Shankar Shah
Shankar Shah | |
---|---|
Titular king of Garha-Mandla | |
Issue | Kunwar Raghunath Shah |
Dynasty | Garha Kingdom dynasty |
Shankar Shah was the titular king of Garha Kingdom, which was situated in the Indian region of Gondwana. He led an uprising against the British in Jubbulpore, and was put to death along with his son.[1] His son's name was Kunwar Raghunath Shah.
Uprising
During the
The 52nd regiment of Bengal Native Infantry was called to put down the rebellion in Jabalpur, but the injustice of the execution of Shankar Shah and Raghunath Shah convinced them to mutiny instead.[4][5]
Death
The aged Shankar Shah, his son Raghunath Shah along with thirteen other followers were arrested and jailed in the prison at the cantonment, accused of "hatching a plot to foully murder the English residents of Jubbulpore".[6]
Even though no incriminating evidence was found against them, the British blew up Shankar Shah along with his son, Kunwar Raghunath Shah with a cannon mouth on 18 September 1857 in a crime of provoking an uprising through their patriotic poems.[6][3][7][1] The 13 followers were executed the next day.[4]
This further enraged the already dissatisfied 52nd regiment of Bengal Native Infantry and they rebelled at Jabalpur.[6]
References
- ^ ISBN 978-81-87100-16-4.
- ^ ISBN 978-1-5287-6963-1.
- ^ a b "अमर बलिदानी महाराजा शंकर शाह और राजकुमार रघुनाथ शाह / बलिदान दिवस – 18 सितम्बर 1857 | VSKgujarat". 17 September 2022.
- ^ a b Malleson, George Bruce (1880). History of the Indian Mutiny, 1857-1858: Commencing from the Close of the Second Volume of Sir John Kaye's History of the Sepoy War. Allen.
- ^ Quarterly Army List of Her Majesty's British Forces on the Bengal Establishment. Calcutta: R C Lepage & Co. 1859.
- ^ ISBN 978-81-230-2299-4.
- ISBN 978-81-7046-175-3.
Further reading
- Indian Revolutionaries 1757-1961 (Vol-1): A Comprehensive Study, 1757-1961. Prabhat Prakashan. January 1999. p. 229. ISBN 978-81-87100-16-4.