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MAHARAJA RANJIT SINGH, THE RISE AND FALL OF THE SIKH EMPIRE - CAPT AJIT VADAKAYIL

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MAHARAJA DULEEP SINGH,  KOHINOOR DIAMOND,  BRITISH EAST INDIA COMPANY EXTERNAL CONSPIRACY,  COMPANY OWNER ROTHSCHILD'S  DOUBLE AGENTS' INTERNAL CONSPIRACY, WEDGE DRIVEN BETWEEN SIKHS AND RAJPUTS,  DISINTEGRATION OF A MIGHTY PUNJAB EMPIRE - CAPT AJIT VADAKAYIL



I am afraid that this post will re-write history, in a manner which shocks the denizens of the glorious Punjab empire of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, called tongue in cheek by Western historians as " The Napoleon of the East".

To understand this post, you must know that British East India Company ( shipping  company)  owner , a German Jew Rothschild , called the shots in India and this planet ever since they laid the hands on the gold of Tipu Sultan in 1799.

You must punch into Google search TIPU SULTAN UNMASKED VADAKAYIL, to understand how the enormous gold of Tipu Sultan was shipped away in British East Company ships. 

This is the base gold asset of the modern banking cartel who rules the planet via the Bilderberg Club.


The Tipu Sultan modus operandi was very simple.

Imagine a hyper thief and a super thief. The hyper thief does things using his cunning and devious brains in style. He refuses to dirty his hands. He allows the super thief to steal from all the hundreds of banks in Mumbai, all the time watching him using his secret agents.This work is dirty, sweaty and without honour. 

Once the super thief has looted all the banks and made a nice pile in one single place, the hyper thief just swipes it away in a jiffy , after murdering the super thief . Nobody even knows such a hyper thief existed . 

End of story.

Maharaja Ranjit Singh made the mistake of trusting Jewish generals ( double agents of Rothschild ) who pulled the carpet from under the feet of Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte at battle of Waterloo in 1815.  

Below: Maharaja Ranjit Singh


Today even Wikipedia accepts that there was indeed a Rothschild conspiracy, wherein Napoleon was tricked . Not only that,  the wealth of the not so bright John Bull Englishmen, were also swiped away overnight.

Punch into Google search NAPOLEON , THE UNKNOWN SIDE VADAKAYIL


Just like how Napoleon's personal Jewish doctor betrayed his trust, by medical trickery , same way Maharaja Ranjit Singh's personal Romanian Jewish doctor in the payroll of Rothschild , and tutored by the personal homeopathy German Jew doctor of the mighty Rothschild himself, did away with the Maharaja.

The simple Sikhs must know the truth. All this will cause a great deal of heart ache. 

The British have accused the simple but brave Sikhs of petty politics and squabbling.  This is a lie.

Every conspiracy was hatched by the owner of British East India Company, micro managed by their king pin agent,  the Jewish Romaninan personal doctor of Ranjit Singh. 

These things will never ever be written by the main stream media , monopolized by big brother.

For people whose knowledge of Punjab Sikh Empire history, is purely pedestrian.  See below , the disgraceful fall of the glorious Sikh Empire.


1801 April 12, Coronation of Ranjit Singh as Maharaja, formal beginning of the Sikh Empire

1801 to June 27, 1839,  Reign of Maharaja Ranjit Singh . From 1801 to 1839 he lead the Sikh Khalsa Army , and expanded  the Sikh.. ( born December 1807-  died September 16, 1843)

Maharaja Ranjit Singh died at the age on 59 , due to a 4th stroke.  He had 3 strokes before that.


The following were the naïve and gullible successors of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, who never even knew the cunning Rothschild conspiracy to snatch their wealth and their empire.

The following ruled over the Sikh Kingdom for a period of less than ten years from 1839 to 1849 A.D, after the death of Maharaja Ranjit Singh. :

1. Maharaja Kharak Singh, (Elder son of Maharaja Ranjit Singh)
Birth February 20, 1801, Accession June 27, 1839
Deposed in a coup October 8, 1839, Poisoned to death November 5, 1840

Below : Maharaja Kharak Singh 


2. Maharaja Naunihal Singh, (son of Maharaja Kharak Singh)
Birth February 11, 1820, Became a Maharaja October 8, 1839 (De-facto ruler)
Death November 6, 1840, ( Murdered with stone pounded on his head ).

