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Banda Singh Bahadur

Banda Singh Bahadur (born Lachman Dev)[3][1][4] (27 October 1670 – 9 June 1716), was a Sikh warrior and a general of the Khalsa Army. At age 15, he left home to become an ascetic, and was given the name Madho Das Bairagi. He established a monastery at Nānded, on the bank of the river Godāvarī. In 1707, Guru Gobind Singh accepted an invitation to meet Mughal Emperor Bahadur Shah I in southern India, he visited Banda Singh Bahadur in 1708. Banda became disciple of Guru Gobind Singh and was given a new name, Gurbaksh Singh (as written in Mahan Kosh[5]), after the baptism ceremony. He is popularly known as Banda Singh Bahadur. He was given five arrows by the Guru as a blessing for the battles ahead. He came to Khanda, Sonipat and assembled a fighting force and led the struggle against the Mughal Empire.

Banda Singh Bahadur
Depiction of Banda Singh Bahadur, during the Battle of Sirhind (1710), from an illustrated folio of ‘Tawarikh-i Jahandar Shah’, Awadh or Lucknow, ca.1770
Birth nameLachman Dev
Other name(s)Madho Das Bairagi, Banda Bairagi
Born27 October 1670 (1670-10-27)
Rajauri, Poonch, Mughal Empire[1]
(present-day Jammu and Kashmir, India)
Died9 June 1716 (1716-06-10) (aged 45)
Delhi, Mughal Empire
(present-day India)
Allegiance
Years of service1708–1716
Spouse(s)Susheel Kaur
Sahib Kaur[2]
ChildrenAjay Singh
Ranjit Singh[2]
Signature
Personal
ReligionSikhism
Religious career
TeacherGuru Gobind Singh

His first major action was the sacking of the Mughal provincial capital, Samana, in November 1709.[1] After establishing his authority and the Sikh Republic in Punjab,[6][page needed] Banda Singh Bahadur abolished the zamindari (feudal) system, and granted property rights to the tillers of the land. Banda Singh was captured by the Mughals and tortured to death in 1715–1716.

Early life

 
Gilded panel (repoussé plaque) from Takht Hazur Sahib, Nanded. Madho Das declares he is Guru Gobind Singh’s ‘Banda’ slave

Banda Singh Bahadur was born as Lachman Dev in a Hindu family to farmer Ram Dev, at Rajouri (now in Jammu and Kashmir) on 27 October 1670.[7] Sources variously describe his father as a Rajput from the Bhardwaj clan[8][9] or a Dogra Rajput,[10] Hakim Rai's Ahwāl-i-Lachhmaṇ Dās urf Bandā Sāhib ("Ballad of Banda Bahadur") claims that his family belonged to the Sodhi sub-clan of the Khatris.[11][12] However, this claim appears to have been an attempt to portray him as Guru Gobind's successor, since the preceding Sikh Gurus were Sodhis.[9] Banda Singh’s family was quite poor. Not much is known about his early life other than the fact that Banda Singh was fond of hunting and shooting and learned the arts of horseriding, wrestling, archery, and swordsmanship at a young age and quite quickly.[7] According to a tale about Banda Singh’s early life he was once hunting at the age of 15. The sight of the doe dying saddened Banda Singh. He was even deeply hurt when he cut the doe and found 2 of the doe’s babies dying who were not yet born. The event deeply scarred him and led to Banda Singh abandoning worldly affairs and becoming an ascetic. He came into contact of a fellow ascetic named Janaki Prasad. Prasad changed Banda Singh’s name, which at the time was Lachman Dev, into Madho Das. Banda Singh established his own Dera (monastery) and took upon a following of some men.[7]

Meeting Guru Gobind Singh

In 1708 Guru Gobind Singh went to the monastery of Banda Singh, at the time Madho Das. Guru Gobind Singh sat on Banda Singh’s seat where the Banda would sit as a saint. According to some sources Guru Gobind Singh also killed the goats there. Upon hearing what happened Banda Singh was filled with rage. Banda Singh used his "magic" to flip the chair the Guru sat on, but nothing happened. Filled with rage Banda Singh made his way to the Guru. Upon seeing the Guru Banda Singh’s rage melted. After a conversation with the Guru Banda Singh converted and took Amrit becoming a Khalsa. Madho Das was named Banda Singh by the Guru. Banda Singh was taught in Gurbani and Sikh history.[13] Upon learning of the killing of Zorawar Singh and Fateh Singh, Banda Singh is said to have cried. Guru Gobind Singh told Banda Singh, "When tyranny had overtaken men, it was the duty off the more sensitive to fight against it and even to lay down their life in the struggle". Banda Singh wanted to do such. Banda Singh wished to fulfil Guru Gobind Singh’s wish of punishing tyrants and saving the commoners.[14]

Military campaigns

Beginning

Soon after Guru Gobind Singh was stabbed by 2 Pathans sent by Wazir Khan and possibly Bahadur Shah I. This is said to have sent Banda Singh into a fury. Banda Singh begged of the Guru to send him into Punjab so he can get revenge for the crimes done on Sikhs and punish the tyrants. In September 1708 Guru Gobind Singh gave Banda Singh the title of Bahadur and gave his full political and military authority to carry on the struggle. Banda Singh was given the duty of punishing wrong-doers and get revenge for the killing of Zorawar Singh and Fateh Singh. He was bestowed with a Nagara (war drum), Nishan Sahib, and 5 arrows of Guru Gobind Singh. He was also given Panj Pyare, Ram Singh, Binod Singh, Kahan Singh, Baj Singh, and Daya Singh to assist him.[15] Banda Singh was also given 20 other Singhs to accompany him. He was told by the Guru to remain honest and pure in heart, to not touch another man’s wife, see himself as a servant of the Khalsa and Guru, do all acts after an Ardas and seeking counsel of the Panj Pyare, not to call himself Guru or form his own sects, and not to get ego from victories nor sadness from losses.[16]

Banda Singh was also given Hukamnamas from Guru Gobind Singh telling all Sikhs to join him in his war against the Mughal Empire. He was given the position of Jathedar of the Khalsa. Thus Banda Singh was sent to Punjab with a group of 300 cavalry following him in a distance of 8 kilometers.[16]

During the trip to Punjab Guru Gobind Singh died on 7 October 1708. Banda Singh used a disguise to travel for most of the trip and followed the path Guru Gobind Singh took in Maharashtra and Rajputana. Banda Singh traveled at a rate of 16 kilometres a day. It took a year for him to reach Punjab.[17]

Early conquests

 
Painting of Banda Singh Bahadur being blessed with five arrows by Guru Gobind Singh, by Gian Singh Naqqash, ca.1930

Banda Singh soon reached modern day Haryana and was soon able to win over the local people.[18] Banda Singh advanced towards the region of Bagar and was successful in subduing local dacoits (bandits) and robbers. He distributed what he captured from the thieves amongst the poor.[18] This incident won Banda Singh fame. He was publicly honoured by the locals with a waving of scarf.[19] Banda Singh was able to gain the support of local villagers and initiated people into the Khalsa.[18] Banda Singh then advanced towards the villages of Sehri and Khanda. It was in these villages that Banda Singh sent letters to the Sikh communities in the Majha, Doaba, and Malwa regions of Punjab to join him on his campaign against the Mughal authorities. It was in these letters that Banda Singh reminded the Sikhs of the cruel deaths of Guru Gobind Singh's two younger sons under the orders of Wazir Khan, the Governor of Sirhind.[18][20] As a result of these letters, Banda Singh began to receive support from the Sikh communities of Punjab.[21] Banda Singh was joined by Fateh Singh along with Karam Singh and Dharm Singh.[21]Tilok Singh and Ram Singh Phulkian provided soldiers and financial aid to Banda Singh.[21] Ali Singh and Mali Singh, who were previously under the service of Wazir Khan, also joined Banda Singh.[21]

Conquest of Sonipat and Kaithal

Banda Singh with a force of 500 soldiers lead an attack on Sonipat which war near the imperial capital Delhi. The Faujdar of Sonipat was defeated by the Sikhs resulting in the city being occupied.[22] Banda Singh plundered the imperial treasury and the rich. He distributed the wealth amongst his own men. The conquest on Sonipat so near to Delhi was an open challenge to the Mughals.[23] Banda Singh next set his eyes on Samana. Along the way Banda Singh lead an attack on a Mughal detachment near Kaithal that was carrying imperial treasure headed to Delhi.[22][23] Banda Singh was successful in taking the treasure from the Mughal authorities.[24] The Amil (Governor) of Kaithal was enraged by this and led an attack on the Sikhs. Banda Singh and the Sikhs fought a hard battle, but being mostly footmen compared to the Mughal cavalry were facing losses. Banda Singh executed a plan where the Sikh force ran into the forest full of thorns forcing the Mughal cavalry to abandon their horses. The Sikhs then popped out of the woods and took the horses. The Mughals were slaughtered in the battle with some surrendering. The Amil was captured by Banda Singh, but was released on the condition he would let the Sikhs keep the horses. The loot captured was distributed amongst Banda Singh’s followers.[25]

Campaign in Haryana and east

Banda Singh decided to head east towards Kiratpur in order to liberate Sikhs of Majha and Doaba held up in Malerkotla and Ropar. Along the way Banda Singh conquered Ghurman and Thaska. Ghurman offered minor resistance whereas Thaska surrendered without any resistance. Banda Singh then advanced upon Kunjpura which was the native village of Wazir Khan. Troops and artillery of Wazir Khan was stationed there but they were defeated by the Sikhs. Banda Singh next attacked Shahabad which was inhabited by Muslims known for committing rape. They were destroyed by Banda Singh and the Sikh forces. Banda Singh also ravaged Damala which was the home of the Pathans who abandoned Guru Gobind Singh in the Battle of Bhangani. Banda Singh next marched upon Mustafabad. The Faujdar of Mustafabad sent 2,000 imperial troops with 2 cannons to stop Banda Singh and the Sikhs. Banda Singh and the Sikhs defeated the Mughals with them leaving behind the cannons in their retreat. The town was plundered and the Faujdar was punished for his tyranny and oppression on the population.[26][27][28]

Battle of Kapuri

Banda Singh heard about Kapuri's Zamindar Qadam-ud-din, his reportedly immoral life[29] and persecution of Hindus and Sikhs.[30] He meddled with Hindu marriages and kidnapped young brides and raped them.[31] Banda Singh immediately attacked Kapuri, and killed Qadam-ud-din capturing his fort. This victory also led to a major capture of booty and war material.[32][31][33]

Battle of Sadhaura

Banda Singh’s next sight was Sadhaura. Sadhaura was ruled by Osman Khan, who tortured and executed the Muslim saint Syed Pir Budhu Shah, for helping Guru Gobind Singh in the Battle of Bhagnani. Osman Khan also committed atrocities against Hindus where the cows were slaughtered in front of their homes and forbade Hindus and Sikhs from cremating their dead and performing their religious events. All of this made Sadhaura Banda Singh’s target.[34][35][31][36] As Banda Singh advanced on Sadhaura the locals and peasants joined him in revolt. The angry mob became uncontrollable and destroyed all. The Sayyids and Shaikhs were killed. Osman Khan was hanged to death and Sadhaura was captured.[31][36][37]

