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Guru Hargobind

Guru Hargobind (Gurmukhi: ਗੁਰੂ ਹਰਿਗੋਬਿੰਦ, pronunciation: [gʊɾuː ɦəɾᵊgoːbɪn̯d̯ᵊ]l 19 June 1595 – 28 February 1644) was the sixth of ten Gurus of the Sikh religion. He had become Guru at the young age of eleven, after the execution of his father, Guru Arjan, by the Mughal emperor Jahangir.[2]

Guru Hargobind
ਗੁਰੂ ਹਰਿਗੋਬਿੰਦ
Contemporary painting of the sixth Sikh guru, Guru Hargobind. Provincial Mughal school, Deccan, mid-17th century
6th Guru of the Sikhs
Personal
Born
Hargobind

19 June 1595 (1595-06-19)
Guru Ki Wadali, Amritsar, Lahore Subah, Mughal Empire
(present-day Punjab, India)
Died28 February 1644 (1644-02-29) (aged 48)[1]
ReligionSikhism
SpouseMata Nanaki, Mata Damodari, and Mata Marvahi
ChildrenBaba Gurditta (1613–1638)
Baba Suraj Mal (1618–1698)
Baba Ani Rai (1633–1678)
Baba Atal Rai (1619–1627)
Guru Tegh Bahadur (1621–1675)
Bibi Veero (1628–1705)
Parent(s)Guru Arjan and Mata Ganga
Known for
  • Building the Akal Takhat
  • Founder of the Akal Sena
  • First Guru to engage in warfare
  • Advising the Sikhs to take part in military training and martial arts
  • Establish the Miri piri
  • Founding Kiratpur Sahib and Hargobindpur
  • Started Gatka, a Sikh martial arts
  • Supervising the creation of the Taus
Other namesThe Sixth Master
Saccha Paatshah
The Master of Miri Piri
Sixth Nanak
Signature
Military service
Battles/warsWars:

Fighting the following battles:

(For detailed list see List of Battles of Guru Hargobind
Religious career
PredecessorGuru Arjan
SuccessorGuru Har Rai

Hargobind introduced the process of militarization to Sikhism, likely as a response to his father's execution and to protect the Sikh community.[3][4] He symbolized it by wearing two swords, representing the dual concept of mīrī and pīrī (temporal power and spiritual authority). In front of the Harmandir Sahib in Amritsar, Hargobind constructed the Akal Takht (the throne of the timeless one). The Akal Takht represents the highest seat of earthly authority of the Khalsa (the collective body of the Sikhs) today.

Early life edit

Guru Hargobind was born in Gurū kī Waḍālī, on 19th June of 1595, in a Sodhi Khatri Family in a village 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) west of Amritsar,[1][5] the only son of Guru Arjan, the fifth Sikh Guru. He suffered from smallpox as a child.[6]

According to Sikh hagiographies, Hargobind survived two poisoning attempts by his uncle Prithi Chand and his wife, Karmo, as well as another attempt on his life, when a cobra was thrown at him by Prithi Chand.[6] The first poisoning attempt involved Karmo dispatching her personal nurse to pretend to be interested in looking after the child Hargobind.[6] However, the nurse placed poison around her nipple which was to harm Hargobind as he suckled her but the young boy refused to latch onto her and thus the nurse's plan failed and she became ill to the poison herself.[6] The second poisoning plan involved a snake-charmer being sent by Prithi Chand and his wife to assassinate the young Hargobind by releasing a snake onto him but the young boy is said to have grabbed the snake in his hand by its head and squeezed it until it died.[6] A third attempt on his life was by a Brahmin directed again by Prithi Chand and his wife, the Brahmin planned to blend poison with curd and feed the child Hargobind with it but when he attempted to do so, Hargobind knocked the curd out of the Brahmin's grasp and it fell onto the floor, where a dog - named Pista; then ate some of it and died as a result revealing its dangerous contents.[6] The Brahmin then died of abdominal afflictions.[6]

