Mehta Basti Ram

{{Short description|Dogra military officer and governor of Ladakh in 19th-century India}}

{{Infobox officeholder

| name = Mehta Basti Ram

| image = Zorawerfort.jpg

| caption = Zorawar Fort in Ladakh, where Basti Ram was the first Qiladar (commandant)

| birth_date = Early 19th century

| birth_place = Kishtwar, Jammu, Sikh Empire

| death_date = Late 19th century

| death_place = Kishtwar, Jammu and Kashmir, British Raj

| nationality = Dogra

| occupation = Military officer, Governor

| allegiance = Jammu and Kashmir

| rank = Colonel

| unit = Fateh Shibji Battalion

| battles = Dogra invasion of Ladakh, Dogra–Tibetan War

| office = Governor of Leh

| term_start = 1847

| term_end = 1861

| predecessor = Zorawar Singh

| successor = Mehta Mangal (son)

| spouse = Unknown

| children = *Mehta Mangal

}}

Mehta Basti Ram was a Dogra officer and commander of the Fateh Shibji battalion under Raja Gulab Singh of Jammu (later Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir). Basti Ram later served as the governor (thanadar) of Leh in Ladakh between 1847 and 1861.{{Sfn|Francke|1926|p=[https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.175780/page/n273/mode/2up 257]}} Basti Ram joined the service of Raja Gulab Singh in 1821 and became an officer under General Zorawar Singh during his conquest of Ladakh between 1834 and 1841. After holding positions such as the governor of Taklakot (briefly) and thanadar of Zanskar, he became the second governor of Leh under Maharaja Gulab Singh.

Life

In 1821, when Gulab Singh, the Raja of Jammu under the Sikh Empire, conquered Kishtwar, Basti Ram joined his service and was soon under General Zorawar Singh.{{Sfn|Bakshi|2002|p=120}} At a rank of Colonel, he led Zorawar Singh's Jangi Fauj, later reorganised and renamed as the Fateh Shibji force{{Efn|Also referred to as 8 Shibji Paltan later reorganised into the 7 Shibji.{{Sfn|Bakshi|2002|p=52}}|name=|group=}} from 1834 to 1841.{{Sfn|Bakshi|2002|p=52, 117}} Fateh Shibji went on to become the 4th Battalion of the Jammu and Kashmir Rifles Regiment (it retains the historic name Fateh Shibji).{{Sfn|Bakshi|2002|p=52, 117}} Major General G. D. Bakshi wrote in 2002 that Basti Ram was a "tactician par excellence" and that he "should be a role model for Indian battalion commanders".{{Sfn|Bakshi|2002|p=144}}

File:Zorawerfort.jpg

= Dogra conquest of Ladakh =

Basti Ram was one of the main officers of Zorawar's force and played a crucial role at multiple locations of the conquest of Ladakh which started in 1834. He led an attack that resulted in the capture of the Fort of Sod/Soth (in Kargil) and subsequently the Gyalpo.{{Sfn|Cunningham|1854|p=335}} The assault included crossing the Indus River on inflated goatskins.{{Sfn|Bakshi|2002|p=65}} During the conquest of Baltistan, which started during the end of 1840, he found a way to cross a river that had caused Zorawar's army to halt for over a month in the cold and snow.{{Sfn|Cunningham|1854|p=347–349}} For this innovation, Zorawar Singh gifted Basti Ram Rs. 500 and a pair of gold bangles.{{Efn|G. D. Bakshi writes that this bridgehead operation deserves to be "a classic" in "military history books".{{Sfn|Bakshi|2002|p=88}}|name=|group=}}{{Sfn|Cunningham|1854|p=349}} Basti Ram was also present during the capture of Skardu.{{Sfn|Cunningham|1854|p=349–350}}