Ropar

Wazir Khan had found out that the Sikhs from Majha had assembled at Kiratpur Sahib to join Banda Singh. When the Sikhs reached Ropar, Sher Mohammad Khan along with Khizar Khan, Nashtar Khan and Wali Mohammad Khan were there to block the Sikhs passage and offer them a battle.[38] The Mughals had better weapons and a superior number of cavalry while the Sikhs had a small army with insufficient weapons.[39] Both sides faced off in a bloody battle. As they were fighting, there came a bad dust storm which forced both parties to withdraw for the night.[40] On the next day, a fresh contingent of Sikhs arrived to reinforce the remaining Sikhs. Immediately a bullet struck Khizar Khan in the head which caused confusion.[41][42] Nashtar and Wali Mohammad Khan tried to retrieve the dead body of Khizar Khan but were killed while doing so. Sher Mohammad Khan fled away due to being seriously wounded.[39] With most of their leaders killed, the remaining force retreated back to Sirhind.[43][32] The Sikh force in Ropar later grouped with Banda Singh Bahadur to prepare for the attack on Sirhind.[44]

Conquest of Sirhind

Preparations

The Sikhs were planning to wage dharamyudh against the city of Sirhind, its Governor Wazir Khan and Dewan Sucha Nand, to avenge Mughal oppression and the execution of the two young children of Guru Gobind Singh.[45][46] This was the main goal of Banda Singh.[14] B

Before the battle began, Wazir Khan and Sucha Nand sent the latter's nephew with 1,000 men to Baba Banda Singh Bahadur in a plot to deceive the Sikhs, by falsely claiming to have deserted the Mughals and have come joined the Sikhs for their cause.[47][38] Wazir Khan had a large well-armed army, which included ghazis, along with a number of artillery, musketeers, and elephants.[47] Khan's army was larger than 20,000.[48]

On the other hand, Banda Singh's army was ill-equipped with long spears, arrows, swords, without artillery and elephants and insufficient amount of horses.[49][47] According to Ganda Singh, Banda's army consisted of three classes of men where the first class were the devoted Sikhs imbued to crusade against the enemies of their country and religion, the second being the paid recruited soldiers sent by the chieftains of the Phul family, who sympathized with Banda Singh's cause. The third were the irregulars who were professional robbers and dacoits (bandits), eager to seize the opportunity to plunder the city. They were also the most unreliable allies as they would desert when fearing a sign of defeat.[47][50] Hari Ram Gupta writes that Banda's army consisted of three groups, the first being Sikhs fighting purely to punish Wazir Khan, the second being Sikhs intent on plundering and punishing enemies of their faith. The third being Hindu Jats, Gujars and Rajputs intent on plunder alone.[51]

Battle

Both sides faced off in Chappar Chiri on 12 May 1710. Upon the firing of artillery by the Mughal Army, the third class of Banda's army, consisting of bandits and irregulars fled, and soon after Sucha Nand's nephew along with his 1,000 men took to flight as well.[47] Baj Singh informed Banda Singh of this. Banda Singh decoded to personally entre the frontlines of the battle leading the charge against the Mughals.[52][47] This motivated the Sikh force who shouted, "Waheguru ji ki Fateh" (Victory belongs to the Wondrous Enlightener) as they charged against the Mughals and their elephants. With only swords two elephants were killed by the Sikhs. The Mughals suffered heavy casualties with the Nawab of Malerkotla, Sher Mohammad Khan, being killed. He was followed by Mughal general Khawaja Ali. Wazir Khan attempted to rally his men as he fired arrows,[53] but was confronted by Baj Singh. Wazir Khan threw a spear at Baj Singh. Both men dueled with Baj Singh injuring Wazir Khan's horse. Wazir Khan shot Baj Singh in the arm with an arrow and reached for his sword to kill him. Fateh Singh charged at Wazir Khan and decapitated Wazir Khan before he could kill Baj Singh.[52] According to Suraj Granth and Maculiffe Wazir Khan was instead killed by Banda Singh who shot him with an arrow from the Guru.[52] As soon as Wazir Khan died the Mughal force fled.[54][47] Wazir Khan's body would later be tied to an animal and dragged around before being hung onto a tree.[55][53][52]

The retreating Mughal force left behind all of their horses, cannons, tents, and ammunition which was all captured by the Sikhs. Sikhs yelled out war cries of "Sat Sri Akaal" (True is the Timeless Lord) as they fell upon Sirhind. Sikhs reached Sirhind by nightfall. The gates had been closed and cannons had been placed to stop the Sikhs. The Sikhs rested for the night. Wazir Khan's family with other Mughal officials had fled to Delhi. On the 13th 500 Sikhs were killed attempting to take Sirhind. By the 14th Sikhs entered Sirhind.[56][57][58]

Aftermath

Filled with rage and revenge Sikhs began to destroy and razed Sirhind to the ground. Sucha Nand was captured and executed. All the booty of Sirhind was captured by Banda Singh.[56] He further abolished the zamindari system (feudal system) and distributed land among the peasants.[59] Banda Singh had ordered that the ownership of the land should be given to the peasants and to let them live in dignity and self-respect.[60][61]

The entire province of Sirhind and its 28 parganas was under the control of Banda Singh. It extended from the Sutlej to the Yamuna and from the Shivalik hills to Kunjpura, Karnal and Kaithal. All of it yielded 3,600,000 rupees annually.[56] He appointed Baj Singh as the new Governor of Sirhind and Ali Singh of Salaudi as his deputy, and struck coins.[62][63][58] Fateh Singh was made Governor of Samana, and Ram Singh Governor of Thanesar.[56]

Banda Singh had become well known at this time as, "The defender of the faith and the champion of the oppressed."[56]

Military Invasions

Banda Singh Bahadur developed the village of Mukhlisgarh and made it his capital. He then renamed it to Lohgarh (Fortress of Iron) where he issued his own mint.[64] The coin described Lohgarh: "Struck in the City of Peace, illustrating the beauty of civic life, and the ornament of the blessed throne".[citation needed]

He briefly established a state in Punjab for half a year. Banda Singh sent Sikhs to Uttar Pradesh and the Sikhs took over Saharanpur, Muzaffarnagar, and other nearby areas.

The rule of the Sikhs over the entire Punjab east of Lahore obstructed the communication between Delhi and Lahore, the capital of Punjab, and this worried Mughal Emperor Bahadur Shah I He gave up his plan to subdue rebels in Rajputana and marched towards Punjab.[65]

The entire imperial force was organized to defeat and kill Banda Singh Bahadur.[66] All the generals were directed to join the Emperor's army. To ensure that there were no Sikh agents in the army camps, an order was issued on 29 August 1710 to all Hindus to shave off their beards.[67]

Banda Singh was in Uttar Pradesh when the Mughal Army under the orders of Munim Khan[68] marched to Sirhind and before the return of Banda Singh, they had already taken Sirhind and the areas around it. The Sikhs therefore moved to Lohgarh for their final battle. The Sikhs defeated the army but reinforcements were called and they laid siege on the fort with 60,000 troops.[69][70] Gulab Singh dressed himself in the garments of Banda Singh and seated himself in his place.[71]

Banda Singh left the fort at night and went to a secret place in the hills and Chamba forests. The failure of the army to kill or catch Banda Singh shocked Emperor Bahadur Shah I and on 10 December 1710 he ordered that wherever a Sikh was found, he should be killed.[72][73]

Banda Singh Bahadur wrote Hukamnamas to the Sikhs to reorganize and join him at once.[74] In 1712, the Sikhs gathered near Kiratpur Sahib and defeated Raja Ajmer Chand,[75] who was responsible for organizing all the Hill States against Guru Gobind Singh and instigating battles with him. After Bhim Chand's dead the other Hill Rajas accepted their subordinate status and paid revenues to Banda Singh. While Bahadur Shah I's four sons were killing themselves for the throne of the Mughal Emperor,[76] Banda Singh Bahadur recaptured Sadhaura and Lohgarh. Farrukh Siyar, the 10th Mughal Emperor, appointed Abdus Samad Khan as the Subahdar of the Lahore province and Zakariya Khan, Abdus Samad Khan's son, the Faujdar of Jammu.[77]

In 1713 the Sikhs left Lohgarh and Sadhaura and went to the remote hills of Jammu and where they built Dera Baba Banda Singh.[78][page needed] During this time Sikhs were being persecuted especially by Mughals in the Gurdaspur region.[79] Banda Singh came out and captured Kalanaur and Batala (both places in modern Gurdaspur district[80] which rebuked Farrukh Siyar to issue Mughal and Hindu officials and chiefs to proceed with their troops to Lahore to reinforce his army.[81]

Siege in Gurdas Nangal

In March 1715, the army under the command of Abd al-Samad Khan,[82] the Mughal Governor of Lahore, drove Banda Bahadur and the Sikh forces into the village of Gurdas Nangal, 6 km to the west of Gurdaspur, Punjab and laid siege to the village.[83] The Sikhs defended the small fort for eight months under conditions of great hardship,[84] but on 7 December 1715 the Mughals broke into the starving garrison and captured Banda Singh and his companions.[85]

Execution

 
Sculpture of the execution of Banda Singh Bahadur at Delhi, Mehdiana Sahib, near Jagraon in Ludhiana district, India

Banda Singh Bahadur was put into an iron cage and the remaining Sikhs were chained.[86] The Sikhs were brought to Delhi in a procession with the 780 Sikh prisoners, 2,000 Sikh heads hung on spears, and 700 cartloads of heads of slaughtered Sikhs used to terrorize the population.[87][88] They were put in the Red Fort and pressured to give up their faith and become Muslims.[89]

The prisoners remained unmoved. On their firm refusal these non-converters were ordered to be executed. Every day 100 Sikh soldiers were brought out of the fort and executed in public.[90] This continued for approximately seven days.[91] Banda was told to kill his four-year-old son, Ajai Singh, which he refused to do.[92] So, Ajai was executed, his heart was cut out, and thrust into Banda's mouth. However, his resolution did not break under torture, and so he was martyred. After three months of confinement,[93] on 9 June 1716, Banda's eyes were gouged out, his limbs were severed, his skin removed, and then he was beheaded.[1][94]

The execution of Banda Singh Bahadur and 700 of his followers by the Mughals in the spring of 1716 at Delhi was observed by a European visitor to the city on official business who was a British East India Company diplomat to the Mughal Empire.[95] This European recorded his thoughts on the execution of the Sikhs in a letter he sent to the Governor of Fort William in Calcutta.[95] It is one of the earliest accounts of the Sikhs from the perspective of a Westerner.[95]

Revolutionary

 
Mural fresco of Banda Singh Bahadur (seated right) with his son (seated left). An attendant to the right is waving a fly-whisk. They are adorned with red clothing colours, characteristic of the Bandai Khalsa faction

Banda Singh Bahadur is known to have halted the Zamindari and Taluqdari system in the time he was active and gave the peasants proprietorship of their own land.[96] It seems that all classes of government officers were addicted to extortion and corruption and the whole system of regulatory and order was subverted.[97]

