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Jassa Singh Ahluwalia

Sultan-ul-Qaum Sardar Jassa Singh Ahluwalia (3 May 1718 – 23 October 1783) was a Sikh leader during the period of the Sikh Confederacy, being the Supreme Leader of the Dal Khalsa. He was also Misldar of the Ahluwalia Misl. This period was an interlude, lasting roughly from the time of the death of Banda Bahadur in 1716 to the founding of the Sikh Empire in 1801. He founded the Kapurthala State in 1772.

Jassa Singh Ahluwalia
Equestrian painting of Jassa Singh Ahluwalia on horseback in-front of his haveli with a fly-whisk attendant, circa 18th or 19th century
Honorable Jathedar
5th Jathedar of Akal Takht
In office
1753–1783
LeaderSikh
Preceded byKapur Singh
Succeeded byPhula Singh
4th Jathedar of Buddha Dal
In office
1753–1783
Preceded byKapur Singh
Succeeded byNaina Singh
Personal details
Born
Jassa Singh

3 May 1718
Ahlu, Lahore Subah, Mughal Empire
(present-day Lahore district, Punjab, Pakistan)
Died23 October 1783 (aged 65)
Bandala, Sikh Confederacy
(present-day Amritsar district, Punjab, India)
Resting placeCremated at the Dera Baba Attal, Amritsar
Spouse(s)Mai Sahibji
Sadarani Raj Kaur Sahiba
RelationsBagh Singh (grand-nephew)
Children3
Parents
Military service
Battles/wars
  1. Sikh raids on Delhi
  2. Siege of Amritsar (1748)[1]
  3. Killing Salabat Khan[1]
  4. Sikh Occupation of Lahore (1761)
  5. Battle of Harnaulgarh (1762)
  6. Battle of Sirhind (1764)
  7. Establishing Independent Sikh state Kapurthala (1772)
  8. Battle of Delhi (1783)
Commander Dal Khalsa

Early life

Jassa Singh was born on 3 May 1718 CE, in the Ahlu village near Lahore, Punjab.[2] Originally known as Jassa Singh Kalal,[3] he styled himself as Ahluwalia after his ancestral village.[4]

Jassa Singh is described as a member of the Kalal or Wine distiller caste.[5][6][7][8][9][10] During the period of Kharak Singh (r. 1870-1877) a Bhatti Rajput origin story was also created.[11] According to this tradition, the Bhatti Rajputs descended from Krishna, and one of them - Rana Har Rai - had to leave the throne of Jaisalmer for refusing to marry his niece to the Mughal emperor Akbar. Har Rai migrated to Punjab, where his descendants married with the Jats, and gradually they became Jats.[12] Starting with Sadhu Singh (also called Sadho or Sadda Singh), they married with Kalals, and the family came to be known as "Ahluwalia Kalal". British administrator Lepel Griffin, who wrote an account of the rulers of Punjab, dismissed this tradition as fictitious.[13]

According to the dynasty's account, Sadhu's Singh's great-grandson Badar Singh and his wife remained childless for a long time, and sought blessings from Guru Gobind Singh. As a result, Jassa Singh was born to them.[14]

The formation of the Dal Khalsa and the Misls

 
Gilded equestrian painting of Jassa Singh Ahluwalia, Punjab Plains, circa 1850

In 1733, Zakariya Khan Bahadur attempted to negotiate peace with the Sikhs by offering them a jagir, the title Nawab to their leader, and unimpeded access to the Harmandir Sahib. After discussion at a Sarbat Khalsa, Kapur Singh was elected leader of the Sikhs and took the title of Nawab. He combined the various Sikh militias into two groups; the Taruna Dal and the Budda Dal, which would collectively be known as the Dal Khalsa. Sikh militias over 40 years of age would be part of the Budda Dal and Sikh militias under 40 years were part of the Taruna Dal.[15] The Taruna Dal was further divided in five jathas, each with 1300 to 2000 men and a separate drum and banner.[16] The area of operations of each Dal, or army, was Hari ke Pattan, where the Sutlej river and Beas River meet; the Taruna Dal would control the area east of Hari ke Pattan while the Budha Dal would control the area west of it.[17] The purpose of the Budda Dal, the veteran group, was to protect Gurdwaras and train the Taruna Dal, while the Taruna Dal would act as combat troops. However, in 1735, the agreement between Zakariya Khan and Nawab Kapur Singh broke down and the Dal Khalsa retreated to the Sivalik Hills to regroup. Later the command of Dal Khalsa was taken by Jassa Singh Ahluwalia who was an able and powerful administrator, even displaced & brought Mughal’s centre of power at the time (Red Fort) under Khalsa flag. He made the foundation of Khalsa firm for future generations to lead.[citation needed]

Military campaigns

Nadir Shah's invasion

In 1739, Nadir Shah, the Persian ruler, invaded much of Northern India, including Punjab, defeating the Mughals at the Battle of Karnal in 1739, he plundered the city of Delhi (Shahjahanabad) robbing it of treasures like the Peacock throne, the Kohinoor diamond and the Darya-i-Noor diamond. Meanwhile, all the Khalsa bands got together and passed a resolution that Nadir shah had plundered the city of Delhi and now he is taking Indian women as slaves to his country. Sikhs made a plan to free all the slaves. Jassa Singh Ahluwalia was 21 years old at that time, he planned raids to free all slaves. He along with other Sikh bands attacked Nadir shah forces, freed all slaves and sent those slaves back to their families safely.[18][19]

Ahluwalia participated in many battles as well where he proved himself to be a natural leader. In a 1748 meeting of the Sarbat Khalsa, Nawab Kapur Singh appointed him as his successor. His followers awarded him the title Sultan-ul-Qaum (King of the Nation).[20]

The raids of Ahmed Shah Abdali

Ahmad Shah Durrani, Nader Shah's seniormost general, succeeded to the throne of Afghanistan when Shah was murdered in June 1747. He established his own dynasty, the Sadozai, which was the name of the Pashtun khel to which he belonged.[citation needed]

