1748–1799

After the Dal Khalsa unified the scattered Sikh resistance into a confederate army in 1748 (see the close of Era 2), the Sikh community spent the next fifty years as a network of twelve independent but cooperating confederacies — the Misls. This was not yet an empire with a single ruler; it was a federation of armed territories, each governed by its own chief, that together resisted Afghan invasion, expanded Sikh-controlled territory across Punjab, and ultimately produced the conditions for a single unified state under Maharaja Ranjit Singh.
The Dal Khalsa's 1748 reorganisation eventually settled into twelve Misls, each controlling its own territory while cooperating under the broader confederacy:
| Misl | Leading family / founder | General territory |
|---|---|---|
| Ahluwalia | Jassa Singh Ahluwalia | Jalandhar Doab; became the most politically prominent Misl — Jassa Singh Ahluwalia was placed in joint command of the Dal Khalsa in 1748, while Nawab Kapur Singh remained acknowledged as supreme commander |
| Bhangi | Hari Singh Bhangi (Dhillon family) | Bari and Rechna Doabs; controlled Lahore, Amritsar, Multan, and Gujrat at their height |
| Sukerchakia | Charat Singh, grandfather of Ranjit Singh | Gujranwala and the Pothohar region; the Misl from which Maharaja Ranjit Singh eventually unified the Empire |
| Kanhaiya | Jai Singh, later Sada Kaur | Territory between Amritsar and the Punjab Hills; Sada Kaur, as regent, helped secure Ranjit Singh's capture of Lahore in 1799 |
| Ramgarhia | Jassa Singh Ramgarhia | Upper Jalandhar Doab; named after the Ram Rauni fort in Amritsar, which the Misl extended and fortified |
| Nakai | — | Lower Bari Doab, between Multan and Kasur |
| Dallewalia | — | Upper Sutlej region, parts of Jalandhar and northern Malwa |
| Karorsinghia | — | Southeastern Malwa and the Upper Gangetic Doab |
| Faizulpuria (Singhpuria) | Nawab Kapur Singh's original Misl | Jalandhar Doab and tribute from the Delhi region |
| Nishanwalia | Dasaundha Singh | Carried the Nishan Sahib (flag) in battle for the joint Misl forces; territory around Ambala, Ropar, and Anandpur Sahib |
| Shaheedan (with the Nihangs) | — | Eastern Malwa, between Karnal and Ferozepore |
| Phulkian | Baba Ala Singh | Sirhind to Delhi; unlike the others, never absorbed into Ranjit Singh's later Empire — instead formed the separate princely states of Patiala, Nabha, and Jind |
By the late 18th century, the Bhangi, Ahluwalia, and Ramgarhia Misls were the most powerful, though rivalries between them grew as Mughal central authority weakened further. Several Misls also operated the Rakhi system — a protection tax collected from villages and farmers in exchange for defence against raiders, a practical exercise of the Miri-Piri principle rather than territorial conquest for its own sake.
Red Fort, Delhi
Combined Misl forces under Baba Baghel Singh and Jassa Singh Ahluwalia captured the Red Fort in Delhi — briefly placing the seat of Mughal imperial power under Sikh control. The event stands as the clearest demonstration of how far Misl military cooperation had reached by the late 18th century, decades before unification under a single Sikh ruler.
By the 1790s, the Misl confederacy had proven it could defend Punjab and project power as far as Delhi — but it remained fragmented, with no single authority over all twelve territories. That changed in 1799, when Ranjit Singh, chief of the Sukerchakia Misl, captured Lahore and began consolidating the Misls into a unified Sikh Empire — covered in Era 4: The Sikh Empire (1799–1849).