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HARNAM SINGH, BHAI (1897-1921), son of Bhai Sundar Singh and Mai Uttam Kaur, was among those who fell martyrs at Nankana Sahib on 20 February 1921. The traditional occupation of the family was weaving, but Harnam Singh`s father and grandfather took to peddling cloth. Harnam Singh was hardly five years old when the family migrated to and permanently settled as drapers at Shahkot, an upcoming market town in Sheikhupura district.
LAHINA SINGH, SARDAR (d.1893) a military commander during Sikh rule in the Punjab, came of a Sohi Khatri family of Gharjakh, a village adjacent to the town of Gujranwala (now in Pakistan). His grandfather, Panjab Singh, was a trooper in the regiment of Sardar Fateh Singh Kalianvala, a general in the army of Maharaja Ranjit Singh. After Fateh Singh`s death in 1807 in the battle of Naraingarh, Panjab Singh left his regiment to join another directly under Ranjit Singh`s command, where he rose in rank and was given a jagir. His son, Kahn Singh, was given the command of 500 horse and ajagir worth 15,000 rupees a year.
TREHAN, a sub caste of Khatris. It belongs to the Sarin group, one of the four subgroups into which the Khatris are divided. They are categorized in two main divisions the higher and the lower. The Trehans belong to the higher group. The etymology of the word trehan is not very clear. According to some, trehan is the distorted form of conjunctive trairin, lit.
ALLARD, ACHILLE, a young Muslim boy whose parents had been killed in one of the battles of Multan, and who was saved by Maharaja Ranjit Singh, had been born at Sayyidpur in the then province of Multan. General Allard noticed his intelligence and asked the Maharaja\'s permission to adopt him. Jacquemont saw him in Lahore, and Honigberger performed upon him a delicate surgical intervention. In 1834, he was christianized and rebaptized Achille by his adopted family.
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HUKAM SINGH, BHAI (d. 1921), son of Bhai Ghanaiya Singh Dhillon and Mat Har Kaur of the village of Dirigariari in Jalandhar district, was born at his mother`s house in Hazara village in the same district and spent his early childhood there under the care of his maternal grandfather, Sham Singh, an educated and dedicated, Sikh. But Hukam Singh himself remained illiterate. By the time he reached his paternal home he had grown up into a strong and lusty youth. He was married at the age of 14.
LAL SINGH, BHAI, ruler of the Sikh state of Kaithal, was the younger son of Bhai Desu Singh, founder of the principality. Unlike other rulers of the cis Sutlej states, the Kaithal chiefs did not assume the title of rajah (king), but preferred to use the family epithet of Bhai (lit. brother). Bhai Desu Singh, who fell out with Raja Amar Singh of Patiala in 1778, sought the patronage of the Delhi Wazir, Nawab Majd ud Daulah `Abd ulAhad. The latter claimed from him arrears in payment of revenue plus a fine of four lakh rupees. Of this amount Desu Singh arranged to pay three lakh rupees and in lieu of the balance payable he left his son, Lal Singh, as a hostage.
TWARIKHIHIND, subtitled Bayan i Ahwal iMulki Hind wa Maluki An az Zamani Qadim ta 1233 A.M., by Ahmad Shah of Batala, a manuscript preserved in Dyal Singh Trust Library, Lahore, is a history of India from earliest times to AD 1818 according to the subtitle, although it also records the birth of Prince Nau Nihal Singh in 1820 and some other events in the Punjab even up to 1824. The manuscript comprising 468 folios, each with 17 lines, was prepared in 1866 by Rajab `All, a native of Batala. The section dealing with the history of the Sikhs was published under the title Zikri Giiruan wa Ibtidai Singhan wa Mazhabi Eshan in 1885, as an appendix to volume I of Sohan Lal Surfs `Umdat-ut-Twankh.
ALLARD, BANNOU PAN DEI (1814-1884), born of Raja Menga Ram of Chamba and Banni Panje Dei at Chamba on 25 January 1814, married Jean Francois Allard, one of Maharaja Ranjit Singh\'s French generals, in March 1826, and bore him seven children, two of whom died in infancy and are buried in Lahore along with their father. Allard and his wife also adopted a little orphan, Achille. In 1834, Bannou Pan Dei, her children and two of her female attendants accompanied Allard to France.
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INDAR SINGH, BHAI (1894-1921), one of the Akali reformers who fell martyr at Nankana Sahib during the reformation of the holy shrines there, was born in 1894, the son of Bhai Mahitab Singh and Mai Ichchhar Kaur of the village of Daroli in Jalandhar district. The family later shifted to Shahkoi, a small town in Sheikhupura district in the newly developed Lower Chenab Canal Colony where he earned a modest income as a draper-cum-tailor. As the movement for Gurdwara reform was picking up momentum towards the end of the second decade of the 20th century, he turned an Akali and took part in the liberation of Gurdwara Babe di Bcr on 45 October 1920.
MANGAL SINGH (d. 1864), manager of Prince Kharak Singh`s estates in Sikh times, came of a Sandhu family of the village of Sirarivali, in Sialkot district, which traced its ancestry to one Husain who founded, at the beginning of sixteenth century, Hasanvala, a village in Gujrariwala district. Mangal Singh`s grandfather Dargah, who was the first in the family to adopt the Sikh faith, migrated from Sirarivali to Gurdaspur owing to straitened circumstances to which he had been reduced, and joined Jaimal Singh Kanhaiya as a horseman His son Lal Singh, the father of Mangal Singh, succeeded him and was promoted to command 100 horse.