Starting from December 1747 till 1769, Abdali made a total of nine incursions into the north India. His repeated invasions weakened the Mughal administration of North India. At the Third Battle of Panipat, he along with Nawab of Oudh and Rohillas, defeated the Marathas, who after a treaty signed in 1752 became the protector of the Mughal throne at Delhi and were controlling much of North India, and Kashmir.[21] However they were never able to subdue the Sikhs in the Punjab.[citation needed]

Help of Sikhs to Jats of Bharatpur

Suraj Mal (1707-63) was the founder of Jat State of Bharatpur. He was killed on 25 December 1763 near Delhi by Najib ul Daulah, the Ruhilaa chief who had been appointed Mir Bakshi and Regent at Delhi by Ahmed Shah Durrani. Suraj Mal’s son Jawahar Singh sought help from Sikhs who responded with a Sikh force of 40,000 under the command of Sardar Jassa Singh Ahluwalia. The Sikhs crossed the Yamuna on 20 February 1764 and attacked the surrounding areas. Najib ul Daulah rushed back to Delhi thereby relieving the pressure on Bharatpur. Najib ul Daulah suffered another defeat at hands of Sikhs under Ahluwalia after a battle that lasted 20 days in the trans-Yamuna area at Barari Ghat, 20 km north of Delhi. He retired to Red Fort on 9 January 1765 and within a month Sikhs defeated Najib ul Daulah again in Nakhas (horse market) and in Sabzi Mandi.[22]

Jawahar Singh also engaged 25,000 Sikh forces under command of Sardar Jassa Singh against the Rajput Raja of Jaipur in the Battle of Maonda and Mandholi and the Battle of Kama and was defeated in both. [23][24]

Rescue of Maratha women by Sikhs

An account appearing in the 19th century texts, Munshi Kanhaiyya Lal's Tareekh-e-Punjab and Gian Singh's Shamsher Khalsa, credits Jassa Singh with rescuing Hindu women captured by Ahmad Shah Durrani after the Third Battle of Panipat in 1761. According to this account, after defeating the Marathas, Abdali captured thousands of prisoners, including 22,000[failed verification] women, who were being taken to Afghanistan as slaves. When Jassa Singh learned of it, he attacked the Afghan army at Goindval on the Sutlej river, rescued the women, and sent them back to their families. Thereafter, he was known as Bandi chhor, or the Liberator of captives.[25][20]

The Sixth Abdali Incursion, 1762

In early 1762, Ahmad Shah Durrani invaded India to crush Sikhs power[26][27]Ahmad Shah Durrani with his Soldiers reached Malerkotla, west of Sirhind, then attacked a 20,000 Sikh army escorting 40,000 women and children, along with the elderly. In one of their worst defeats—known as Vadda Ghalughara—the Sikhs lost perhaps 5–10,000+ soldiers and had 20,000 civilians massacred. The Afghan forces of Ahmad Shah Durrani came out victorious with the night ambush on the large convoy.[28][29]

Despite the Ghalughara disaster, by the month of May, the Sikhs were up in arms again. Under Jassa Singh, they defeated the Afghan faujdar of Sirhind in the Battle of Harnaulgarh.[30] By autumn, the Sikhs had regained enough confidence to foregather in large numbers at Amritsar to celebrate Diwali. Abdali made a mild effort to win over them and sent an envoy with proposals for a treaty of peace. The Sikhs were in no mood for peace and insulted the emissary. Abdali did not waste any time and turned up at the outskirts of Amritsar.[citation needed]

The Battle of Pipli Sahib was fought in the grey light of a sun in total eclipse. It ended when the sunless day was blacked out by a moonless night with the adversaries retiring from the field: The Sikhs to the fastness of the jungles of the Lakhi (the forests of a hundred thousand trees located in Central Punjab) and Abdali behind the walled safety of Lahore.[31]

Conquest of Jalandhar and Malerkotla

In June 1763, Jassa Singh Ahluwalia marched towards Jalandhar, Sadat Yar-Khan, the Governor of Jalandhar so much terrified he did not stir out of his capital, Jassa Singh sacked Jalandhar, In December 1763, Jassa Singh Ahluwalia defeated and Killed Bhikhan Khan, the Nawab of Malerkotla, and pludendered Morinda,[32]

Conquest of Sirhind

In January 1764, Dal Khalsa under Jassa Singh Ahluwalia attacked Sirhind, Zain Khan Sirhindi, the Governor of Sirhind was killed, Sikhs captured Sirhind and divide Province between themselves, Jassa Singh Ahluwalia captured the territories of Jagaon, Bharog, Fatehgarh, [33]

In The Ganga Doab and Rohilakhand 1764

In February 1764, Sikhs crossed Jamuna under Jassa Singh Ahluwalia, Khushal Singh, Sardar Tara Singh Ghaiba, Baghel Singh Gurbaksh Singh, at the head of strong force, Plundered Saharanpur, Shamli, Kandha, Ambli, Miranpur, Deobandi, Jawalapur, Chandausi, Muzaffarnagar, Najibabad, Najib ad-Dawlah made peace with the Sikhs by offering them a 11 lakhs of rupees tribute,[34]

Ahmad Shah Durrani Seventh Invasion

In 1765, Ahmad Shah Durrani invaded India for seventh time in the winter of 1764–1765, During this campaign he constantly harassed by Sikhs, Qazi Nur Muhammad who was present in the Afghan army describes the numbers of engagements between Sikhs and Afghans, a battle was fought on the western bank of the Satluj opposite Rupar, it was morning and the Afghan army was hardly gone 3 km from the western bank of the Satluj, when they attacked by the Sikhs, The Afghans immediately stopped marching and got into regular formation of battle, Ahmad Shah Durrani was in the center with 6,000 choice soldiers, Shah Vali Khan, Jahan Khan, Shah Pasand Khan, Anzala Khan and others at the head of 12,000 troops were on the right Nasir Khan with 12,000 Baluchis was on the left, The Dal Khalsa also organised themselves in regular battle army Jassa Singh Ahluwalia fearlessly stood like a mountain in the center close by him was Jassa Singh Thokah, looking like a lion in stature,[35]