Hargobind studied religious texts with Bhai Gurdas and was trained in swordsmanship and archery by Baba Budda.[1] He was also instructed on various languages, religious philosophy, astronomy, medicine, horse-riding, and administration.[6] Hargobind spent a good deal of his early years engrossed in hymns being sung at the Harmandir Sahib complex in Amritsar.[6]

Guruship edit

On 25 May 1606, Guru Arjan, five days before his own death, selected his son Hargobind as his successor and instructed his son to start a military tradition to protect the Sikh people and always keep himself surrounded by armed Sikhs for protection.[7] Shortly afterwards, Arjan was arrested, tortured and killed by order of the Mughal Emperor Jahangir.[7][8] Guru Hargobind's succession ceremony took place on 24 June 1606.[2][5] He put on two swords: one indicated his spiritual authority (pīrī) and the other, his temporal authority (mīrī).[2][9] He followed his martyred father's advice and always kept himself surrounded by armed Sikhs for protection. The number fifty-two was special in his life, and his retinue consisted of fifty-two armed men.[1] He thus founded the military tradition in the Sikh faith.[2][7]

Hargobind had three wives: Damodari, Nanaki, and Marvahi.[1][10] He had children from three wives. Two of his eldest sons from the first wife died during his lifetime. Guru Tegh Bahadur, his son from Nanaki, became the ninth Sikh Guru.[11] The Sodhis of Anandpur Sahib[12] are the descendants of Baba Suraj Mal Sodhi, one of Guru Hargobind's sons.[13]

The Guru was a martial artist (shastarvidyā); he encouraged people to maintain physical fitness and keep their bodies ready for physical combat. He had his own Darbar (court). The arming and training of some of his devoted followers began. The Guru came to possess seven hundred horses and his Risaldari (cavalry) grew to three hundred horsemen and sixty musketeers.[14]

Relations with other rulers edit

 
Guru Hargobind is released from Gwalior Fort by Jahangir's order

Guru Hargobind led the Sikh response against Mughal power after Guru Arjan's execution. He nominally accepted Shah Jahan's authority but resisted the Islamic persecution, fighting four wars against Shah Jahan's armies. His attempts to transform the Sikh community brought him in conflict with the Mughal authority.[4][15][16]

Jahangir edit

Along with the execution of Arjan by the Mughal Emperor Jahangir, Hargobind from the very start was a dedicated enemy of the Mughal rule. He advised Sikhs to arm and fight the Mughals.[9] The death of his father at the hands of Jahangir prompted him to emphasize the military dimension of the Sikh community. He symbolically wore two swords, which represented miri piri. He founded the Akal Sena, the first Sikh army. He built a fort to defend Ramdaspur and created a formal court, Akal Takht.[17]

Jahangir responded by jailing the 14-year-old Guru Hargobind at Gwalior Fort in 1609, on the pretext that the fine imposed on Guru Arjan had not been paid by the Sikhs and Hargobind.[18] It is not clear as to how much time he spent as a prisoner. The year of his release appears to have been either 1611 or 1612, when Hargobind was about 16 years old.[18] Persian records, such as Dabestan-e Mazaheb suggest he was kept in jail for twelve years, including over 1617–1619 in Gwalior, after which he and his camp were kept under Muslim army's surveillance by Jahangir.[1][19]

It is unclear why he was released. Scholars suggest that Jahangir had more or less reverted to tolerant policies of Akbar by about 1611 after he felt secure about his throne, and the Sunnis and Naqshbandi court officials at the Mughal court had fallen out of his favour. Another theory states that Jahangir discovered the circumstances and felt that Guru Hargobind was harmless, so he ordered his release.[17][18][20]

