
1802, he took control of the holy city of Amritsar. The following years he
spent fighting the Afghans and driving them out of the Punjab. He then embarked
on a campaign of conquest, capturing Pashtun territory that included Peshawar,
the province of Multan in southern Punjab, Jammu and Kashmir, and the hill
states north of Anandpur Sahib, the largest of which was Kangra.
He extended his territories upto
Ladakh and China. Maharajah Ranjeet Singh was a devout Sikh, but opted for a
secular form of government where equal opportunities were provided for all
irrespective of religion
The maharajah had a
harem of 46 wives. These could be
segregated into 4 classes. Firstly 9 of his wives he had married in the orthodox
Sikh manner. These wives were considered a cut above other wives. Ranjit Singh
also married 9 rich widows by what in Sikh custom is called casting the Chaddar
( blanket) over them.
The Chaddar is a peculiar custom in the Punjab where a
widow is married to the man who casts a ‘Chaddar’ on the woman after which she
becomes his wife. Ranjit had 9 such attractive
widows as wives. He also had a third
category of courtesan wives who were all Muslim. . The remaining were gorgeous women
whom he had fancied and were concubines. Fakir Nuruddin, the Home Minister, was
incharge of Maharaja’s palaces and the
harem.
The
Maharajah was not
averse to going to war to capture a beautiful woman or princess. In 1804
he
learnt of the beauty of 2 daughters Guddan and Raj Banso of Raja Sansar
Chand of Kangra. He wished to marry them and sent his marriage
proposal.
The Raja turned it down as he could not agree both his daughters
marrying the same man—and that too ugly by Rajput standards. Ranjit mounted an expedition and defeated Raja
Sansar Chand. He married both the
princesses at Jwalalmukhi, a holy place 30 km from Kangra. Jwalalmukhi has one of the most holy temples
of Hinduism dedicated to the ‘Goddess of Light.
Ranjit Singh spent the wedding night servicing
these two girls on the same bed till morning, fortified with aphrodisiacs. Guddan and Rani Raj Banso, the daughters of
Raja Sansar Chand were the most stately , dignified and charming women in the
Maharajah's entire harem.
Much later one of these
Rajput sisters , Maharani Mahtab Devi Sahiba ( Guddan ) who refused to marry this
ugly pock faced man , would hold his
head in her lap and calmly burn herself ( sati ) on her husband’s , Ranjit
Singh’s funeral pyre. Eleven of his
wives would burn themselves.
His
youngest wife, who was also his 9th regular wife, Maharani Jindan Kaur did not
commit Sati, saying she had a 10-month
old baby Duleep Singh to feed and look after.
Probably she had future royal designs for him
.
One of the dancing girls girls called Kaulan (Lotus) was given seven villages
as jagir, but despite this wealth she was one of the ladies who committed sati
on Ranjit Singh’s pyre.
Today, the ashes of
these eleven wives are placed in tiny urns, surrounding the large marble urn,
in the shape of a lotus, containing Maharajah Ranjeet Singh's ashes, in the
center of the tomb, the Samadhi of Ranjeet Singh, at Lahore.
Ranjit was also fond of
dance and music. He had collected a troupe of 125 dancing girls from his
kingdom as dancers. The girls were chosen from about the age of 14-16 and
retired at 25 after which they were given to the courtiers of Ranjit Singh or
the foreign generals who served in Ranjit’s army as a reward. The favorite
girls dancer was a drop dead beautiful girl named ‘Billoo’ ( Bashiran ) who
Ranjit loved passionately because of her blue eyes.
Carried away by the
lifestyle of Lahore, the mercenary Jewish Italian General Jean Baptist Ventura,
one of the foreign commanders of Ranjit Singh’s army, too kept 50 dancing
girls! The elite of the ‘Lahore Darbar’
all were measured by the quality of their harem, for it depicted their power
and prestige.
The sheer number of
courtesans in Lahore in the Sikh era has never been rivalled. They were
interested in the arts, in music, in the finest things in life. With the coming
of the British, bringing women to sell in Lahore was banned and all women
living outside the wedlock as courtesans and keeps were asked to leave the
city. Many then decided to marry their masters.
Ranjit Singh had heard
of a legendary horse named As-i-Leila. This horse belonged to Dost Mohammed or
Yaar Mohammed who were the chiefs of the Orakazi Muslim tribes. The horse was a
black stallion of Persian origin. When Ranjit Singh heard of the horse he
demanded it from Yaar Mohammed. On his refusal he ordered General Jean Baptist
Ventura to mount an offensive against the Tribes.
In 1830 Yaar Mohammed was
defeated by Ventura who threatened to behead him in case the horse was not
handed over to his lord and Master Ranjit Singh. Later Yar Mohammed himself was
killed by his tribesmen and Ranjit Singh anointed his brother as the chief. The
horse was carried to Lahore in a special wagon and escorted by a large
contingent of him Sikh army
One of Ranjit Singh’s favoured
queens, was Moran, ( Gul Bahar begum ) a dancing girl of Amritsar, with whom he
fell passionately in love at first sight when he was just twenty-two in 1832.. Ranjit Singh accepted all the conditions
of Moran’s father to marry her as per
custom of the courtesan’s family.
Moran
had had danced before British Governor General, Lord William Bentinck, at Ropar
in October 1831. She rode with the Maharaja on the same
elephant, sat in the darbar without veil , while she fondled Ranjit Singh.. Ranjit Singh went to see Moran on arrival in Amritsar,
rather than first paying his respects at the Darbar Sabib, as a consequence of
which he had to face the wrath of the jathedar of the Akal Takht.
He subsequently visited the Golden Temple in
an act of contrition for marrying a lady whose status did not match his own. Akali
Phula Singh reprimanded Maharaja Ranjit Singh and he presented himself at the
Akal Takhat to receive the ‘tankhah’ imposed by the Jathedar, by baring his
back to receive the lashes.
Much later the
British agents of Rothschild operating in Lahore in those days chose to operated
through Moran , causing him 4 strokes , the last one final. Unfortunately Ranjit Singh never suspected
Moran and even got gold coins struck in her name, samples of which can be seen
even today in the Lahore Museum.. She had the ability to extract state secrets
from Ranjit Singh while having sex.
When Moran died, the Ranjit
Singh decided to favour another courtesan by the name of Jugnoo Begum. She was
a very beautiful woman, but did not have the wit of Mooran, and soon the
maharaja found her boring. He then found another beauty from Amritsar, a woman
Moran had once predicted would win his heart one day.
Her
name was Gul Begum, and the proud Gul
demanded that he not touch her before he walked bare-foot from Lahore to
Amritsar to wed her. The maharaja knew well that she would not bend, and
so he
did as Gul Begum had demanded. It was
Gul Begum who looked after the maharaja when he fell ill. She smiled as
she sat in the pyre in which Ranjit Singh was cremated. So looks like
his barefoot walk did some magic.
His consumption of
alcohol mixed with crushed pearls was excessive and would contribute to his
early death. Emily Eden (sister of Lord
Auckland, the then governor general of India) wrote, “Ranjit produced some of
his wine, a sort of liquid fire, that none of our strong spirits approach and,
in general, Europeans cannot swallow more than a drop of it.”
Among the more
important of his regular wives married according to Sikh customs, were Mehtab
Kaur of the Kanhia Misl, the daughter of Rani Sada Kaur, whom he married, when
he was 16 years old, in the year 1796.
