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    Sikh Scriptures and Literature
    Bhai Gurdas and the early Sikh literature  Eighteenth century Literature  Literature in the Singh Sabha movement  Modern works on Sikhs and Sikhism  Nineteenth century Literature  Sri Guru Granth Sahib and Guru Gobind Singh's Bani  Writings by non-Sikhs on Sikhs and Punjab 
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    Ham Hindu Nahin

    Ham Hindu Nahin, by Bhai Kahn Singh, lit. "We, i.e. Sikhs, are not Hindus," is a clear-cut declaration of Sikh identity registered by a Sikh scholar and intellectual towards the close of the nineteenth century. The statement constitutes the basic dictum of the book which appeared under this challenging title

    • Maninder S Gujral
    • December 19, 2000
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    HAQIQAT RAH MUQAM RAJE SHIVNABH KI

    HAQIQAT RAH MUQAM RAJE SHIVNABH KI Haqiqat Rah Muqam Raje Shivnabh Ki (account or description of way, i.e. journey to the abode of Raja Shivnabh) is an anonymous and undated short piece in Punjabi prose, found appended to some manuscript copies of the Guru Granth Sahib, particularly to copies of

    • Maninder S Gujral
    • December 19, 2000
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    HARIJAS GRANTH

    HARIJAS GRANTH, by Bhai Darbari, is a collection of verse the first part (ff. 1530) of which is, in imitation of the Guru Granth Sahib, cast in rdgas, totalling thirty-four in number, adding Malkauns, Malva and Hindol to the thirty-one employed in the Sikh Scripture. The only known manuscript of

    • Maninder S Gujral
    • December 19, 2000
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    HAZARNAMAH
    HAZARNAMAH, an apocryphal composition in verse attributed to Guru Nanak. The work is a discourse on the control of five lusts. It commends virtues of honesty, dutifulness, humility, truthfulness, justice, contentment and faithfulness.
    • Maninder S Gujral
    • December 19, 2000
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    HIKAYAT

    HIKAYAT is the title given to the eleven tales, in Persian verse but in Gurmukhi letters, in the Dasam Granth, immediately after the Zafamamah. The title `Hikayat` does not occur in the actual text, but most of the tales have a verse, coming after two or three invocational lines

    • Maninder S Gujral
    • December 19, 2000
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    HISAB I AFWAJ MAHARAJA RANJIT SINGH

    HISAB I AFWAJ MAHARAJA RANJIT SINGH, Persian MS. No. 622, in the Oriental Public (Khuda Bux) Library, Patna, is a manual of the accounts of Maharaja Ranjit Singh\'s army. It is a highly illuminated manuscript with gold ruled borders, size 12"x 71/s" 477 folios, written in mixed shikasld and nasta

    • Maninder S Gujral
    • December 19, 2000
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    HISTORY OF THE PUNJAB

    HISTORY OF THE PUNJAB (and of the Rise, Progress and Present Condition of the Sect and Nation of the Sikhs) is an anonymous work in two volumes ascribed variously to T.H. Thornlon (Catalogue of the Sikh Reference Library, Amritsar), H.T. Prinsep (Catalogue of the Khalsa College, Amritsar), and William Murray

    • Maninder S Gujral
    • December 19, 2000
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    HUKAMNAMA

    HUKAMNAMA, a compound of two Persian words hukm, meaning command or order, and ndmah, meaning letter, refers in the Sikh tradition to letters sent by the Gurus to their Sikhs or sangats in different parts of the country. Currently, the word applies to edicts issued from time to time from

    • Maninder S Gujral
    • December 19, 2000
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