According to Surjit Singh Gandhi, 52 rajas (kings) who were imprisoned in the fort as hostages for "millions of rupees" and for opposing the Mughal empire were dismayed as they were losing a spiritual mentor. Guru Hargobind requested the rajas to be freed along with him as well and stood surety for their loyal behavior. Jahangir ordered their release as well. Hargobind got a special gown stitched which had 52 hems. As Hargobind left the fort, the captive kings caught the hems of the cloak and came out along with him.[21]

After his release, Guru Hargobind more discreetly strengthened the Sikh army and reconsolidated the Sikh community.[18] His relations with Jahangir remained mostly friendly. He accompanied Jahangir to Kashmir and Rajputana and subdued Tara Chand of Nalagarh, who had continued for a long time in open rebellion and all efforts to subdue him had failed.[22][23][24] During Jahangir's reign, Hargobind fought a battle against the Mughals at Rohilla. The battle was in response to the militarisation of the Sikhs. The Mughals who were led by Governor Abdul Khan were defeated by the Sikhs.[25]

Shah Jahan edit

During the reign of Jahangir's son and successor Shah Jahan that started in 1627, relations became bitter again. Shah Jahan was intolerant. He destroyed the Sikh baoli at Lahore.[26] In 1628, Shah Jahan's hunting party plundered some of Guru Hargobind's property, which triggered the first armed conflict.[27]

Hargobind's army fought battles with the Mughal armies of Shah Jahan at Amritsar, Kartarpur and elsewhere. Hargobind defeated the Mughal troops near Amritsar in the Battle of Amritsar in 1634. The Guru was again attacked by a provincial detachment of Mughals, but the attackers were routed and their leaders slain.[28] Guru Hargobind also led his armies against the provincial Mughal governors.[29] The Guru anticipated the return of a larger Mughal force, so retreated into Shivalik Hills to strengthen his defenses and army, with a base in Kiratpur where he continued to stay till his death.[27]

Painde Khan was appointed the leader of the provincial troops by Shah Jahan and marched upon the Guru. Hargobind was attacked, but he won this battle as well.[28] He also fought the Battle of Kartarpur. Chandu Shah, who had ordered Guru Arjan's death, was killed through torture by the Sikhs of Guru Hargobind: a thick iron ring was put around his nose and he was dragged on the floor until the man who tortured Arjan, and had since become a Sikh, poured hot sand on him from the same ladle used on Arjan.[30][31]

Guru Hargobind lost his eldest son Baba Gurditta in 1638. Shah Jahan attempted political means to undermine the Sikh tradition, by dividing and influencing the succession.[27] The Mughal ruler gave land grants to Gurditta's eldest son Dhir Mal, living in Kartarpur, and attempted to encourage Sikhs to recognise Dhir Mal as the rightful successor to Hargobind. Dhir Mal issued statements in favour of the Mughal state, and critical of his grandfather. Hargobind died at Kiratpur, Rupnagar, Punjab, on 28 February 1644, but before his death, he rejected his eldest grandson Dhir Mal's politics, and nominated Guru Har Rai (Dhir Mal's younger brother) instead to succeed him as the Guru.[27] The pattern was repeated when Guru Har Rai chose his second son as his successor instead of his eldest son.

Samarth Ramdas and Guru Hargobind edit

 
Guru Hargobind and Samarth Ramdas

According to Sikh tradition based on an old Punjabi manuscript Panjah Sakhian, Samarth Ramdas met Guru Hargobind at Srinagar in the Garhval hills. The meeting, corroborated in a Marathi source, Ramdas's Bakhar, by Hanumant Swami, written in 1793, probably took place in the early 1630s during Samarth Ramdas's pilgrimage travels in the north and Hargobind's journey to Nanakmata in the east. It is said that as they came face to face with each other, Hargobind had just returned from a hunting excursion. He was fully armed and rode a horse. "I had heard that you occupied the Gaddi of Guru Nanak", said the Maratha saint Ramdas, and asked what sort of sadhu was he. Hargobind replied, "Internally a hermit, and externally a prince. Arms mean protection to the poor and destruction of the tyrant. Guru Nanak had not renounced the world but had renounced Maya".[32]