Rani Mehtab Kaur gave birth to three sons; the eldest Ishar Singh died
young at 1½years of age. The second and third sons were twins, Sher Singh and
Tara Singh. Sher Singh was the strongest claimant to the throne after Maharajah
Ranjeet Singh, being the eldest surviving son of the senior most wife of the
king.
Ranjit
Singh’s mother did NOT get
along with the mother ( Sada Kaur ) of his wife Mehtab Kaur. Mehtab
Kaur was a vain and haughty woman. Sada Kaur took her daughter Mehtab
Kaur away
with her, where two princes Sher Singh and Tara Singh were born, who
thus lived
away from their father. Ranjit Singh
killed his mother on sensing infidelity to his dead father. Nobody
writes or
talks about this.
His second wife was Raj
Kaur of Nakai Misl, the daughter of Khazan Singh Nakai, whom he married in
1798, at the age of 18 years. Rani Raj
Kaur gave birth to a son Kharak Singh in 1801 who became the heir-apparent to
Maharajah Ranjeet Singh, being the Maharajah's eldest son.
Prince Kharak Singh
was was utterly lacking in ambition and
worldly sense. Though he was trained as heir-apparent and was sent on some
military expeditions, his real interest lay in reading the Granth and sitting
in the company of holy men. On top of that he was addicted to Opium.
Ranjit Singh’s
passionate love for horses can be judged from the fact that he had more than
1200 horses in his stable, 1000 reserved for him personally. Riding was his
favourite exercise. Whenever he was burdened with private or state matters, he
would abruptly call for a horse, saddled, bridled and go for a long ride. The
vanity he lacked about his own appearance was made up in appearance of his
horses. They were decked in most expensive and gorgeous trappings.
Famous were
Gauharbar, Sufaid Pari, Laili – all of Persian breed. There is a fairy
tale-like story about Laili for which many expeditions were made and it cost him
sixty lakhs of rupees and 1200 soldiers! He used to take pride of this possession and
exhibit to his foreign visitors.
Another marvel was his bungalow on wheels – decorated, furnished and pulled by eight mighty and richly caparisoned elephants.
One of these horses
would be his undoing. His Jewish Romanian chemist, Dr. John Martin Honigberger ,
who was responsible for mixing his gunpowder,
infected the leg of his favourite horse causing an ulcer.
Below: Honigberger
He got into the good
books of Ranjit Singh by offering to cure the horse and injected the anti-dote of
whatever he had infected the leg with. Later he assumed the role of Ranjit
Singh’s personal doctor. He was responsible for preparing all these aphrodisiac
potions with crushed pearls . He treated the Maharaja by dispensing “Dulcamara”
in wine and galvanic cell electric shocks.
This Romanian Jew was
an agent of Rothschild. He took his orders from Rothschild’s personal
homeopathy doctor, the German Jew Dr Friedrich Samuel Hahnemann, who is known as “the
father of Homeopathy” ( sic ).
Below:- Hahnemann
Dr. John
Martin Honigberger had scrounged around in India for ancient vedic homeopathy texts
, which he delivered to his boss in Paris in 1834. The fact that water holds
memory is written in our vedic texts . What the hell is “tirtham” and the holy water in a Maharishi's lota?
Following the July
Revolution of 1830 that saw Louis Philippe come to power in France , James de
Rothschild put together the loan package to stabilize the finances of the new
government and a huge second banking loan in 1834— all wealth stolen from India. In gratitude for his services to the nation,
Louis Philippe elevated him to a grand officer of the Legion of Honor.
Here is the golden throne of Ranjit Singh. He was a simple man and did
NOT sit on it too often. Even when he sat on it, it was in a cross
legged fashion.
Ranjit singh was led
into the Treaty of Amritsar in 1809, by
Rothschild.
The British though they
were being very smart. They would make
the fierce Ranjit Singh’s Sikh kingdom of Punjab act as a buffer between the
marauding Muslims of Afghanistan and themselves. They would allow his to vacuum and squirrel
away wealth from the Mughal remnants –a long and dirty job. And one fine day
Rothschild would swipe away this nice heap of wealth—just like what they did to
Tipu Sultan in 1799.
In between Rothschild’s
French Generals would hold the key member of the Sikh darbar in their vice
grip, by bribes , as their hidden agents.
Maharaja Ranjit Singh
out thought the British. This is why this man must be admired..
He
knew that as long as
the Sikhs, Rajputs, Hindus and Muslims people bond together –without the
British
playing dirty “divide and rule” tactics , as they did in the rest of
India, he
would be just fine. His army would be too hard to beat, in a one on one
fight. To keep the bonding alive he treated Sikhs, Muslims,
Rajputs and Hindus subjects alike. He never discriminated.
So he agreed to sign
the Treaty of Amritsar of 1809. This would be an insurance policy as far as British
attacks were concerned.
This treaty was signed
by Mr. Charles Theophilus Metcalfe on behalf of British Government , whose
Governor General was Lord Minto , and Maharaja Ranjit Singh at Amritsar on
April 25, 1809. Charles Theophilus
Metcalfe was born in Calcutta in January 1785 and he was the son of Thomas
Theophilus Metcalfe who was appointed by Rothschild as the Director of the
British East India Company.
Below: Charles Metcalfe
He was only 23 years old when he was appointed
envoy to the court of Maharajah Ranjit Singh, as Rothchild’s hawk’s eye. This
was a very young age to be given such a huge responsibility. Later in life
Charles Metcalfe would be acting Governor-General of India.
The Text of the
Treaty:Treaty with the Rajah of Lahore - 1809
Whereas certain
differences which had arisen between the British Government and the Rajah of
Lahore have been happily and amicably adjusted, and both parties being anxious
to maintain the relations of perfect amity and-concord, the following Articles
of treaty, which shall be binding on the heirs and successors of the two
parties, have been concluded by Rajah Runjeet Sing on his own part, and by the
agency of Charles Theophilus Metcalfe, Esquire, on the part of the British
Government.
Article 1. Perpetual
friendship shall subsist between the British Government and the State of
Lahore. The latter shall be considered, with respect to the former, to be on
the footing of the most favoured powers; and the British Government will have
no concern with the territories and subjects of the Rajah to the northward of
the Sutlej.
Article 2. The Rajah
will never maintain in the territory occupied by him and his dependents .on the
left bank of the River Sutlej, more troops than are necessary for the internal
duties of that territory, nor commit or suffer any encroachments on the
possessions or rights of the Chiefs in its vicinity.
Article 3. In the event
of a violation of any of the preceding Articles,
or of a departure from
the rules of friendship on the part of either State, this Treaty shall be
considered to be null and void.
Article 4. This Treaty,
consisting of four Articles, having been settled and concluded at Amritsar, on
the 25th day of April, 1809, Mr. Charles Theophilus Metcalfe has delivered to
the Rajah of Lahore a copy of the same, in English and Persian, under his seal
and signature, and the said Rajah has delivered another copy of the same, under
his seal and signature; and Mr. Charles Theophilus Metcalfe engages to procure,
within the space of two months, a copy of the same duly ratified by the Right
Honourable the Governor-General in Council, on the receipt of which by the
Rajah, the present Treaty shall be deemed complete and binding on both parties,
and the copy of it now delivered to the Rajah shall be returned.
Seal and signature of
C.T. METCALFE
Signature and seal of
RAJAH RUNJEET SING
Company's 'Seal MINTO
(Sd)
Ratified by the
Governor-General in Council on 30th May, 1809.
This treaty though
would put a limit on extending the Sikh kingdom to the south, already occupied
by the British, it would in theory allow expansion to the North and West
without any interference from the British. This rough terrain was where all the
Mughal treasures were , including the Kohinoor diamond, originally stolen from
India.
