Mahan Singh Mirpuri

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Raja

Mahan Singh

Mirpuri
Other name(s)Mihan Singh
Mian Singh
Born1810
Mirpur, Kashmir
Died1844
Kashmir, Sikh Empire
RankMilitary officer (General)
ChildrenChhattar Singh
Himmat Singh
Sham Singh
Wadhwa Singh
RelationsData Ram Bali (Father)
Signature

Raja Mahan Singh Mirpuri (1810 – 1844) was a famous general in the Sikh Khalsa Army, and was the second-in-command General to General Hari Singh Nalwa.[1] He was conferred by Maharaja Ranjit Singh the title of Raja for his conquests of Haripur, Nowshera and Peshawar. The town of Mansehra derives its name from him.

Early life[edit]

Mahan Singh was born in Mirpur in the Kashmir region of India into a Hindu (Saraswat) Mohyal Brahmin family of the Bali clan (Parāśara gotra). He was the son of Data Ram Bali, who was a counselor to Sultan Raja Muqqarab Khan, the muslim Gakhar Subedar of the Punjabi cities of Gujrat, Jhelum, and Rawalpindi. Mahan Singh Mirpuri, born a Brahmin Hindu, took amrit and became a Khalsa Sikh.[2]

Military career and later Life[edit]

While in Lahore in search of a job, he happened to participate in a hunting expedition of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, in which he caught the notice of the Maharaja by single-handedly killing a leopard with his sword. Impressed by his valor, the Maharaja had him inducted into the army under the famous General Hari Singh Nalwa.

Mahan Singh Mirpuri played a key role in the battles of Peshawar and Kashmir, and in the 1818 siege of Multan, where he was seriously wounded two times. He went on to become second-in-command to Hari Singh Nalwa. In April 1837, he was the main defender of the Jamrud Fort, holding out against an invasion by the Afghans. In the Battle of Jamrud, Hari Singh Nalwa was killed but Mahan Singh maintained the news secret until reinforcements arrived from Lahore.

Mai Desan, the widow of Hari Singh Nalwa, adopted Mahan Singh as her son and solemnized his marriage into a fellow Mohyal Brahmins family of the Mohan clan (Kashyapa gotra) from Gujranwala according to Hindu Vedic traditions.

Mahan Singh had four sons, named Chhattar Singh, Himmat Singh, Sham Singh and Wadhwa Singh.

Death[edit]

Mahan Singh was murdered by his own soldiers in 1844, when mutiny broke out in the Sikh Khalsa Army.

His death at the hands of mutinying soldiers was avenged by Chhattar Singh (His Son), who was himself killed soon after.[3][unreliable source]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ The history of the Muhiyals: The militant Brahman race of India'' (English,1911) by T.P. Russell Stracey
  2. ^ ''Mohyal History'' (Urdu, 1940) Chuni Lal Dutt
  3. ^ Griffin Lepel. H Sir (1890). Chiefs and Families of Note in the Punjab Vol. 2. Civil And Military Gazette Press Lahore. pp. 265–266. Retrieved 2015-07-09.