Below: Maharaja  Naunihal Singh 

3. Maharaja Sher Singh., (Second son of Maharaja Ranjit Singh)
Occupied the throne  November 9, 1840, for 23 days only, Dethroned December 2, 1840

Below : Maharaja Sher Singh 

4. Maharani Chand Kaur., (Widow of Maharaja Kharak Singh)
Proclaimed Malika Mukaddas December 2, 1840 or  Queen Empress.
Capituated January 17, 1841, Deposed  January 18, 1841,  Killed June 9, 1842

Below: Maharani Chand Kaur

5. Maharaia Sher Singh, (Again returned to power)
Birth 1807
Accession  January 18, 1841, Killed September 15, 1843

6. Maharaja Duleep Singh, (Youngest son of Maharaja Ranjit Singh)
Birth  September 6, 1838, Mounted the throne. September 15, 1843
* Deposed  March 29,  1849.  * Exiled  to England December 21, 1849
Death (in Paris-France) October 22, 1893

Below: Boy king Maharaja Duleep Singh with his mother Jindan Kaur.


Boy king at the age of 5, Maharaja Duleep Singh’s godmother was Kohinoor snatching Queen Victoria of England .  

Below : the priceless Kohinoor diamond ( presented to the English Queen by Jew Rothschild , the owner of British East India Company ) 


Below:  Queen Victoria



Maharaja Duleep Singh was converted to Christianity married twice--first  to a honey pot Bamba Müller ( half German Jew - half Ethiopian ) and then to a  honey pot  chambermaid Ada Douglas Wetherill  .  

Below Maharani Bamba Muller




He had eight children in total, six from his first marriage to Bamba, the half breed daughter of a German banker.:
Prince Victor Duleep Singh
Prince Frederick Duleep Singh
Prince Albert Edward Duleep Singh
Princess Bamba Duleep Singh
Princess Catherine Duleep Singh
Princess Sophia Duleep Singh

Below : Duleep Singh's attractive daughter Princess Bamba Jr 



He also had two children from his second marriage to Ada Douglas Wetherill:
Princess Pauline Alexandra Duleep Singh
Princess Ada Irene Beryl Duleep Singh

Below: Duleep Singh's attractive daughter Pauline Alexandra


All the above eight children of Maharaja Duleep Singh died without children,  (which is astonishing and quite mysterious),  ending the direct line of the Sikh Royalty.

WHEN A INDIAN YUV-RAJ IN WAITING MARRIES A WHITE CHRISTIAN FOREIGNER OUT OF LOVE ( SIC) ,  IN A FOREIGN LAND , IT IS USUALLY MADE TO HAPPEN,  BY POWERFUL FORCES.  

SUCH A WOMAN IS CALLED A HONEY POT. ( KNOW OF ANY SUCH  RECENT  LIVING HONEY POT  ?!?)

And Maharaja Duleep Singh is NOT Ranjit Singh’s biological child, no matter what any historian writes.  

Below: Maharaja Duleep Singh  

Maharaja Ranjit Singh , who just recovered from his 3rd stroke , was paralysed below the waist, and was NOT in a any prime physical condition to have a boner and penetrate and seed Rani Jindan Kaur , when Duleep Singh was conceived, as per his doctor.  

His attractive mother Maharani Jindan Kaur was having a torrid affair with the handsome Raja Lal Singh, behind Ranjit Singh’s back.  

Below-Jindan Kaur


Maharani  Jindan Kaur, did NOT have royal blood. 

She was the daughter of Sardar Manna Singh Aulak, the Royal Kennel Keeper at the Court of Lahore. She was the ninth and the last regular wife he married, according to Sikh customs in 1835, and who bore him his last son Duleep Singh ( sic )  in 1838, just 10 months before his death in 1839.

The British called her the Messalina of the Punjab-- comparing her to Messalina, the wife of the Roman Emperor, Claudius, who was a wanton and licentious seductress

Manna used to perch his pretty girl child Jindan kaur on his shoulder, and running alongside the Maharaja’s palki.  He  used to joke with Ranjit Singh,  wheren ever he saw him ogling his attractive but underage daughter  “ When will you marry my daughter and make her your queen?”

One day to his utter surprise Ranjit Singh relied  “Very well, bring her to my palace.”  

She made all the other women of Ranjit Singh very jealous.  Till the age of 13, his Prime minister Dhian Singh was in charge of her.

In the Memoirs of Alexander Gardner”  Ranjit Singh took Jindan into his harem where the little smouldering beauty used to gambol, and frolic and tease and captivated the Maharaja in a way that smote the real wives with jealousy.  In 1830, with the object of calming the jealousy of his wives, the Maharaja sent Jindan, then thirteen, to her godfather at Amritsar where her amorous flirtatious glances and coquettish pranks continued attracting lustful attentions of no small number of erotic truants”.

A lot of Sikhs are very proud of this Maharani-- whose shady history is a pack of lies.  