The British kept low ,
even after Ranjit Singh vacuumed all the wealth from the North West areas ,
including the Kohinoor diamond and kept it in a nice pile. They would at the right time murder him by
inducing a stroke by putting extra crushed pearls in his daily aphrodisiac
drink, he got addicted to.
Addiction
was achieved by adding opium in increasing quantities.
The stoke would be achieved by clogging his
kidneys with crushed pearls. This potion
was prepared daily by the Romanian Jew quack doctor.
Once Ranjit Singh was out of the way they
would drive an irreversible wedge between the Rajputs and the Sikhs by making
the gullible Sikhs suspect the loyal Rajput members of Ranjit Singh’s inner
darbar and army.
Sir Lepel Griffin a
British propaganda mouthpiece for Rothschild wrote “There are perhaps no
characters in Punjab history more repulsive than Rajputs Dhian Singh and Gulab
Singh Dogra “.
Nothing is further than
the truth , as both these loyal men were handpicked by Ranjit Singh himself--
and Ranjit Singh has the capability to gauge men.
A
distraught Prime Minister Dhian Singh nearly jumped into the funeral
pyre of Ranjit Singh, and he was held back by force. Gulab Singh's own
son Udam Singh was killed along with Naunihal Singh while returning
from the funeral of his father Maharaja Kharak Singh.
Dhian Singh , the blood brother of Gulab Singh , too was badly injured . Naunihal was a great leader at a young age, and he had the potential to be even greater than Ranjit Singh.
Dhian Singh , the blood brother of Gulab Singh , too was badly injured . Naunihal was a great leader at a young age, and he had the potential to be even greater than Ranjit Singh.
It
was the Rothschild's British agents who collapsed the stone archway
over the passing elephant. They did this to drive a wedge between
Rajputs and Sikhs.
In Sikh history Dhian
Singh is Ram, Gulab Singh is Lakshman
and Tej singh is Ravan.
See how Rothschild monopolized
encyclopedias, media , historians , movie and TV , have converted Ram to Ravan
and vice versa, in a disgraceful manner.
The purpose of this
blog site is to reverse such white lies , as I have told from the outset.
Lepel's son Sir Lancelot Cecil Lepel Griffin later would
be appointed by Rothschild as the last political secretary of British India.
Even today the naïve
Sikhs think that Dhian Singh and Gulab Singh are the real culprits for the
astonishing disintegration of the mighty Sikh empire.
None of them even know
that such a Jew owner of British East India Company by the name of Rothschild
exists.
The King of England never dared to cross Rothschild, as he held the
money.
When Rothschild, the owner of British East India Company, who grew opium in India and sold it in China, screamed
at the King or Queen of England to jump , they never dared to ask WHY?
They only whispered “ How high , Sir?”
Now let me tell how
Ranjit Singh got his hands on the fabulous Kohinoor diamond.
Lord Krishna received
this diamond called Syamantakam from his father in law Jambavan as dowry in 4100 BC.
It passed through many
hands over the years.
Nadir Shah was
assassinated and the Kohinoor diamond fell into the hands of Ahmad Shah Abdali,
one of his ablest generals, who later became the King of Afghanistan. After his death in 1772, the Koh-i-noor diamond
passed into the hands of his successors.
In the battle for
succession that followed, the Koh-i-noor ended in possession of one of his sons
Shah Shuja Mirza. In the changing fortunes of war, Shuja Mirza was defeated and
made prisoner by the allies of his brother, Mahmud Shah.
However, before being captured, he managed to
send his family to Punjab to seek refuge with Maharaja Ranjit Singh . Wafa Begum, Shuja Mirza’s wife, carried the
Koh-i-noor diamond with her to Lahore. Wafa Begum became greatly distressed
when she heard the dreadful news of her husband. She sent envoys to Ranjit
Singh and implored him to use his influence to get her husband released and in
return for his help promised him the Koh-i-noor diamond.
Ranjit Singh marched against the Afghans and
got Shah Shuja released. After securing
the Koh-i-noor diamond, Ranjit Singh had the prized jewel fitted in his turban.
Later he had it sewn into an armlet, which he wore on all the important state
occasions, where it remained for twenty years.
Before Ranjit Singh
died in 1839, his priests tried to get him to donate the diamond to the Temple
of Jaggannath. Apparently he agreed, but
by this time he was unable to speak due to a stroke , and the keeper of the
royal treasure refused to release the stone, on the grounds that he has not
received such orders.
Kohinoor signed away to
queen Victoria in 1849 by 11 year old boy King Duleep Singh while in
exile. As a reward he could play with
the royal kids in London.
The terms of the
treaty, at the end of the Second Anglo-Sikh War specified that: "The gem
called Koh-I-noor, which was taken from Shah Shuja-ul-Mulk by Maharajah Ranjit
Singh shall be surrendered by the Maharajah of Lahore to the Queen of England.
John Lawrence, the
colonial administrator, put it in his waistcoat pocket and forgot about it.
When asked for the prize, Lawrence had no idea where it was. Racing home, he
asked his servant- who said, yes, he had found a small box, containing a piece
of glass in his master’s waistcoat!
After gaining the
famous diamond, the Governor General, Lord Dalhousie immediately sent the
Koh-i-noor to England after taking every care to ensure its safe passage over
the land and the sea-routes.
On 6 April 1850 the
Koh-i-noor left the shores of India on board of the HMS Medea. So shrouded in
mystery was its departure that even the Captain of the Medea did not know the
precious cargo his ship carried. It was delivered to Sir
J. W. Logg, Deputy Chairman of the British East India Company, who presented the
diamond to Her Majesty, Queen Victoria, in the presence of Sir John Hobhouse,
at Buckingham Palace on July 3 1850.
Prince Albert hired stupid "experts" at Coster Diamonds in Amsterdam to cut the diamond into a brilliant, reducing it by up to 43% of its original size, which made it lose its natural divine moonlight blue glow.
Probably they tried to
get rid of the curse attached to the diamond. Little do the British
know that their great empire went into decline and the mental acquity of their
people eroded ( MAD COW ) as a result of
the curse of the Kohinoor.
Such great stones
cannot be mined but are found on riverbeds in their natural state. 6100 years ago a slave stole it from Lord
Krishna when he was sleeping.
Edward VIII , abdicated
the throne to his brother King George VI ( Ruler of India ) within 362 days .
George was a misfit, terribly shy with a stutter. He would cry and was prone to
melancholy. His English subjects never knew that he could NOT speak without a
endless stammer. This suited Rothschild
, as he could conduct 2nd World War to carve out the state of Israel, as he
wanted , with Winston Churchill whose Jewish mother Jenny Jerome, was of
Rothschild blood.
King George’s wife Elizabeth ( present queen’s Elizabeth II’s
mother ) was very shrewd and managed all affairs with an iron will. She got the
great Kohinoor diamond stolen from India for her own crown , and was most of
the time sozzled on leg bucklin' ZAZA ( this is 30% gin and 70% dubonnet
--neat-- with a slice of lime ).
Maharaja Gulab Singh
came from a distinguished Dogra-Rajput Royal lineage, unlike Ranjit Singh who
was a commoner. Gulab Singh was a Ikshvaku Surya Vansi blue
blooded Rajput, one of the most ancient and respected lineages of India . Lord
Rama is the 'kuldevta' (family deity) of the Dogras.
Gulab Singh Dogra and
was born on October 21, 1792 to Kishore Singh, whose grandfather was the
brother of the illustrious king of Jammu namely, Raja Ranjit Dev.
