Dallewalia Misl
Punjab Region shows the relative positions of the Sikh Misls and other states. |
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The Dallewalia
Gulab Singh, with his two brothers, Dayal Singh and Gurdyal Singh and two sons, Jaipal Singh and Hardyal Singh, actively participated in the chhota ghallughara in June 1746. In 1748, Gulab Singh was declared to be the head of the Dallewalias, with Gurdyal Singh and
Skirmish with Najib Khan Rohilla of Najibabad
In the year 1756, in collaboration with his friend, Sardar Karora Singh, Gulab Singh attacked Najib Khan Rohilla of Najibabad. Nawab Doda Khan offered a stiff resistance in the beginning but shortly thereafter he escaped from the battlefield. Later, Gulab Singh chastised Nawab Zabita Khan of Meerut. Then, he turned his attention towards Muzaffarnagar, Deoband, Miranpur and Saharanpur. Finding themselves unable to face him, the rulers of these places offered tribute and paid obeisance to him.[9]
Encounter with Ahmed Shah Abdali
In 1756-57, when Ahmad Shah Abdali, after plundering Delhi, was carrying with him a huge booty and many young Hindu girls, he was obstructed by the Sikhs at river Ravi and dispossessed of much of the booty. All the girls were got released from the Afghans and restored to their parents. Gulab Singh, accompanied by his men, actively participated in this enterprise. The same year, an intelligence of the Sikhs gave them an information that revenue, to the tune of five lakh rupees, collected from the area between Sarai Rawalpindi and Rohtas, was being carried to Lahore. Hearing this news Gulab Singh and Karora Singh, at the head of their men, attacked the guard that was escorting the treasure near Jhelum and took away the money with which they purchased provisions and distributed the same among the dais of the Khalsa.[5]
Decline
Gulab Singh died in 1759, in the
After the death of Sardar Gulab Singh in 1759, his successor was
See also
- Sardar Gulab Singh
- Sardar Tara Singh Ghaiba
References
- ISBN 978-8130201818.
- ISBN 978-8121501651.
- ^ Singh, Surinder Pal (2009). History Of Sikh Misls. p. 149
- OCLC 695560144.
- ^ a b c Singh, Surinder Pal (2009). History Of Sikh Misls. p. 149.
- ISBN 978-0-19-975655-1.
- ^ a b Gupta, Hari Ram (1978). History of the Sikhs: The Sikh commonwealth or Rise and fall of Sikh misls. Munshiram Manoharlal Publishing. p. 52.
- ^ www.DiscoverSikhism.com. History Of The Sikhs Vol. IV The Sikh Commonwealth Or Rise And Fall Of Sikh Misls.
- ^ a b Singh, Surinder Pal. History of the Sikh Misls. p. 227.