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During 1857-58, at many places in the Punjab, the people fought bravely for the independence of their country. There occurred many events of resistance. It is a fact that in the Punjab, the War was not on that large scale as it was in the Central and Northern India. Similarly it is wrong to assert that Punjab did not take part in the war, or it only supported the British. Karl Marx has rightly pointed out that the Punjab is declared to be quiet, but at the same time we are informed that, at Ferozepur, on the 13th of June, military executions had taken place, while Vaughan’s Corps─5th Punjab Infantry- is praised for having behaved admirably in pursuit of the 55th Native Infantry. This, it must be confessed, is a very queer sort of quiet.1 So we see that like other areas, in the Punjab, too, there were murders, incendiaries, conspiracies, disloyalty, disarming, battles, executions, pursuits, panics and treacheries.2 But as the authorities in the province were fully prepared to crush the resistance, so the freedom-fighters in this province could not succeed. In the Punjab, the spirit of the War was forcibly kept down

Turab-ul-Hassan Sargana. (2016) The British Response to War of Independence in the Punjab, Journal of the Research Society of Pakistan, Volume 53, Issue 2.
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