Local tradition recalls that the people from the neighborhood of Sadaura came to Banda Singh complaining of the iniquities practices by their feudal lords. Banda Singh ordered Baj Singh to open fire on them. The people were astonished at the strange reply to their representation and asked him what he meant. He told them that they deserved no better treatment when being thousands in number they still allowed themselves to be cowed down by a handful of Zamindars. He defeated the Sayyids and Shaikhs in the Battle of Sadhaura.[98]

Possible rivalry with Tat Khalsa and legacy

 
Mural of Banda Singh Bahadur with his son with both being served by fly-whisk attendants

In 1714, a resolute effort was envisaged by Farrukh Siyar to suppress Banda's rebellion, who was evading capture despite significant Mughal endeavors and investment of resources. At first, Mata Sundari (Guru Gobind's widow) was asked to persuade Banda to stop his lawlessness and expedition against the Mughals in exchange for jagirs and recruitment for Sikh soldiers into the imperial army. Banda declined on account of his lack of trust in the government. The Emperor had then imprisoned both of Gobind's widows, prompting Sundari to write to Banda again to get him to submit. Banda had again declined, leading the Emperor to tighten the restrictions on the widows, culminating in the excommunication of Banda Singh Bahadur by Mata Sundari for refusing to submit to the Emperor as per her demands. She further accused him of reigning over the Sikhs as their "Guru", and reprimanded his followers in a hukam-nama. This dispute led to two separate factions of the contemporary Sikh community, the Tat Khalsa; who were allied to Mata Sundari, and the Bandais; who were allied to Banda Singh Bahadur.[99][100][101][102] Mata Sundari's intervention led to half of Banda's followers (approximately fifteen thousand) abandoning him prior to the siege of Gurdas Nangal.[103][104][105] Disputes between the Tat Khalsa and the Bandais primarily included topics including Banda's abandonment of the traditional blue robes in favor of red ones, his insistence on vegetarianism, his observance of caste rituals, and his replacement of the prescribed Sikh slogan with "Fateh Darshan", as well as concerns over excesses committed by Banda's troops during their campaign of retribution against the Mughals. Banda's excommunication impeded his ability to counter the Mughals and contributed to his eventual capture and execution.[106][107][108][109]

Modern Sikh tradition speaks of at least two different Khalsas; the Tat Khalsa adhering to the polity and injunctions of Guru Gobind Singh, and the Bandais; those who adopted the principles of Banda Singh Bahadur.[110][111]

However the authenticity of the excommunication of Banda Singh Bahadur by Mata Sundari has been questioned by historian Ganda Singh who mentions that there is no contemporary or near contemporary writers or sources that make any mention of Banda Singh Bahadur being excommunicated, or that Farrukh Siyar had come into negotiations with Mata Sundari.[112] Historian Surjit Singh Gandhi also claims that there is no contemporary sources that make any mention of an excommunication occurring between Banda Singh and Mata Sundari.[113] Historian Sukhdial Singh further notes that there is no hukam-nama issued by Mata Sundari that addresses Banda Singh.[114] According to Dr. Nazer Singh, Banda Singh was regarded with contempt by the Akalis and the larger Sikh community for two centuries after his death, to counter Banda's exclusion from the Sikh community, Dr. Ganda Singh wrote an exculpatory book on him in 1935, proclaiming him to be a "perfect Sikh".[115] Modern scholarship has also cast doubt on Ganda Singh's explication of Banda Singh Bahadur's life and adherence to the Khalsa doctrine; his citing of Banda's phrases in hukam-namas, which he interpreted as Banda deferring to the Guru's authority and strictures ("This is the order of the Sacha Sahiba" and "He who lives according to the Rehat of the Khalsa shall be saved by the Guru") were equivocal and could also be taken as Banda conferring guruship upon himself. Ganda Singh also concurred that Banda invented his own salutation and prohibited the consumption of meat, likely motivated by his Bairagi background as opposed to the customs of the Khalsa.[116] According to Purnima Dhavan's When Sparrows Became Hawks: The Making of the Sikh Warrior Tradition, 1699-1799, while Banda did reiterate support of the Khalsa rahit in his hukam-namas, he also revered the values of vegetarianism and customs associated with the Hindu elite, made appeals to a collective Hindu and Sikh religion, and omitted prior orthodox Sikh sentiments and apprehensions about the Khalsa's interactions with other groups.[117]

Baba Banda Singh Bahadur War Memorial

 
Night view of Fateh Burj, Chappar Chiri, Sahibzada Ajit Singh Nagar, Punjab, India.

A war memorial was built where Battle of Chappar Chiri was fought, to glorify heroic Sikh soldiers. The 328 feet tall Fateh Burj was dedicated to Banda Singh Bahadur who led the army and defeated the Mughal forces. The Fateh Burj is taller than Qutab Minar and is an octagonal structure. There is a dome at the top of the tower with Khanda made of stainless steel.[118]

In popular culture

  • Sarbans Dani Guru Gobind Singh, a 1998 Indian Punjabi-language drama film directed by Ram Maheshwari. The film follows the Guru and Banda Singh Bahadur's struggle against the Mughal Empire.[119]
  • Rise of Khalsa, a 2006 Indian animated historical drama film by Vismaad Mediatech.
  • Chaar Sahibzaade: Rise of Banda Singh Bahadur, a 2016 Indian computer-animated film by Harry Baweja. A sequel to Chaar Sahibzaade, it follows Banda Singh Bahadur's fight against the Mughals under the guidance of Guru Gobind Singh.
  • Guru Da Banda, a 2018 Indian animated historical drama film by Jassi Chana.

Battles fought by Banda Singh

  1. Battle of Sonipat
  2. Battle of Samana
  3. Battle of Kapuri
  4. Battle of Sadhaura[120]
  5. Battle of Ropar (1710)
  6. Battle of Chappar Chiri
  7. Battle of Sirhind
  8. Battle of Saharanpur
  9. Battle of Nanautu
  10. Siege of Jalalabad (1710)
  11. Battle of Thanesar
  12. Siege of Kotla Begum (1710)
  13. Battle of Bhilowal
  14. Battle of Rahon (1710)
  15. First Battle of Lohgarh
  16. Battle of Bilaspur (1711)
  17. Battle of Jammu (1712)
  18. Second Battle of Lohgarh
  19. Battle of Kiri Pathan (1714)
  20. Battle of Gurdas Nangal or Siege of Gurdaspur

