Maharaja Sir Sardar Singh Bahadur (11 February 1880 – 21 March 1911) was the Maharaja of
Jodhpur State from 11 October 1895 till his death on 20 March 1911.
He succeeded his father
Maharaja Sir Jaswant Singh II in 1895. He reigned under the Regency of his uncle until he came of age and was invested with full ruling powers, at Mehrangarh,
Jodhpur, 18 February 1898. But within a short period of attaining his ruling powers, he began to spend state funds on an extraordinary rate and neglected his duties in favor of pleasure, thereby depleting the state revenues and gradually causing the administration to grind to a near halt. The British Indian officials, eventually intervened in 1903 and deprived him of his ruling powers and ordered him to refrain from interfering in the active work of his ministers and requested that he reside outside the state at
Panchmarhi
Pachmarhi is a hill station in Narmadapuram district of Madhya Pradesh state of central India. It has been the location of a cantonment (Pachmarhi Cantonment) since British Raj.
It is widely known as ''Satpura ki Rani'' ("Queen of Satpura") ...
. He had certain restricted powers restored to him and was permitted to return to Jodhpur 8 November 1905. Further powers were restored to him in 1906, with full ruling powers being finally restored in 1908. He was created KCSI in 1908 and GCSI in 1910. He was a noted polo player.
He died on 21 March 1911 and was succeeded by his son
Sumer Singh
Sumer Singh (1847-1903) was a Sikh historian, a writer and poet of Braj literature, interpreter of Sikh Scripture, and teacher. Sumer Singh was called ''Sahibzada'', prince, and ''Bābā'', because of his direct lineage to the Bhalla clan, asso ...
.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sardar Singh of Jodhpur
Knights Grand Commander of the Order of the Star of India
1880 births
1911 deaths
Rulers of the Kingdom of Marwar
Indian knights