Conflict with Jassa Singh Ramgarhia

In 1775, Jassa Singh Ahluwalia one day was going to Achal near Batala, he was attacked by Jassa Singh Ramgarhia brothers Khushal singh, Tara singh, and Mali singh, Jassa Singh Ahluwalia was taken prisoner, Jassa Singh Ramgarhia apologized for the misbehaviour of his brothers and honorably returned Ahluwalia with gifts but, the differences between two increased, Jassa Singh Ahluwalia took the oath, He will drive Ramgarhias out of country,


In 1778, Jai Singh Kanhaiya and Haqiqat Singh Kanhaiya supported by Jassa Singh Ahluwalia attacked Jassa Singh Ramgarhia headquarter Sri Hargobindpur and after tough resistance expled him to the desert of Hansi and Hisar, he set up his headquarters at Tosham[36]

Battle of Delhi

The Sikhs under Baghel Singh had been raiding Delhi since 1764 but without success. On 11 March 1783 the combined Sikh army of Baghel Singh, Jassa Singh Ahluwalia and Jassa Singh Ramgarhia conquered the Red fort of Delhi hosting Nishan Sahib.[37][38][39][40][page needed][41]

Death and legacy

 
Photo of Jassa Singh Ahluwalia's haveli, circa early 20th century

Jassa Singh Ahluwalia died on 23 October 1783 in Amritsar

He (Jassa Singh Ahluwalia) had the great privilege of conquering Lahore and issuing his own coin ... [and] sitting on the throne of the Mughal Emperors in the Red Fort at Delhi [after conquering it]. He fought a number of times face to face with Ahmad Shah Durrani, the greatest Asian general of his days. The invader tried to win him over in vain. The Maharajas of Patiala and Jind stood before him in all reverence and humility. The Rajas of Nalagarh, Bilaspur, Kangra Hills and Jammu touched his knees. The Nawabs of Malerkotla and Kunjpura paid him homage. And yet he remained a humble and docile disciple of Guru Gobind Singh. In the person of Jassa Singh Ahluwalia, the Guru actually made a sparrow kill hawks. Jassa Singh was a great warrior, mighty general and eminent organiser. He bore thirty-two scars of sword cuts and bullet marks on the front part of his body and none on his back. He was a giant in body. ... Qazi Nur Muhammad who saw him fighting against Ahmad Shah Durrani called him a mountain.


He was a great warrior, mighty general and eminent organiser. He bore thirty-two scars of sword cuts and bullet marks on the front of his body and none on his back. He was a giant in body. His breakfast consisted of one kilogram of flour, one half kilogram of butter, one quarter kilogram of crystalline sugar slabs ( misri ), and one bucketful of butter-milk (lassi). One he-goat sufficed him for two meals…. These were the days of physical prowess, and only men possessed of indomitable will power could compete with ferocious Afghans on better footing. He was wheatish in colour, tall, fat, with a broad forehead, wide chest, loud and sonorous voice which could be clearly heard by an assemblage of 50,000 men….. The horses under him must have been the size of an elephant. This is why he could be clearly seen by Qazi Nur Muhammad in a body of fifty or sixty thousand men. His long arms came down to his knees. This enabled him to strike his sword right and left with equal valour.

Nawab Jassa Singh Ahluwalia Government College (NJSA Government College) in Kapurthala, established in 1856 by Raja Randhir Singh of Kaputhala is named after him.[43] A commemorative postage stamp on Jassa Singh Ahluwalia was issued by Government of India on 4 April 1985.

