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Diwan Sawan Mal Chopra

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Diwan
Sawan Mal
Diwan Sawan Mal seated holding a lotus. Watercolour by a Company artist, Punjab, c. 1865
Sikh governor of Multan
In office
1820–1844
MonarchsRanjit Singh
Kharak Singh
Nau Nihal Singh
Sher Singh
Duleep Singh
Preceded byNawab Muzaffar Khan (as Durrani governor, d. 1818)
Several temporary Sikh governors of Multan (1818–1820)
Succeeded byDiwan Mulraj Chopra
Personal details
BornGujranwala, Sukerchakia Misl (modern day Punjab, Pakistan)
Died29 September 1844
Multan, Sikh Empire (modern day Punjab, Pakistan)
Cause of deathSeriously wounded by an under-trial prisoner
ParentHoshnak Rai Chopra (father)

Diwan Sawan Mal (died 29 September 1844) was a Sikh Empire-era administrator who served as governor (Diwan) of Multan from 1820 to 1844.

Biography

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Early life

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Sawan Mal was born into a Hindu Khatri family of the Chopra gotra originally from Gujranwala, the region where Maharaja Ranjit Singh's Misl, the Sukerchakias held sway.[1][2]

Career

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Along with Hari Singh Nalwa, he was a top commander in Maharaja Ranjit Singh's army. As a general under Ranjit Singh, he assisted in wresting the subah (province) of Multan from the Durrani governor Nawab Muzaffar Khan, in 1818. After a series of incompetent governors, Sawan Mal was appointed as the Diwan of the region.

In 1834, he signed an agreement on behalf of the Maharaja with Sardar Karam Khan, a Mazari warrior respected in his tribe as well as in the Sikh Army. Karam Khan was the younger brother of Mir Bahram Khan, chief of the Baloch Mazari tribe, thereby ending the long war between the Sikhs and the Mazaris of Rojhan. He was succeeded to the governorship of Multan by his son, Diwan Mulraj Chopra, who was the last ethnic Punjabi to administer Multan.[3]

Sawan Mal died on 29 September 1844 due to wounds inflicted upon him by an under-trial prisoner.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b The encyclopaedia of Sikhism. Vol. 4. Harbans Singh. Patiala: Punjabi University. 1992–1998. p. 82. ISBN 0-8364-2883-8. OCLC 29703420.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  2. ^ Yasmin, Robina (2022). Muslims Under Sikh Rule in the Nineteenth Century: Maharaja Ranjit Singh and Religious Tolerance. Library of Islamic South Asia. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 92. ISBN 9780755640348.
  3. ^ "Heroes and Villains of Sikh Rule".