Death edit

He nominated his grandson to succeed him as the seventh Guru Har Rai. He died in 1644 at Kiratpur Sahib, a town on the banks of the River Sutlej, and was cremated on the banks of the river, where now stands Gurdwara Patalpuri Sahib.[1]

Battles and skirmishes edit

  1. Battle of Sangrana (1628)
  2. Battle of Rohilla (1630)
  3. Battle of Amritsar (1634)
  4. Battle of Lahira, 1634
  5. Battle for Maham
  6. Battle of Padiala
  7. Battle of Kiratpur
  8. Battle of Kartarpur, 1635
  9. Battle of Phagwara, 1635[33]

Popular culture edit

The animated Punjabi movie Dastaan-E-Miri Piri is about Guru Hargobind and his contribution to the Sikh faith and community.[34]

The life story and teachings of Guru Hargobind influenced the 2023 season theme and artwork of the Dallas Cowboys football team.[35][36][37]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Fauja Singh (2009). "HARGOBIND, GURU (1595–1644)". Encyclopaedia of Sikhism. Punjabi University, Patiala. Retrieved 8 December 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d HS Syan (2013), Sikh Militancy in the Seventeenth Century, IB Tauris, ISBN 978-1780762500, pages 48–55
  3. ^ John F. Richards (1995). The Mughal Empire. Cambridge University Press. pp. 97–98, 177–178. ISBN 978-0-521-56603-2.
  4. ^ a b Hargobind: Sikh Guru, Encyclopedia Britannica, Quote: "Hargobind, sixth Sikh Guru, who developed a strong Sikh army and gave the Sikh religion its military character, in accord with the instructions of his father, Guru Arjan (1563–1606), the first Sikh martyr, who had been executed on the order of the Mughal emperor Jahangir."; "After Jahāngīr’s death (1627) the new Mughal emperor, Shāh Jahān, persecuted the Sikh community in earnest. The Sikhs under Hargobind Sahib defeated Shāh Jahān’s armies four times, crushing the myth of Mughal invincibility. To the Sikh ideals of his predecessor, Guru Hargobind thus added another: the right and duty of the Sikhs to defend their faith by the sword if necessary."
  5. ^ a b HS Singha (2009), Sikh Studies, Book 7, Hemkunt Press, ISBN 978-8170102458, pages 18–19
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Singh, Prithi Pal (2006). The History of Sikh Gurus. Lotus Press. pp. 69–70. ISBN 9788183820752.
  7. ^ a b c Pashaura Singh (2005), Understanding the Martyrdom of Guru Arjan 20 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Journal of Philosophical Society, 12(1), pp. 29–62
  8. ^ Louis E. Fenech, Martyrdom in the Sikh Tradition, Oxford University Press, pages 118–121
  9. ^ a b V. D. Mahajan (1970). Muslim Rule In India. S. Chand, New Delhi, p.223.
  10. ^ Fenech and McLeod (2014), Historical Dictionary of Sikhism, 3rd Edition, Rowman & Littlefield, ISBN 978-1442236004, page 145
  11. ^ W. H. McLeod (2009). The A to Z of Sikhism. Scarecrow. p. 88. ISBN 978-0-8108-6344-6.
  12. ^ Fenech, Louis E.; McLeod, W. H. (11 June 2014). Historical Dictionary of Sikhism. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4422-3601-1.
  13. ^ "Suraj Mal - SikhiWiki, free Sikh encyclopedia". www.sikhiwiki.org. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  14. ^ Grewal, J.S. Sikh History from Persian Sources: Translations of Major Texts ISBN 978-8185229171, p. 62 "Guru Hargobind, son of Guru Arjan, ate meat and took to hunting. Most of their [the Guru's] followers adopted his practice."
  15. ^ HS Syan (2013). Sikh Militancy in the Seventeenth Century. IB Tauris. pp. 48–49, 98. ISBN 978-1780762500.