In popular culture

Television

See also

References

  1. ^ a b H. S. Singha 2005, p. 31.
  2. ^ H. S. Singha 2005, p. 111.
  3. ^ Ahluwalia, M. L. (1989). Life and Times of Jassa Singh Ahluwalia. Publication Bureau, Punjabi University.
  4. ^ Donald Anthony Low (1968). Soundings in Modern South Asian History. University of California Press. p. 70-71. OCLC 612533097.
  5. ^ Low, D.A. (1968). Soundings in Modern South Asian History. University of California Press. p. 70. ISBN 978-0-520-00770-3. Retrieved 14 August 2022. With the rise to political power of Jassa Singh Kalal, the most famous Sikh chiefofthe eighteenth century, the importance of the Kalals had increased and there had been a tendency among them to abandon their degrading hereditary occupation…In addition to abandoning their hereditary occupation the Kalals tried to raise their status by changing their caste names and by claiming more respectable social origins. Jassa Singh Kalal had styled himself Ahllu- walia from the name of his ancestral village, a title which was still borne by his descendants, the royal family of the Native State of Kapurthala in British times; and one which the Sikh Kalals generally adopted as the name o f their caste. By the early twentieth century some o f the Ahlluwalias had gone further by claiming Khatri or Rajput origin.
  6. ^ Gandhi, S.S. (1980). Struggle of the Sikhs for Sovereignty. Gur Das Kapur. Retrieved 4 August 2022. The Ahluwalia Misl is also interesting for the same reason as it was led by Jassa Singh Ahluwalia , a member of Kalal caste , or distillers of palm wine . The Kalals rank among the artisans castes of the Sikhs
  7. ^ Gupta, H.R. (2001). History of the Sikhs: The Sikh commonwealth or Rise and fall of Sikh misls. History of the Sikhs. Munshiram Manoharlal. p. 24. ISBN 978-81-215-0540-6. Retrieved 4 August 2022. There lived a young man named Badar Singh of the Kalal caste known as distillers of wine...It was there that Badar Singh got a son in 1718, named Jassa Singh.
  8. ^ M. L. Ahluwalia (1989). Life and Times of Jassa Singh Ahluwalia. Punjabi University. p. 3. ...the original homeland of Jassa Singh's ancestors was Mauza Mullu Sadhu-Ke in Majha. His qaum (caste) was Kalal alias Tulsi (sub-caste).
  9. ^ Louis E. Fenech; W. H. McLeod Singh, eds. (2014). Historical Dictionary of Sikhism. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 21. ISBN 978-1442236004. ...the ruling family of Kapurthala (the descendants of Jassa Singh Ahluvalia) was also Kalal. So successful have they been that today their Kalal antecedents have been largely forgotten [...] Jassa Singh Ahluvalia, though not a Jat, was regarded as the principal misl chieftain
  10. ^ Grewal, J.S. (2007). Sikh Ideology Polity, and Social Order: From Guru Nanak to Maharaja Ranjit Singh. Manohar. p. 245. ISBN 978-81-7304-737-4. Retrieved 14 August 2022. Nevertheless, differences of caste was discounted by the Jatts themselves. Sukha Singh, a Tarkhan, was 'brought up' by Shiam Singh, a Sandhu Jatt. Jassa Singh Ahluwalia, a Kalal, was similarly 'brought up' by Kapur Singh, a Virk Jatt.
  11. ^ Sohan Singh Seetal (1981). The Sikh Misals and the Punjab States. Lahore Book Shop. Everybody had been dubbing the Kapoorthala dynasty as Kalaals, meaning wine vendors. But, during the time of Raja Kharak Singh , the penultimate chief of the state , an attempt was made to relate this dynasty to the Bhatti Rajput Rajput rulers of Jaisalmer in Rajasthan.
  12. ^ Ganda Singh 1990, p. 1With the passing of time, they got mingled with the Jats who constituted at that time the majority community of this area. They began to enter into matrimonial alliances with them. Thus, gradually they also became Jats.
  13. ^ Ganda Singh 1990, p. 4.
  14. ^ Ganda Singh 1990, p. 6.
  15. ^ H. S. Singha 2005, p. 37.
  16. ^ Narang, K. S.; Gupta, H. R. (1969). History of Punjab: 1500 - 1558. p. 216. Retrieved 15 July 2010.
  17. ^ H. S. Singha 2005, p. 39.
  18. ^ Rajmohan Gandhi (1999), Revenge and Reconciliation, p. 118, ISBN 9780140290455
  19. ^ Saggu, DS (2018). Battle Tactics And War Manoeuvres of the Sikhs. Notion Press. ISBN 9781642490060.
  20. ^ a b H. S. Singha 2000, p. 111.
  21. ^ Gordon, Stewart (February 2007). The Marathas 1600–1818, Volume 2. Cambridge University Press, 1993. ISBN 978-0-521-26883-7.
  22. ^ "Sikh Relations with Jats of Bharatpur". The sikh encyclopedia. 19 December 2000. Retrieved 30 August 2020.
  23. ^ Herrli, Hans (2004) [1993]. The Coins of the Sikhs (2nd ed.). Munshiram Manoharlal publishers Pvt ltd , New Delhi. p. 233. In December 1765 Jawahir singh marched against Jaipur with 25000 sikhs who were bought off by Raja Mado Singh ,but in March 1768 Jawahir Singh , supported by 20000 Sikh mercenaries , again attacked and routed Mado Singh"
  24. ^ Hooja, Rima (2006). A History of Rajasthan. New Delhi: Rupa Publication. pp. 726, 736.
  25. ^ Ganda Singh 1990, p. 106: "...he became famous as a Liberator of bonded women. (Ghanaya Lal, Tareekh-i-Punjab-100 ; Gian Singh, Shamsheer Khalsa, 145/507"
  26. ^ Mehta, J. L. (2005). Advanced study in the history of modern India 1707–1813. Sterling Publishers Pvt. Ltd. p. 303. ISBN 978-1-932705-54-6. Retrieved 23 September 2010.
  27. ^ Bhatia, Sardar Singh. "Vadda Ghallurghara". Encyclopaedia of Sikhism. Punjabi University Patiala. Retrieved 24 September 2015.
  28. ^ Jacques, Tony (2007). Dictionary of Battles and Sieges. Greenwood Press. p. 553. ISBN 978-0-313-33536-5. Retrieved 18 July 2015.
  29. ^ Awan, Muhammad Tariq (1994). History of India and Pakistan, Volume 2 (2 ed.). Ferozsons, 1994. pp. 502–505. ISBN 9789690100351.
  30. ^ Raj Pal Singh (2004). The Sikhs : Their Journey Of Five Hundred Years. Pentagon Press. p. 115. ISBN 9788186505465.
  31. ^ Alikuzai, Hamid Wahed (October 2013). A Concise History of Afghanistan in 25 Volumes, Volume 14. ISBN 9781490714417. Retrieved 29 December 2014.
  32. ^ Gupta, Hari Ram. History Of The Sikhs Vol II Evolution of Sikh Confederacies. Munshilal Manohorlal, Pvt Ltd.
  33. ^ Gupta, Hari Ram. History Of The Sikhs Vol II Evolution of Sikh Confederacies. Munshilal Manohorlal, Pvt Ltd.
  34. ^ Singh, Khushwant (11 October 2004). A History of the Sikhs: 1469–1838 (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-567308-1. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  35. ^ Gupta, Hari Ram. History Of The Sikhs Vol II Evolution of Sikh Confederacies. Munshilal Manohorlal, Pvt Ltd.
  36. ^ Dhavan, Purnima (2011). When Sparrows Became Hawks: The Making of the Sikh Warrior Tradition, 1699–1799. Oxford University Press. p. 85. ISBN 9780199756551.
  37. ^ H. S. Singha 2000, p. 26-27.
  38. ^ Sethi, Jasbir Singh. Views and Reviews. ISBN 9788190825986.
  39. ^ Hari Ram Gupta, History of the Sikhs: Sikh Domination of the Mughal Empire, 1764–1803, second ed., Munshiram Manoharlal (2000) ISBN 978-8-12150-213-9
  40. ^ H. R. Gupta 1982.
  41. ^ Randhir, G.S (1990). Sikh Shrines in India. ISBN 9788123022604.
  42. ^ H. R. Gupta 1982, p. 43.
  43. ^ "College of excellence, 150 years ago". The Tribune. 1 October 2006.