Lal Singh was a Brahmin from Jhelum and entered the service of the Sikh Darbar in 1832 as a lowly writer in the treasury,  on the recommendation of the Dogra Prime minister Dhian Singh.  

Below - Lal Singh 

In December 1844, Maharani Jindan Kaur broke all pretense and appointed her lover as a member of the Council of Regency under her.  He was made Wazir on 8 November 1845.   

He was also personally teaching his own son Duleep Singh, as per his mother Jindan Kaur’s her wishes.  Lal Singh had designs for his son to be the future emperor of Punjab and Kashmir, and hence he mollycoddled the British, who used him like the proverbial curry leaf ..  

One fine day he got careless and the British caught him .  They found his letter giving secret instructions to Shaikh Imam ud Din, the governor of Kashmir, to thwart the occupation by Gulab Singh Dogra (  brother of Dhian Singh ) of the valley granted him by the British under a treaty signed on 16 March 1846.  

Below : Gulab Singh Dogra 


Lal Singh was formally tried by a British Court of Inquiry and found guilty. He was removed from his high office and expelled from the Punjab with a pension of 12,000 rupees per annum.  

He was sent to Agra and then to Dehra Dun, where he died in 1866.

I will NOT eulogize Ranjit Singh, but will attempt to shed true light.  

As a child Ranjit Singh suffered from smallpox as a child which resulted in the loss of one eye, and his face was deeply pitted , and it was NOT a pretty sight.  

He was also a short man, considering Sikhs are tall and huge people.  But was was extremely athletic and fast.  He was  uneducated, could neither read nor write, but had a marvellous memory.  

He was a born leader and evoked intense loyalty among his subjects and his army consisting of Sikhs, Rajputs, Hindus and Muslims. He never admitted the possibility of failure, and hence held the "awe factor".

Ranjeet Singh saw action at the battle front, when he was hardly 12 years old, when he accompanied his father Mahan Singh on a campaign.  During the long siege Mahan Singh fell seriously ill, and knowing very well that his end was approaching, anointed his son Ranjeet Singh as his successor and chief of the Sukerchakia Misl,  by applying saffron paste on his forehead.  

The army of Sukerchakia Misl commanded by young Ranjeet Singh,  achieving an astonishing victory against all odds, that amazed everybody.  The news of the sons victory reached the ailing Mahan Singh who heaved a sigh of relief just before he breathed his last in 1792. .  

Once while on a hunting expedition, Ranjit Singh was attacked by one of his father's enemies Hashmat Khan, who had old scores to settle with his father. Out of fear Ranjeet Singh's horse stopped in its tracks, and Khan took the opportunity and wounded Ranjit Singh with his sword. In spite of being wounded Ranjeet Singh moved like greased lightning and with a powerful stroke of his sword cut off Khan's head.  

13 year old Ranjeet Singh then picked up the severed head of Hashmat Khan with his spear while on horse back – and this was a tale while would be told a million times from a thousand lips.  

Much later he would demonstrate his prowess in “tent pegging” to the British ladies , ( on popular request ) , by making a soldier hold a lime in his palm. He galloped past at full speed and speared the tiny lime with the sharp tip of his long spear.  All noted that the soldier’s palm was unharmed,  nor was he in a state of fear. The horse was literally an extension of his body.


Thus Ranjeet Singh had demonstrated his prowess as an excellent horseman and skilled fighter at a relatively young age, and his fame spread far and wide. He was a master in guerilla tactics, night attacks with very little men , pursuing withdrawing forces, and  inflicting crushing and morale shattering defeats.


Maharaja Ranjit Singh is included in the list of "Undefeated Military Commanders"

The maharajah had a harem of 46 wives. These could  be segregated into 4 classes.  Firstly  9 of his wives he had married in the orthodox Sikh manner. These wives were considered a cut above other wives. Ranjit Singh also married 9 rich widows by what in Sikh custom is called casting the Chaddar ( blanket) over them. 

The Chaddar is a peculiar custom in the Punjab where a widow is married to the man who casts a ‘Chaddar’ on the woman after which she becomes his wife.  Ranjit had 9 such attractive widows as wives.  He also had a third category of courtesan wives who were all Muslim. . The remaining were gorgeous women whom he had fancied and were concubines. Fakir Nuruddin, the Home Minister, was  incharge of Maharaja’s palaces and the harem.

The Maharajah was not averse to going to war to capture a beautiful woman or princess. In 1804 he learnt of the beauty of 2 daughters Guddan and Raj Banso  of Raja Sansar Chand of Kangra.  He wished to marry them and sent his marriage proposal. 