  16. ^ Sikh history from Persian sources : translations of major texts. J. S. Grewal, Irfan Habib, Indian History Congress. Session. New Delhi: Tulika. 2001. p. 4. ISBN 81-85229-17-1. OCLC 47024480. Even Guru Hargobind was sent as a prisoner to the fort of Gwalior on account of the arrears of fine imposed upon Guru Arjan. However, this was not the only cause of Guru Hargobind's difficulties. He had begun to wear the sword and adopted the appearance of a soldier; he used to hunt and to maintain servants. He came into armed conflict with the gumashtas (officials) of Shah Jahan and had to leave Ramdaspur for Kartarpur in the Jalandhar Doab. There too he had to fight quite a few battles before he moved to Phagwara and then to Kiratpur in the territory of the refractory hill chief Tara Chand. There too, Guru Hargobind maintained seven hundred horses in his stables, three hundred horsemen, and sixty musketeers. His headquarters served as a place of refuge for refractory individuals. The Dabistan, thus, provides extremely useful evidence on the change in the attitude of the Mughal Emperors towards the Gurus and the change in the attitude of Guru Hargobind towards the State.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  17. ^ a b Phyllis G. Jestice (2004). Holy People of the World: A Cross-cultural Encyclopedia, Volume 1. ABC-CLIO. pp. 345, 346. ISBN 9781576073551.
  18. ^ a b c d Arvind-Pal Singh Mandair (2013). Sikhism: A Guide for the Perplexed. A & C Black. p. 48. ISBN 9781441117083.
  19. ^ The Sikh Review, Volumes 42–43, Issues 491–497. Sikh Cultural Centre. 1994. pp. 15–16.
  20. ^ Raj Pal Singh (2004). The Sikhs : Their Journey Of Five Hundred Years. Pentagon Press. pp. 22, 23. ISBN 9788186505465.
  21. ^ Surjit Singh Gandhi (2007). History of Sikh Gurus Retold: 1606–1708 C.E. Atlantic Publishers & Dist. p. 52. ISBN 9788126908585.
  22. ^ Jasbir Singh Sarna (2014). The Sikh Shrines in Jammu & Kashmir. p. 28. ISBN 9788186741306.
  23. ^ Surjit Singh Gandhi (2007). History of Sikh Gurus Retold: 1606-1708 C.E. Atlantic Publishers & Distributors. p. 506. ISBN 9788126908592.
  24. ^ Joseph Davey Cunningham, H.L.O. Garrett (2012). A History of the Sikhs from the Origin of the Nation to the Battles of the Sutlej. Asian Educational Services. p. 57. ISBN 9788120609501.
  25. ^ Jaques, Tony (2007). Dictionary of Battles and Sieges. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 860. ISBN 978-0-313-33536-5. Retrieved 31 July 2010.
  26. ^ Sikhism Origin and Development By Dalbir Singh Dhillon, p121 "In the year A. D. 1632, Shah Jahan revived his religious policy and issued ... of his policy, the Gurdwara and a Baoli at Lahore was destroyed and a mosque was erected over its place"
  27. ^ a b c d Arvind-Pal Singh Mandair (2013). Sikhism: A Guide for the Perplexed. A & C Black. pp. 48–49. ISBN 9781441117083.
  28. ^ a b Cunningham, Joseph Davey. A History Of The Sikhs (1853 ed.). London: John Murray. p. 55.
  29. ^ Cunningham, Joseph Davey. A History Of The Sikhs (1853 ed.). London: John Murray. p. 53.
  30. ^ Gujral, Maninder S. (19 December 2000). "CHANDU SHAH". The Sikh Encyclopedia. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
  31. ^ "Chandu Shah - SikhiWiki, free Sikh encyclopedia". www.sikhiwiki.org. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
  32. ^ Singh, Sangat (2010). The Sikhs In History (2nd ed.). Singh Brothers. p. 48. ISBN 978-8172052768.
  33. ^ Harbans Kaur Sagoo (2001). Banda Singh Bahadur and Sikh Sovereignty. Deep & Deep Publications. p. 38. ISBN 9788176293006.
  34. ^ "Dastaan-E-Miri Piri". IMDb.
  35. ^ Monet, Jazz (7 September 2023). "Carpe omnia: Dallas Cowboys intend to 'seize everything' in 2023". Inside The Star. Retrieved 8 September 2023.
  36. ^ Kaur, Kamaljit (7 September 2023). "ਅਮਰੀਕਾ 'ਚ ਨੈਸ਼ਨਲ ਫੁੱਟਬਾਲ ਲੀਗ ਦੀ ਟੀਮ Dallas Cowboys ਨੇ ਜਰਸੀ 'ਤੇ ਲਗਾਈ ਜਰਨੈਲ ਹਰੀ ਸਿੰਘ ਨਲੂਆ ਦੀ ਤਸਵੀਰ" [Dallas Cowboys team of the National Football League in America put the picture of General Hari Singh Nalua on the jersey]. Rozana Spokesman (in Punjabi). Retrieved 8 September 2023.
  37. ^ Gehlken, Michael (7 September 2023). "What is Carpe Omnia? Mike McCarthy's 2023 theme for Cowboys is about seizing everything". Dallas News. Retrieved 8 September 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Dr Harjinder Singh Dilgeer (2012), SIKH HISTORY in 10 volumes, Sikh University Press.

