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Samadhi of Ranjit Singh

Coordinates: 31°35′21″N 74°18′41″E / 31.5893°N 74.3113°E / 31.5893; 74.3113
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Samadhi of Ranjit Singh
Raṇjīt Singh dī Samādhī (Punjabi)
The Samadhi was built next to Badshahi Mosque and Gurdwara Dera Sahib
Map
LocationLahore, Punjab
Pakistan
TypeSamadhi (shrine)
Completion date1848

The Samadhi of Ranjit Singh[a] is a 19th-century building in Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan that houses the funerary urns of the former Maharaja of Punjab Ranjit Singh. It is located within the Walled City, adjacent to the Lahore Fort, Badshahi Mosque, and Gurdwara Dera Sahib. Its construction was started by his son and successor, Maharaja Kharak Singh, after the Maharaja's death in 1839, and completed nine years later. It overlooks the Hazuri Bagh, built by Ranjit Singh, to its south.

History

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Photograph of the Samadhi of Maharaja Ranjit Singh in Lahore, Sikh Empire, by John McCosh, 1849

Maharaja Ranjit Singh died on Thursday, 27 July 1839, with there being a large funeral and cremation of his remains.[1][2]: 17–18  The hair of the corpse was washed with Ganges water, the body was bathed and dressed in new clothes, being placed on a bier of sandalwood decorated with gold flowers.[3] Four queens, most principally Rani Katochan, committed sati on his funeral pyre.[4] Three days after the cremation, Kharak Singh retrieved his father's ashes.[1] His ashes were brought to Haridwar to be dispersed into the Ganges river.[2]: 17–18  There were initial proposals for a large-scale funerary monument at Shahdara across the Ravi River, comparable to Jahangir’s mausoleum.[2]: 17–18  However, eventually a more modest construction began under the reign of Ranjit Singh's successor, Kharak Singh.[2]: 17–18  Few details on the structure's construction are given by the court-chronicler, Sohal Lal Suri, and its construction occurred during a period of hardship for the court of Lahore, due to internal struggles.[2]: 17–18 

Construction of the mausoleum began in August 1839 but its completion was delayed due to infighting within the Sikh Empire between different factions.[5][2]: 17–18  Construction of the building was started by his son, Kharak Singh on the spot where he was cremated, and was completed by his youngest son, Duleep Singh in 1848.[6] However, according to Khan, the construction of the monument was still not totally complete when the British annexed the territory in 1849.[2]: 17–18  The new British-rulers of Punjab, having annexed the Sikh Empire in 1849, undertook repairs of the mausoleum, which was completed in 1851.[5] For several decades afterwards, the samadhi functioned as both a mausoleum and gurdwara, with the primary Sikh scripture, the Guru Granth Sahib, being installed in it.[6]

Urdu literary works about the city of Lahore, such as by Nur Ahmad Chishti (1867), Mufti Ghulam Sarwar Qureshi Lahori (1877), Kanhaya Lal (1884), and Syad Muhammad Latif (1892), cover the samadhi in-detail, with a work by Chishti in 1867 documenting a white, marble statue of Ganesha located on the eastern entrance of the complex and that its interior contained marble statues of Hindu goddesses with silk curtains on them, with one of these goddess statues supposedly being donated by Jind Kaur.[2]: 21–22  The Ganesha and goddess statues mentioned in these accounts cannot be traced today.[2]: 21–22  Furthermore, the account records that both the Guru Granth Sahib and Dasam Granth were kept in prakash (installed and read from) located on the southern side of the central chhatrī, with there being two granthis appointed to read from the scriptures.[2]: 21–22  Lahori and Lal's own works claim that Kanhaya Lal was employed by the British as an engineer to save the structure from collapse, due to issues related to its eight columns in the interior not being able to bear the load of the dome, with Lal deciding to add an additional eight columns to help bear the weight of the dome and prevent an imminent collapse.[2]: 22  Lal further stated that he repaired cracked, marble columns by adding iron clamps to them.[2]: 22 

Modern era

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The funerary urns were removed from the marble pavilion and were replaced by a simple slab around 1999.[citation needed] This was done as part of the preparations for the Khalsa Tricentenary and the visit of Sikh dignitaries from India. It has been kept well by Pakistani government. The Samadhi was damaged by an earthquake in 2005 but was repaired soon.[citation needed]

Architecture

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Building

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The shrine was built at the northeast corner of the Badshahi Mosque.

The building combines elements of Sikh, Hindu, and Islamic architecture.[7] Portions of the building are believed to have been plundered from the adjacent Lahore Fort.[8]

The building has gilded fluted domes and cupolas, and an ornate balustrade around the upper portion of the building. The front of the doorway has images of Ganesh, Devi and Brahma that are cut from red sandstone. The dome is decorated with Nāga (serpent) hood designs - the product of Hindu craftsmen that worked on the project.[9] The wooden panels on the ceiling are decorated with stained glass work, while the walls are richly decorated with floral designs. The ceilings are decorated with glass mosaic work.

Funerary urns

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Ranjit Singh's ashes are contained in a marble urn in the shape of a lotus, sheltered under a marble pavilion inlaid with pietra dura, in the centre of the tomb. Surrounding him, in smaller urns, are the ashes of four Hindu sati queens and seven concubines.[10]

Scholarly assessments

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The samadhi combines Hindu, Islamic, and Sikh motifs.

