SardarChhajja Singh was a Jat Sikh warrior and leader of Jathâ succeeding Banda Singh Bahadur of the early 18th century Punjab region. He was also the founder of the Bhangi Misl[1][2] He was the first companion of Banda Singh Bahadur to receive Sikh baptism of Amrit.[3][4] According to Kanaihya Lal, he had taken Amrit at the hands of Guru Gobind Singh.
^Singh, Rishi (2015). State Formation and the Establishment of Non-Muslim Hegemony:Post-Mughal 19th-century Punjab. India: Sage Publications India Pvt Ltd, New Delhi, 23 April 2015. ISBN
^Dhavan, Purnima (2011). When Sparrows Became Hawks: The Making of the Sikh Warrior Tradition, 1699-1799, p.60. OUP USA Publisher, 3 November 2011.
Sardar ChhajjaSingh was a Jat Sikh warrior and leader of Jathâ succeeding Banda Singh Bahadur of the early 18th century Punjab region. He was also the...
owner ChhajjaSinghDhillon, 18th-century founder of the Bhangi Misl Gurinder SinghDhillon, guru of Radha Soami Satsang Beas Gurdial SinghDhillon (1915–1992)...
century by Sardar ChhajjaSinghDhillon, who was baptised by Banda Singh Bahadur. The misl received its name "Bhangi" because ChhajjaSingh and his soldiers...
second leader of the Bhangi Misl succeeding Sardar ChhajjaSingh. Sardar Bhuma Singh was a Dhillon Jat of the village of Hung, near Badhni in present-day...
State and a former Member of Parliament Charat Singh, founder of Sukerchakia Misl ChhajjaSinghDhillon, founder and chieftain of Bhangi Misl Churaman...
Singh Khangura was a famous Sikh warrior during Sikh misl period from 1716 to 1799. He was a friend of the Sikh Emperor Sardar ChhajjaSinghDhillon (1716–1746)...
dances Sardar Baj Singh, Sikh general and governor. Bhai Bhag Singh Bhikhiwind, leader of the Ghadar Party (1914) Sardar ChhajjaSinghDhillon, a renowned Sikh...