External links edit

    Preceded by Sikh Guru
    25 May 1606 – 3 March 1644
    Succeeded by

    guru, hargobind, gurmukhi, ਹਰ, pronunciation, gʊɾuː, ɦəɾᵊgoːbɪn, june, 1595, february, 1644, sixth, gurus, sikh, religion, become, guru, young, eleven, after, execution, father, guru, arjan, mughal, emperor, jahangir, ਹਰ, ਦcontemporary, painting, sixth, sikh, . Guru Hargobind Gurmukhi ਗ ਰ ਹਰ ਗ ਬ ਦ pronunciation gʊɾuː ɦeɾᵊgoːbɪn d ᵊ l 19 June 1595 28 February 1644 was the sixth of ten Gurus of the Sikh religion He had become Guru at the young age of eleven after the execution of his father Guru Arjan by the Mughal emperor Jahangir 2 Guru Hargobindਗ ਰ ਹਰ ਗ ਬ ਦContemporary painting of the sixth Sikh guru Guru Hargobind Provincial Mughal school Deccan mid 17th century6th Guru of the SikhsPersonalBornHargobind19 June 1595 1595 06 19 Guru Ki Wadali Amritsar Lahore Subah Mughal Empire present day Punjab India Died28 February 1644 1644 02 29 aged 48 1 Kiratpur Sahib Lahore Subah Mughal Empire present day Punjab India ReligionSikhismSpouseMata Nanaki Mata Damodari and Mata MarvahiChildrenBaba Gurditta 1613 1638 Baba Suraj Mal 1618 1698 Baba Ani Rai 1633 1678 Baba Atal Rai 1619 1627 Guru Tegh Bahadur 1621 1675 Bibi Veero 1628 1705 Parent s Guru Arjan and Mata GangaKnown forBuilding the Akal Takhat Founder of the Akal Sena First Guru to engage in warfare Advising the Sikhs to take part in military training and martial arts Establish the Miri piri Founding Kiratpur Sahib and Hargobindpur Started Gatka a Sikh martial arts Supervising the creation of the TausOther namesThe Sixth MasterSaccha PaatshahThe Master of Miri PiriSixth NanakSignatureMilitary serviceBattles warsWars Early Mughal Sikh WarsFighting the following battles Battle of Rohilla Battle of Kartarpur Battle of Amritsar 1634 Battle of Lahira or Gurusar Battle of Phagwara Battle of Kiratpur For detailed list see List of Battles of Guru HargobindReligious careerPredecessorGuru ArjanSuccessorGuru Har RaiHargobind introduced the process of militarization to Sikhism likely as a response to his father s execution and to protect the Sikh community 3 4 He symbolized it by wearing two swords representing the dual concept of miri and piri temporal power and spiritual authority In front of the Harmandir Sahib in Amritsar Hargobind constructed the Akal Takht the throne of the timeless one The Akal Takht represents the highest seat of earthly authority of the Khalsa the collective body of the Sikhs today Contents 1 Early life 2 Guruship 2 1 Relations with other rulers 2 1 1 Jahangir 2 1 2 Shah Jahan 2 1 3 Samarth Ramdas and Guru Hargobind 3 Death 4 Battles and skirmishes 5 Popular culture 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life editGuru Hargobind was born in Guru ki Waḍali on 19th June of 1595 in a Sodhi Khatri Family in a village 7 kilometres 4 3 mi west of Amritsar 1 5 the only son of Guru Arjan the fifth Sikh Guru He suffered from smallpox as a child 6 According to Sikh hagiographies Hargobind survived two poisoning attempts by his uncle Prithi Chand and his wife Karmo as well as another attempt on his life when a cobra was thrown at him by Prithi Chand 6 The first poisoning attempt involved Karmo dispatching her personal nurse to pretend to be interested in looking after the child Hargobind 6 However the nurse placed poison around her nipple which was to harm Hargobind as he suckled her but the young boy refused to latch onto her and thus the nurse s plan failed and she became