- Writings by non-Sikhs on Sikhs and Punjab84
- World5
- Uncategorized25
- Uncategorised72
- Traditional Sikh schools16
- Theology33
- The Sikh Empire [1799 - 1839]11
- The Modern History of Sikhs [1947 - present]9
- The establishment of the Khalsa Panth [1699]3
- The British and Sikhs [1849 - 1947]55
- Sri Guru Granth Sahib and Guru Gobind Singh's Bani83
- Social and voluntary organisations20
- slider4
- Sikh struggle against Mughal empire [1708 - 1799]13
- Sikh reformist movements16
- Sikh political institutions and movements23
- Sikh Political figures404
- Sikh Mystics and Traditional scholars80
- Sikh Martyrs143
- Sikh Gurus9
- Sikh Confederacies [1708 - 1769]13
- row4.11
- row3.11
- row32
- row2.15
- row23
- row1.23
- Research institutions2
- Punjab Districts20
- Punjab2
- Punjab287
- Political Philosophy14
- Philosophy, Spirituality and Ethics352
- Philosophy33
- Pakistan27
- Other Historical Places405
- Nineteenth century Literature48
- Mythological references209
- Muslims rulers and Sufi saints111
- Musicology and Musicians34
- Moral codes and Sikh practices55
- Modern works on Sikhs and Sikhism12
- Modern Scholars of Sikhism33
- Metaphysics8
- Martial Heritage12
- Literature in the Singh Sabha movement14
- India84
- In the times of Gurus [1469 - 1708]5
- Historical Events in Sikh History106
- Historic Gurdwaras outside Punjab6
- Historic Gurdwaras in Punjab38
- Historic Gurdwaras in Pakistan20
- Hindu bhagats and poets, and Punjabi officials185
- Gurudwaras64
- Gurmukhi Calligraphy4
- Gurdwara Management committees5
- Famous Women82
- Famous Sikh personalities494
- European adventurers, scholars and officials108
- Eighteenth century Literature49
- Educational institutions10
- Biographical1649
- Bhai Gurdas and the early Sikh literature26
- Arts and Heritage79
- Arts and Artists12
- Architecture17
- 4.21
APOCRYPHAL COMPOSITIONS, known in Sikh vocabulary as kachchi bani (unripe, rejected texts) or vadhu bani (superfluous texts) are those writings, mostly in verse but prose not excluded,which have been attributed to the Gurus, but which were not incorporated in the Guru Granth Sahib at the time of its compilation in 1603-04. Since the Sikh Scripture was compiled by one of the Gurus and the text as approved by him has come down to us intact, compositions not included therein must be reckoned as extratextual and spurious. Moreover, the contents of the Guru Granth Sahib have been so arranged and numbered as to leave absolutely no scope for any extraction or interpolation.
ANNEXATION OF THE PUNJAB to British dominions in India in 1849 by Lord Dalhousie, the British governor general, which finally put an end to the sovereignty of the Sikhs over northwestern India, was the sequel to a chain of events that had followed the death of Maharaja Ranjit Singh ten years earlier. Internal dissensions and treachery had caused the defeat of the Sikh army at the hands of the British in the first Anglo Sikh war (1845-46). When on 16 December 1846, the Lahore Darbar was forced to sign the treaty of Bhyrowal (Bharoval), the kingdom of the Punjab was made a virtual British protectorate.
ANJUMANIPANJAB, founded in Lahore on 21 January 1865 by the distinguished linguist, Dr Gottlieb Wilhelm Leitner, who became successively the first principal of the Government College at Lahore and the first registrar of the University of the Panjab, was a voluntary society which aimed at the development of "vernacular literature" and dissemination of popular knowledge through this medium. Its actual activities spanned a wide range of educational forums and social issues, including encouragement of Vedic and Unani medicine, a mushaira or poetical symposium, newspaper journalism, a free public library, a system of private primary schools, lecture series and publication of literary works in Indian languages.
ANI RAI, author of Jangnama Guru Gobind Singh Ji, was one of the numerous poets and scholars who enjoyed the patronage of Guru Gobind Singh (1666-1708). The Jangnama is an account in verse of a battle on the banks of the River Sutlej in which an attack from the imperial troops was countered and repulsed by Sikhs under the personal command of Guru Gobind Singh. No date is given of the event, but a reference in the text to "Khalsa," inaugurated in 1699, and other details indicate that it was one of the last battles of Anandpur.
ANGLOSIKH WAR II, 1848-49, which resulted in the abrogation of the Sikh kingdom of the Punjab, was virtually a campaign by the victors of the first Anglo Sikh war (1945-46) and since then the de facto rulers of the State finally to overcome the resistance of some of the sardars who chafed at the defeat in the earlier war which, they believed, had been lost owing to the treachery on the part of the commanders at the top and not to any lack of fighting strength of the Sikh army.