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Ganda Singh. "Banda Singh Bahadur". Encyclopaedia of Sikhism. Punjabi University Patiala. Retrieved 27 January 2014.
  2. ^ a b Sagoo 2001, p. 213.
  3. ^ Rajmohan Gandhi (1999), Revenge and Reconciliation, Penguin Books India, pp. 117–18, ISBN 9780140290455
  4. ^ "Banda Singh Bahadur". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 15 May 2013.
  5. ^ RATNAKAR, GUR SHABAD. Mahan kosh (in Punjabi). Bhai Baljinder Singh. pp. visit website of Rara Sahib www.rarasahib.com.
  6. ^ Sagoo 2001.
  7. ^ a b c Sagoo 2001, pp. 112–113.
  8. ^ Sagoo 2001, p. 112.
  9. ^ a b Rai Jasbir Singh (1997). "Historical analysis of the ballad of Banda Bahadur". Journal of Sikh Studies. 21 (2). Guru Nanak Dev University: 33. The poet wants to assert that Banda was the religious descendant of Guru Gobind Singh and the 11th guru of the Sikhs. For this purpose, he acclaimed that Banda was a Sodhi Khatri. Actually, Banda was Bhardwaj Rajput. The poet knows that only the Sodhi Khatri could be the guru of the Sikhs. He seems, to be aware of the Sikh tradition that the guruship would remain within the limit of the Sodhi's.
  10. ^ Vidya Dhar Mahajan (1965). Muslim Rule in India. S. Chand. p. 231. Banda Bahadur was a Dogra Rajput
  11. ^ Ganda Singh. "Banda Singh Bahadur". Encyclopaedia of Sikhism. Punjabi University Patiala. Retrieved 27 January 2014.
  12. ^ Ganda Singh (1975). "Banda Singh Bahadur, His Achievements and the Place of His Execution". The Panjab Past and Present. Department of Punjab Historical Studies, Punjabi University. p. 441. According to Hakim Rai's Ahwal Lachhman Das urf Banda Sahib Chela Guru Singh Sahib, he originally belonged to the Sodhi clan of the Khatris, while another account records him as a Panjabi Khatri (Kapur or Khana) of the Sialkot District.
  13. ^ Sagoo 2001, pp. 115–117.
  14. ^ a b Singh, Raj Pal (1998). Banda Bahadur and His Times. Harman Publishing House. ISBN 978-81-86622-25-4.
  15. ^ Singh 1990, p. 25.
  16. ^ a b Sagoo 2001, pp. 118–119.
  17. ^ Sagoo 2001, p. 120.
  18. ^ a b c d Singh 1935, pp. 27–31.
  19. ^ Sagoo 2001, p. 121.
  20. ^ Sagoo 2001, p. 122.
  21. ^ a b c d Singh 1935, pp. 32–34.
  22. ^ a b Singh 1935, pp. 35–39.
  23. ^ a b Sagoo 2001, p. 124.
  24. ^ Singh 1935, p. 35-39.
  25. ^ Sagoo 2001, pp. 124–125.
  26. ^ Singh, Dr. Sukhdial. Banda Singh Bahadur On The Canvas Of History.
  27. ^ Singh 1990, pp. 42–44.
  28. ^ Sagoo 2001, p. 126; Singh 1998, p. 18.
  29. ^ Dr Sukhdial Singh (2015). textsBanda Singh Bahadur On The Canvas Of History. p. 97.
  30. ^ Singh 1995, p. 273.
  31. ^ a b c d Sagoo 2001, p. 127.
  32. ^ a b Singh 2000, p. 72.
  33. ^ Gandhi 1999, p. 28.
  34. ^ Singh 2007, pp. 68, 69.
  35. ^ Gandhi 1999, p. 29.
  36. ^ a b Singh 1990, pp. 46–49.
  37. ^ Singh 2004, p. 6.
  38. ^ a b Sagoo 2001, p. 129.
  39. ^ a b D.S Saggu VSM (2018). Battle Tactics And War Manoeuvres of the Sikhs. Notion Press. ISBN 9781642490060.
  40. ^ Dhillon, Harish (May 2013). First Raj of the Sikhs. Hay House. ISBN 9789381398395.
  41. ^ Sampath, Vikram (26 October 2022). Bravehearts of Bharat. Penguin Random House India Private Limited. ISBN 9789354928284.
  42. ^ Nijjar, Bakhshish Singh (1972). Panjab Under the Later Mughals, 1707-1759. New Academic Publishing Company. p. 47.
  43. ^ Institute of Sikh Studies (1997). Sikhism - Its Philosophy And History. Institute of Sikh Studies. p. 434. ISBN 9788185815039.
  44. ^ Dhillon, Harish (May 2013). First Raj of the Sikhs. Hay House. ISBN 9789381398395.
  45. ^ Singh, Khushwant (2004b). A History of the Sikhs: 1469–1838. Oxford University Press. p. 105. ISBN 9780195673081.
  46. ^ Gupta, Hari Ram (1944). Studies in Later Mughal History of the Panjab. The Minerva Book Shop. p. 47.
  47. ^ a b c d e f g Singh 1990, pp. 55–66.
  48. ^ Singh 1935, pp. 59–60.
  49. ^ Sagoo 2001, p. 126.
  50. ^ Sagoo 2001, p. 139.
  51. ^ Gupta 1978, p. 12.
  52. ^ a b c d Sagoo 2001, p. 130–131.
  53. ^ a b Bengal, Royal Asiatic Society of (1895). Journal and Proceedings.
  54. ^ Gupta, Hari Ram (1999) [1937]. History of the Sikhs: Evolution of Sikh Confederacies (1708-69) (PDF). Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers. pp. 12, 13. ISBN 9788121502481.
  55. ^ www.DiscoverSikhism.com. History Of The Sikhs Vol. II Evolution Of Sikh Confederacies (1707-69).
  56. ^ a b c d e Sagoo 2001, pp. 132–134.
  57. ^ Macauliffe, Max Arthur (28 March 2013) [1909]. The Sikh Religion: Its Gurus, Sacred Writings and Authors. Cambridge University Press. p. 248. ISBN 978-1-108-05547-5.
  58. ^ a b Singh, Ganda (1989) [1950]. A Short History of the Sikhs. Publication Bureau, Punjabi University. p. 84.
  59. ^ Kaur, Madanjit (2007). Guru Gobind Singh: Historical and Ideological Perspective. Unistar Books. p. 241. ISBN 9788189899554.
  60. ^ Singh 1927, p. 8.
  61. ^ Dhavan 2011, p. 51.
  62. ^ Singha 2005, p. 9.
  63. ^ Gupta 1999, p. 14.
  64. ^ Grewal, J.S. (1998). The Sikhs of the Punjab. Cambridge University Press. p. 83. ISBN 9780521637640.
  65. ^ Singha 2005, p. 14.
  66. ^ Singh 1995, p. 27.
  67. ^ Bakshi, S. R. (2005). Early Aryans to Swaraj. Sarup & Sons. p. 25. ISBN 9788176255370.
  68. ^ Sharma, S.R. (1999). Mughal Empire in India: A Systematic Study Including Source Material, Volume 2. Atlantic Publishers & Distributors. p. 627. ISBN 9788171568185.
  69. ^ Jaques, Tony (2007). Dictionary of Battles and Sieges. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 595. ISBN 9780313335389.
  70. ^ Gupta 1978, p. 19.
  71. ^ Ralhan, O. P. (1997). The Great Gurus of the Sikhs: Banda Singh Bahadur, Asht Ratnas etc. Anmol Publications Pvt Ltd. p. 17. ISBN 9788174884794.
  72. ^ Singh 1927, p. 10.
  73. ^ Johar, Surinder (2002). The Sikh Sword to Power. The University of Michigan: Arsee Publishers. p. 27.
  74. ^ Singh 1999, p. 91.
  75. ^ Kapoor, Sukhbir (1988). The Ideal Man: The Concept of Guru Gobind Singh, the Tenth Prophet of the Sikhs. The University of Virginia: Khalsa College London Press. p. 177.
  76. ^ General Knowledge Digest 2010. Tata McGraw-Hill Education. 2010. p. 2.134. ISBN 9780070699397.
  77. ^ Singh 1999, p. 93.
  78. ^ Singh 2007.
  79. ^ Sastri, Kallidaikurichi (1978). A Comprehensive History of India: 1712–1772. the University of Michigan: Orient Longmans. p. 243.
  80. ^ Gill, Pritam (1978). History of Sikh nation: foundation, assassination, resurrection. The University of Michigan: New Academic Pub. Co. p. 279.
  81. ^ Singh 1999, p. 94.
  82. ^ Jawandha, Nahar (2010). Glimpses of Sikhism. New Delhi: Sanbun Publishers. p. 82. ISBN 9789380213255.
  83. ^ Pletcher, Kenneth (2010). The History of India. The Rosen Publishing Group. p. 200. ISBN 9781615302017.
  84. ^ Hoiberg, Dale (2000). Students' Britannica India, Volumes 1-5. New Delhi: Popular Prakashan. p. 157. ISBN 9780852297605.
  85. ^ "Banda Singh Bahadar – Bandai or Tatt Khalsa?". Singh Sabha Canada. 2 February 2011. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  86. ^ Duggal, Kartar (2001). Maharaja Ranjit Singh: The Last to Lay Arms. Abhinav Publications. p. 41. ISBN 9788170174103.
  87. ^ Johar, Surinder (1987). Guru Gobind Singh. The University of Michigan: Enkay Publishers. p. 208. ISBN 9788185148045.
  88. ^ Sastri, Kallidaikurichi (1978). A Comprehensive History of India: 1712–1772. The University of Michigan: Orient Longmans. p. 245.
  89. ^ Singh 1927, p. 12.
  90. ^ Jawandha, Nahar (2010). Glimpses of Sikhism. Sanbun Publishers. p. 89. ISBN 9789380213255.
  91. ^ Singh 1999, p. 97.
  92. ^ Social Studies history and civics, class 10. PSEB. p. 72.
  93. ^ Singh 1935, p. 229.
  94. ^ Singh, Kulwant (2006). Sri Gur Panth Prakash: Episodes 1 to 81. Institute of Sikh Studies. p. 415. ISBN 9788185815282.
  95. ^ a b c Mandair, Arvind-pal Singh; Singh, Sunit (2017). "Orientalism (Sikhism)". Sikhism: with 64 figures. Encyclopedia of Indian Religions. Dordrecht: Springer. p. 290. ISBN 978-94-024-0845-4. Based on the best available compendiums of English records, the first occasion that an EIC officer had to observe Sikhs close at hand apparently arose in the spring of 1716 at Delhi, where an EIC mission in the Mughal capital witnessed the publicly held exe- cutions of 700 Sikh rebels as well as their chief Banda Bahadur. "It is not a little remarkable," wrote the head of the mission in a letter to the Governor of Fort William, the resolve with which the rebels "undergo their fate" without apostasy in the name of their "new formed religion."
  96. ^ Jawandha, Nahar (2010). Glimpses of Sikhism. New Delhi: Sanbun Publishers. p. 81. ISBN 9789380213255.
  97. ^ Sagoo 2001, p. 158.
  98. ^ Singh 1999, p. 85.
  99. ^ Ballantyne, Tony (2010). Textures of the Sikh Past: New Historical Perspectives. Oxford University Press. pp. 80–84. ISBN 9780195686630.
  100. ^ Gupta 1978, pp. 24–26.
  101. ^ McLeod, W.H. (2003). Sikhs of the Khalsa: A History of the Khalsa Rahit. Oxford University Press. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-19-567221-3.
  102. ^ Alam, Muzaffar (1986). The Crisis of Empire in Mughal North India: Awadh and the Punjab 1707-1748. Oxford University Press. p. 175.
  103. ^ Kaur, Madanjit (2000). Guru Gobind Singh and Creation of Khalsa. Guru Nanak Dev University. pp. 83–84. The truth is that fifteen thousand Sikhs left Banda's force because of the intervention of Mata Sundri, the widow of Guru Gobind Singh. She admonished Banda Singh Bahadur for breaches of the Khalsa code of conduct. Banda started calling himself a Guru, required his followers to address him as Sacha Sahib and changed the Khalsa greeting, Wahe Guru ji ka Khalsa, Wahe Guru ji ki Fateh into Fateh Darshan. For these and other misdeeds Banda was excommunicated from the Khalsa Panth by Mata Sundri.....The result of Mata Sundri's intervention was that half of Banda's followers sided with Mata Sundri, left Banda's force and started calling themselves Tatva Khalsa.
  104. ^ Grewal, J. S.; Chattopadhyaya, Debi Prasad (2005). The State and Society in Medieval India. Oxford University Press. p. 350. ISBN 978-0-19-566720-2. According to Ratan Singh Bhangu , the earliest historian of the Khalsa , the veteran followers of Guru Gobind Singh ( Tat - khālsa ) charged Banda with having assumed ' rulership ' whereas he had been only assigned ' service '. They maintained that the Tenth Guru had bestowed sovereignty upon the Khalsa Panth. They charged Banda with deviation from Khalsa practices by adopting the salutation 'fateh darshan', by insisting upon vegetarianism, and by preferring red dress over the traditional blue of the Singhs. His observance of chauka (plastered squared space) militated against the practice of collective dinning. Therefore, the staunch Khalsa dissociated themselves from Banda before the final siege in 1715. Mata Sundri, the widow of Guru Gobind Singh, is believed to have lent her moral support to the Tat - Khālsa in their tussle first against Banda and then against his followers ( Bandais ).
  105. ^ Banga, Indu; Indian History Congress (2002). Banerjee, Himadri (ed.). The Khalsa and the Punjab: Studies in Sikh History, to the Nineteenth Century. Tulika Books. pp. 103–104. ISBN 978-81-85229-71-3. His observance of ritual purities seemed to militate against the casteless order created by the baptism (sarbangi reet) created by the baptism of the double-edged sword. The old Khalsa also regarded it unsuitable for a state of warfare. Therefore, they are said to have disassociated from Banda before the siege of Gurdas Nangal and gone to Amristar.
  106. ^ Louis E. Fenech; W.H. McLeod (2014). Historical Dictionary of Sikhism. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 59, 296. ISBN 9781442236011.
  107. ^ Mandair, Arvind-Pal Singh (6 June 2013). Sikhism: A Guide for the Perplexed. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 70. ISBN 978-1-4411-5366-1.
  108. ^ Fenech, Louis E. (14 January 2021). The Cherished Five in Sikh History. Oxford University Press. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-19-753285-0. He nevertheless soon fell out of their favour, even drawing the ire of the Tenth Guru's widow Mata Sundari and actually managing to divide the Khalsa in its loyalties, between those who remained attached to the memory of the Tenth Guru (the Akalpurakhia) and those committed to Banda (Bandai), whom Mughal sources often refer to as the 'accursed guru' or confuse with Guru Gobind Singh.
  109. ^ Sarkar, Jagdish Narayan (1976). A Study of Eighteenth Century India. Saraswat Library. p. 311. According to Sikh tradition, one of Guru Gobind's wives, Mata Sundari, wrote to Banda to stop his 'career of carnage and spoliation' as he had 'accomplished the mission imposed on him by the Guru'.
  110. ^ Singh & Fenech 2014, p. 242.
  111. ^ Irschick, Eugene F. (3 September 2018). A History of the New India: Past and Present. Routledge. p. 121. ISBN 978-1-317-43617-1.
  112. ^ Singh 1990, pp. 246–250.
  113. ^ Gandhi 1999, p. 61.
  114. ^ Singh, Sukhdial (2005). Banda Singh Bahadur On The Canvas Of History. Patiala: Gurmat Prakashan. p. 6.
  115. ^ Singh, Dr Nazer (15 September 2021). Golden Temple and the Punjab Historiography. K.K. Publicatons. p. 198.
  116. ^ Dhavan 2011, p. 196.
  117. ^ Dhavan 2011, p. 53.
  118. ^ "Baba Banda Singh Bahadur War Memorial, Fateh Burj in Ajitgarh". Ajitgarhonline.in. 30 November 2011. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
  119. ^ Singh & Fenech 2014, p. 478.
  120. ^ William Irvine (1904). Later Mughals. Atlantic Publishers & Distri.

