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Ram Baksh Singh : ウィキペディア英語版 | Ram Baksh Singh Raja Rao Ram Baksh Singh was a 19th-century Hindu zamindar of Daundia Khera in Unnao district, in the then Oudh province of British India.〔Civil rebellion in the Indian mutinies, 1857-1859 by Sashi Bhusan Chaudhuri, World Press, 1957, pp:102,104,107,127,143.〕〔Kaye's and Malleson's History of the Indian Mutiny of 1857-8 By John Kaye, George Bruce Malleson - 2010,pp:386〕〔Theories of the Indian Mutiny (1857-59): A Study of the Views of an Eminent Historian on the Subject by Sashi Bhusan Chaudhuri, 1965:pp 94.〕 He was one of the leaders of the Revolt of 1857, and a close associate of Nana Sahib. He was hanged by the British on 28 December 1857 for taking part in the revolt and being found guilty of the killing of British soldiers. In 1992, the Government of India built a memorial at the place where he was hanged to honor his death. The dilapidated remains of his fort - consisting of the ruins of his royal mansion, a huge campus spread over hundreds of acres, a temple to Shiva which has been in use for more than 180 years, and various other structures - have been in the news recently due to an excavation for gold by the Archaeological Survey of India. The Archaeological Survey of India, upon excavation his fort in October 2013, discovered a brick wall, sherds, pieces of bangles, hopscotch toys, and a mud floor which could date back to the 17-19th centuries, but no gold treasure or any other valuable materials. ==References== `
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