In his childhood Gulab Singh was sent by his
father for martial training to his grandfather Zorawar Singh, who was one of
the most ferocious tough warriors of
this planet.
Gulab Singh learnt
martial arts at a very young age, and in course matured into a great soldier. In
a single combat Ranjit Singh with one eye, stood no chance against Gulab Singh
on foot or on horse.
Maharaja Ranjit
Singh had dispatched Bhai Hukma Singh (Chimni) to annex Jammu in the year 1808.
A young and reckless 16 year old Gulab
Singh ( without informing his grandfather ) quietly joined in the battle and
due to the astonishing resistance put forward by him and his small group
against the superior Sikh forces, the
Sikh forces were forced to withdraw to Saidgarh.
Eventually,Maharaja Ranjit Singh sent
re-inforcements and was able to annex Jammu to his Sikh empire. Bhai Hukma Singh was greatly impressed by the outstanding
leadership and exceptional fighting abilities of this young prince Gulab Singh
and told about this to Maharaja Ranjit Singh.
In in the year 1809 Maharaja Ranjit
Singh invited Gulab Singh to Daska a village situated a few miles from Sialkot
and personally requested him to join his army.
Ultimately due to the services rendered and loyalty displayed by Gulab
Singh, Maharaja Ranjit Singh made Gulab Singh, the Raja of Jammu.
Any other vested version by British and Sikh
historians is wrong, and was written more to make the Sikhs hate the Rajpiuts,
and break their alliance.
Ranjit Singh
was NOT the type to be arm twisted against his better judgement.
The widow of Kharak
Singh, Mai Chand Kaur was crowned as the reagent thereafter on 2nd December,
1840 and she retained the able , wise and loyal Dhian Singh as her prime
minister. Unfortunately soon Mai Chand
Kaur and the son of Maharaja Ranjit Singh (from Mehtab Kaur), namely Sher Singh
came into conflict due to a Rothschild conspiracy and Mai Chand Kaur abdicated
and Sher Singh was declared as the Maharaja.
Mai Chand Kaur was poisoned and
then stoned to death by her maid servants on 11 June, 1842. Though historians
say that , Mai Chand Kaur was put to death by the orders of Maharaja Sher
Singh, it is well known that this was again a British conspiracy—to divide the
Sikhs into various warring camps.
Soon enough Maharaja
Sher Singh along with his son Prince Pratap Singh and Dhian Singh were also
killed by the Sikh Chiefs, the Sandhanwalias on 15th September 1843 after being
bribed by the British.
The British official
Joseph Davey Cunningham, residing in Ludhiana during that period circulated the
propaganda that Maharaja Sher Singh was killed by Dhian Singh and then the Sandhanwalias
killed Raja Dhian Singh.
The gullible Sikhs got confused and angry and nobody
trusted a Rajput or even a fellow Sikh. Poison was indeed injected in the
simple minds of the Sikhs. How quickly the Sikhs forgot the loyal services of
Dhian Singh.
Retribution would be
quick. The son of Dhian Singh ( and nephew of Maharaja Gulab Singh) aided by
his uncle Suchet Singh took revenge on the Sandhanwalia chiefs. The Sandhanwalia culprits Ajit Singh, Lehna
Singh and about 600 of their gang were mercilessly put to the sword by the
tough Rajputs.
Interestingly when the
widow of Dhian Singh heard that her son had avenged the murder (in the true
Rajput tradition) of his father she mentioned to her son ,"I will tell
your father that you acted as a brave and a dutiful son", and she committed
Sati. Dhian Singh’s son Hira
Singh, was handsome, wise and brave and was a favourite of Maharaja Ranjit
Singh.
The British who were
looking for an opportunity to seize the territories of the late Maharaja Ranjit
Singh were obviously delighted. Lord Ellenborough the Governor General of India
during that period wrote to her Majesty Queen Victoria on October 20, 1843,
"...it is impossible not to preceive that the ultimate tendency of the
late events at Lahore is without, any effort on our part, to bring the plains
first, and at somewhat later period the hills, under our protection or
control."
After this the youngest
wife Maharani Jindan Kaur crowned her son Duleep Singh as the Maharaja on
September 18, 1843. Hira Singh , the son
of the slain Shian Singh who was made the prime minister.
Hira Singh was killed
on December 21, 1844, along with his relatives, another of Rothchild’s
conspiracies – for Hira Singh was as wise , loyal and level headed as his
father Dhian Singh. However, brave Hira
Singh died after giving a fierce fight.
Maharani Jindan Kaur
now made her own sweet brother Jawaher Singh the prime minister . She surprisingly goaded
on by her own ambitious brother, "the son
of the dog keeper", made all efforts were
made to beleaguer Raja Gulab Singh. . Eventually a conflict developed between
the Lahore Sikh Durbar and Raja Gulab Singh.
Things got from bad to
worse and shove became push. Eventually a great battle took place on the plain
of the Satwari and the Jammu forces commanded by Diwan Hari Chand routed the
Sikhs. The divide was now complete and
the British were very happy.
Remote controlled intrigue
in the Lahore Durbar continued and Jawahar
Singh “the ambitious to be king” commoner
brother of Maharani Jindan was killed by the orders of the Panch (military
council) for his role in the killing of Prince Peshora Singh one of the sons of
the late Maharaja Ranjit Singh.
Jawahar
Singh was beheaded, right in front of Maharani Jindan Kaur and her young son
Maharajah Duleep Singh, on September 21, 1845. The death of her own brother right in front of
her eyes, was something too much for the Maharani to bear, who gave vent to her
anguish with loud cries of lamentation.
Britain now declared war on the Sikhs , giving the
lame excuse that the Sikhs did NOT allow the passage of the British troops
through their territory during the first Afghan War of the 1839-1842.
The Sikh army commanded by Tej Singh (
appointed by Jindan Kaur ) had crossed the Sutlej on December 11, 1845, ostensibly to occupy a former Sikh possession,
the village of Moran, named after one of Maharajah Ranjeet Singh's favorite
Muslim courtesans, on the east side of the river.
Tej Singh and Lal Singh DELIBERATELY broke the Amritsar Treaty signed by Maharaja Ranjit Singh in 1809.
The British considered this
as a hostile move , breaking the Amristar treaty of 1809, and hence declared
war. Tej Singh was bribed by the British to do this.
Lal Singh the clandestine
lover of the Queen Jindan kaur and the army chief Tej were in direct
communication with the British, giving away camp and battle positions and
tactic .
The cannons would not
fire as our Romanian Jew Dr. John Martin Honigberger made sure they would NOT
fire. This was exactly the same modus
operandi with Tipu Sultan in 1799, when Rothschild’s French arm fiddled around with the gunpowder.
Tej Singh led his own dang
army to deliberate defeat, during the First Angle Sikh war on December 13th
1845 .
60,000
ferocious Sikhs who fought their hearts out, could NOT handle 8,000
British , lowering the proud Sikh army morale for ever.
The British troops
showed no mercy and the result was a massacre of thousands of Sikh soldiers. The Rothschild planted Jewish French and
Italian mercenary commanders were involved in this too .
Below Tej Singh.
Tej Singh whilst
fleeing the battlefield destroyed bridges and even planted guns on his side of
the river to shot any escaping Sikhs!
— Well, well ! how do you like Rothschild’s
conspiracies now?
All this came to light
only in 1857, during the First war of Independence , when the whole of India
fought mutinied against the British except the Sikhs.
YES! Tej Singh , the traitor raised Sikh cavalry regiments to aid the
British. His scattered Jagirs were consolidated and he was rewarded with the new
title Raja of Batala.