Bibliography

  • Ganda Singh (1990). Sardar Jassa Singh Ahluwalia. Punjabi University. pp. 1–3. ISBN 978-8173805042.
  • H. R. Gupta (1982). History of the Sikhs. Vol. IV: The Sikh Commonwealth or Rise and Fall of Sikh Misls (1st ed.). New Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal. ISBN 978-8121501651.
  • H. S. Singha (2005). Sikh Studies. Vol. 6. Hemkunt Press. ISBN 8170102588.
  • H. S. Singha (2000). The encyclopedia of Sikhism. New Delhi: Hemkunt Press. ISBN 978-81-7010-301-1.
Preceded by:
Nawab Kapur Singh
Jassa Singh Ahluwalia Followed by:
Akali Naina Singh

jassa, singh, ahluwalia, confused, with, jassa, singh, ramgarhia, sultan, qaum, sardar, 1718, october, 1783, sikh, leader, during, period, sikh, confederacy, being, supreme, leader, khalsa, also, misldar, ahluwalia, misl, this, period, interlude, lasting, roug. Not to be confused with Jassa Singh Ramgarhia Sultan ul Qaum Sardar Jassa Singh Ahluwalia 3 May 1718 23 October 1783 was a Sikh leader during the period of the Sikh Confederacy being the Supreme Leader of the Dal Khalsa He was also Misldar of the Ahluwalia Misl This period was an interlude lasting roughly from the time of the death of Banda Bahadur in 1716 to the founding of the Sikh Empire in 1801 He founded the Kapurthala State in 1772 Sultan ul Qaum Nawab Sardar BabaJassa Singh AhluwaliaEquestrian painting of Jassa Singh Ahluwalia on horseback in front of his haveli with a fly whisk attendant circa 18th or 19th centuryHonorable Jathedar5th Jathedar of Akal TakhtIn office 1753 1783LeaderSikhPreceded byKapur SinghSucceeded byPhula Singh4th Jathedar of Buddha DalIn office 1753 1783Preceded byKapur SinghSucceeded byNaina SinghPersonal detailsBornJassa Singh3 May 1718Ahlu Lahore Subah Mughal Empire present day Lahore district Punjab Pakistan Died23 October 1783 aged 65 Bandala Sikh Confederacy present day Amritsar district Punjab India Resting placeCremated at the Dera Baba Attal AmritsarSpouse s Mai SahibjiSadarani Raj Kaur SahibaRelationsBagh Singh grand nephew Children3ParentsSardar Badar Singh father Mata Jeevan Kaur a sister of Sardar Bagh Singh Hallovalla citation needed mother Military serviceBattles warsSikh raids on Delhi Siege of Amritsar 1748 1 Killing Salabat Khan 1 Sikh Occupation of Lahore 1761 Battle of Harnaulgarh 1762 Battle of Sirhind 1764 Establishing Independent Sikh state Kapurthala 1772 Battle of Delhi 1783 CommanderDal Khalsa Contents 1 Early life 2 The formation of the Dal Khalsa and the Misls 3 Military campaigns 3 1 Nadir Shah s invasion 3 2 The raids of Ahmed Shah Abdali 3 3 Help of Sikhs to Jats of Bharatpur 3 4 Rescue of Maratha women by Sikhs 3 5 The Sixth Abdali Incursion 1762 3 6 Conquest of Jalandhar and Malerkotla 3 7 Conquest of Sirhind 3 8 In The Ganga Doab and Rohilakhand 1764 3 9 Ahmad Shah Durrani Seventh Invasion 3 10 Conflict with Jassa Singh Ramgarhia 3 11 Battle of Delhi 4 Death and legacy 5 In popular culture 5 1 Television 6 See also 7 References 7 1 BibliographyEarly life EditJassa Singh was born on 3 May 1718 CE in the Ahlu village near Lahore Punjab 2 Originally known as Jassa Singh Kalal 3 he styled himself as Ahluwalia after his ancestral village 4 Jassa Singh is described as a member of the Kalal or Wine distiller caste 5 6 7 8 9 10 During the period of Kharak Singh r 1870 1877 a Bhatti Rajput origin story was also created 11 According to this tradition the Bhatti Rajputs descended from Krishna and one of them Rana Har Rai had to leave the throne of Jaisalmer for refusing to marry his niece to the Mughal emperor Akbar Har Rai migrated to Punjab where his descendants married with the Jats and gradually they became Jats 12 Starting with Sadhu Singh also called Sadho or Sadda Singh they married with Kalals and the family came to be known as Ahluwalia Kalal British administrator Lepel Griffin who wrote an account of the rulers of Punjab dismissed this tradition as fictitious 13 According to the dynasty s account Sadhu s Singh s great grandson Badar Singh and his wife remained childless for a long time and sought blessings from Guru Gobind Singh As a result Jassa Singh was born to them 14 The formation of the Dal Khalsa and the Misls Edit Gilded equestrian painting of Jassa Singh Ahluwalia Punjab Plains circa 1850Main articles Dal Khalsa Sikh Army and Ahluwalia misl In 1733 Zakariya Khan Bahadur attempted to negotiate peace with the Sikhs by offering them a jagir the title Nawab to their leader and unimpeded access to the Harmandir Sahib After discussion at a Sarbat Khalsa Kapur Singh was elected leader of the Sikhs and took the title of Nawab He combined the various Sikh militias into two groups the Taruna Dal and the Budda Dal which would collectively be known as the Dal Khalsa Sikh militias over 40 years of age would be part of the Budda Dal and Sikh militias under 40 years were part of the Taruna Dal 15 The Taruna Dal was further divided in five jathas each with 1300 to 2000 men and a separate drum and banner 16 The area of operations of each Dal or army was Hari ke Pattan where the Sutlej river and Beas River meet the Taruna Dal would control the area east of Hari ke Pattan while the Budha Dal would control the area west of it 17 The purpose of the Budda Dal the veteran group was to protect Gurdwaras and train the Taruna Dal while the Taruna Dal would act as combat troops However in 1735 the agreement between Zakariya Khan and Nawab Kapur Singh broke down and the Dal Khalsa retreated to the Sivalik Hills to regroup Later the command of Dal Khalsa was taken by Jassa Singh Ahluwalia who was an able and powerful administrator even displaced amp brought Mughal s centre of power at the time Red Fort under Khalsa flag He made the foundation of Khalsa firm for future generations to lead citation needed Military campaigns EditNadir Shah s invasion Edit Main articles Nader Shah s invasion of India and Skirmish of