Various authors in the 19th and 20th centuries, such as Thornton, Khan, Ihsan H. Nadiem, Nazir Ahmed Chaudhry, Kamil Khan Mumtaz, F. S. Aijazuddin, wrote assessments on the architecture of the samadhi, with most being negative due to being influenced by views first expressed by Thornton.[2]: 22–24 

Thomas Henry Thornton wrote a disparaging account of the structure in 1876:[2]: 20 

One of the latest specimens of Sikh architecture is the Mausoleum of Ranjit Singh himself, his son and grandson. The building is, as usual, in design substantially Hindu, overlaid with Muhammadan details, and does not bear close inspection; but the effect at a distance is not unpleasing

— Thomas Henry Thornton, Thornton & Kipling 1876: 158

Khan Muhammad Waliullah Khan, writing in 1961, being influenced by Thornton's earlier account, gives an unfavourable assessment of the structure's architectural design:[2]: 22 

[…] an unhappy mixture of Hindu and Muslim architecture, composed and constructed in conformity with Hindu tastes, with the result that it has no dignity of the Muslim architecture, it has all crowdedness of the Hindu style

— Khan 1973 [1961]: 82–83

Nearly all of the 19th and 20th century accounts of the structure fail to take note or recognize its distinctively Sikh features.[2]: 23–24  According to Nadra Khan, the structure represents the "pitome of Sikh architectural ornament and art", building upon previous architectural traditions with Sikh innovations, blending both the Punjabi and Pahari art styles in its painted murals within its interior, showcasing a merging of Sikh and Hindu themes, which have been ignored.[2]: 23–24  She states that the samadhi has distinctively Sikh features and can be regarded as an "indigenous art".[2]: 23–24 

Artwork

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The walls of the samadhi are decorated with murals in the form of frescoes.[6] They were painted between 1839–49.[11] Forty-eight individual fresco wall-paintings remain on the two-levels of the samadhi's interior.[2]: 26 

Associated monuments

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The Gurdwara Dera Sahib is adjacent to the samadhi, and commemorates the spot where Guru Arjan Dev Ji died.

Two small samadhi monuments to the west of the main building commemorate Maharaja Ranjit Singh's son Maharaja Kharak Singh and grandson Nau Nihal Singh, along with their wives.[6] The patron of the samadhis of Kharak Singh and Nau Nihal Singh is unknown.[6] The building is located adjacent to Gurdwara Dera Sahib, the place of Guru Arjun's martyrdom.

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See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Punjabi: رݨجیت سنگھ دی سمادھی (Shahmukhi), ਰਣਜੀਤ ਸਿੰਘ ਦੀ ਸਮਾਧੀ (Gurmukhi); Urdu: رنجیت سنگھ کی سمادھی

References

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  1. ^ a b Khan, Nadhra Shahbaz N. (25 July 2016). "Posthumous Homage Paid to Maharaja Ranjit Singh". Sikh Research Journal. 1 (1): 33–42. doi:10.62307/srj.v1i1.123.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Khan, Nadhra Shahbaz Naeem (2018). THE SAMĀDHI OF MAHARAJA RANJIT SINGH IN LAHORE: A Summation of Sikh Architectural and Decorative Practices (PDF). Berlin: EB-Verlag. ISBN 9783868932713.
  3. ^ Gupta, Hari Ram (1978). History of the Sikhs. Vol. 5: The Sikh Lion of Lahore, Maharaja Ranjit Singh, 1799–1839 (3rd ed.). Munshiram Manoharlal. p. 534. ISBN 9788121505154.
  4. ^ Gupta, Hari Ram (1978). History of the Sikhs. Vol. 5: The Sikh Lion of Lahore, Maharaja Ranjit Singh, 1799–1839 (3rd ed.). Munshiram Manoharlal. p. 534. ISBN 9788121505154.
  5. ^ a b "Lot 427: The mausoleum of Maharajah Ranjit Singh, Lahore, by a British artist, April 1914". Bonhams. 2011. Retrieved 18 December 2024. Work on the samadhi began in August of the same year [1839], though after initial [sic] progress the work became bogged down, largely as a result of internecine faction fighting. By 1849 it had fallen to the British to put up the money to complete the building, which after some delay they did, and the work was completed in 1851. See F. S. Aijazuddin, Lahore: illustrated views of the 19th Century, Ahmedabad 1991, pp. 87-92.
  6. ^ a b c d e Bose, Melia Belli (25 August 2015). "Conclusion: Beyond Rajasthan - Claiming Sikh Space in Lahore: Mahārājā Ranjit Singh's Samādhi". Royal Umbrellas of Stone: Memory, Politics, and Public Identity in Rajput Funerary Art. BRILL. pp. 287–295. ISBN 9789004300569.
  7. ^ Samadhi of Ranjit Singh – a sight of religious harmony, Pakistan Today. JANUARY 16, 2016, NADEEM DAR
  8. ^ Samadhi of Ranjit Singh – a sight of religious harmony, Pakistan Today. JANUARY 16, 2016, NADEEM DAR
  9. ^ Samadhi of Ranjit Singh – a sight of religious harmony, Pakistan Today. JANUARY 16, 2016, NADEEM DAR
  10. ^ "'Sati' choice before Maharaja Ranjit's Ranis, Kanwarjit Singh Kang, 28 Jun 2015". Archived from the original on 18 January 2018. Retrieved 3 May 2016.
  11. ^ Ikeda, Atsushi (24 September 2024). Portraying the Guru: Art, Devotion and Identity in Sikhism. Boydell & Brewer. p. 47. ISBN 9781837652389.
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31°35′21″N 74°18′41″E / 31.5893°N 74.3113°E / 31.5893; 74.3113