Gulab
Singh had tried in vain to convince Maharani Jindan to avoid a conflict
with the British. Raja Gulab Singh during this conflict took no
sides but still had sympathy for the Sikhs and sent them food and
animals. He then left for a pilgrimage to Vaishno Devi
and Purmandel.
Maharani Jindan fervently
summoned Raja Gulab Singh . Eventually
Raja Gulab Singh, his son Ranbir Singh, nephew Jawahar Singh along with four
thousand horsemen and about five thousand Rajputs of his clan left for Lahore.
On arriving in Lahore Raja Gulab Singh was informed by Maharani Jindan that she
had lost control of the affairs of the State.
In the Durbar held on
January 31, 1846, Maharani Jindan was cursed by the Panchas . The Punchas
mentioned that Maharani Jindan was pushing the Sikh kingdom towards destruction
by moving the army across the Sutlej River, against the British. In addition
the Panchas also made it clear to Maharani Jindan that they would kill her if
she did not make Raja Gulab Singh the prime minister.
The battles between the
Sikhs and the British were not decisive intially but with time the British
started to make gains. Eventually on February 10, 1846, Sir Hugh Gough attacked
the Sikhs at Sobraon with heavy artillery and the Sikhs suffered bad reverses.
On accepting the prime ministership, Raja
Gulab Singh made it clear he would only continue in this position only if the
court officials gave it in written that they would not interfere with his peace
efforts with the British. By now
Maharani Jindan who was inexperienced in matters of the state became panicky.
Sir Hugh Gough was
supported by Lord Hardinge, the governor-general, who volunteered to serve
under him. The Sikhs were overwhelmed and Gulab Singh sued for peace at Lahore.
(The services of Sir Hugh Gough were
rewarded by Rothschild and he was elevated to the peerage of the United Kingdom
as Baron of Maharajpore and the Sutlej in April 1846.)
Below : Baron Gough
While
Raja Gulab Singh
continued to be the prime minister he and Lal Singh, the lover of
Maharani
Jindan Kaur ( and the biological father of Duleep Singh ) did not get
along. Lal Singh made several attempts were made on the life of
Raja Gulab Singh. Finally Lal Singh
forced Maharani Jindan Kaur to dismiss
Gulab Singh and he became Prime Minister on 26 February, 1847.
The British were firm
in their demand of two crore rupees from the Lahore Durbar as a fine and also
wanted the Doab territory as reparation.
Eventually the boy king
Maharaja Dalip Singh was bought to Lahore for forcing a treaty.
Some of the conditions
of the peace treaty that was signed in Lahore between the Lahore Darbar and the
British East India Company, on March 9, 1846, soon after the war ended, are as
follows :-
1) The Jullundur Doab
between the Beas River and the Sutlej River to be surrendered to the British.
2) The Lahore Darbar to
pay an indemnity of 15 million (1.5 crore) rupees.
3) Maharajah DULEEP
SINGH to continue as ruler of Punjab, with his mother Maharani Jindan Kaur
remaining as regent.
4) The Sikh army was
greatly reduced in size from its original 80,000 to around 20,000 thousand
troops, that set the stage for the second Anglo-Sikh war.
5) The British troops
were to be withdrawn from Lahore by the end of the year 1846.
Lal Singh now the Prime
Minister could not come up with the money which he was supposed to pay to the
British. A conniving Lal Singh hence decided to kill
two birds with one stone and one of the birds being Raja Gulab Singh. Lal Singh subsequently made an offer to the
British that he, Lal Singh was willing
to offer all the hill territory to them between the rivers Sindh and Beas
including Kashmir and Hazara in place of rupees one crore. As this included the territory of Jammu this
was indeed a clever way of marginalizing Gulab Singh.
When Gulab Singh learnt
about this he felt felt double-crossed. He then met the Governor General to access the
situation. The clever Governor General realized
that it was a good thing to have the Rajputs as allies and he knew the loyalty
Gulab Singh commanded with Sikhs, Rajputs, Muslims and Hindus.
Eventually after
discussions with the British, Raja Gulab Singh sent Diwan Jwala Sahai his
confidant to the British with the request that the territory of Jammu be handed
over to his dependents for their support, while Raja Gulab Singh would himself
lead a retired life in the holy city of Varanasi.
However, it seems that
Lord Hardinge had his own plans and informed Diwan Jwala Sahai that he would be
willing to hand over the territories lying between the source of Beas including
the areas of Kashmir and Hazara to Raja Gulab Singh. In
exchange for these territories Raja Gulab Singh was to pay rupees one crore to
the British. Since Raja Gulab Singh
could not come up with this kind of money, hence, he decided to trade some
territory on the the right side of the Beas River for less money.
On receiving this
proposal from Raja Gulab Singh, Lord Hardinge wrote the following to a secret
committee, "that the trans Beas portion of Kulu and Mandi with the fertile
district and strong position of Nurpur and the celebrated fort of Kangra and
the key to the Himalayas in native estimation with its districts and its
dependencies should be in our possession". Eventually it was accepted that
Raja Gulab Singh would pay 75 lakhs to the British for the smaller territory.
On finding out that
they had been outwitted and the tables turned on them, Lal Singh and Maharani
Jindan dispatched the loyal but wily Kashmiri Brahmin Diwan Dina Nath to Henry
Lawrence and Frederic Currie. The aim being to request the British to cancel
their deal with Raja Gulab Singh and that they (Lahore Durbar) was willing to
pay all the money in order to retain their territory.
As the British were
keen to get rid of the volatile Sikh threat to their Empire, hence, they found
that the best strategy was to stick with Raja Gulab Singh.
Eventually Raja Gulab
Singh was invited by the Governor General at a camp on March 15, 1846.
Following this Raja Gulab Singh was bestowed with the title of a Maharaja and
the Treaty of Amritsar was signed between the British and Maharaja Gulab Singh
on March 16, 1846. As a result of this
treaty Maharaja Gulab Singh found himself in possession of the State of Jammu
and Kashmir.
By Article 1 of the Amritsar
Treaty, Gulab Singh acquired "all the hilly or mountainous country with
its dependencies situated to the eastward of the River Indus and the westward
of the River Ravi including Chamba and excluding Lahul, being part of the
territories ceded to the British Government by the Lahore State according to
the provisions of Article IV of the Treaty of Lahore, dated 9th March,
1846."
Under Article 3, Gulab
Singh was to pay 75 lakhs (7.5 million) of Nanak Shahi rupees (the ruling
currency of Punjab) to the British Government, along with other annual
tributes.
The Treaty of Amritsar
marked the beginning of Dogra rule in Kashmir, which was to end in 1948 after
an attack by the Pakistani army which led to Indo-Pakistani War of 1947.
Lord Hardinge gave the
following reason for the transfer of Jammu and Kashmir to Maharaja Gulab Singh,
" It was necessary last March to weaken the Sikhs by depriving them of
Kashmir".
Getting back a bit in
time —
Maharajah Ranjeet Singh
was succeeded by his eldest son Kharak Singh from his second wife, Raj Kaur,
instead of his eldest surviving son Sher Singh by his most senior wife, Mehtab
Kaur, daughter of Rani Sada Kaur. The succession caused a lot of bitterness
among Ranjit Singh's heirs. Opium addict
,spiritual and soft, Kharak Singh was not fit and prepared to rule his father's
vast empire, and was unable to control the various factions within his kingdom.
