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SECTION I - Sikhs-in-Europe

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A Selected Bibliography of the <strong>Sikhs</strong> & Sikhism 41<br />

by the English, a short resume of the customs, rites, songs and<br />

proverbs of the <strong>Sikhs</strong>, and twenty discourses regard<strong>in</strong>g the events<br />

In the life of Guru Nanak taken from Janam Sakhi, together with<br />

a short Gurmukhi Grammar, etc. pub author at the C. & M. G.<br />

Press, Lahore 1888.<br />

……………. The Aralsh-i-Mahfil, or The Ornament of the Assembly,<br />

translated from the Urdu, Calcutta, 1882.<br />

Guru Nanak, his religion and his disciples.<br />

Court, M.A. (<strong>in</strong> the service of M. Ranjit S<strong>in</strong>gh.) Extracts translated from<br />

a Memoir on a map of Peshawar and the country comprised<br />

between the Indus and the Hydaspes. JASB, 1836, pp. 468.482.<br />

(Coxe, Col., H.W.H.) The Punjab and the North—West Frontier of India<br />

by an old Punjabee. See “Punjabee”, “An old.”<br />

Craddock, R. The Dilemma <strong>in</strong> India. Constable & Co, London, 1929.<br />

Crauford, Q. Sketches, chiefly relat<strong>in</strong>g to the History, Religion. Learn<strong>in</strong>g<br />

and manners of the H<strong>in</strong>doos with a concise account of the present<br />

state of native powers of H<strong>in</strong>dostan. T. Cadel, London, 1790.<br />

The account of the <strong>Sikhs</strong>; pp. 350-370, is based upon the <strong>in</strong>formation supplied<br />

by Col. Polier and Mr. Stuart. Leav<strong>in</strong>g aside the account of the<br />

Gurus, which is mostly <strong>in</strong>correct, the Impression about the religion,<br />

manners and general life of the <strong>Sikhs</strong> of those days, based as they<br />

are on personal observation, are of great historical value; so is the<br />

account of their struggles with Ahmad Shah and his son Talmur.<br />

Talmur and the <strong>Sikhs</strong>, 350; Ahamd Shah and the <strong>Sikhs</strong> (at<br />

Kup Rahlra), 356; Abdali defeated at Amritsar, 357; the present<br />

condition of the <strong>Sikhs</strong>, their customs and manners, 365-70; their<br />

conquests, 356-70.

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