Chenab 1739 In 1739 Nadir Shah the Persian ruler invaded much of Northern India including Punjab defeating the Mughals at the Battle of Karnal in 1739 he plundered the city of Delhi Shahjahanabad robbing it of treasures like the Peacock throne the Kohinoor diamond and the Darya i Noor diamond Meanwhile all the Khalsa bands got together and passed a resolution that Nadir shah had plundered the city of Delhi and now he is taking Indian women as slaves to his country Sikhs made a plan to free all the slaves Jassa Singh Ahluwalia was 21 years old at that time he planned raids to free all slaves He along with other Sikh bands attacked Nadir shah forces freed all slaves and sent those slaves back to their families safely 18 19 Ahluwalia participated in many battles as well where he proved himself to be a natural leader In a 1748 meeting of the Sarbat Khalsa Nawab Kapur Singh appointed him as his successor His followers awarded him the title Sultan ul Qaum King of the Nation 20 The raids of Ahmed Shah Abdali Edit Main article Indian campaign of Ahmad Shah Durrani Ahmad Shah Durrani Nader Shah s seniormost general succeeded to the throne of Afghanistan when Shah was murdered in June 1747 He established his own dynasty the Sadozai which was the name of the Pashtun khel to which he belonged citation needed Starting from December 1747 till 1769 Abdali made a total of nine incursions into the north India His repeated invasions weakened the Mughal administration of North India At the Third Battle of Panipat he along with Nawab of Oudh and Rohillas defeated the Marathas who after a treaty signed in 1752 became the protector of the Mughal throne at Delhi and were controlling much of North India and Kashmir 21 However they were never able to subdue the Sikhs in the Punjab citation needed Help of Sikhs to Jats of Bharatpur Edit Suraj Mal 1707 63 was the founder of Jat State of Bharatpur He was killed on 25 December 1763 near Delhi by Najib ul Daulah the Ruhilaa chief who had been appointed Mir Bakshi and Regent at Delhi by Ahmed Shah Durrani Suraj Mal s son Jawahar Singh sought help from Sikhs who responded with a Sikh force of 40 000 under the command of Sardar Jassa Singh Ahluwalia The Sikhs crossed the Yamuna on 20 February 1764 and attacked the surrounding areas Najib ul Daulah rushed back to Delhi thereby relieving the pressure on Bharatpur Najib ul Daulah suffered another defeat at hands of Sikhs under Ahluwalia after a battle that lasted 20 days in the trans Yamuna area at Barari Ghat 20 km north of Delhi He retired to Red Fort on 9 January 1765 and within a month Sikhs defeated Najib ul Daulah again in Nakhas horse market and in Sabzi Mandi 22 Jawahar Singh also engaged 25 000 Sikh forces under command of Sardar Jassa Singh against the Rajput Raja of Jaipur in the Battle of Maonda and Mandholi and the Battle of Kama and was defeated in both 23 24 Rescue of Maratha women by Sikhs Edit An account appearing in the 19th century texts Munshi Kanhaiyya Lal s Tareekh e Punjab and Gian Singh s Shamsher Khalsa credits Jassa Singh with rescuing Hindu women captured by Ahmad Shah Durrani after the Third Battle of Panipat in 1761 According to this account after defeating the Marathas Abdali captured thousands of prisoners including 22 000 failed verification women who were being taken to Afghanistan as slaves When Jassa Singh learned of it he attacked the Afghan army at Goindval on the Sutlej river rescued the women and sent them back to their families Thereafter he was known as Bandi chhor or the Liberator of captives 25 20 The Sixth Abdali Incursion 1762 Edit In early 1762 Ahmad Shah Durrani invaded India to crush Sikhs power 26 27 Ahmad Shah Durrani with his Soldiers reached Malerkotla west of Sirhind then attacked a 20 000 Sikh army escorting 40 000 women and children along with the elderly In one of their worst defeats known as Vadda Ghalughara the Sikhs lost perhaps 5 10 000 soldiers and had 20 000 civilians massacred The Afghan forces of Ahmad Shah Durrani came out victorious with the night ambush on the large convoy 28 29 Despite the Ghalughara disaster by the month of May the Sikhs were up in arms again Under Jassa Singh they defeated the Afghan faujdar of Sirhind in the Battle of Harnaulgarh 30 By autumn the Sikhs had regained enough confidence to foregather in large numbers at Amritsar to celebrate Diwali Abdali made a mild effort to win over them and sent an envoy with proposals for a treaty of peace The Sikhs were in no mood for peace and insulted the emissary Abdali did not waste any time and turned up at the outskirts of Amritsar citation needed The Battle of Pipli Sahib was fought in the grey light of a sun in total eclipse It ended when the sunless day was blacked out by a moonless night with the adversaries retiring from the field The Sikhs to the fastness of the jungles of the Lakhi the forests of a hundred thousand trees located in Central Punjab and Abdali behind the walled safety of Lahore 31 Conquest of Jalandhar and Malerkotla Edit In June 1763 Jassa Singh Ahluwalia marched towards Jalandhar Sadat Yar Khan the Governor of Jalandhar so much terrified he did not stir out of his capital Jassa Singh sacked Jalandhar In December 1763 Jassa Singh Ahluwalia defeated and Killed Bhikhan Khan the Nawab of Malerkotla and pludendered Morinda 32 Conquest of Sirhind Edit In January 1764 Dal Khalsa under Jassa Singh Ahluwalia attacked Sirhind Zain Khan Sirhindi the Governor of Sirhind was killed Sikhs captured Sirhind and divide Province between themselves Jassa Singh Ahluwalia captured the territories of Jagaon Bharog Fatehgarh 33 In The Ganga Doab and Rohilakhand 1764 Edit In February 1764 Sikhs crossed Jamuna under Jassa Singh Ahluwalia Khushal Singh Sardar Tara Singh Ghaiba Baghel Singh Gurbaksh Singh at the head of strong force Plundered Saharanpur Shamli Kandha Ambli Miranpur Deobandi Jawalapur