The Raja turned it down as he could not agree both his daughters marrying the same man—and that too ugly by Rajput standards.  Ranjit mounted an expedition and defeated Raja Sansar Chand.  He married both the princesses at Jwalalmukhi, a holy place 30 km from Kangra.  Jwalalmukhi has one of the most holy temples of Hinduism dedicated to the ‘Goddess of Light.  

Ranjit Singh spent the wedding night servicing these two girls on the same bed till morning, fortified with aphrodisiacs.  Guddan and Rani Raj Banso, the daughters of Raja Sansar Chand were the most stately , dignified and charming women in the Maharajah's entire harem.

Much later one of these Rajput sisters , Maharani Mahtab Devi Sahiba ( Guddan ) who refused to marry this ugly pock faced man ,  would hold his head in her lap and calmly burn herself ( sati ) on her husband’s , Ranjit Singh’s funeral pyre.  Eleven of his wives would burn themselves.  

His youngest wife, who was also his 9th regular wife, Maharani Jindan Kaur did not commit Sati,  saying she had a 10-month old baby Duleep Singh to feed and look after.  

Probably she had future royal designs for him . 

One of the dancing girls girls called Kaulan (Lotus) was given seven villages as jagir, but despite this wealth she was one of the ladies who committed sati on Ranjit Singh’s pyre.

Today, the ashes of these eleven wives are placed in tiny urns, surrounding the large marble urn, in the shape of a lotus, containing Maharajah Ranjeet Singh's ashes, in the center of the tomb, the Samadhi of Ranjeet Singh, at Lahore.

Ranjit was also fond of dance and music. He had collected a troupe of 125 dancing girls from his kingdom as dancers. The girls were chosen from about the age of 14-16 and retired at 25 after which they were given to the courtiers of Ranjit Singh or the foreign generals who served in Ranjit’s army as a reward. The favorite girls dancer was a drop dead beautiful girl named ‘Billoo’ ( Bashiran ) who Ranjit loved passionately because of her blue eyes.  

Carried away by the lifestyle of Lahore, the mercenary Jewish Italian General Jean Baptist Ventura, one of the foreign commanders of Ranjit Singh’s army, too kept 50 dancing girls!  The elite of the ‘Lahore Darbar’ all were measured by the quality of their harem, for it depicted their power and prestige.

The sheer number of courtesans in Lahore in the Sikh era has never been rivalled. They were interested in the arts, in music, in the finest things in life. With the coming of the British, bringing women to sell in Lahore was banned and all women living outside the wedlock as courtesans and keeps were asked to leave the city. Many then decided to marry their masters. 

Ranjit Singh had heard of a legendary horse named As-i-Leila. This horse belonged to Dost Mohammed or Yaar Mohammed who were the chiefs of the Orakazi Muslim tribes. The horse was a black stallion of Persian origin. When Ranjit Singh heard of the horse he demanded it from Yaar Mohammed. On his refusal he ordered General Jean Baptist Ventura to mount an offensive against the Tribes. 

In 1830 Yaar Mohammed was defeated by Ventura who threatened to behead him in case the horse was not handed over to his lord and Master Ranjit Singh. Later Yar Mohammed himself was killed by his tribesmen and Ranjit Singh anointed his brother as the chief. The horse was carried to Lahore in a special wagon and escorted by a large contingent of him Sikh army

One of Ranjit Singh’s favoured queens, was Moran, ( Gul Bahar begum ) a dancing girl of Amritsar, with whom he fell passionately in love at first sight when he was just twenty-two in 1832..  Ranjit Singh accepted all the conditions of  Moran’s father to marry her as per custom of the courtesan’s family.  

Moran had had danced before British Governor General, Lord William Bentinck, at Ropar in October 1831.   She rode with the Maharaja on the same elephant, sat in the darbar without veil , while she fondled Ranjit Singh.. Ranjit Singh went to see Moran on arrival in Amritsar, rather than first paying his respects at the Darbar Sabib, as a consequence of which he had to face the wrath of the jathedar of the Akal Takht.  


He subsequently visited the Golden Temple in an act of contrition for marrying a lady whose status did not match his own.   Akali Phula Singh reprimanded Maharaja Ranjit Singh and he presented himself at the Akal Takhat to receive the ‘tankhah’ imposed by the Jathedar, by baring his back to receive the lashes.  


Much later the British agents of Rothschild operating in Lahore in those days chose to operated through Moran , causing him 4 strokes , the last one final.  Unfortunately Ranjit Singh never suspected Moran and even got gold coins struck in her name, samples of which can be seen even today in the Lahore Museum.. She had the ability to extract state secrets from Ranjit Singh while having sex.