After Zorawar Singh's forces captured Western Tibet, Basti Ram was appointed the governor of Taklakot (Burang).{{Sfn|Cunningham|1854|p=351}} Soon afterwards, the Tibetans launched a counterattack during winter. Zorawar Singh was killed on 12 December 1941 and his army defeated.{{Sfn|Cunningham|1854|p=352}} The men stationed at Taklakot fled to the British province of Kumaon.{{Sfn|Cunningham|1854|p=353}} Basti Ram escaped to Almora where the British commissioner gave him shelter.{{Sfn|Cunningham|1854|p=332}} By the autumn of 1846, Basti Ram was appointed the thanadar of Zanskar and "one of the confidential servants of Maharaja Gulab Sing.{{Sfn|Cunningham|1854|p=355}}

Basti Ram provided one of the earliest written accounts of the Dogra conquest of Ladakh and beyond, twelve years after the events. While the original version was lost, Alexander Cunningham had re-written Basti Ram's account based on a dictation by Basti Ram himself.{{Sfn|Francke|1926|p=[https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.175780/page/n273/mode/2up 257]}}{{Sfn|Neve|1913|p=246}} August Hermann Francke notes that Basti Ram may have exaggerated the enemy numbers at certain locations.{{Sfn|Francke|1926|p=261}}

= Governor of Leh =

Basti Ram was appointed the thanadar of Leh between 1847 and 1861.{{Sfn|Cunningham|1854|p=273–274}} At the time there were four thanadars for Ladakh, in Zanskar, Kargil, Dras and Nubra.{{Sfn|Cunningham|1854|p=273–274}} All the thanadars had military and civil authority in their districts and were accountable directly to the Maharaja.{{Sfn|Cunningham|1854|p=273–274}} Alexander Cunningham estimated that Basti Ram's income would have been a "respectable" Rs.18,000 annually, (roughly £1,800 a year).{{Sfn|Cunningham|1854|p=274}} Lieutenant Colonel Henry Torrens, who passed through Ladakh in 1862, noted that Basti Ram had retired to his home in Kishtawar on account of old age, and a successor had not yet been appointed by the Maharaja".{{Sfn|Torrens|1862|p=171–172}} Instead, Torrens met the Kahlon{{Efn|Also spelt Kahlon.{{Sfn|Cunningham|1854|p=277}} Old Tibetan title signifying Prime Minister.{{Sfn|Torrens|1862|p=171–172}} Cunningham notes that "the term is also applied to the chief men of all the districts."{{Sfn|Cunningham|1854|p=335}}|name=|group=}} of Leh, the "nominal governor", who got little respect from the Sikhs [Dogras].{{Sfn|Torrens|1862|p=172}}

Family

Basti Ram was born in the Mehta family from Kishtwar. His grandfather had been in charge of military affairs under the last Kishtwar ruler Mohammad Teg Singh.{{Sfn|Bakshi|2002|p=120}}{{Cite web|last=Nayyar|first=Sanjeev|date=2016|title=Zorawar Singh Museum Leh|url=https://www.esamskriti.com/album-detail.aspx?state=Jammu-and-Kashmir&albumname=Zorawar-Singh-Museum-Leh|access-date=2021-01-05|website=eSamskriti|language=en-us}} Basti Ram's son Mehta Mangal succeeded him as Governor of Ladakh.{{Cite book|last=Chohan|first=Amar Singh|url=http://archive.org/details/dli.ernet.242486|title=Historical Study Of Society and Culture In Dardistan and Ladakh|publisher=Atlantic Publishers and Distributors, New Delhi|year=1983|pages=200–201}}

Basti Ram's great-granddaughter was Krishna Mehta, who went on to become the first woman member of parliament from Jammu and Kashmir. Krishna Mehta had been married to Duni Chand Mehta who was appointed as the wazir-e-wazarat of Muzaffarabad. In October 1947, Duni Chand was killed by Pashtun tribal militias,{{Cite web|title=Krishna Mehta|url=http://krishnamehta.net/KrishnaMehta.htm|access-date=2020-12-29|website=krishnamehta.net}} and Krishna Mehta was taken prisoner and eventually repatriated by Pakistan. Krishna Mehta's brother Om Mehta served as a Minister of State for Home Affairs in Indira Gandhi's government in 1976. Another younger brother Ved Mehta was at one time the president of Chamber of Commerce and Industry Jammu.{{Cite web|date=28 April 2015|title=Ved Mehta passes away|url=http://www.kashmirtimes.in/newsdet.aspx?q=40351|access-date=2020-12-29|website=Kashmir Times}} Other family members and descendants include Mehta Jagat Ram, RS Mehta, SS Mehta, KS Mehta, Kusum Mehta, Sarla Mehta and Anil Mehta. Mehta Jagat Ram was a respected forest officer and later a Forest Lessee in Kishtwar along with his son Krishan Mehta. RS Mehta was a renowned lawyer who did his law from Gawyer Hall Delhi University. SS Mehta was a renowned economist from Delhi School of Economics and was a visiting professor at Harvard. He later retired as Director IIFT.

