Jasjit Singh Grewal Gordon Johnson Christopher Alan Bayly
This important new contribution to the New Cambridge History of India examines chronologically the entire span of Sikh history from prehistoric times to the present day. In an introductory chapter, Professor Grewal surveys the changing pattern of human settlements in the Punjab until the fifteenth century and the emergence of the Punjabi language as the basis of regional articulation. Subsequent chapters explore the life and beliefs of Guru Nanak--the founder of Sikhism; the extension and modification of his ideas by his successors; the increasing number and composition of their followers and...
This important new contribution to the New Cambridge History of India examines chronologically the entire span of Sikh history from prehistoric times ...
From foundation concepts through in-depth discussions on extensibility and customization, written by the members of the ATL server team, this is the ultimate book on ATL Server.
From foundation concepts through in-depth discussions on extensibility and customization, written by the members of the ATL server team, this is th...
This important new contribution to the New Cambridge History of India examines chronologically the entire span of Sikh history from prehistoric times to the present day. In an introductory chapter, Professor Grewal surveys the changing pattern of human settlements in the Punjab until the fifteenth century and the emergence of the Punjabi language as the basis of regional articulation. Subsequent chapters explore the life and beliefs of Guru Nanak--the founder of Sikhism; the extension and modification of his ideas by his successors; the increasing number and composition of their followers and...
This important new contribution to the New Cambridge History of India examines chronologically the entire span of Sikh history from prehistoric times ...
The Cha r Ba gh-i-Panja b, written by Ganesh Das Wadera immediately after the annexation of the Lahore kingdom by the British in 1849, is a classic Persian text. Its long descriptive part is the only surviving account of the social, religious, and cultural life of the peoples of the Punjab, especially during the late-eighteenth and the early-nineteenth century. Ganesh Das writes about traditional learning, literature, folklore, urban centres, and women with a rare catholicity as an Indian, an orthodox Hindu, a Punjabi, and a Khatri. Himself a hereditary qanungo of Gujrat in...
The Cha r Ba gh-i-Panja b, written by Ganesh Das Wadera immediately after the annexation of the Lahore kingdom by the British in 1849, is ...