Therefore, Kharak
Singh's eldest son Nau Nihal Singh, who was just 18 years old took control of
the kingdom himself from his father, on October 8, 1839. Kharak Singh died of poisoning on November 5,
1840, and Nau Nihal Singh was to formally take over as king after his father's
death. However, unfortunately when Nau
Nihal Singh was returning from his father's funeral, he was fatally injured by
debris from a collapsing archway that smashed his head. It is not known whether the building collapse
was accidental or deliberate.
Nau Nihal
Singh, was succeeded by Sher Singh, the eldest surviving son of Ranjeet Singh
by his most senior wife Rani Mehtab Kaur, who was believed by many to be the
actual claimant to the throne of the Punjab, after Ranjeet Singh's death.
Sher Singh's succession did not come
automatically. He won the throne only after a protracted siege of the Lahore
fort, that was held by the Royal family. He was installed as king, in January
1841, but was himself killed just two years after taking office, in September
1843, together with Prime Minister Dhian Singh in a plot hatched by the
Sandhawalias, cousins of Sher Singh. Raja Dian Singh's son .
Raja Hira Singh,
with the support of the army, wiped out the Sandhawalia faction, and captured
the fort of Lahore. Then on September 16, 1943, the army proclaimed Ranjeet
Singh's youngest son, Duleep Singh who was just five years old, as king, with
his mother Jindan Kaur as regent and Dhian Singh’s son Hira Singh was appointed
as Wazir.
The Treaty of Bhyroval
was intended to tighten the noose on the Punjab, and to supercede the clause of
withdrawing the British troops from Lahore
as agreed by the first treaty of Amritsar in 1809 with Maharaja Ranjit Singh..
According to this new
treaty signed on December 16, 1846, Maharani Jindan Kaur was removed as regent
to her son Maharajah Duleep Singh, and replaced by a British Resident in Lahore
Sir Henry Lawrence, supported by a Regency Council. This was ironically headed by the
traitor Tej Singh, ( the double agent of Rothschild ) the former commander of
the Sikh army, who treacherously facilitated the British victory in the first
Anglo-Sikh war. The appointment of Tej Singh caused a lot of anger and
resentment among the Sikh population.
Meanwhile the British were waiting for the slightest
pretext to separate the mother and the son. The pretext was cooked up when the boy king refused to confer the title as
Raja of Sialkot in Aug 1847, at instigation of his mother Jindan Kaur.
The British tried to
implicate the Maharani in a conspiracy
known as the Premilla Plot, in which Sir Henry Lawrence and Tej Singh were to
be murdered at a fete at the Shalimar Gardens. A sham
inquiry held into both incidents and on
the orders of Henry Lawrence, the mother and son were separated, and Maharani
Jindan Kaur was sent to the Summan Tower of Lahore Fort, from where she was
transferred to the fort at Sheikhurpura, for incarceration in September 1847.
Whither honour?
Her annual allowance
was drastically reduced from Rs 150,000 to a mere Rs. 48,000. She was then moved to the Fort of Chunar in
Uttar Pradesh, from where she escaped to Nepal disguised as a maid-servant, on
April 19, 1849. he fled to the Himalayas
disguised as a beggar woman, and moved to Kathmandu, in Nepal, where she was
given political asylum by the Prime Minister Jung Bahadur, mainly as a mark of
respect to the memory of the late Maharajah Ranjeet Singh.
The British
authorities confiscated all her gold and jewelry, said to be worth around a
fortune which also included the fabulous
emerald and seed-pearl necklace, that had been left in the government treasury
at Benares, and rescinded her pension. Maharani
Jindan Kaur's exile in Kathmandu, Nepal, lasted for over ten years, until 1860.
The second Anglo-Sikh
war began as a localized rebellion on April 18, 1848, in the Muslim dominated
Multan in southern Punjab. It was sparked by the killing of two British officers
who accompanied the new governor, General Khan Singh Man to Multan. This started a rebellion and pent up feelings
of the Sikhs spilled over.
Sikh soldiers who
escorted the new governor and the British officers from Lahore, defected and
joined Mulraj's rebel army. As news of
the rebellion spread, large numbers of Sikh soldiers deserted the regiments
loyal to the Lahore Durbar, and joined the rebels under the leadership of
Mulraj. None of the Sikh soldiers were properly paid.
The news of the rebellion reached Lahore on April 21, 1848, and Currie
sought for assistance from Governor-General Dalhousie and Hugh Gough, the
commander of the Bengal army, to suppress the rebellion at Multan. However,
Gough and Dalhousie decided not to send any assistance until the end of the hot
weather and the monsoon seasons, which would be in November.
The "Battle of
Gujrat" has gone down in the history of British imperialism in India, as
the biggest battle in terms of men and weaponry, and came to be known as the
"Battle of Guns." Here also
the bribed foreign mercenary commanders of the Sikhs deliberately provided poor
leadership allowing the British to slaughter the Sikh army.
The Sikhs fled in confusion,
pursued by the cavalry and horse artillery. The battle was over within a few
hours. The Sikhs lost more than 5000 men, and the British casualties were less
than 100.
Ranjit Singh’s European
mercenary generals were:
Jean-François Allard--
French
Jean-Baptiste Ventura –
Italian
Paolo Di Avitabile –
Italian
Claude August Court –
French
Josiah Harlan – American
, later governor of Gujrat
Alexander Gardner –
American (Scots – Irish)
Mercenaries are a
unique breed who have have NIL loyalty to a person. Their loyalty is to money and “what is in it
for me”..
On March 14, 1849, the
whole Sikh Army of around 22,000 men, surrendered. "Today our Maharaja Ranjeet Singh is
truly dead," sighed the brave Sikh soldiers,
as they kissed the swords with tears flowing down their cheeks, and laid them
down on the ever-enlarging heap of steel.
On March 29, 1849, Lord
Dalhousie proclaimed the annexation of the Punjab. His foreign secretary, Sir Henry Meirs Elliot,
arrived at Lahore to obtain the signatures of the minor king Maharajah Duleep
Singh and members of the Regency Council.
Maharajah Duleep Singh
held his last court at Lahore, on March 29, 1849. A grand Darbar was held in the Lahore Fort,
with the British troops lined up on his right, and the Sardars of the Regency Council
on the left, the boy king Duleep Singh affixed his royal signatures in great pomp
to the document which deprived him of his crown and kingdom.
It was a poignant sight, even for the British.
After the proclamation
of the Punjab, as part of the British Empire in India, on March 29, 1849, the Sikh
flag was taken down and the British flag was hoisted on the citadel of Lahore. Lord Dalhousie assigned Dr. John Login, the
important task of taking the Koh-i-Noor and other famous jewels into the safe
custody of British officials in Lahore, from the "Toshakana" (jewel
house), whose custodian was the treasurer of the Punjab Government.
The
"Toshakana" had the single largest and valuable collection of jewels
and jewelry in the world. The court jewels were well preserved either wrapped
in soft cloth or secure inside their velvet-lined cases. The most famous and
valuable jewels, such as the "Koh-i-Noor" and the "Timur
Ruby" were taken into the custody of Dr. John Login, to be sent
subsequently to London as "gifts" for Queen Victoria. The British
officials were tripping over each other to see the fabled "Koh-i-Noor Diamond" .
The relevant section of
the treaty read tersely as follows :- "The gem called the Koh-i-Noor which
was taken from Sha Shuja-ul-Mulk, by Maharajah Ranjeet Singh, shall be
surrendered by the Maharajah of Lahore to the Queen of England."
The items were listed
in seven printed catalogues, and the sales took place over five successive
days, from 28th November 1850 to 2nd December 1850. Some of the jewels were boxed in Bombay, by
Frazer and Hawes, and sent to London, where they were sold by Garrards.
