LUDHIANA POLITICAL AGENCY, renamed North-West Frontier Agency in 1835, was established in 1810 as tlie main official channel of Anglo-Sikh political and diplomatic communications. When, in February 1809, Lt. Col David Ochlerlony established a British military post at Ludhiana during Charles Metcalfe`s negotiations with Maharaja Ranjit Singh, the town belonged to Raja Bhag Singh of Jtnd. Ranjit Singh had seized Ludhiana from the ruling Muhammadan family during his Malva campaign of 1807 and bestowed it on Bhag Singh.
MEGH RAJ (d. 1864), the third son of Misr Divan Chand, starting as a clerk in Gobindgarh Fort at Amritsar under Maharaja Ranjit Singh, became head of the treasury at Amritsar in 1816. He held this position until the Maharaja`s death in 1839 soon after which Prince Nau Nihal Singh and Raja Hira Singh visited Amritsar to have his accounts checked. The accounts revealed no embezzlement, yet Megh Raj and his brother Rup Lal were taken into custody, and a fine of 5,00,000 rupees was imposed on them. They remained in captivity until Hira Singh`s assassination on 21 December 1844.
SHAHID BILAS (BHAI MANI SINGH), by Kavi Seva Singh, is a biography in verse of Bhai Mani Singh, a Rajput warrior of Panvar clan, whom the poet identifies with Bhai Mani Singh, the martyr. Seva Singh, son of Kesar Singh Kaushish, was a bhatt or family bard of one of Bhai Mani Singh`s great grandsons, Sarigat Singh, who had settled at Ladva, in the present Yamunanagar district of Haryana, as ajagirdar under Raja Ajit Singh. According to the poet himself, he commenced writing Shahid Bilas at Ladva, but completed it at Bhadson, in Parganah Thanesar, to which place he migrated, probably in 1846, when Raja Ajit Singh`s estates were confiscated by the British for helping the Lahore armies in the first AngloSikh war.
STEINBACH, HENRY, a Prussian, was one of the many European adventurers who secured employment in the Punjab under Maharaja Ranjit Singh and his successors. Steinbach joined the Sikh infantry in 1836 as a battalion commander on a starting salary of Rs 600 per month, increased to Rs 800 by 1841. He was charged with training his battalion on the British model. From 1838 to 1841, Steinbach was posted at Peshawar.