When Moran died, the Ranjit Singh decided to favour another courtesan by the name of Jugnoo Begum. She was a very beautiful woman, but did not have the wit of Mooran, and soon the maharaja found her boring. He then found another beauty from Amritsar, a woman Moran had once predicted would win his heart one day.  

Her name was Gul Begum, and the proud Gul demanded that he not touch her before he walked bare-foot from Lahore to Amritsar to wed her. The maharaja knew well that she would not bend, and so he did as Gul Begum had demanded.  It was Gul Begum who looked after the maharaja when he fell ill.  She smiled as she sat in the pyre in which Ranjit Singh was cremated. So looks like his barefoot walk did some magic.

His consumption of alcohol mixed with crushed pearls was excessive and would contribute to his early death.  Emily Eden (sister of Lord Auckland, the then governor general of India) wrote, “Ranjit produced some of his wine, a sort of liquid fire, that none of our strong spirits approach and, in general, Europeans cannot swallow more than a drop of it.”

Among the more important of his regular wives married according to Sikh customs, were Mehtab Kaur of the Kanhia Misl, the daughter of Rani Sada Kaur, whom he married, when he was 16 years old, in the year 1796.  

Rani Mehtab Kaur gave birth to three sons; the eldest Ishar Singh died young at 1½years of age. The second and third sons were twins, Sher Singh and Tara Singh.  Sher Singh was the strongest claimant to the throne after Maharajah Ranjeet Singh, being the eldest surviving son of the senior most wife of the king.  

Ranjit Singh’s mother did NOT get along with the mother ( Sada Kaur ) of his wife Mehtab Kaur.  Mehtab Kaur was a vain and haughty woman.  Sada Kaur took her daughter Mehtab Kaur away with her, where two princes Sher Singh and Tara Singh were born, who thus lived away from their father.  Ranjit Singh killed his mother on sensing infidelity to his dead father. Nobody writes or talks about this.

His second wife was Raj Kaur of Nakai Misl, the daughter of Khazan Singh Nakai, whom he married in 1798, at the age of 18 years.  Rani Raj Kaur gave birth to a son Kharak Singh in 1801 who became the heir-apparent to Maharajah Ranjeet Singh, being the Maharajah's eldest son. 

Prince Kharak Singh was  was utterly lacking in ambition and worldly sense. Though he was trained as heir-apparent and was sent on some military expeditions, his real interest lay in reading the Granth and sitting in the company of holy men. On top of that he was addicted to Opium.

Ranjit Singh’s passionate love for horses can be judged from the fact that he had more than 1200 horses in his stable, 1000 reserved for him personally. Riding was his favourite exercise. Whenever he was burdened with private or state matters, he would abruptly call for a horse, saddled, bridled and go for a long ride. The vanity he lacked about his own appearance was made up in appearance of his horses. They were decked in most expensive and gorgeous trappings. 


Famous were Gauharbar, Sufaid Pari, Laili – all of Persian breed. There is a fairy tale-like story about Laili for which many expeditions were made and it cost him sixty lakhs of rupees and 1200 soldiers!  He used to take pride of this possession and exhibit to his foreign visitors.

Another marvel was his bungalow on wheels – decorated, furnished and pulled by eight mighty and richly caparisoned elephants.

One of these horses would be his undoing. His Jewish Romanian chemist, Dr. John Martin Honigberger ,  who was responsible for mixing his gunpowder, infected the leg of his favourite horse causing an ulcer. 

Below: Honigberger 


He got into the good books of Ranjit Singh by offering to cure the horse and injected the anti-dote of whatever he had infected the leg with. Later he assumed the role of Ranjit Singh’s personal doctor. He was responsible for preparing all these aphrodisiac potions with crushed pearls . He treated the Maharaja by dispensing “Dulcamara” in wine and galvanic cell electric shocks.

This Romanian Jew was an agent of Rothschild.   He took his orders from Rothschild’s personal homeopathy doctor, the German Jew Dr Friedrich Samuel Hahnemann, who is known as “the father of Homeopathy” ( sic ).  

Below:- Hahnemann

Dr. John Martin Honigberger had scrounged around in India for ancient vedic homeopathy texts , which he delivered to his boss in Paris in 1834. The fact that water holds memory is written in our vedic texts .  What the hell is “tirtham” and the holy water in a Maharishi's lota?

Following the July Revolution of 1830 that saw Louis Philippe come to power in France , James de Rothschild put together the loan package to stabilize the finances of the new government and a huge second banking loan in 1834— all wealth stolen from India.  In gratitude for his services to the nation, Louis Philippe elevated him to a grand officer of the Legion of Honor.




TO BE CONTINUED--
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