Sajjan Singh of Udaipur
For other uses, see Sajjan Singh.
| Sajjan Singh of Udaipur | |
|---|---|
| Ruler of Udaipur State | |
|  Maharana Sajjan Singh shoots at an apple | |
| Ruler of Udaipur State | |
| Reign | 1874-84 (10 years) | 
| Predecessor | Shambhu Singh | 
| Successor | Fateh Singh | 
| Born | 18 July 1859 | 
| Died | 23 December 1884 (aged 25) | 
| Father | Shakti Singh | 
| Sisodia Rajputs of Mewar II (1326–1884) | |
| Hammir Singh | (1326–1364) | 
| Kshetra Singh | (1364–1382) | 
| Lakha Singh | (1382–1421) | 
| Mokal Singh | (1421–1433) | 
| Rana Kumbha | (1433–1468) | 
| Udai Singh I | (1468–1473) | 
| Rana Raimal | (1473–1508) | 
| Rana Sanga | (1508–1527) | 
| Ratan Singh II | (1528–1531) | 
| Vikramaditya Singh | (1531–1536) | 
| Vanvir Singh | (1536–1540) | 
| Udai Singh II | (1540–1572) | 
| Maharana Pratap | (1572–1597) | 
| Amar Singh I | (1597–1620) | 
| Karan Singh II | (1620–1628) | 
| Jagat Singh I | (1628–1652) | 
| Raj Singh I | (1652–1680) | 
| Jai Singh | (1680–1698) | 
| Amar Singh II | (1698–1710) | 
| Sangram Singh II | (1710–1734) | 
| Jagat Singh II | (1734–1751) | 
| Pratap Singh II | (1751–1754) | 
| Raj Singh II | (1754–1762) | 
| Ari Singh II | (1762–1772) | 
| Hamir Singh II | (1772–1778) | 
| Bhim Singh | (1778–1828) | 
| Jawan Singh | (1828–1838) | 
| Sardar Singh | (1828–1842) | 
| Swarup Singh | (1842–1861) | 
| Shambhu Singh | (1861–1874) | 
| Sajjan Singh | (1874–1884) | 
| Fateh Singh | (1884–1930) | 
| Bhupal Singh | (1930–1947) | 
Colonel Maharaja Sir Sajjan Singh GCSI[1] (18 July 1859 - 23 December 1884), was the Maharana of princely state of Udaipur (r. 1874 – 1884).[2] He was a son of Shakti Singh of Bagore and was adopted by his first cousin Maharana Shambhu Singh, whom he succeeded in 1874. He died without an heir.[3]
References
- ↑ The London Gazette: no. 24976. p. 2674. 24 May 1881.
- ↑ Murray, John (1929). Murray's Handbook, India, Pakistan, Burma & Ceylon. p. 157.
- ↑ Cotton, James Sutherland; Burn, Sir Richard; Meyer, Sir William Stevenson (1908). Imperial Gazetteer of India. Clarendon Press. pp. 93–94. Retrieved 2 September 2016.
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