ill to the poison herself 6 The second poisoning plan involved a snake charmer being sent by Prithi Chand and his wife to assassinate the young Hargobind by releasing a snake onto him but the young boy is said to have grabbed the snake in his hand by its head and squeezed it until it died 6 A third attempt on his life was by a Brahmin directed again by Prithi Chand and his wife the Brahmin planned to blend poison with curd and feed the child Hargobind with it but when he attempted to do so Hargobind knocked the curd out of the Brahmin s grasp and it fell onto the floor where a dog named Pista then ate some of it and died as a result revealing its dangerous contents 6 The Brahmin then died of abdominal afflictions 6 Hargobind studied religious texts with Bhai Gurdas and was trained in swordsmanship and archery by Baba Budda 1 He was also instructed on various languages religious philosophy astronomy medicine horse riding and administration 6 Hargobind spent a good deal of his early years engrossed in hymns being sung at the Harmandir Sahib complex in Amritsar 6 Guruship editOn 25 May 1606 Guru Arjan five days before his own death selected his son Hargobind as his successor and instructed his son to start a military tradition to protect the Sikh people and always keep himself surrounded by armed Sikhs for protection 7 Shortly afterwards Arjan was arrested tortured and killed by order of the Mughal Emperor Jahangir 7 8 Guru Hargobind s succession ceremony took place on 24 June 1606 2 5 He put on two swords one indicated his spiritual authority piri and the other his temporal authority miri 2 9 He followed his martyred father s advice and always kept himself surrounded by armed Sikhs for protection The number fifty two was special in his life and his retinue consisted of fifty two armed men 1 He thus founded the military tradition in the Sikh faith 2 7 Hargobind had three wives Damodari Nanaki and Marvahi 1 10 He had children from three wives Two of his eldest sons from the first wife died during his lifetime Guru Tegh Bahadur his son from Nanaki became the ninth Sikh Guru 11 The Sodhis of Anandpur Sahib 12 are the descendants of Baba Suraj Mal Sodhi one of Guru Hargobind s sons 13 The Guru was a martial artist shastarvidya he encouraged people to maintain physical fitness and keep their bodies ready for physical combat He had his own Darbar court The arming and training of some of his devoted followers began The Guru came to possess seven hundred horses and his Risaldari cavalry grew to three hundred horsemen and sixty musketeers 14 Relations with other rulers edit nbsp Guru Hargobind is released from Gwalior Fort by Jahangir s orderGuru Hargobind led the Sikh response against Mughal power after Guru Arjan s execution He nominally accepted Shah Jahan s authority but resisted the Islamic persecution fighting four wars against Shah Jahan s armies His attempts to transform the Sikh community brought him in conflict with the Mughal authority 4 15 16 Jahangir edit Along with the execution of Arjan by the Mughal Emperor Jahangir Hargobind from the very start was a dedicated enemy of the Mughal rule He advised Sikhs to arm and fight the Mughals 9 The death of his father at the hands of Jahangir prompted him to emphasize the military dimension of the Sikh community He symbolically wore two swords which represented miri piri He founded the Akal Sena the first Sikh army He built a fort to defend Ramdaspur and created a formal court Akal