Maharaja Ranjit Singh Sukerchakia had made Lahore the capital of the
Sikh Empire of the
Punjab, which he built up between 1799 and his death in 1839. After his death, factions and assassinations destroyed the unity of the State, causing alarm to the British because it weakened the buffer against the perceived threat of invasion from the north. Provocative acts by both the British and the Sikhs escalated tension and, on 13 December 1845, Hardinge issued a proclamation declaring war on the Sikhs. During the
First Anglo-Sikh War, the British came close to defeat at the
Battle of Ferozeshah, but were eventually victorious. After the defeat of the Sikhs at the
Battle of Sobraon, the British marched unopposed into Lahore on 20February 1846. , Lahore, 1846 The peace was negotiated and drafted by
Frederick Currie, assisted on military matters by Brevet-Major
Henry Lawrence, acting under powers vested in them by Hardinge. Currie's diplomatic skills so impressed Hardinge that the British authorities rewarded him with a
baronetcy in January 1847. On 11March 1846, two days after signature of the treaty, a supplement, comprising eight Articles of Agreement, was signed by the same parties. It provided that a British force would remain in Lahore until no longer than the end of the year "for the purpose of protecting the person of the Maharajah and the inhabitants of the city of Lahore, during the reorganization of the Sikh Army". This supplementary agreement was at the request of the Lahore Durbar. The Lahore army would vacate the city, convenient quarters would be provided for the British troops and the Lahore Government would pay the extra expenses. The Agreement also provided that the British would respect the
bona fide rights of
jagirdars in the Lahore territories and would assist the Lahore Government in recovering the arrears of revenue justly due to the Lahore Government from the kardars and managers in the territories ceded by the provisions of Articles 3 and 4 of the Treaty. ==Treaty of Amritsar==