Hukma Singh Chimni

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Hukma Singh Chimni, commander-cum-civil administrator under Maharaja Ranjit Singh. He was son of Ram Singh, of Bhera, who was the First one in the family to take the vows of Guru Gobind Singh's amrita, and who entered the service of the Sukkarchakkia misl under Charhat Singh as a trooper. After the death of his father, Hukma Singh was admitted into Ranjit Singh's army and took part in the Kasur expedition of 1807. He soon won the favour of the Maharaja by his valour particularly in the reduction of the Kanhaiya citadel of Pathankot in 1808, and in the seizure of Sialkot the same year from Sardar Jivan Singh.

The energy and alacrity of Hukma Singh won from the Maharaja the affectionate epithet of Chimnl. 'Chimna' in Punjabi signifies both a man of small stature and a little bird, swift and strong of wing. The nickname fitted Hukma Singh, who was short of stature, but very virile and active. Hukma Singh was created a sardar and was made the governor of Ramnagar on a salary of Rs 2,000 per month. He also became the controller of customs and salt mine duties. He was assigned a jagir (estate) worth 60,000 rupees annually.

Hukma Singh took part in the battle of Haidru, 8 km from the Fort of Attock, in 1813, under Diwan Mohkam Chand, when the Sikhs defeated the Kabuli Wazir, Fateh Khan. As Yar Muhammad Khan, the Afghan governor of Peshawar, made an attempt to reoccupy Attock, Hukma Singh drove the Afghan army from the fortress and plundered the retreating host. In 1818, Maharaja Ranjit Singh appointed Hukma Singh as the governor of Attock and Hazara. Hukma Singh was primarily a soldier, and there were few of the Maharaja's campaigns in which he did not participate. He was well rewarded for his skill and bravery and, at one time, held jagirs amounting to ______________________.


References 1. Sun, Sohan Lal, ` Umdat-ut- Twdnkh. Lahore, 1885-89 2. Prein Singh, Baba, Khalsa Raj de Usrayye, vol. II. Hoti Mardan,1944 3. Griffin, Lepel, and C.F. Massy, Chiefs and Families of Note in the Punjab. Lahore, 1909 4. Khushwant Singh, Ranjit Singh: Maharajah of the Punjab. Bombay, 1962