Chandausi Muzaffarnagar Najibabad Najib ad Dawlah made peace with the Sikhs by offering them a 11 lakhs of rupees tribute 34 Ahmad Shah Durrani Seventh Invasion Edit In 1765 Ahmad Shah Durrani invaded India for seventh time in the winter of 1764 1765 During this campaign he constantly harassed by Sikhs Qazi Nur Muhammad who was present in the Afghan army describes the numbers of engagements between Sikhs and Afghans a battle was fought on the western bank of the Satluj opposite Rupar it was morning and the Afghan army was hardly gone 3 km from the western bank of the Satluj when they attacked by the Sikhs The Afghans immediately stopped marching and got into regular formation of battle Ahmad Shah Durrani was in the center with 6 000 choice soldiers Shah Vali Khan Jahan Khan Shah Pasand Khan Anzala Khan and others at the head of 12 000 troops were on the right Nasir Khan with 12 000 Baluchis was on the left The Dal Khalsa also organised themselves in regular battle army Jassa Singh Ahluwalia fearlessly stood like a mountain in the center close by him was Jassa Singh Thokah looking like a lion in stature 35 Conflict with Jassa Singh Ramgarhia Edit In 1775 Jassa Singh Ahluwalia one day was going to Achal near Batala he was attacked by Jassa Singh Ramgarhia brothers Khushal singh Tara singh and Mali singh Jassa Singh Ahluwalia was taken prisoner Jassa Singh Ramgarhia apologized for the misbehaviour of his brothers and honorably returned Ahluwalia with gifts but the differences between two increased Jassa Singh Ahluwalia took the oath He will drive Ramgarhias out of country In 1778 Jai Singh Kanhaiya and Haqiqat Singh Kanhaiya supported by Jassa Singh Ahluwalia attacked Jassa Singh Ramgarhia headquarter Sri Hargobindpur and after tough resistance expled him to the desert of Hansi and Hisar he set up his headquarters at Tosham 36 Battle of Delhi Edit The Sikhs under Baghel Singh had been raiding Delhi since 1764 but without success On 11 March 1783 the combined Sikh army of Baghel Singh Jassa Singh Ahluwalia and Jassa Singh Ramgarhia conquered the Red fort of Delhi hosting Nishan Sahib 37 38 39 40 page needed 41 Death and legacy Edit Photo of Jassa Singh Ahluwalia s haveli circa early 20th century Jassa Singh Ahluwalia died on 23 October 1783 in Amritsar He Jassa Singh Ahluwalia had the great privilege of conquering Lahore and issuing his own coin and sitting on the throne of the Mughal Emperors in the Red Fort at Delhi after conquering it He fought a number of times face to face with Ahmad Shah Durrani the greatest Asian general of his days The invader tried to win him over in vain The Maharajas of Patiala and Jind stood before him in all reverence and humility The Rajas of Nalagarh Bilaspur Kangra Hills and Jammu touched his knees The Nawabs of Malerkotla and Kunjpura paid him homage And yet he remained a humble and docile disciple of Guru Gobind Singh In the person of Jassa Singh Ahluwalia the Guru actually made a sparrow kill hawks Jassa Singh was a great warrior mighty general and eminent organiser He bore thirty two scars of sword cuts and bullet marks on the front part of his body and none on his back He was a giant in body Qazi Nur Muhammad who saw him fighting against Ahmad Shah Durrani called him a mountain He was a great warrior mighty general and eminent organiser He bore thirty two scars of sword cuts and bullet marks on the front of his body and none on his back He was a giant in body His breakfast consisted of one kilogram of flour one half kilogram of butter one quarter kilogram of crystalline sugar slabs misri and one bucketful of butter milk lassi One he goat sufficed him for two meals These were the days of physical prowess and only men possessed of indomitable will power could compete with ferocious Afghans on better footing He was wheatish in colour tall fat with a broad forehead wide chest loud and sonorous voice which could be clearly heard by an assemblage of 50 000 men The horses under him must have been the size of an elephant This is why he could be clearly seen by Qazi Nur Muhammad in a body of fifty or sixty thousand men His long arms came down to his knees This enabled him to strike his sword right and left with equal valour Hari Ram Gupta 42 excessive quote Nawab Jassa Singh Ahluwalia Government College NJSA Government College in Kapurthala established in 1856 by Raja Randhir Singh of Kaputhala is named after him 43 A commemorative postage stamp on Jassa Singh Ahluwalia was issued by Government of India on 4 April 1985 In popular culture EditTelevision Edit In the 2010 historical TV series Maharaja Ranjit Singh telecasted on DD National the character of Jassa Singh Ahluwalia is portrayed by Shahbaz Khan citation needed See also EditBanda Bahadur Baba Deep Singh Nawab Kapur Singh Virk Dal KhalsaReferences Edit a b H S Singha 2005 p 31 H S Singha 2005 p 111 Ahluwalia M L 1989 Life and Times of Jassa Singh Ahluwalia Publication Bureau Punjabi University Donald Anthony Low 1968 Soundings in Modern South Asian History University of California Press p 70 71 OCLC 612533097 Low D A 1968 Soundings in Modern South Asian History University of California Press p 70 ISBN 978 0 520 00770 3 Retrieved 14 August 2022 With the rise to political power of Jassa Singh Kalal the most famous Sikh chiefofthe eighteenth century the importance of the Kalals had increased and there had been a tendency among them to abandon their degrading hereditary occupation In addition to abandoning their hereditary occupation the Kalals tried to raise their status by changing their caste names and by claiming more respectable social origins Jassa Singh Kalal had styled himself Ahllu walia from the name of his ancestral village a title which was still borne by his descendants the royal family of the Native State of Kapurthala in British times and one which the Sikh Kalals generally adopted as the name o f