In January 1791, Bhanga Singh advanced up to Anupshahar, a British cantonment on the Gariga under the charge of LtCol Robert Stuart. He captured the Colonel and brought him to Thanesar where he was confined for nine months in the fort before his release in October 1791 at the intercession of Lord Cornwallis, the British governor general, and some Sikh and Mughal chiefs and on payment of sixty thousand rupees as ransom. In 1795 Bhanga Singh captured Karnal and in 1799 he helped Raja Bhag Singh of Jind against the attack of the Irish adventurer, George Thomas. Bhanga Singh joined hands with Lord Lake in attacking Delhi in September 1803 and was granted some additional territory.
In 1806 he accompanied Maharaja Ranjit Singh on his return journey from Thanesar to the Sutlej and received from him a village in jagir in Talvandi parganah between Moga and Firozpur. Sir Lepel Griffin has described Bhanga Singh as a man “of a most savage and untameable character,” and as “the fiercest and most feared of all the cis Sutlej chiefs.” Bhanga Singh died in 1815 and was survived by his son, Fateh Singh, and daughter, Karam Kaur, married to Maharaja Karam Singh of Patiala, and wife, Hassan. Fateh Singh died in 1819 without issue, and one half of his territory was confiscated by the British while the other half remained with his mother, Hassan, who signed herself as Bhanga Singh in her correspondence with the British.
References :
1. Griffin, Lepel, The Rajas of the Punjab. Delhi, 1977
2. Gupta, Hari Ram, History of the Sikhs, vol. III. Delhi, 1980