British historian uncovers the mystery of Punjab's Princess Pauline

By Sikhchic.com,
Special to The Post

The whereabouts and the cause of death of Princess Pauline Duleep Singh has been finally unearthed by British historian and biographer Peter Bhupinder Singh Bance. 
Since World War II, the life and death of the eldest daughter from Maharajah Duleep Singh's second marriage has remained a mystery.
Princess Pauline Alexandrina Duleep Singh’s life was sharply contrasted to that of her half-siblings brought up on the grand Suffolk estate at Elveden.
Where her half-siblings were welcomed at Windsor and adored by Queen Victoria, Pauline, on the other hand, was born in mid-winter Russia in a shabby boarding house in Moscow in 1887.
Her father was in Russia at the time plotting a rebellion with Russian agents for the liberation of Punjab and the subcontinent from the British occupation. 
After the tragic suicide of her youngest sister, Princess Irene, at Monaco in 1926, the relationship between Princess Pauline and her siblings from her father’s first marriage became most strained.
Pauline’s half-sister Princess Bamba had contested the ‘Last Will and Testament’ of Princess Irene, claiming that her vast estate worth over £20,000 be distributed amongst all the remaining family members. Bamba even took Princess Pauline to court over the matter in a lengthy and expensive trial. 
The court favoured that Pauline be the sole recipient as per Irene’s will.
From then on the relationship between the siblings from the two different mothers was irreparable. 
In the late 1930s, Princess Pauline decided to shift to Paris due to the family feud. Although her other half-sisters Princess Catherine and Sophia Duleep Singh did keep some contact with Pauline for a time, when the Second World War broke out, Princess Pauline went completely off the radar, and was never to be heard of again.
Over the next 75 years, various stories and rumours were cooked up as what happened to this Princess, ranging from the theory that she may have been killed during the bombings in war-torn France, to dying in a German concentration camp.
In the 1950s, when Patiala University historian Ganda Singh visited Princess Bamba in Lahore when he was researching his book, ‘Maharajah Duleep Singh and His Correspondence’, even she did not know what had become of her half-sister.
British-born Sikh historian Peter Singh Bance has spent over 15 years tracing the family of Maharajah Duleep Singh, in which time he discovered the locations of the graves of Prince and Princess Victor Duleep Singh in Monte Carlo, and Maharani Jindan’s gravestone in London’s Kensal Green.
The whereabouts of Princess Pauline during her final years, however, have eluded him until October 2014, when Bance was contacted by a distant relative of Lieutenant LSA Torry, who had briefly been the husband of Princess Pauline and had died in the First World War at the Battle of Loos within a year of their marriage. 
The relative had an unconfirmed place of death of the Princess whilst tracing his own family tree.
“This was a much needed piece of information to search for the Princess’s final moments, as I had exhausted every other avenue available to me,“ said Bance.
He went on to recover Princess Pauline’s French death certificate and her last will and testament as well as a ‘Death report of a foreign subject in France.’
The Princess had shifted to Paris in the late 1930s. At the start of the war, she contracted tuberculosis. In those years, this was a very serious illness and in most cases incurable. She was placed at the Sanatorium de Trespoey in Pau, France. Due to the Second World War raging and France being a partially occupied territory, she could not get word back to her friends and family in England of her condition.
Not even her own sisters would know how her last months were spent. 
Pauline tragically died alone on the 10th of April, 1941 at Pau Sanatorium.
She was buried by the officials in the nearby Pau Cemetery, her passing away unknown to her family. Her remains were later moved to an unmarked grave to make space for further burials.
Today, there is no gravestone to mark the Princess except an entry in the Pau Cemetery register to confirm that the grand-daughter of Maharajah Ranjit Singh lies in this forgotten corner of France. 
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