Sardar

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Sardar is a Punjabi and Hindi word usually used to mean a male follower of the Sikh faith. The word's cognate in Persian, Sirdar, (Persian: سردار ) (Sardār, IPA: [Sɐrda:r]) means commander. Literally sar means "head" while dar means "holder" in Persian. Thus, the term Sardar may also mean a military or political leader, comparable to the english chieftain.

The word may convey several meanings, often associated with military authority.

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  • In Marathi and Hindi languages Sardar means an army chieftain (who may have been granted a Jagir).
  • in the colonial era, the title Sirdar or Sardar applied to native nobles in British India, e.g. the sirdars of the Deccan. Sirdar Bahadur was an Indian military distinction; and Sirdar was the official title of the commander-in-chief of the Anglo-Egyptian army.

A few princely states on the South Asia, notably in Punjab, have been ruled by a prince styled Sardar or Gujjar Sardar:

In Afghanistan and Pakistan, many Pashtun, Baloch, Sindhi and Brahui tribal leaders are called Sardars.

  • In Persian the style Sardar or Sardar i Bozorg the title of Hosein Qoli Khan Qajar ( Sardari Iravani ) and his brother Hasan Khan Qajar ( Sardari Iravani ) the Chief in Command of Fath Ali Shah Qajar in Russo-Persian wars 1807-1828.
  • In Persian, the style Sardar i-Azam ("Supreme Sardar") was occasionally used as an alternative title for the Shahanshah's Head of government, normally styled Vazir i-Azam, notably in 1904-06 for a Qajar prince, Major-General H.R.H. Shahzada Sultan 'Abdu'l Majid Mirza .
  • in the Afghan kingdom, recipients of the original Nishan-i-Sardari 'Order of the Leader', founded by King Amanullah in 1923, as a reward for exceptional services to state and crown, conferred by the King on his own initiative, enjoyed the titles of Sardar-i-Ala 'the most high leader' or Sardar-i-Ali (first viz. second class) before their names and received grants of land until it was made obsolete in 1929 (no longer when later revived by King Muhammad Zahir Shah).
  • still in Afghanistan, Sardar-i-Salar meant Field Marshal.
  • Sardar-i-Riyasat was the title of one Constitutional Head of State of the princely state of Kashmir, Yuvaraj Shri Karan Singhji Bahadur, who was appointed as Heir Apparent on 11 May 1931 and (after his father had acceded to India, ending the sovereign Monarchy) Regent 20 June 1949 to 31 October 1956, Sardar-i-Riyasat 1 November 1956 to 9 April 1965 (succeeded on the death of his father as Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir, 26 April 1961, no longer carrying any hereditary power), next Governor of the Indian constitutive State of Jammu and Kashmir 10 April 1965 to 15 March 1967.

Sardar Gurbachan Singh (Canadian) Chahal.

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  1. ^ Sayre, Woodrow Wilson (1964). Four Against Everest. Englewood Cliffs, NJ, USA: Prentice-Hall, p. 223. Library of Congress Catalog Card No: 64-15208. 
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