Giani Gian Singh (15 April 1822 – 24 September 1921) was a 19th-century Sikh historian, literati, hagiographer, martial artist, theologian, and scholar.[1][2] He wrote the works NaveenPanth Prakash[note 1] and Twarikh Guru Khalsa.[3]
Biography
He was born into a Jat family.[1] He was sponsored by Maharaja Narinder Singh and assisted Pundit Tara Singh Narotam for his work in writing the Sri Guru Tirath Sangreh.[4] His work, Twarikh Guru Khalsa, was meant to be a simplification of the Suraj Parkash by Kavi Santokh Singh, which had been written in Braj verse that was difficult to decode.[4] He reintroduced novel understandings about the compilation of the primary Sikh scriptural canon, the Guru Granth Sahib, by suggesting it was compiled through the collecting of various works by the previous gurus held by various, distant Sikh congregations, a process that took years.[5]
Bibliography
Tawarikh Sri Amritsar - account on the history of the holy city of Sikhism, including the construction of the Golden Temple[6]
^The original title of the work was 'Panth Prakash', it is not to be confused with an earlier work with the same name by Ratan Singh Bhangu, in-which it is differentiated from it by the addition of the word 'Naveen' meaning "new" before the title.
^Kang, Kanwarjit Singh (1988). "13. Art and Architecture of the Golden Temple". Punjab Art and Culture. Atma Ram & Sons. pp. 56–62. ISBN9788170430964.
^Singh, Inderjeet. “Revisiting Zorawar Singh Campaign in Tibet During 1841.” The Tibet Journal, vol. 43, no. 1, 2018, pp. 17–33. JSTOR, https://www.jstor.org/stable/26634903. Accessed 8 June 2024.