their caste By the early twentieth century some o f the Ahlluwalias had gone further by claiming Khatri or Rajput origin Gandhi S S 1980 Struggle of the Sikhs for Sovereignty Gur Das Kapur Retrieved 4 August 2022 The Ahluwalia Misl is also interesting for the same reason as it was led by Jassa Singh Ahluwalia a member of Kalal caste or distillers of palm wine The Kalals rank among the artisans castes of the Sikhs Gupta H R 2001 History of the Sikhs The Sikh commonwealth or Rise and fall of Sikh misls History of the Sikhs Munshiram Manoharlal p 24 ISBN 978 81 215 0540 6 Retrieved 4 August 2022 There lived a young man named Badar Singh of the Kalal caste known as distillers of wine It was there that Badar Singh got a son in 1718 named Jassa Singh M L Ahluwalia 1989 Life and Times of Jassa Singh Ahluwalia Punjabi University p 3 the original homeland of Jassa Singh s ancestors was Mauza Mullu Sadhu Ke in Majha His qaum caste was Kalal alias Tulsi sub caste Louis E Fenech W H McLeod Singh eds 2014 Historical Dictionary of Sikhism Rowman amp Littlefield p 21 ISBN 978 1442236004 the ruling family of Kapurthala the descendants of Jassa Singh Ahluvalia was also Kalal So successful have they been that today their Kalal antecedents have been largely forgotten Jassa Singh Ahluvalia though not a Jat was regarded as the principal misl chieftain Grewal J S 2007 Sikh Ideology Polity and Social Order From Guru Nanak to Maharaja Ranjit Singh Manohar p 245 ISBN 978 81 7304 737 4 Retrieved 14 August 2022 Nevertheless differences of caste was discounted by the Jatts themselves Sukha Singh a Tarkhan was brought up by Shiam Singh a Sandhu Jatt Jassa Singh Ahluwalia a Kalal was similarly brought up by Kapur Singh a Virk Jatt Sohan Singh Seetal 1981 The Sikh Misals and the Punjab States Lahore Book Shop Everybody had been dubbing the Kapoorthala dynasty as Kalaals meaning wine vendors But during the time of Raja Kharak Singh the penultimate chief of the state an attempt was made to relate this dynasty to the Bhatti Rajput Rajput rulers of Jaisalmer in Rajasthan Ganda Singh 1990 p 1With the passing of time they got mingled with the Jats who constituted at that time the majority community of this area They began to enter into matrimonial alliances with them Thus gradually they also became Jats Ganda Singh 1990 p 4 Ganda Singh 1990 p 6 H S Singha 2005 p 37 Narang K S Gupta H R 1969 History of Punjab 1500 1558 p 216 Retrieved 15 July 2010 H S Singha 2005 p 39 Rajmohan Gandhi 1999 Revenge and Reconciliation p 118 ISBN 9780140290455 Saggu DS 2018 Battle Tactics And War Manoeuvres of the Sikhs Notion Press ISBN 9781642490060 a b H S Singha 2000 p 111 Gordon Stewart February 2007 The Marathas 1600 1818 Volume 2 Cambridge University Press 1993 ISBN 978 0 521 26883 7 Sikh Relations with Jats of Bharatpur The sikh encyclopedia 19 December 2000 Retrieved 30 August 2020 Herrli Hans 2004 1993 The Coins of the Sikhs 2nd ed Munshiram Manoharlal publishers Pvt ltd New Delhi p 233 In December 1765 Jawahir singh marched against Jaipur with 25000 sikhs who were bought off by Raja Mado Singh but in March 1768 Jawahir Singh supported by 20000 Sikh mercenaries again attacked and routed Mado Singh Hooja Rima 2006 A History of Rajasthan New Delhi Rupa Publication pp 726 736 Ganda Singh 1990 p 106 he became famous as a Liberator of bonded women Ghanaya Lal Tareekh i Punjab 100 Gian Singh Shamsheer Khalsa 145 507 Mehta J L 2005 Advanced study in the history of modern India 1707 1813 Sterling Publishers Pvt Ltd p 303 ISBN 978 1 932705 54 6 Retrieved 23 September 2010 Bhatia Sardar Singh Vadda Ghallurghara Encyclopaedia of Sikhism Punjabi University Patiala Retrieved 24 September 2015 Jacques Tony 2007 Dictionary of Battles and Sieges Greenwood Press p 553 ISBN 978 0 313 33536 5 Retrieved 18 July 2015 Awan Muhammad Tariq 1994 History of India and Pakistan Volume 2 2 ed Ferozsons 1994 pp 502 505 ISBN 9789690100351 Raj Pal Singh 2004 The Sikhs Their Journey Of Five Hundred Years Pentagon Press p 115 ISBN 9788186505465 Alikuzai Hamid Wahed October 2013 A Concise History of Afghanistan in 25 Volumes Volume 14 ISBN 9781490714417 Retrieved 29 December 2014 Gupta Hari Ram History Of The Sikhs Vol II Evolution of Sikh Confederacies Munshilal Manohorlal Pvt Ltd Gupta Hari Ram History Of The Sikhs Vol II Evolution of Sikh Confederacies Munshilal Manohorlal Pvt Ltd Singh Khushwant 11 October 2004 A History of the Sikhs 1469 1838 2nd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 567308 1 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Gupta Hari Ram History Of The Sikhs Vol II Evolution of Sikh Confederacies Munshilal Manohorlal Pvt Ltd Dhavan Purnima 2011 When Sparrows Became Hawks The Making of the Sikh Warrior Tradition 1699 1799 Oxford University Press p 85 ISBN 9780199756551 H S Singha 2000 p 26 27 Sethi Jasbir Singh Views and Reviews ISBN 9788190825986 Hari Ram Gupta History of the Sikhs Sikh Domination of the Mughal Empire 1764 1803 second ed Munshiram Manoharlal 2000 ISBN 978 8 12150 213 9 H R Gupta 1982 Randhir G S 1990 Sikh Shrines in India ISBN 9788123022604 H R Gupta 1982 p 43 College of excellence 150 years ago The Tribune 1 October 2006 Bibliography Edit Ganda Singh 1990 Sardar Jassa Singh Ahluwalia Punjabi University pp 1 3 ISBN 978 8173805042 H R Gupta 1982 History of the Sikhs Vol IV The Sikh Commonwealth or Rise and Fall of Sikh Misls 1st ed New Delhi Munshiram Manoharlal ISBN 978 8121501651 H S Singha 2005 Sikh Studies Vol 6 Hemkunt Press ISBN 8170102588 H S Singha 2000 The encyclopedia of Sikhism New Delhi Hemkunt Press ISBN 978 81 7010 301 1 Preceded by Nawab Kapur Singh Jassa Singh Ahluwalia Followed by Akali Naina Singh Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jassa Singh Ahluwalia amp oldid 1148766130, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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