Naushehra Pannuan is a large village located in the Tarn Taran district in the Indian State of Punjab.
According to a local legend, the Pannu Jatt clan which established Naushehra Pannuan had originally lived near the village of Lachmann Maari in Batala.
One morning, a woman belonging to this clan was harassed by a Muslim Chaudhry (hereditary landholder) who she killed with a stick.
The legend states that Mange Shah blessed Baba Rassal with a 50 paise coin that would double each day.
Four of these formal orders were issued between 1699 and 1702 and are preserved at the local Baba Dhanna Gurudwara, a major place of Sikh worship.
[citation needed] The first reference to Naushehra Pannuan in a book can be found in Buta Singh's Geographical description of Punjab written in the 1840s.
[citation needed] The first modern public-development project in Naushehra Pannuan was a local canal extension to the Upper Bari Doab irrigation network implemented by the British Raj in 1859.
[citation needed] The villagers helped excavate this canal, and it has irrigated the local farmland since its construction.
[citation needed] Development of Naushehra Pannuan continued with the construction of a primary and middle school in 1938.
[citation needed] During the Partition of India in 1947, a large number of Naushehra Pannuan Muslim residents left their homes in the bazaar to move to Pakistan.
During the turmoil of the 1980s, as a village located in the rural Majha region, Naushehra Pannuan suffered due to conflict.
[citation needed] As a result, a number of Hindu families felt a threat to their lives and moved from the village.
This gurudwara is dedicated to Baba Dhanna who was the gardener of the Sri Guru Gobind Singh Ji, and preserves the latter's letters to the village.
Baba Mange shah Samadh received patronage and popularity over the last 30 years and have since been rebuilt and reconstructed.
The site is used for a major religious festival in the honor of Baba Mange Shah, who is considered the founder-saint of the village.
[citation needed] According to a local legend, Baba Rassal chose two suiters from Sarhali for marriage with his daughters.