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  1. Maharaja Ranjit Singh (2 May 1745 – 6 December 1805) was the ruling Maharaja of the princely state of Bharatpur (r. 1778–1805) and the successor of Maharaja Kehri Singh, he was bestowed upon the title of Farzand Jang meaning Son of War by the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II.

  2. Maharaja Ranjit Singh (महाराजा रणजीत सिंह, भरतपुर) was the ruler of princely state Bharatpur (1776 - 1805) and successor of Maharaja Nawal Singh. Genealogy of Bharatpur Rulers. Maharaja Ranjit Singh remained the friend of British rulers through out his life. He fully followed the treaty with British.

  3. Oct 27, 2018 · Maharaja Ranjit Singh. With exception of the Maharana of Dholpur already mentioned, Maharaja Ranjit Singh of Bharatpur was the first of all the Rajputana princes, who hailed the advent of the British rule with sincere delight.

  4. Maharaja Ranjit Singh was the ruler of princely state Bharatpur (1776 - 1805) and successor of Maharaja Nawal Singh. Jawahar Singh had no son, hence he was succeeded by his incapable, licentious and luxuriant brother Maharaja Ratan Singh.

  5. The origins of the conflict between the British and the Bharatpur state can be traced to the Second Anglo-Maratha War, when the ruler of the state, Ranjit Singh, formed an alliance with the Marathas against the colonial forces.

  6. Randhir Singh (r.1805–1823) ( महाराजा रणधीर सिंह) was the ruler of the Princely state of Bharatpur and the successor of Ranjit Singh of Bharatpur. Randhir Singh ascended the throne after death of his father Ranjit Singh in 1805.

  7. Ranjit Singh decided to accept the British offer, and paid the British an indemnity, which allowed him to retain all his possessions, including Deeg. Caught between three British armies, led by Lake, Gen. Jones and Col. Ball, Holkar sent emissaries to Lake.