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The Making of the Sikh Empire - The role of Banda Bahadur and the Misls (Paperback)
Loot Price: R291
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The Making of the Sikh Empire - The role of Banda Bahadur and the Misls (Paperback)
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Loot Price R291
Discovery Miles 2 910
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This study is based primarily on secondary sources in English
language and takes issue with Sikh historians to offer novel
perspectives on the nature and function of Sikh misls. It covers
the period beginning in the fall of 1709 when Banda Bahadur and his
small band of Khalsa warriors stormed into Punjab and the Baisakhi
day in 1801 when Ranjit Singh was proclaimed Maharaja of the
Punjab. During this period Punjab was buffeted by political
turbulence and confusion. Mogul empire was losing its majesty and
luster and embroiled with an endless spiral of wars of succession
that weakened the imperial grip over Punjab. The Moguls confronted
a two-front war on two geographically separate fronts. In the
north, primarily in Punjab, the repeated forays of Afghan invader
Abdali so emasculated Mogul hold over Punjab that the Mogul emperor
Ahmad Shah Bahadur ceded Lahore and Multan to Abdali. In the south
the Marathas read the winds of change then blowing through imperial
Mogul indicating an empire on the wane and in 1757 captured Delhi
and vast swathes of countryside up to Saharanpur. With overpowering
presence in the imperial city the Marathas now turned their eye on
Punjab to drive the Afghan invader and occupier from the country.
The Afghans and Marathas faced one another at Panipat. They fought
three battles and in the final clash in January 1761 the Maratha
army suffered a catastrophic defeat, ending Maratha hegemony over
Punjab. Although Abdali managed to crush the Marathas once and for
all, his ambition of hegemony over Punjab was quashed by his
nemesis, the Sikh misls. And in this crucible of turbulence the
Sikhs were to forge their destiny. Following the death of Banda
Bahadur some of his followers for whom marauding had become a way
of life formed their own jathas (gangs) and lived off plunder. On
Baisakhi 1748 these bands or jathas were finally merged into one
army, the Dal Khalsa divided into eleven misls with own name,
leader and flag, under the supreme command of Jassa Singh
Ahluwalia. The twelfth misl was the Phulkian misl but it was not an
integral part of the Dal Khalsa. Pillaging skills that the jathas
honed over the years were employed to pounce on Abdali's
booty-laden caravan, hit and grab as much of loot and make a
getaway to their strongholds and bulwarks in the hills and jungles;
redoubts built for the purpose of better securing their persons and
property against Afghan and Mogul search parties. The misls
pillaged villages, merchants and traders. In time they changed
their tactics. Instead of terrorizing the villages and towns they
offered them protection (rakhi) against interlopers and in return
exact some form of tithe. As a misl amassed large treasure, it also
attracted greater following. The stronger misls would flex their
muscles and intimidate the weaker ones. Territorial influence
intensified rivalry and political maneuverings prompting some
misldars to invite their counterparts to launch an attack on a
chieftain with whom they had a bone to pick with. They
double-crossed each other and often aligned themselves with the
enemy (Moguls or Afghans), without compunction. As the authority of
prominent and wealthy misldars diminished on their passing or old
age, Ranjit Singh, chief of Sukerchakia misl, was able to
amalgamate or annex them under his flag and proclaimed Maharaja.
General
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