Raghunath Singha Dev II

Raghunath Singha Dev II was the fifty-fourth king of the Mallabhum. He ruled from 1702 to 1712 CE.[1][2][3]

Raghunath Singha Dev II
54th king of the Mallabhum
Reign1702 - 1712 CE.
PredecessorDurjan Singha Dev
SuccessorGopal Singha Dev
ReligionHinduism

History

Personal life

Raghunath Singha Dev II and Princess Chandraprava of Chetbarda(wife) had no child so his younger brother Gopal Singha Dev was the next King.[1][2][4]

Mughals

Raghunath Singha Dev was the son of Durjan Singha Dev and a very brave king. He took care of his military force. He was also a very pious king and very much fond of music, dance and other performing arts. His time period. coincides the Aurangjeb and Bahadur Shah’s reign. During his rule Jijia tax(Jizya) was imposed. During the time of Alamgir Aurangjeb, who was very orthodox, as per his order any type of performing art was strictly prohibited. Ignoring his order Raghunath Singha Dev II developed Bishnupur as a very important place of performing art. He brought Ustad Bahadur Khan a descendant of Tansen in a monthly payment of rupees 500 and Pir Box. Gradually Bishnupur gave us several vocalists, instrumentalists and other performing artists. A new gharana of classical music named as Bishnupur gharana developed. In his regime. Shobha Singha was Zamindar of Chetuwa — Baroda (Midnapur) rose in revolt against the Mughals.[5]

gollark: A giant amoral one, inasmuch as you can consider it as one thing.
gollark: They are not a person. They are, well, an organization.
gollark: What reasons have they given you to trust them?
gollark: Why?
gollark: They're a big company. They have thousands of people. Some of them could have access to your data.

References

  1. Dasgupta 2009, p. 38.
  2. Malabhum, Bishnupur-Chandra, Manoranjan; 2004; Kolkata. Deys Publishing ISBN 8129500442
  3. History of Bishnupur Raj-Malick Abhaayapada. 1982, West Bengal
  4. History of Bishnupur Raj-Malick Abhaayapada. 1982, West Bengal
  5. Dasgupta 2009, p. 26.

Sources

  • Dasgupta, Gautam Kumar; Biswas, Samira; Mallik, Rabiranjan (2009), Heritage Tourism: An Anthropological Journey to Bishnupur, A Mittal Publication, p. 20, ISBN 978-8183242943
  • O’Malley, L.S.S., ICS, Bankura, Bengal District Gazetteers, pp. 21-46(26), 1995 reprint, first published 1908, Government of West Bengal.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.