Bibliography

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banda, singh, bahadur, born, lachman, october, 1670, june, 1716, sikh, warrior, general, khalsa, army, left, home, become, ascetic, given, name, madho, bairagi, established, monastery, nānded, bank, river, godāvarī, 1707, guru, gobind, singh, accepted, invitat. Banda Singh Bahadur born Lachman Dev 3 1 4 27 October 1670 9 June 1716 was a Sikh warrior and a general of the Khalsa Army At age 15 he left home to become an ascetic and was given the name Madho Das Bairagi He established a monastery at Nanded on the bank of the river Godavari In 1707 Guru Gobind Singh accepted an invitation to meet Mughal Emperor Bahadur Shah I in southern India he visited Banda Singh Bahadur in 1708 Banda became disciple of Guru Gobind Singh and was given a new name Gurbaksh Singh as written in Mahan Kosh 5 after the baptism ceremony He is popularly known as Banda Singh Bahadur He was given five arrows by the Guru as a blessing for the battles ahead He came to Khanda Sonipat and assembled a fighting force and led the struggle against the Mughal Empire Banda Singh BahadurDepiction of Banda Singh Bahadur during the Battle of Sirhind 1710 from an illustrated folio of Tawarikh i Jahandar Shah Awadh or Lucknow ca 1770Birth nameLachman DevOther name s Madho Das Bairagi Banda BairagiBorn27 October 1670 1670 10 27 Rajauri Poonch Mughal Empire 1 present day Jammu and Kashmir India Died9 June 1716 1716 06 10 aged 45 Delhi Mughal Empire present day India AllegianceKhalsa Khalsa Fauj First Sikh StateYears of service1708 1716Spouse s Susheel KaurSahib Kaur 2 ChildrenAjay SinghRanjit Singh 2 SignaturePersonalReligionSikhismReligious careerTeacherGuru Gobind Singh Banda Singh BahadurBattles warsBattle of Sonipat Battle of Samana Battle of Kapuri Battle of Sadhaura Battle of Ropar 1710 Battle of Chappar Chiri Siege of Sirhind Battle of Saharanpur Battle of Jalalabad 1710 Battle of Thanesar 1710 Siege of Kotla Begum 1710 Battle of Bhilowal Battle of Rahon Siege of Lohgarh Banda Singh Bahadur s invasion of the Hill States Battle of Bilaspur 1711 Battle of Jammu 1712 Second Battle of Lohgarh Battle of Kiri Pathan 1714 Siege of Gurdaspur Battle of Gurdas Nangal His first major action was the sacking of the Mughal provincial capital Samana in November 1709 1 After establishing his authority and the Sikh Republic in Punjab 6 page needed Banda Singh Bahadur abolished the zamindari feudal system and granted property rights to the tillers of the land Banda Singh was captured by the Mughals and tortured to death in 1715 1716 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Meeting Guru Gobind Singh 2 Military campaigns 2 1 Beginning 2 2 Early conquests 2 2 1 Conquest of Sonipat and Kaithal 2 3 Campaign in Haryana and east 2 3 1 Battle of Kapuri 2 3 2 Battle of Sadhaura 2 3 3 Ropar 2 4 Conquest of Sirhind 2 4 1 Preparations 2 4 2 Battle 2 4 3 Aftermath 2 5 Military Invasions 3 Siege in Gurdas Nangal 4 Execution 5 Revolutionary 6 Possible rivalry with Tat Khalsa and legacy 7 Baba Banda Singh Bahadur War Memorial 8 In popular culture 9 Battles fought by Banda Singh 10 Gallery 11 See also 12 References 12 1 BibliographyEarly life nbsp Gilded panel repousse plaque from Takht Hazur Sahib Nanded Madho Das declares he is Guru Gobind Singh s Banda slave Banda Singh Bahadur was born as Lachman Dev in a Hindu family to farmer Ram Dev at Rajouri now in Jammu and Kashmir on 27 October 1670 7 Sources variously describe his father as a Rajput from the Bhardwaj clan 8 9 or a Dogra Rajput 10 Hakim Rai s Ahwal i Lachhmaṇ Das urf Banda Sahib Ballad of Banda Bahadur claims that his family belonged to the Sodhi sub clan of the Khatris 11 12 However this claim appears to have been an attempt to portray him as Guru Gobind s successor since the preceding Sikh Gurus were Sodhis 9 Banda Singh s family was quite poor Not much is known about his early life other than the fact that Banda Singh was fond of hunting and shooting and learned the arts of horseriding wrestling archery and swordsmanship at a young age and quite quickly 7 According to a tale about Banda Singh s early life he was once hunting at the age of 15 The sight of the doe dying saddened Banda Singh He was even deeply hurt when he cut the doe and found 2 of the doe s babies dying who were not yet born The event deeply scarred him and led to Banda Singh abandoning worldly affairs and becoming an ascetic He came into contact of a fellow ascetic named Janaki Prasad Prasad changed Banda Singh s name which at the time was Lachman Dev into Madho Das Banda Singh established his own Dera monastery and took upon a following of some men 7 Meeting Guru Gobind Singh In 1708 Guru Gobind Singh went to the monastery of Banda Singh at the time Madho Das Guru Gobind Singh sat on Banda Singh s seat where the Banda would sit as a saint According to some sources Guru Gobind Singh also killed the goats there Upon hearing what happened Banda Singh was filled with rage Banda Singh used his magic to flip the chair the Guru sat on but nothing happened Filled with rage Banda Singh made his way to the Guru Upon seeing the Guru Banda Singh s rage melted After a conversation with the Guru Banda Singh converted and took Amrit becoming a Khalsa Madho Das was named Banda Singh by the Guru Banda Singh was taught in Gurbani and Sikh history 13 Upon learning of the killing of Zorawar Singh and Fateh Singh Banda Singh is said to have cried Guru Gobind Singh told Banda Singh When tyranny had overtaken men it was the duty off the more sensitive to fight against it and even to lay down their life in the struggle Banda Singh wanted to do such Banda Singh wished to fulfil Guru Gobind Singh s wish of punishing tyrants and saving the commoners 14 Military campaignsBeginning Soon after Guru Gobind Singh was stabbed by 2 Pathans sent by Wazir Khan and possibly Bahadur Shah I This is said to have sent Banda Singh into a fury Banda Singh begged of the Guru to send him into Punjab so he can get revenge for the crimes done on Sikhs and punish the tyrants In September 1708 Guru Gobind Singh gave Banda Singh the title of Bahadur and gave his full political and military authority to carry on the struggle Banda Singh was given the duty of punishing wrong doers and get revenge for the killing of Zorawar Singh and Fateh Singh He was bestowed with a Nagara war drum Nishan Sahib and 5 arrows of Guru Gobind Singh He was also given Panj Pyare Ram Singh Binod Singh Kahan Singh Baj Singh and Daya Singh to assist him 15 Banda Singh was also given 20 other Singhs to accompany him He was told by the Guru to remain honest and pure in heart to not touch another man s wife see himself as a servant of the Khalsa and Guru do all acts after an Ardas and seeking counsel of the Panj Pyare not to call himself Guru or form his own sects and not to get ego from victories nor sadness from losses 16 Banda Singh was also given Hukamnamas from Guru Gobind Singh telling all Sikhs to join him in his war against the Mughal Empire He was given the position of Jathedar of the Khalsa Thus Banda Singh was sent to Punjab with a group of 300 cavalry following him in a distance of 8 kilometers 16 During the trip to Punjab Guru Gobind Singh died on 7 October 1708 Banda Singh used a disguise to travel for most of the trip and followed the path Guru Gobind Singh took in Maharashtra and Rajputana Banda Singh traveled at a rate of 16 kilometres a day It took a year for him to reach Punjab 17 Early conquests nbsp Painting of Banda Singh Bahadur being blessed with five arrows by Guru Gobind Singh by Gian Singh Naqqash ca 1930 Banda Singh soon reached modern day Haryana and was soon able to win over the local people 18 Banda Singh advanced towards the region of Bagar and was successful in subduing local dacoits bandits and robbers He distributed what he captured from the thieves amongst the poor 18 This incident won Banda Singh fame He was publicly honoured by the locals with a waving of scarf 19 Banda Singh was able to gain the support of local villagers and initiated people into the Khalsa 18 Banda Singh then advanced towards the villages of Sehri and Khanda It was in these villages that Banda Singh sent letters to the Sikh communities in the Majha Doaba and Malwa regions of Punjab to join him on his campaign against the Mughal authorities It was in these letters that Banda Singh reminded the Sikhs of the cruel deaths of Guru Gobind Singh s two younger sons under the orders of Wazir Khan the Governor of Sirhind 18 20 As a result of these letters Banda Singh began to receive support from the Sikh communities of Punjab 21 Banda Singh was joined by Fateh Singh along with Karam Singh and Dharm Singh 21 Tilok Singh and Ram Singh Phulkian provided soldiers and financial aid to Banda Singh 21 Ali Singh and Mali Singh who were previously under the service of Wazir Khan also joined Banda Singh 21 Conquest of Sonipat and Kaithal Banda Singh with a force of 500 soldiers lead an attack on Sonipat which war near the imperial capital Delhi The Faujdar of Sonipat was defeated by the Sikhs resulting in the city being occupied 22 Banda Singh plundered the imperial treasury and the rich He distributed the wealth amongst his own men The conquest on Sonipat so near to Delhi was an open challenge to the Mughals 23 Banda Singh next set his eyes on Samana Along the way Banda Singh lead an attack on a Mughal detachment near Kaithal that was carrying imperial treasure headed to Delhi 22 23 Banda Singh was successful in taking the treasure from the Mughal authorities 24 The Amil Governor of Kaithal was enraged by this and led an attack on the Sikhs Banda Singh and the Sikhs fought a hard battle but being mostly footmen compared to the Mughal cavalry were facing losses Banda Singh executed a plan where the Sikh force ran into the forest full of thorns forcing the Mughal cavalry to abandon their horses The Sikhs then popped out of the woods and took the horses The Mughals were slaughtered in the battle with some surrendering The Amil was captured by Banda Singh but was released on the condition he would let the Sikhs keep the horses The loot captured was distributed amongst Banda Singh s followers 25 Campaign in Haryana and east Banda Singh decided to head east towards Kiratpur in order to liberate Sikhs of Majha and Doaba held up in Malerkotla and Ropar Along the way Banda Singh conquered Ghurman and Thaska Ghurman offered minor resistance whereas Thaska surrendered without any resistance Banda Singh then advanced upon Kunjpura which was the native village of Wazir Khan Troops and artillery of Wazir Khan was stationed there but they were defeated by the Sikhs Banda Singh next attacked Shahabad which was inhabited by Muslims known for committing rape They were destroyed by Banda Singh and the Sikh forces Banda Singh also ravaged Damala which was the home of the Pathans who abandoned Guru Gobind Singh in the Battle of Bhangani Banda Singh next marched upon Mustafabad The Faujdar of Mustafabad sent 