Victor Duleep Singh was educated at
Eton and
Trinity College, Cambridge, where he met Lady Anne Blanche Alice Coventry whom he would later marry. In 1887 he entered the
Royal Military College, Sandhurst, with a special Cadetship and left it the following December to be commissioned as Lieutenant into the
1st (Royal) Dragoons. made in 1879 now a part of the
Royal Collection. In 1889 Singh was stationed at
Halifax,
Nova Scotia, as a member of the staff of
General Sir John Ross, commander of British forces in
British North America. In December, he was rumoured to be engaged to marry Jeanne Turnure, daughter of Lawrence Turnure, a
New York City banker, after staying at the Turnure house in
Newport, Rhode Island, the previous summer; the rumour was however denied by the banker. In February the following year, Singh took a three-month leave of absence from the army to meet his father in
Paris, when rumours of unpaid creditors in Halifax became current for the first time. He continued to serve in the Royal Dragoons until he resigned his commission in 1898. On the death of his father, Maharaja Sir
Duleep Singh, on 23 October 1893, Victor succeeded him as titular head of the Royal House of the Punjab. On 4 January 1898, Prince Victor Albert Jay Duleep Singh married Lady Anne Coventry, a daughter of
the 9th Earl of Coventry, who was eight years younger than himself. The marriage created a sensation: it was the first time an Indian prince had married an English noblewoman, and the marriage was made possible primarily due to the intervention of
the Prince of Wales (subsequently King Edward VII). The wedding took place at
St Peter's Church, Eaton Square, London, where
Queen Victoria was also represented. Although Queen Victoria gave the couple her blessing, she allegedly told Lady Anne to never have children with the Prince. The marriage remained childless. Singh was declared
bankrupt on 4 September 1902, with debts totaling £117,900 (approximately £ in today's value), despite his £8,250 annual allowance and his wife's income of £2,500. The bankruptcy was attributed to bad investments and to gambling, something that plagued him for the rest of his life. He died, without legitimate issue, aged 51, on 7 June 1918, and was buried at the Anglican Cemetery above
Monte Carlo. Beside him is the grave of his wife who died aged 82, on 2 July 1956. ==Honours==