Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 The Turko-Afghan Rule
- 2 Foundation of the Sikh Panth
- 3 Evolution of the Sikh Panth (1539–1606)
- 4 Transformation of the Sikh Panth (1606–1708)
- 5 Rise to political power (1708–1799)
- 6 The Sikh empire (1799–1849)
- 7 Recession and resurgence (1849–1919)
- 8 In the struggle for freedom (1920–1947)
- 9 Towards the ‘Punjabi Province’ (1947–1966)
- 10 In the new Punjab state (1966–1984)
- Bibliographical essay
- Index
- THE NEW CAMBRIDGE HISTORY OF INDIA
- References
3 - Evolution of the Sikh Panth (1539–1606)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 The Turko-Afghan Rule
- 2 Foundation of the Sikh Panth
- 3 Evolution of the Sikh Panth (1539–1606)
- 4 Transformation of the Sikh Panth (1606–1708)
- 5 Rise to political power (1708–1799)
- 6 The Sikh empire (1799–1849)
- 7 Recession and resurgence (1849–1919)
- 8 In the struggle for freedom (1920–1947)
- 9 Towards the ‘Punjabi Province’ (1947–1966)
- 10 In the new Punjab state (1966–1984)
- Bibliographical essay
- Index
- THE NEW CAMBRIDGE HISTORY OF INDIA
- References
Summary
By the beginning of the seventeenth century the socio-religious community of Guru Nanak's followers became ‘a state within the state’. Each of his first four successors made his own distinctive contribution, working within the ideological and institutional parameters adumbrated by him. We have to study their own compositions closely to perceive the slow but sure development of the Sikh Panth in terms of numbers, composition, material resources, social institutions and a multi-dimensional transmutation of ideas in a creative response to changing situations. To listen to those who were closely connected with them is equally rewarding. The context for this development was provided by the politico-administrative arrangements evolved by Akbar, giving peace and prosperity to a vast empire. The position of the Sikh Panth at the end of his reign may be seen as the culmination of a peaceful evolution of nearly three-quarters of a century. This evolutionary phase came dramatically to a grave end with the martyrdom of Guru Arjan in the very first year of Jahangir's reign.
Babur ruled over the territory he conquered from Bhera to Bihar for only four years till his death in 1530. His son and successor, Nasirud-din Humayun, temporarily added Malwa and Gujarat to the dominions inherited from Babur. The Afghan resurgence under the leadership of the Sur Afghan Sher Khan obliged Humayun to abandon the Mughal territory in India in 1540. Sher Shah Sur and his successors ruled over northern India for fifteen years before Humayun staged a successful return in 1555.
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- Information
- The Sikhs of the Punjab , pp. 42 - 61Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1991