VAR HARI SINGH KI, by Sahai Singh. included in the anthology entitled Prachin Varan te Jangname, edited by Shamsher Singh Ashok and published by the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee, Amritsar, in 1947. He describes Hari Singh Nalva`s expedidon against the Afghans who had invaded Peshawar from across the Khaibar Pass and his final battle in defence of the Fort of Jamrud. This printed version is based, according to the testimony of the editor, on an incomplete manuscript in the personal collection of Shivdev Singh of Nabha. No other copy of the manuscript has so far been discovered.
WAZIRKHAN, NAWAB (d. 1710), a resident of Kuhjpura, near Karnal, now in Haryana, was the faujdar of Sirhind under the Mughals in the opening years of the eighteenth century. The hill chiefs who held territories in the Sivalik ranges often sought his help against Guru Gobind Singh, then living in their midst at Anandpur. In August of 1700 they invested Anandpur, but found the defences impregnable. Later, Guru Gobind Singh moved to a site 4 km south of Kiratpur. By this time a contingent of troops sent by Wazir Khan from Sirhind at the rajas` request joined their forces.
ZORAWAR SINGH PAUT (d. 1708), generally known as Guru Gobind Singh\'s adopted son, was born to Bhai Natthu, a carpenter of Bassi Pathanan, near Sirhind. His mother, Mai Bhikkhi, served in the Guru`s household at Anandpur, where the boy spent his early childhood, too. He was about the same age as the Guru\'s third son, Zorawar Singh, and both of them were playmates. Once he defeated his Sahibzada in a friendly wrestling bout in the presence of Guru Gobind Singh. The Guru lovingly remarked, " He, too, is my Zorawar (literally, strong or mighty) son, " and he treated him as such.