References

Notes

{{Notelist}}

Citations{{Reflist}}Bibliography

  • {{Cite book|last=Francke|first=August Hermann|chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.175780/page/n273/mode/2up |via=archive.org |chapter=Basti Ram's account of Dogra War and Cunningham's 'other information' |title=Antiquities of Indian Tibet|publisher=S. Chand & Co.|year=1926|isbn=9788120607699|editor-last=Thomas|editor-first=Frederick William|volume=2: The Chronicles of Ladakh and Minor Chronicles|location=New Delhi|publication-date=1972|author-link=August Hermann Francke (Tibetologist)}}
  • {{Cite book|last=Bakshi|first=G. D.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4S99oXkx_-cC|title=Footprints in the Snow: On the Trail of Zorawar Singh|publisher=Lancer Publishers|year=2002|isbn=9788170622925|location=New Delhi|chapter=9—Colonel Basti Ram: Tactician Par Excellence|author-link=G. D. Bakshi}}
  • {{Cite book|last=Torrens|url=https://archive.org/details/in.gov.ignca.35521|title=Travels in Ladakh, Tartary, and Kashmir|publisher=Saunders, Otley's, and Co.|year=1862|location=London|first=Lieut–Colonel Henry D.|author-link=Henry Torrens (British Army officer, born 1833)}}
  • {{Cite book|last=Neve|first=Arthur|title=Thirty Years in Kashmir|publisher=Edward Arnold|year=1913|location=London|author-link=Arthur Neve}}
  • {{Cite book|last=Cunningham|first=Alexander|url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.127431/mode/1up?q=Mehta+Basti+Ram|title=Ladak, Physical, Statistical, and Historical; with notices of the surrounding countries|publisher=W. H. Allen & Co.|year=1854|location=London|author-link=Alexander Cunningham}}

Further reading

  • {{Cite book|last=Charak|first=Sukhdev Singh|url=https://archive.org/details/dli.bengal.10689.12482/page/n7/mode/2up?q=%22Mehta+Basti+Ram%22|title=Indian Conquest of the Himalayan Territories: Military Exploits of General Zorawar Singh Dogra|publisher=Ajaya Prakashan|year=1978|location=Jammu}}
  • {{Cite book|last=Charak|first=Sukhdev Singh|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_qk-DwAAQBAJ|title=General Zorawar Singh Dogra|publisher=Publications Division, Ministry of Information & Broadcasting, Government of India|year=2016|isbn=9788123026480|location=New Delhi}}
  • {{Cite book|last=Prasad|first=Shankar|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_Wxsgt6_0TYC|title=The Gallant Dogras: An Illustrated History of the Dogra Regiment|publisher=Lancer Publishers|others=Dogra Regimental Centre|year=2005|isbn=9788170622680|location=New Delhi}}
  • {{Cite book|last1=Kaul|first1=Shridhar|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8J3YdskW00sC|title=Ladakh Through the Ages, Towards a New Identity|last2=Kaul|first2=H. N.|publisher=Indus Publishing|year=1992|isbn=9788185182759|edition=3|location=New Delhi}}
  • {{Cite book|last=Kaul|first=H. N.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mg8My6WaWRcC|title=Rediscovery of Ladakh|publisher=Indus Publishing|year=1998|isbn=9788173870866|location=New Delhi}}

{{Sikh Empire|state=collapsed}}

Category:Governors of Ladakh

Category:People from Kishtwar district

Category:Dogra people

Category:19th-century Indian military personnel