Misplaced Pages

Chandrakirti Singh

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Ningthou
Chandrakirti Singh
Ningthou
Meitei and Bengali transliterations of "Chandrakirti Singh", the name of the Meitei King, the Maharaja of Kangleipak Kingdom (Manipur kingdom)
Reign1850–May 1886
BornManipur Kingdom
HouseNingthouja dynasty
FatherGambhir Singh
Occupationmonarch
Kingdom of Manipur
Part of History of Manipur
Kings of Manipur
Loiyumba 1074–1112
Senbi Kiyamba 1467–1508
Koirengba 1508–1512
Khagemba 1597–1652
Pitambar Charairongba 1697–1709
Pamheiba 1720–1751
Gaurisiam 1752–1754
Chitsai 1754–1756
Ching-Thang Khomba 1769–1798
Rohinchandra 1798–1801
Maduchandra Singh 1801–1806
Chourjit Singh 1806–1812
Marjit Singh 1812–1819
Gambhir Singh 1825–1834
Nara Singh 1844–1850
Debindro Singh 1850–1850
Chandrakirti Singh 1850–1886
Surachandra Singh 1886–1890
Kulachandra Singh 1890–1891
Churachandra Singh 1891–1941
Bodhchandra Singh 1941–1949
Manipur monarchy data
Part of a series on
Meitei people
History
Culture
People
Religion
Politics

Chandrakirti Singh (1850 – May 1886) was a Meitei monarch and the Maharaja of Manipur Kingdom. He was the son of Maharaja Gambhir Singh.

Biography

He was born in Imphal, and resided there till the end of his Regime in 1886. Before he became the king, the reign of his father Maharaja Gambhir Singh was succeeded by Raja Narsingh and later on his death by Raja Narshingh's brother Debendra Singh for a short time. Maharaja Gambhir Singh's death on 9 January 1834 paved the way to the throne to Raja Narsingh.

Chandrakirti had ten sons from his six queens and Surchandra Singh is the eldest son of the first queen and the other three sons (Pakasana, Kesarjit, Gopalsana) of the first queen, Kulachandra (the second son of the second queen) and Gandhar Singh (another son of the second queen), Tikendrajit Singh (the third son of the third queen), the son of the fourth queen died in his early days, Angousana (the fifth son of the fifth queen) and the Zila Ngamba (the eighth son of the sixth queen).

See also

References

  1. "Manipur Princely State - (11 gun salute)". Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 21 September 2014.

Bibliography

  • Hodson, Thomas Callan.The Meitheis. Harvard University, 1908.
Preceded byDebindro Singh King of
Manipur

1850–May 1886
Succeeded bySurachandra Singh
Stub icon

This biography of a member of an Indian royal house is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Stub icon

This article about a person notable in Hinduism is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: