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Franz Xaver Winterhalter (1805-73)

Maharajah Duleep Singh (1837-1893) dated 15 Jul 1854

28.8 x 18.7 cm (sheet of paper) | RCIN 913342

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  • A bust-length portrait of the Maharajah Dalip Singh, depicted in profile to the right. Signed and dated at lower right.

    Winterhalter was the premier portraitist in the mid-nineteenth century at many of the major European courts, working for those of London, Paris, Belgium, Berlin, Vienna, Madrid and St Petersburg, amongst others. He painted over 100 portraits for Queen Victoria and her extended family; the Queen esteemed him especially for his ability to capture a likeness, and the elegance, romance and naturalism of his works. Winterhalter painted a full-length portrait in oils of the Maharajah for Queen Victoria at Buckingham Palace in July 1854 (see RCIN 403843).

    Duleep Singh (1838-93) was the last Maharaja of the Sikh Empire. The youngest son of Maharaja Ranjit Singh (1780-1839), Duleep Singh was declared Maharaja of the Punjab at the age of five in 1843. His mother, Maharani Jind Kaur (1817-63), acted as regent until 1847 when she was exiled and separated from her nine-year-old son by the British Resident. Following the British annexation of the Punjab in the Second Anglo-Sikh War, Duleep Singh was forced in 1849 to renounce all claims of sovereignty in exchange for a British government pension of £40,000 per year. He converted to Christianity in 1853 and arrived in England in 1854.

    Singh was received by Queen Victoria at Buckingham Palace on 1 July 1854. After their first meeting, the Queen described the young Maharaja in her journal as ‘16 & extremely handsome... [he] has a pretty, graceful & dignified manner. He was beautifully dressed & covered with diamonds’. Singh quickly became a close friend of the royal family, visiting them at Osborne that summer, where he continued to make a favourable impression on the Queen.

    Singh was not permitted any contact with his mother by the British authorities until 1861, when he was finally allowed to see Jin Kaur in Kolkata and travel together to England.

    Duleep Singh eventually became disaffected and embittered with the British, reverted to his former faith, Sikhism, and launched a renewed claim on the Punjab. Although he had plans to return to India, he died in France in 1893, having latterly achieved a reconciliation with Queen Victoria.

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    Provenance

    Commissioned by Queen Victoria

  • Medium and techniques
    Measurements

    28.8 x 18.7 cm (sheet of paper)