2 000 imperial troops with 2 cannons to stop Banda Singh and the Sikhs Banda Singh and the Sikhs defeated the Mughals with them leaving behind the cannons in their retreat The town was plundered and the Faujdar was punished for his tyranny and oppression on the population 26 27 28 Battle of Kapuri Banda Singh heard about Kapuri s Zamindar Qadam ud din his reportedly immoral life 29 and persecution of Hindus and Sikhs 30 He meddled with Hindu marriages and kidnapped young brides and raped them 31 Banda Singh immediately attacked Kapuri and killed Qadam ud din capturing his fort This victory also led to a major capture of booty and war material 32 31 33 Battle of Sadhaura Banda Singh s next sight was Sadhaura Sadhaura was ruled by Osman Khan who tortured and executed the Muslim saint Syed Pir Budhu Shah for helping Guru Gobind Singh in the Battle of Bhagnani Osman Khan also committed atrocities against Hindus where the cows were slaughtered in front of their homes and forbade Hindus and Sikhs from cremating their dead and performing their religious events All of this made Sadhaura Banda Singh s target 34 35 31 36 As Banda Singh advanced on Sadhaura the locals and peasants joined him in revolt The angry mob became uncontrollable and destroyed all The Sayyids and Shaikhs were killed Osman Khan was hanged to death and Sadhaura was captured 31 36 37 Ropar Wazir Khan had found out that the Sikhs from Majha had assembled at Kiratpur Sahib to join Banda Singh When the Sikhs reached Ropar Sher Mohammad Khan along with Khizar Khan Nashtar Khan and Wali Mohammad Khan were there to block the Sikhs passage and offer them a battle 38 The Mughals had better weapons and a superior number of cavalry while the Sikhs had a small army with insufficient weapons 39 Both sides faced off in a bloody battle As they were fighting there came a bad dust storm which forced both parties to withdraw for the night 40 On the next day a fresh contingent of Sikhs arrived to reinforce the remaining Sikhs Immediately a bullet struck Khizar Khan in the head which caused confusion 41 42 Nashtar and Wali Mohammad Khan tried to retrieve the dead body of Khizar Khan but were killed while doing so Sher Mohammad Khan fled away due to being seriously wounded 39 With most of their leaders killed the remaining force retreated back to Sirhind 43 32 The Sikh force in Ropar later grouped with Banda Singh Bahadur to prepare for the attack on Sirhind 44 Conquest of Sirhind Preparations The Sikhs were planning to wage dharamyudh against the city of Sirhind its Governor Wazir Khan and Dewan Sucha Nand to avenge Mughal oppression and the execution of the two young children of Guru Gobind Singh 45 46 This was the main goal of Banda Singh 14 BBefore the battle began Wazir Khan and Sucha Nand sent the latter s nephew with 1 000 men to Baba Banda Singh Bahadur in a plot to deceive the Sikhs by falsely claiming to have deserted the Mughals and have come joined the Sikhs for their cause 47 38 Wazir Khan had a large well armed army which included ghazis along with a number of artillery musketeers and elephants 47 Khan s army was larger than 20 000 48 On the other hand Banda Singh s army was ill equipped with long spears arrows swords without artillery and elephants and insufficient amount of horses 49 47 According to Ganda Singh Banda s army consisted of three classes of men where the first class were the devoted Sikhs imbued to crusade against the enemies of their country and religion the second being the paid recruited soldiers sent by the chieftains of the Phul family who sympathized with Banda Singh s cause The third were the irregulars who were professional robbers and dacoits bandits eager to seize the opportunity to plunder the city They were also the most unreliable allies as they would desert when fearing a sign of defeat 47 50 Hari Ram Gupta writes that Banda s army consisted of three groups the first being Sikhs fighting purely to punish Wazir Khan the second being Sikhs intent on plundering and punishing enemies of their faith The third being Hindu Jats Gujars and Rajputs intent on plunder alone 51 Battle Both sides faced off in Chappar Chiri on 12 May 1710 Upon the firing of artillery by the Mughal Army the third class of Banda s army consisting of bandits and irregulars fled and soon after Sucha Nand s nephew along with his 1 000 men took to flight as well 47 Baj Singh informed Banda Singh of this Banda Singh decoded to personally entre the frontlines of the battle leading the charge against the Mughals 52 47 This motivated the Sikh force who shouted Waheguru ji ki Fateh Victory belongs to the Wondrous Enlightener as they charged against the Mughals and their elephants With only swords two elephants were killed by the Sikhs The Mughals suffered heavy casualties with the Nawab of Malerkotla Sher Mohammad Khan being killed He was followed by Mughal general Khawaja Ali Wazir Khan attempted to rally his men as he fired arrows 53 but was confronted by Baj Singh Wazir Khan threw a spear at Baj Singh Both men dueled with Baj Singh injuring Wazir Khan s horse Wazir Khan shot Baj Singh in the arm with an arrow and reached for his sword to kill him Fateh Singh charged at Wazir Khan and decapitated Wazir Khan before he could kill Baj Singh 52 According to Suraj Granth and Maculiffe Wazir Khan was instead killed by Banda Singh who shot him with an arrow from the Guru 52 As soon as Wazir Khan died the Mughal force fled 54 47 Wazir Khan s body would later be tied to an animal and dragged around before being hung onto a tree 55 53 52 The retreating Mughal force left behind all of their horses cannons tents and ammunition which was all captured by the Sikhs Sikhs yelled out war cries of Sat Sri Akaal True is the Timeless Lord as they fell upon Sirhind Sikhs reached Sirhind by nightfall The gates had been closed and cannons had been placed to stop the Sikhs The Sikhs rested for the night Wazir Khan s family with other Mughal officials had fled to Delhi On the 13th 500 Sikhs were killed attempting to take Sirhind By the 14th Sikhs entered Sirhind 56 57 58 Aftermath Filled with rage and revenge Sikhs began to destroy and razed Sirhind to the ground Sucha Nand was captured and executed All the booty of Sirhind was captured by Banda Singh 56 He further abolished the zamindari system feudal system and distributed land among the peasants 59 Banda Singh had ordered that the ownership of the land should be given to the peasants and to let them live in dignity and self respect 60 61 The entire province of Sirhind and its 28 parganas was under the control of Banda Singh It extended from the Sutlej to the Yamuna and from the Shivalik hills to Kunjpura Karnal and Kaithal All of it yielded 3 600 000 rupees annually 56 He appointed Baj Singh as the new Governor of Sirhind and Ali Singh of Salaudi as his deputy and struck coins 62 63 58 Fateh Singh was made Governor of Samana and Ram Singh Governor of Thanesar 56 Banda Singh had become well known at this time as The defender of the faith and the champion of the oppressed 56 Military Invasions Banda Singh Bahadur developed the village of Mukhlisgarh and made it his capital He then renamed it to Lohgarh Fortress of Iron where he issued his own mint 64 The coin described Lohgarh Struck in the City of Peace illustrating the beauty of civic life and the ornament of the blessed throne citation needed He briefly established a state in Punjab for half a year Banda Singh sent Sikhs to Uttar Pradesh and the Sikhs took over Saharanpur Muzaffarnagar and other nearby areas The rule of the Sikhs over the entire Punjab east of Lahore obstructed the communication between Delhi and Lahore the capital of Punjab and this worried Mughal Emperor Bahadur Shah I He gave up his plan to subdue rebels in Rajputana and marched towards Punjab 65 The entire imperial force was organized to defeat and kill Banda Singh Bahadur 66 All the generals were directed to join the Emperor s army To ensure that there were no Sikh agents in the army camps an order was issued on 29 August 1710 to all Hindus to shave off their beards 67 Banda Singh was in Uttar Pradesh when the Mughal Army under the orders of Munim Khan 68 marched to Sirhind and before the return of Banda Singh they had already taken Sirhind and the areas around it The Sikhs therefore moved to Lohgarh for their final battle The Sikhs defeated the army but reinforcements were called and they laid siege on the fort with 60 000 troops 69 70 Gulab Singh dressed himself in the garments of Banda Singh and seated himself in his place 71 Banda Singh left the fort at night and went to a secret place in the hills and Chamba forests The failure of the army to kill or catch Banda Singh shocked Emperor Bahadur Shah I and on 10 December 1710 he ordered that wherever a Sikh was found he should be killed 72 73 Banda Singh Bahadur wrote Hukamnamas to the Sikhs to reorganize and join him at once 74 In 1712 the Sikhs gathered near Kiratpur Sahib and defeated Raja Ajmer Chand 75 who was responsible for organizing all the Hill States against Guru Gobind Singh and instigating battles with him After Bhim Chand s dead the other Hill Rajas accepted their subordinate status and paid revenues to Banda Singh While Bahadur Shah I s four sons were killing themselves for the throne of the Mughal Emperor 76 Banda Singh Bahadur recaptured Sadhaura and Lohgarh Farrukh Siyar the 10th Mughal Emperor appointed Abdus Samad Khan as the Subahdar of the Lahore province and Zakariya Khan Abdus Samad Khan s son the Faujdar of Jammu 77 In 1713 the Sikhs left Lohgarh and Sadhaura and went to the remote hills of Jammu and where they built Dera Baba Banda Singh 78 page needed During this time Sikhs were being persecuted especially by Mughals in the Gurdaspur region 79 Banda Singh came out and captured Kalanaur and Batala both places in modern Gurdaspur district 80 which rebuked Farrukh Siyar to issue Mughal and Hindu officials and chiefs to proceed with their troops to Lahore to reinforce his army 81 Siege in Gurdas NangalSee also Battle of Gurdas Nangal In March 1715 the army under the command of Abd al Samad Khan 82 the Mughal Governor of Lahore drove Banda Bahadur and the Sikh forces into the village of Gurdas Nangal 6 km to the west of Gurdaspur Punjab and laid siege to the village 83 The Sikhs defended the small fort for eight months under conditions of great hardship 84 but on 7 December 1715 the Mughals broke into the starving garrison and captured Banda Singh and his companions 85 Execution nbsp Sculpture of the execution of Banda Singh Bahadur at Delhi Mehdiana Sahib near Jagraon in Ludhiana district IndiaBanda Singh Bahadur was put into an iron cage and the remaining Sikhs were chained 86 The Sikhs were brought to Delhi in a procession with the 780 Sikh prisoners 2 000 Sikh heads hung on spears and 700 cartloads of heads of slaughtered Sikhs used to terrorize the population 87 88 They were put in the Red Fort and pressured to give up their faith and become Muslims 89 The prisoners