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'''FATEH KHAN TIWANA''' (d. 1848) was the son of Khuda Yar Khan, a jagirdar in the neighbourhood of  Dera  Ismail Khan. The  Sikh  general,  Hari Singh Nalwa  appointed him to take charge of Mittha  Tiwana,  country in the upper regions of the Sindh Sagar Doab. On being implicated in the assassination of Raja  Dhian Singh  in September 1843,Fateh Khan fled to  Dera  Ismail Khan and raised the standard of revolt. When in 1844 Diwan  Lakkhi Mall  was sent from  Lahore  to punish him,  Fateh Khan took shelter in the fort of Tonk, but was forced to flee. He remained in hiding in the trans Indus territory. Later, he was implicated in the murder of Karivar Pashaura Singh. After the first Anglo-Sikh war,  Fateh Khan  Tiwana  became the governor of Bannu. In November 1848, Herbert  Edwardes  sent him to suppress  Sikh  disturbances. A  Sikh  force brought him to bay in the fort of Dalipgarh where he was killed in action.
'''Fateh Khan Tiwana''' (d. 1848) was the son of Khuda Yar Khan, a jagirdar in the neighbourhood of  Dera  Ismail Khan. The  Sikh  general,  Hari Singh Nalwa  appointed him to take charge of Mittha  Tiwana,  country in the upper regions of the Sindh Sagar Doab. On being implicated in the assassination of Raja  Dhian Singh  in September 1843, Fateh Khan fled to  Dera  Ismail Khan and raised the standard of revolt.  
 
When in 1844 Diwan  Lakkhi Mall  was sent from  Lahore  to punish him,  Fateh Khan took shelter in the fort of Tonk, but was forced to flee. He remained in hiding in the trans Indus territory. Later, he was implicated in the murder of Karivar Pashaura Singh. After the first Anglo-Sikh war,  Fateh Khan  Tiwana  became the governor of Bannu. In November 1848, Herbert  Edwardes  sent him to suppress  Sikh  disturbances. A  Sikh  force brought him to bay in the fort of Dalipgarh where he was killed in action.


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 11:21, 13 January 2008

Fateh Khan Tiwana (d. 1848) was the son of Khuda Yar Khan, a jagirdar in the neighbourhood of Dera Ismail Khan. The Sikh general, Hari Singh Nalwa appointed him to take charge of Mittha Tiwana, country in the upper regions of the Sindh Sagar Doab. On being implicated in the assassination of Raja Dhian Singh in September 1843, Fateh Khan fled to Dera Ismail Khan and raised the standard of revolt.

When in 1844 Diwan Lakkhi Mall was sent from Lahore to punish him, Fateh Khan took shelter in the fort of Tonk, but was forced to flee. He remained in hiding in the trans Indus territory. Later, he was implicated in the murder of Karivar Pashaura Singh. After the first Anglo-Sikh war, Fateh Khan Tiwana became the governor of Bannu. In November 1848, Herbert Edwardes sent him to suppress Sikh disturbances. A Sikh force brought him to bay in the fort of Dalipgarh where he was killed in action.

References

1. Suri, Sohan Lal, `Udmat-ut-Twarikh. Lahore, 1885-89

2. Khushwant Singh, A History of the Sikhs, vol. II. Princeton, 1966

3. Bhagat Singh, Maharaja Ranjit Singh and His Times. Delhi, 1990