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SECTION I - Sikhs-in-Europe

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A Selected Bibliography of the <strong>Sikhs</strong> & Sikhism 10<br />

Ashe. Major Waller. Personal Records of the Kandahar Campaign by officers<br />

engaged there<strong>in</strong>, edited and annotated. David Bogue. London, 1881.<br />

Ashraf Ali. Maulvi Mirza. A Catalogue of Persian books and manuscripts<br />

<strong>in</strong> the Library of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. Calcutta. 1895.<br />

Atk<strong>in</strong>son. Edw<strong>in</strong> T. Statistical. Descriptive and Historical Account of the<br />

Himalayan districts of the North Western Prov<strong>in</strong>ces of India.<br />

N.W.P. and Oudh Govt. Press. Allahabad, 1874-84. 14 Vols. <strong>in</strong><br />

all; Vols II & III Me3rut Division.<br />

Vol. I. Bhuksa <strong>Sikhs</strong>—Nanak Matta. 372; Rajah Fateh<br />

Shah, 573-76 ; <strong>Sikhs</strong> <strong>in</strong> the Dun—Ghulam Kadir Khan Rohilla,<br />

578-80; Sikh Raids and a Sikh village burnt and people sacked.<br />

620 ; Sikh Temple, 840, 848.<br />

Atk<strong>in</strong>son, Capt. George Frankl<strong>in</strong>. The Campaign <strong>in</strong> India. 1857-58, from<br />

draw<strong>in</strong>gs made dur<strong>in</strong>g the eventful period of the great Mut<strong>in</strong>y<br />

by—. illustrat<strong>in</strong>g the military operations before Delhi and its<br />

neighbourhood. Day & Son, London, 1859.<br />

<strong>Sikhs</strong> under Hudson at Rohtak, 14; Rattray’s <strong>Sikhs</strong>, 15 ;<br />

Other <strong>Sikhs</strong>. 16. 19, 20.<br />

Atk<strong>in</strong>son J. Expedition <strong>in</strong>to Afghanistan, and sketches descriptive of the<br />

country, conta<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong> a personal narrative dur<strong>in</strong>g the campaign of<br />

1839-1840 up to the surrender of Dost Muhammad Khan. Allen<br />

& Co., London, 1842.<br />

Dost Muhammad—Ranjit S<strong>in</strong>gh’s conquests <strong>in</strong><br />

Afghanistan, 1-9; History of Shah Shujah—the Koh-i-Nur—Shah<br />

Shujah at Ludhiana, 10-37; conflict between Azam Khan and the<br />

<strong>Sikhs</strong>. 38-53; navigation of the Punjab—British schemes, 59-83;<br />

British advance to Candahar and Ghazni, 127-200; Somnath gates.<br />

201-27; banishment of Dost Muhammad—death of Shah Shujah—<br />

return of the British army through the Punjab, Hassan Andal—<br />

Lahore. 377-408.

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