remained unmoved On their firm refusal these non converters were ordered to be executed Every day 100 Sikh soldiers were brought out of the fort and executed in public 90 This continued for approximately seven days 91 Banda was told to kill his four year old son Ajai Singh which he refused to do 92 So Ajai was executed his heart was cut out and thrust into Banda s mouth However his resolution did not break under torture and so he was martyred After three months of confinement 93 on 9 June 1716 Banda s eyes were gouged out his limbs were severed his skin removed and then he was beheaded 1 94 The execution of Banda Singh Bahadur and 700 of his followers by the Mughals in the spring of 1716 at Delhi was observed by a European visitor to the city on official business who was a British East India Company diplomat to the Mughal Empire 95 This European recorded his thoughts on the execution of the Sikhs in a letter he sent to the Governor of Fort William in Calcutta 95 It is one of the earliest accounts of the Sikhs from the perspective of a Westerner 95 Revolutionary nbsp Mural fresco of Banda Singh Bahadur seated right with his son seated left An attendant to the right is waving a fly whisk They are adorned with red clothing colours characteristic of the Bandai Khalsa faction Banda Singh Bahadur is known to have halted the Zamindari and Taluqdari system in the time he was active and gave the peasants proprietorship of their own land 96 It seems that all classes of government officers were addicted to extortion and corruption and the whole system of regulatory and order was subverted 97 Local tradition recalls that the people from the neighborhood of Sadaura came to Banda Singh complaining of the iniquities practices by their feudal lords Banda Singh ordered Baj Singh to open fire on them The people were astonished at the strange reply to their representation and asked him what he meant He told them that they deserved no better treatment when being thousands in number they still allowed themselves to be cowed down by a handful of Zamindars He defeated the Sayyids and Shaikhs in the Battle of Sadhaura 98 Possible rivalry with Tat Khalsa and legacy nbsp Mural of Banda Singh Bahadur with his son with both being served by fly whisk attendants In 1714 a resolute effort was envisaged by Farrukh Siyar to suppress Banda s rebellion who was evading capture despite significant Mughal endeavors and investment of resources At first Mata Sundari Guru Gobind s widow was asked to persuade Banda to stop his lawlessness and expedition against the Mughals in exchange for jagirs and recruitment for Sikh soldiers into the imperial army Banda declined on account of his lack of trust in the government The Emperor had then imprisoned both of Gobind s widows prompting Sundari to write to Banda again to get him to submit Banda had again declined leading the Emperor to tighten the restrictions on the widows culminating in the excommunication of Banda Singh Bahadur by Mata Sundari for refusing to submit to the Emperor as per her demands She further accused him of reigning over the Sikhs as their Guru and reprimanded his followers in a hukam nama This dispute led to two separate factions of the contemporary Sikh community the Tat Khalsa who were allied to Mata Sundari and the Bandais who were allied to Banda Singh Bahadur 99 100 101 102 Mata Sundari s intervention led to half of Banda s followers approximately fifteen thousand abandoning him prior to the siege of Gurdas Nangal 103 104 105 Disputes between the Tat Khalsa and the Bandais primarily included topics including Banda s abandonment of the traditional blue robes in favor of red ones his insistence on vegetarianism his observance of caste rituals and his replacement of the prescribed Sikh slogan with Fateh Darshan as well as concerns over excesses committed by Banda s troops during their campaign of retribution against the Mughals Banda s excommunication impeded his ability to counter the Mughals and contributed to his eventual capture and execution 106 107 108 109 Modern Sikh tradition speaks of at least two different Khalsas the Tat Khalsa adhering to the polity and injunctions of Guru Gobind Singh and the Bandais those who adopted the principles of Banda Singh Bahadur 110 111 However the authenticity of the excommunication of Banda Singh Bahadur by Mata Sundari has been questioned by historian Ganda Singh who mentions that there is no contemporary or near contemporary writers or sources that make any mention of Banda Singh Bahadur being excommunicated or that Farrukh Siyar had come into negotiations with Mata Sundari 112 Historian Surjit Singh Gandhi also claims that there is no contemporary sources that make any mention of an excommunication occurring between Banda Singh and Mata Sundari 113 Historian Sukhdial Singh further notes that there is no hukam nama issued by Mata Sundari that addresses Banda Singh 114 According to Dr Nazer Singh Banda Singh was regarded with contempt by the Akalis and the larger Sikh community for two centuries after his death to counter Banda s exclusion from the Sikh community Dr Ganda Singh wrote an exculpatory book on him in 1935 proclaiming him to be a perfect Sikh 115 Modern scholarship has also cast doubt on Ganda Singh s explication of Banda Singh Bahadur s life and adherence to the Khalsa doctrine his citing of Banda s phrases in hukam namas which he interpreted as Banda deferring to the Guru s authority and strictures This is the order of the Sacha Sahiba and He who lives according to the Rehat of the Khalsa shall be saved by the Guru were equivocal and could also be taken as Banda conferring guruship upon himself Ganda Singh also concurred that Banda invented his own salutation and prohibited the consumption of meat likely motivated by his Bairagi background as opposed to the customs of the Khalsa 116 According to Purnima Dhavan s When Sparrows Became Hawks The Making of the Sikh Warrior Tradition 1699 1799 while Banda did reiterate support of the Khalsa rahit in his hukam namas he also revered the values of vegetarianism and customs associated with the Hindu elite made appeals to a collective Hindu and Sikh religion and omitted prior orthodox Sikh sentiments and apprehensions about the Khalsa s interactions with other groups 117 Baba Banda Singh Bahadur War Memorial nbsp Night view of Fateh Burj Chappar Chiri Sahibzada Ajit Singh Nagar Punjab India A war memorial was built where Battle of Chappar Chiri was fought to glorify heroic Sikh soldiers The 328 feet tall Fateh Burj was dedicated to Banda Singh Bahadur who led the army and defeated the Mughal forces The Fateh Burj is taller than Qutab Minar and is an octagonal structure There is a dome at the top of the tower with Khanda made of stainless steel 118 In popular cultureSarbans Dani Guru Gobind Singh a 1998 Indian Punjabi language drama film directed by Ram Maheshwari The film follows the Guru and Banda Singh Bahadur s struggle against the Mughal Empire 119 Rise of Khalsa a 2006 Indian animated historical drama film by Vismaad Mediatech Chaar Sahibzaade Rise of Banda Singh Bahadur a 2016 Indian computer animated film by Harry Baweja A sequel to Chaar Sahibzaade it follows Banda Singh Bahadur s fight against the Mughals under the guidance of Guru Gobind Singh Guru Da Banda a 2018 Indian animated historical drama film by Jassi Chana Battles fought by Banda SinghBattle of Sonipat Battle of Samana Battle of Kapuri Battle of Sadhaura 120 Battle of Ropar 1710 Battle of Chappar Chiri Battle of Sirhind Battle of Saharanpur Battle of Nanautu Siege of Jalalabad 1710 Battle of Thanesar Siege of Kotla Begum 1710 Battle of Bhilowal Battle of Rahon 1710 First Battle of Lohgarh Battle of Bilaspur 1711 Battle of Jammu 1712 Second Battle of Lohgarh Battle of Kiri Pathan 1714 Battle of Gurdas Nangal or Siege of GurdaspurGallery nbsp Statue of Baba Banda Bahadur at Chappar Chiri near Mohali Punjab nbsp Statue of Veer Banda Bairagi in Birla Mandir Delhi nbsp Banda Bairagi Memorial in Khanda near Sonipat Haryana nbsp Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Indian Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal at the commemorative event to mark the 300th anniversary of the martyrdom of Baba Banda Singh Bahadur nbsp Shaheed Baba Banda Singh Bahadur memorial at Chhapar Chiri near Mohali nbsp Places related with life of Baba Banda Singh Bahadur nbsp Issued edict hukamnama of Banda Singh Bahadur Held in the Bhai Rupa Collection nbsp Issued edict hukamnama of Banda Singh Bahadur containing his official seal at top of page nbsp Pind Dehra Sahibji dedicated to Banda Singh Bahadur in September 1932See also nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Banda Singh Bahadur Sharan Kaur Pabla Nanua Bairagi Hari Singh Nalwa Sawan Mal Rattan Singh Bhangu Bhai Mani Singh Baba Darbara Singh Baba Binod Singh Baj Singh Sambhaji RahonReferences a b c d Ganda Singh Banda Singh Bahadur Encyclopaedia of Sikhism Punjabi University Patiala Retrieved 27 January 2014 a b Sagoo 2001 p 213 Rajmohan Gandhi 1999 Revenge and Reconciliation Penguin Books India pp 117 18 ISBN 9780140290455 Banda Singh Bahadur Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 15 May 2013 RATNAKAR GUR SHABAD Mahan kosh in Punjabi Bhai Baljinder Singh pp visit website of Rara Sahib www rarasahib com Sagoo 2001 a b c Sagoo 2001 pp 112 113 Sagoo 2001 p 112 a b Rai Jasbir Singh 1997 Historical analysis of the ballad of Banda Bahadur Journal of Sikh Studies 21 2 Guru Nanak Dev University 33 The poet wants to assert that Banda was the religious descendant of Guru Gobind Singh and the 11th guru of the Sikhs For this purpose he acclaimed that Banda was a Sodhi Khatri Actually Banda was Bhardwaj Rajput The poet knows that only the Sodhi Khatri could be the guru of the Sikhs He seems to be aware of the Sikh tradition that the guruship would remain within the limit of the Sodhi s Vidya Dhar Mahajan 1965 Muslim Rule in India S Chand p 231 Banda Bahadur was a Dogra Rajput Ganda Singh Banda Singh Bahadur Encyclopaedia of Sikhism Punjabi University Patiala Retrieved 27 January 2014 Ganda Singh 1975 Banda Singh Bahadur His Achievements and the Place of His Execution The Panjab Past and Present Department of Punjab Historical Studies Punjabi University p 441 According to Hakim Rai s Ahwal Lachhman Das urf Banda Sahib Chela Guru Singh Sahib he originally belonged to the Sodhi clan of the Khatris while another account records him as a Panjabi Khatri Kapur or Khana of the Sialkot District Sagoo 2001 pp 115 117 a b Singh Raj Pal 1998 Banda Bahadur and His Times Harman Publishing House ISBN 978 81 86622 25 4 Singh 1990 p 25 a b Sagoo 2001 pp 118 119 Sagoo 2001 p 120 a b c d Singh 1935 pp 27 31 Sagoo 2001 p 121 Sagoo 2001 p 122 a b c d Singh 1935 pp 32 34 a b Singh 1935 pp 35 39 a b Sagoo 2001 p 124 Singh 1935 p 35 39 Sagoo 2001 pp 124 125 Singh Dr Sukhdial Banda Singh Bahadur On The Canvas Of History Singh 1990 pp 42 44 Sagoo 2001 p 126 Singh 1998 p 18 Dr Sukhdial Singh 2015 