Maharajah Duleep Singh was
eleven years old at the time he was deposed by the British on March 29, 1849. He was entrusted to the care of Dr. John
Login, by Governor-General Dalhousie. Dr. Login took Duleep Singh from Lahore to
Fatehgarh, in Uttar Pradesh, on December 21, 1849, “in order to keep the boy
away from the influences of the Punjab” , his former kingdom.
He was provided
lavishly furnished houses in Fategarh and also in Lucknow, where he spent his
remaining days in India, before being exiled to Britain in 1854. Thus he
spent almost five years in India after he was deposed, before being exiled to
Britain. During this period he came under the tutelage
of both Dr. Login and Bhajan Lal, a Christian convert, both of whom exposed the
poor boy to a lot of Christian text and literature.
Governor-General
Dalhousie had instructed Dr. Login, that the boy should be completely
anglicized and “civilized” before he was sent to Britain to see Queen Victoria.
It was in keeping with these
instructions that Duleep Singh was raised in complete isolation from his own
countrymen and tight restrictions were placed on who he was allowed to meet. No Indians except trusted servants, were
allowed to meet him in private.
Duleep Singh's
closest childhood friends were both English, one the child of an Anglican
missionary. The child's brain-washing
was complete before he attained his 15th
birthday, and he was converted to Christianity, at Fatehgarh, with the
blessings of Governor-General Dalhousie.
He was then exiled to Britain in 1854.
His early years in the
United Kingdom, until his settlement in Scotland, where he earned the nickname
"Black Prince of Perthshire"
Duleep Singh arrived in
England in 1854, and was initially lodged at Claridge's Hotel in London, before
the Rothschild arranged a house for him in Wimbledon and later at Roehampton,
which became his home for 3 years. Queen Victoria adopted him as a godson, and showered
a lot of fake affection on the young turbaned Maharajah, so did the Prince
consort, Prince Albert. The young prince
became well known for his lavish life style, hunting trips and a love for
wearing the funny Scottish highland costume.
In spite of the luxurious
life that he was leading in the United Kingdom, Duleep Singh was well aware
that he was a virtual prisoner in the hands of his British hosts. His separation from his beloved mother traumatized
him , and he was desperate to see his
mother, and be re-united with her.
In
1860, Duleep Singh secretly sent one of his native attendants to Kathmandu to get
some information about his mother. A report was sent to England through the
British Resident in Nepal that, Maharani Jindan Kaur had changed over the years
and was now blind and physically weak, taking little interest in her
surroundings, and what was going on around her.
Ranjeet Singh
immediately made a fervent appeal to Queen Victoria for permission to see his
mother, and if circumstances permitted to bring her back to England to reside
with him. The Queen granted permission after consulting Rothschild . It was
determined that the Maharani no longer posed a serious threat to British
interests in India.
The Nepalese Government which had been on a confrontational
course with the Maharani, imposing humiliating restrictions on her under
British pressure, were happy to get rid of her and facilitated the meeting by
appealing on her behalf. The Maharani herself was tired of her exile and
isolation, and the indignity she had been made to suffer during the 10 years of
her exile in Nepal, and was longing to re-unite with her only son.
The meeting
was arranged in Calcutta at the Spence's Hotel. Duleep Singh set sail to
Calcutta in late 1860, and the Maharani was taken overland from Kathmandu
to Spence's Hotel in Calcutta. The meeting
took place in January 1861, and the mother and son were re-united for the first
time in 13½years (1848 to 1861). It was an emotional moment for both the mother
and son.
Duleep Singh set sail
to England with his mother from Calcutta. Duleep Singh found her
mother almost blind and suffering from poor health, although she was relatively
young, and only 43 years old. Her
premature aging was caused by trauma, her long years of isolation and incarceration.
Duleep Singh returned
to London with his sick mother, and took a house in Bayswater. He stayed there
with his mother Maharani Jindan Kaur for the next two years. Lady Login noted
changes in Duleep Singh's behavior ever since he returned to London with his
mother. For the first time she heard him talking about his vast private
property in Punjab, information that only his mother could have given him.
The Maharani during her long conversations
with her son seem to have reawakened her son's true faith and royal heritage,
telling him stories of all that had been lost to the British. The Logins were worried about the Maharani's
influence on her son, and tried to persuade Duleep Singh to find his mother a
separate house. But, Duleep Singh would not listen to the Logins, for fear of
hurting her mother's sentiments..
Maharani Jindan Kaur
passed away in Kensington , England on 1st Auh 1863, at the age of
46 and her body is moved to the Dissenters Chapel, until it could be taken to
India for cremation.
The passing away of his
beloved mother was a terrible blow to Duleep Singh, and he felt orphaned in his
country of adoption, with no relatives or friends from his own country.
According to Sikh traditions the Maharani's body had to be cremated and her
ashes scattered in a river. But cremation was not allowed under English law at
that time. Thus with the intervention of John Login the Maharani's body was
moved to the Dissenters Chapel at Kensal Green Cemetery, until such time that
it could be taken to India for the last rites.
At a simple funeral ceremony
held at Kensal Green, Duleep Singh addressed the small gathering of mourners,
that included a number of Indian dignitaries and the Maharani's retinue that
she had brought with her, in his native language Punjabi. Her body was kept at
Kensal Green for almost an year, before permission was granted to take the body
to India for cremation, which had been her dying wish.
Maharani Jindan Kaur's
body was cremated by the banks of the Godavari river, and the ashes scattered
in the river, and part of the ashes entombed in a Samadhi built by the river.
Duleep Singh
accompanied his mother's body to India in 1864, but he was not given permission
to take the body to Punjab. A small memorial containing part of her ashes was
erected on the left bank of the Godavari river.
Below" Samadhi of Maharaja Ranjit Singh at Lahore
In 1924, Maharani
Jindan Kaur's granddaughter Princess Bamba Sutherland, carried her ashes from
Bombay to Lahore and deposited it at the "Samadhi" of Ranjeet Singh,
fulfilling the death wish of her grandmother.
The fabulous Emerald
and Seed Pearl Necklace of Maharani Jindan Kaur was sold at the Bonham's auction
of October 8, 2009, for a sum of only £55,200. It was well known that the king
sized dazzling green emeralds were replaced by ones of lesser fire by Rothschild.
The velvet-lining on
the lid of the case carried the following inscription in English :- "From
the Collection of the Court of Lahore formed by HH The Maharajah Rungeet Singh and
lastly worn by Her Highness The Late Maharanee Jeddan Kower."(sic!)
Jindan Kaur
re-converted Duleep Singh to Sikhism, and then petitioned the British Crown to
have his kingdom returned. He never
received any justice or the respect he deserved. He died in 1893, in Paris, France.
When Duleep returned
from burying his mother in India he was introduced to a honey pot Bamba Muller
by Rothschild’s agents—half German Jew and half Ethiopian. It is rumored that
this girl was of Rothschild blood on her father’s side. She was an illegitimate girl who was working
at a missionary school in Cairo. He
brought her back to England as his wife and they lived a life of luxury and
were known to Queen Victoria.
Bamba Sutherland
was their first child, and was named after her mother, her maternal grandmother
and her paternal grandmother respectively. The name "Bamba" means
pink in Arabic. In 1924 permission was
finally given for Jindan Kaur’s ashes to be buried in Lahore. It was Princess Bamba Sutherland who
supervised their transfer from Bombay where they had been placed when her
father Duleep Singh visited India.