textsBanda Singh Bahadur On The Canvas Of History p 97 Singh 1995 p 273 a b c d Sagoo 2001 p 127 a b Singh 2000 p 72 Gandhi 1999 p 28 Singh 2007 pp 68 69 Gandhi 1999 p 29 a b Singh 1990 pp 46 49 Singh 2004 p 6 a b Sagoo 2001 p 129 a b D S Saggu VSM 2018 Battle Tactics And War Manoeuvres of the Sikhs Notion Press ISBN 9781642490060 Dhillon Harish May 2013 First Raj of the Sikhs Hay House ISBN 9789381398395 Sampath Vikram 26 October 2022 Bravehearts of Bharat Penguin Random House India Private Limited ISBN 9789354928284 Nijjar Bakhshish Singh 1972 Panjab Under the Later Mughals 1707 1759 New Academic Publishing Company p 47 Institute of Sikh Studies 1997 Sikhism Its Philosophy And History Institute of Sikh Studies p 434 ISBN 9788185815039 Dhillon Harish May 2013 First Raj of the Sikhs Hay House ISBN 9789381398395 Singh Khushwant 2004b A History of the Sikhs 1469 1838 Oxford University Press p 105 ISBN 9780195673081 Gupta Hari Ram 1944 Studies in Later Mughal History of the Panjab The Minerva Book Shop p 47 a b c d e f g Singh 1990 pp 55 66 Singh 1935 pp 59 60 Sagoo 2001 p 126 Sagoo 2001 p 139 Gupta 1978 p 12 a b c d Sagoo 2001 p 130 131 a b Bengal Royal Asiatic Society of 1895 Journal and Proceedings Gupta Hari Ram 1999 1937 History of the Sikhs Evolution of Sikh Confederacies 1708 69 PDF Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers pp 12 13 ISBN 9788121502481 www DiscoverSikhism com History Of The Sikhs Vol II Evolution Of Sikh Confederacies 1707 69 a b c d e Sagoo 2001 pp 132 134 Macauliffe Max Arthur 28 March 2013 1909 The Sikh Religion Its Gurus Sacred Writings and Authors Cambridge University Press p 248 ISBN 978 1 108 05547 5 a b Singh Ganda 1989 1950 A Short History of the Sikhs Publication Bureau Punjabi University p 84 Kaur Madanjit 2007 Guru Gobind Singh Historical and Ideological Perspective Unistar Books p 241 ISBN 9788189899554 Singh 1927 p 8 Dhavan 2011 p 51 Singha 2005 p 9 Gupta 1999 p 14 Grewal J S 1998 The Sikhs of the Punjab Cambridge University Press p 83 ISBN 9780521637640 Singha 2005 p 14 Singh 1995 p 27 Bakshi S R 2005 Early Aryans to Swaraj Sarup amp Sons p 25 ISBN 9788176255370 Sharma S R 1999 Mughal Empire in India A Systematic Study Including Source Material Volume 2 Atlantic Publishers amp Distributors p 627 ISBN 9788171568185 Jaques Tony 2007 Dictionary of Battles and Sieges Greenwood Publishing Group p 595 ISBN 9780313335389 Gupta 1978 p 19 Ralhan O P 1997 The Great Gurus of the Sikhs Banda Singh Bahadur Asht Ratnas etc Anmol Publications Pvt Ltd p 17 ISBN 9788174884794 Singh 1927 p 10 Johar Surinder 2002 The Sikh Sword to Power The University of Michigan Arsee Publishers p 27 Singh 1999 p 91 Kapoor Sukhbir 1988 The Ideal Man The Concept of Guru Gobind Singh the Tenth Prophet of the Sikhs The University of Virginia Khalsa College London Press p 177 General Knowledge Digest 2010 Tata McGraw Hill Education 2010 p 2 134 ISBN 9780070699397 Singh 1999 p 93 Singh 2007 Sastri Kallidaikurichi 1978 A Comprehensive History of India 1712 1772 the University of Michigan Orient Longmans p 243 Gill Pritam 1978 History of Sikh nation foundation assassination resurrection The University of Michigan New Academic Pub Co p 279 Singh 1999 p 94 Jawandha Nahar 2010 Glimpses of Sikhism New Delhi Sanbun Publishers p 82 ISBN 9789380213255 Pletcher Kenneth 2010 The History of India The Rosen Publishing Group p 200 ISBN 9781615302017 Hoiberg Dale 2000 Students Britannica India Volumes 1 5 New Delhi Popular Prakashan p 157 ISBN 9780852297605 Banda Singh Bahadar Bandai or Tatt Khalsa Singh Sabha Canada 2 February 2011 Retrieved 26 December 2016 Duggal Kartar 2001 Maharaja Ranjit Singh The Last to Lay Arms Abhinav Publications p 41 ISBN 9788170174103 Johar Surinder 1987 Guru Gobind Singh The University of Michigan Enkay Publishers p 208 ISBN 9788185148045 Sastri Kallidaikurichi 1978 A Comprehensive History of India 1712 1772 The University of Michigan Orient Longmans p 245 Singh 1927 p 12 Jawandha Nahar 2010 Glimpses of Sikhism Sanbun Publishers p 89 ISBN 9789380213255 Singh 1999 p 97 Social Studies history and civics class 10 PSEB p 72 Singh 1935 p 229 Singh Kulwant 2006 Sri Gur Panth Prakash Episodes 1 to 81 Institute of Sikh Studies p 415 ISBN 9788185815282 a b c Mandair Arvind pal Singh Singh Sunit 2017 Orientalism Sikhism Sikhism with 64 figures Encyclopedia of Indian Religions Dordrecht Springer p 290 ISBN 978 94 024 0845 4 Based on the best available compendiums of English records the first occasion that an EIC officer had to observe Sikhs close at hand apparently arose in the spring of 1716 at Delhi where an EIC mission in the Mughal capital witnessed the publicly held exe cutions of 700 Sikh rebels as well as their chief Banda Bahadur It is not a little remarkable wrote the head of the mission in a letter to the Governor of Fort William the resolve with which the rebels undergo their fate without apostasy in the name of their new formed religion Jawandha Nahar 2010 Glimpses of Sikhism New Delhi Sanbun Publishers p 81 ISBN 9789380213255 Sagoo 2001 p 158 Singh 1999 p 85 Ballantyne Tony 2010 Textures of the Sikh Past New Historical Perspectives Oxford University Press pp 80 84 ISBN 9780195686630 Gupta 1978 pp 24 26 McLeod W H 2003 Sikhs of the Khalsa A History of the Khalsa Rahit Oxford University Press p 80 ISBN 978 0 19 567221 3 Alam Muzaffar 1986 The Crisis of Empire in Mughal North India Awadh and the Punjab 1707 1748 Oxford University Press p 175 Kaur Madanjit 2000 Guru Gobind Singh and Creation of Khalsa Guru Nanak Dev University pp 83 84 The truth is that fifteen thousand Sikhs left Banda s force because of the intervention of Mata Sundri the widow of Guru Gobind Singh She admonished Banda Singh Bahadur for breaches of the Khalsa code of conduct Banda started calling himself a Guru required his followers to address him as Sacha Sahib and changed the Khalsa greeting Wahe Guru ji ka Khalsa Wahe Guru ji ki Fateh into Fateh Darshan For these and other misdeeds Banda was excommunicated from the Khalsa Panth by Mata Sundri The result of Mata Sundri s intervention was that half of Banda s followers sided with Mata Sundri left Banda s force and started calling themselves Tatva Khalsa Grewal J S Chattopadhyaya Debi Prasad 2005 The State and Society in Medieval India Oxford University Press p 350 ISBN 978 0 19 566720 2 According to Ratan Singh Bhangu the earliest historian of the Khalsa the veteran followers of Guru Gobind Singh Tat khalsa charged Banda with having assumed rulership whereas he had been only assigned service They maintained that the Tenth Guru had bestowed sovereignty upon the Khalsa Panth They charged Banda with deviation from Khalsa practices by adopting the salutation fateh darshan by insisting upon vegetarianism and by preferring red dress over the traditional blue of the Singhs His observance of chauka plastered squared space militated against the practice of collective dinning Therefore the staunch Khalsa dissociated themselves from Banda before the final siege in 1715 Mata Sundri the widow of Guru Gobind Singh is believed to have lent her moral support to the Tat Khalsa in their tussle first against Banda and then against his followers Bandais Banga Indu Indian History Congress 2002 Banerjee Himadri ed The Khalsa and the Punjab Studies in Sikh History to the Nineteenth Century Tulika Books pp 103 104 ISBN 978 81 85229 71 3 His observance of ritual purities seemed to militate against the casteless order created by the baptism sarbangi reet created by the baptism of the double edged sword The old Khalsa also regarded it unsuitable for a state of warfare Therefore they are said to have disassociated from Banda before the siege of Gurdas Nangal and gone to Amristar Louis E Fenech W H McLeod 2014 Historical Dictionary of Sikhism Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers pp 59 296 ISBN 9781442236011 Mandair Arvind Pal Singh 6 June 2013 Sikhism A Guide for the Perplexed Bloomsbury Publishing p 70 ISBN 978 1 4411 5366 1 Fenech Louis E 14 January 2021 The Cherished Five in Sikh History Oxford University Press p 91 ISBN 978 0 19 753285 0 He nevertheless soon fell out of their favour even drawing the ire of the Tenth Guru s widow Mata Sundari and actually managing to divide the Khalsa in its loyalties between those who remained attached to the memory of the Tenth Guru the Akalpurakhia and those committed to Banda Bandai whom Mughal sources often refer to as the accursed guru or confuse with Guru Gobind Singh Sarkar Jagdish Narayan 1976 A Study of Eighteenth Century India Saraswat Library p 311 According to Sikh tradition one of Guru Gobind s wives Mata Sundari wrote to Banda to stop his career of carnage and spoliation as he had accomplished the mission imposed on him by the Guru Singh amp Fenech 2014 p 242 Irschick Eugene F 3 September 2018 A History of the New India Past and Present Routledge p 121 ISBN 978 1 317 43617 1 Singh 1990 pp 246 250 Gandhi 1999 p 61 Singh Sukhdial 2005 Banda Singh Bahadur On The Canvas Of History Patiala Gurmat Prakashan p 6 Singh Dr Nazer 15 September 2021 Golden Temple and the Punjab Historiography K K Publicatons p 198 Dhavan 2011 p 196 Dhavan 2011 p 53 Baba Banda Singh Bahadur War Memorial Fateh Burj in Ajitgarh Ajitgarhonline in 30 November 2011 Retrieved 3 December 2016 Singh amp Fenech 2014 p 478 William Irvine 1904 Later Mughals Atlantic Publishers amp Distri Bibliography Dhavan Purnima 3 November 2011 When Sparrows Became Hawks The Making of the Sikh Warrior Tradition 1699 1799 Oxford University Press USA ISBN 978 0 19 975655 1 Gandhi Surjit Singh 1999 Sikhs In The Eighteenth Century Singh Bros ISBN 9788172052171 Gupta Hari Ram 1978 1937 History of the Sikhs Vol II Evolution of the Sikh Confederacies 1708 1769 3rd ed Munshiram Motilal Publishers ISBN 978 8121502481 Sagoo Harbans Kaur 2001 Banda Singh Bahadur and Sikh Sovereignty Deep amp Deep Publications ISBN 9788176293006 Singh Ganda 1935 Life Of Banda Singh Bahadur Based On Contemporary And Original Records Sikh Digital Library Singh Ganda 1990 1935 Life of Banda Singh Bahadur Publication Bureau Punjabi University Singh Gurbaksh 1927 The Khalsa Generals Canadian Sikh Study amp Teaching Society ISBN 0969409249 Singh Harbans 1995 The Encyclopedia Of Sikhism Volume I A D ISBN 9788173801006 Singh Harbans 2004 The Encyclopedia Of Sikhism Volume IV S Z 2nd ed Punjabi University Patiala Singh Patwant 2000 The Sikhs Knopf ISBN 9780375407284 Singh Patwant 2007 The Sikhs Random House Digital Inc ISBN 9780307429339 Singh Teja 1999 A Short History of the Sikhs 1469 1765 Patiala Publication Bureau Punjabi University ISBN 9788173800078 Singh Pashaura Fenech Louis E 2014 The Oxford Handbook of Sikh Studies Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 969930 8 Singha H S 2005 Sikh Studies Hemkunt Press ISBN 9788170102588 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Banda Singh Bahadur amp oldid 1219445817, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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