Bamba
Sutherland was widowed in Lahore when her husband died in 1939. She was the
last survivor of a royal family who should have owned the Punjab. When she died on 10 March 1957 at the age of 89,
her funeral was arranged by United Kingdom Deputy High Commissioner in Lahore.
The rites were
witnessed by a few select Pakistani dignitaries. The Pakistani authorities did
not allow any of her distant relatives to attend, Sikh or Hindu, nor were any
Sikhs in Pakistan allowed to attend her rites. Thus no Sikh was present at
Princess Bamba's funeral, the last of Dalip Singh's line. So much for Muslim and Christian mentality. She was NOT a terrorist.
Like I said before
Duleep Singh’s first wife was Bamba
Muller, by whom he had six children, three boys and three girls. After the
death of his first wife in 1887, Duleep
Singh, took his second wife Ada Douglas Wetherill, by whom he had two children,
both girls.
As the last surviving
member of the dynasty, Bamba Sutherland left
a large quantity of important historical items to her secretary, Pir Karim
Bakhsh Supra of Lahore. The collection consists of eighteen paintings, fourteen
watercolours, 22 paintings on ivory and a number of photos and other articles.
The collection was sold to the Pakistan government and it is kept in Lahore
Fort. It is known as the Princess Bamba Collection.
A translation of the
Persian epitaph on her gravestone has been translated as:
The
difference between royalty and servility vanishes
The
moment the writing of destiny is encountered
If
one opens the grave of a dead
None
would be able to discern rich from poor
The Pakistanis could NOT
avoid sarcasm even on the tombstone -- such is the lack of culture!.
In
his memoirs Karl Wilhelm referred to Princess Bamba Sutherland as – “ the true
heiress of Maharaja Ranjit Singh' . For
she was most conscious of the actual desperate situation of the whole family. She
considered the Punjab and Kashmir as the lost possession of her family and was
absolutely furious when the border between Pakistan and India was drawn right
across the Punjab.”
In Princess Bamba's
eyes, Pakistan or India did not exist, there was just the Punjab and its
capital Lahore. She met distant
relatives throughout her travels in India, trying to have one last glimpse of
the glory that she was denied. In her
mind she was the legitimate Queen of the glorious Sikh empire of Punjab.
Like I said before none
of Duleep Singh’s children has any issue. All the children , boy and girl , were made
sterile in a covert manner — such is the sordid tale of British
intrigue and treachery.
British justice!! – say
again?
There was an incident
of a young tiger cub being caught by shikaris.
When Maharaja Ranjit Singh came to know that the mother tiger was running
around in search of her cub, and moaning all night, he ordered it to be
released to join the tigeress.
Maharaja Ranjit Singh
died at Lahore on June 27, 1839. At the time of his death, he ruled over an
area of one lakh, forty five thousand square miles. But what is significant is that for the first
time in a thousand years, he reversed the traditional direction of attacks on
India and also laid down fresh frontiers for her. Attacking armies started to push northwards
instead of pressing south as heretofore. The northern boundary of Pakistan
today is, to an inch, the same as the boundary of the Sikh kingdom
Here is a British
account of Maharaja Ranjit Singh’s last journey--
When Ranjit Singh died,
his body was bathed with fragrant waters, embalmed and then dressed in rich
clothes and decorated with ornaments as when he was alive. The sacred Bhagwad Gita was placed on the
Maharaja’s chest and, Dhian Singh, having touched the body of his royal master
and the book, swore loyalty to the new Maharaja Kharak Singh.
The Maharaja’s body was
placed on a decorated pier (Hawan) shaped like a ship. As the funeral procession advanced, large
amount of coins were thrown amongst the
crowd as alms.
For the first time in their lives, the Ranis of the Great
Maharaja came out unveiled from the harem and followed the corpse bare-footed. They were dressed in pure, white silk and wore
no ornaments. They had distributed all
their jewels and valuables among the poor before leaving the Zenana for the
final Sati.
In front of each Rani, at a
distance of two or three paces, a man with his face turned towards her walked
backwards. He held a looking glass
before the Rani in front of whom he walked that she might see that her facial features
were composed and unaltered-- that her
resolution to sacrifice her life had no effect on her outer appearance.
The funeral pyre was
constructed of sandalwood in the form of a square, six feet high and upon it
were strewn inflammable substances such as cottonseeds etc. The bier, having been brought close to it, its
valuable ornaments and coverings were given away to the people. The Brahmins
and Gurus then recited passages from their holy books and offered prayers. This took about half an hour.
The ascent to the
funeral pyre was by a ladder. The
ministers and Sardars first ascended and helped in gently removing the royal
body from the bier and placing it on the pyre. The four Ranis, with
death-despising intrepidity, then
ascended the fatal ladders one by one, according to their rank and solemnly occupied
a place at the head of their royal husband, holding the head with their hands.
The
Rajput princess of Kangra Guddan had his head on her lap . The 7 beautiful slave
girls, with equal courage and contempt for death, then ascended the ladder and
placed themselves at the foot of their lord.
The sathis having thus
seated themselves were covered with red mats, on which oil had been profusely
poured. Raja Dhian Singh at this moment
approached the Ranis and begged them to offer prayers for the prosperity of the
new Maharaja, but not a word was uttered by the Ranis, who with eyes closed and
hand stretched towards the head of the Maharaja, which they were holding,
maintained a solemn silence in expectation of the final moment.
A strong, thick mat of
reeds was then brought and saturated with oil with which all were covered. The
Minister, Raja Dhian Singh and the Sardars then came down. Then Dhian Singh
suddenly lost his composure and overwhelmed with grief , insisting on being
burnt with the Ranis. Thrice, he even
attempted to force his way forward and it was with difficulty, that he was physically
prevented from sharing the fate of the sathis. For the new king Karakh Singh was a dull witted person.
Oil, atta and ghee were then profusely thrown
on the pile. This being done, Prince Kharak Singh lit the pyre at each corner.
In almost the twinkling of an eye, the unfortunate creatures who had been
covered with the mats had ceased to exist and in a short time the whole mass
was reduced to ashes.
On the third day, the
ashes of the dead were picked out by the members of the family and put in
separate urns and, placed in separate tents made of Kashmiri shawls, the poles
of which were wrought with gold and silver. Preparations were then made to send the ashes
to the Ganga.
The remains of the Maharaja and those of the Ranis, were placed
in separate, richly caparisoned palanquins and brought out, in state, from the
Fort. They were accompanied by costly
presents such as valuable shawls, richly decorated elephants and horses, gold
and silver utensils, rich cloth etc., which were to be distributed as alms
among the Brahmins at Hardwar. On the procession leaving the Fort, a royal
salute was fired.
The procession
traversed the principal bazaars and streets; housetops, windows and balconies
were all filled with spectators. The door of the palanquin that contained the
ashes of the Maharaja was open; those of the other four containing the remains
of the Ranis were closed.
Mourning was observed
for thirteen days, the mourning costume being white. On the thirteenth day, the
last funeral obsequies were gone through and thousands of rupees lavished on
Brahmins and fakirs.
Before the fatal and 4th
stroke on June 22, 1839, the Maharaja was managing the affairs of the state as
efficiently as before. After the third
stroke attack in 1838 he was unable to speak while his mind was still
active. He would give orders through the
language of signs while the faithful minister Fakir Azizuddin would reduce them
to writing and ensured their implementation.
According to a British
historian, “Ranjit Singh died like the old Lion as he had lived. He preserved
his senses to the last, and was (which is unusual with the native princes)
obeyed to the last by all his chiefs...”
To this I will say –AYE!
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