Takht 17 Jahangir responded by jailing the 14 year old Guru Hargobind at Gwalior Fort in 1609 on the pretext that the fine imposed on Guru Arjan had not been paid by the Sikhs and Hargobind 18 It is not clear as to how much time he spent as a prisoner The year of his release appears to have been either 1611 or 1612 when Hargobind was about 16 years old 18 Persian records such as Dabestan e Mazaheb suggest he was kept in jail for twelve years including over 1617 1619 in Gwalior after which he and his camp were kept under Muslim army s surveillance by Jahangir 1 19 It is unclear why he was released Scholars suggest that Jahangir had more or less reverted to tolerant policies of Akbar by about 1611 after he felt secure about his throne and the Sunnis and Naqshbandi court officials at the Mughal court had fallen out of his favour Another theory states that Jahangir discovered the circumstances and felt that Guru Hargobind was harmless so he ordered his release 17 18 20 According to Surjit Singh Gandhi 52 rajas kings who were imprisoned in the fort as hostages for millions of rupees and for opposing the Mughal empire were dismayed as they were losing a spiritual mentor Guru Hargobind requested the rajas to be freed along with him as well and stood surety for their loyal behavior Jahangir ordered their release as well Hargobind got a special gown stitched which had 52 hems As Hargobind left the fort the captive kings caught the hems of the cloak and came out along with him 21 After his release Guru Hargobind more discreetly strengthened the Sikh army and reconsolidated the Sikh community 18 His relations with Jahangir remained mostly friendly He accompanied Jahangir to Kashmir and Rajputana and subdued Tara Chand of Nalagarh who had continued for a long time in open rebellion and all efforts to subdue him had failed 22 23 24 During Jahangir s reign Hargobind fought a battle against the Mughals at Rohilla The battle was in response to the militarisation of the Sikhs The Mughals who were led by Governor Abdul Khan were defeated by the Sikhs 25 Shah Jahan edit During the reign of Jahangir s son and successor Shah Jahan that started in 1627 relations became bitter again Shah Jahan was intolerant He destroyed the Sikh baoli at Lahore 26 In 1628 Shah Jahan s hunting party plundered some of Guru Hargobind s property which triggered the first armed conflict 27 Hargobind s army fought battles with the Mughal armies of Shah Jahan at Amritsar Kartarpur and elsewhere Hargobind defeated the Mughal troops near Amritsar in the Battle of Amritsar in 1634 The Guru was again attacked by a provincial detachment of Mughals but the attackers were routed and their leaders slain 28 Guru Hargobind also led his armies against the provincial Mughal governors 29 The Guru anticipated the return of a larger Mughal force so retreated into Shivalik Hills to strengthen his defenses and army with a base in Kiratpur where he continued to stay till his death 27 Painde Khan was appointed the leader of the provincial troops by Shah Jahan and marched upon the Guru Hargobind was attacked but he won this battle as well 28 He also fought the Battle of Kartarpur Chandu Shah who had ordered Guru Arjan s death was killed through torture by the Sikhs of Guru Hargobind a thick iron ring was put around his nose and he was dragged on the floor until the man who tortured Arjan and had since become a Sikh poured hot sand on him from the same ladle used on Arjan 30 31 Guru Hargobind lost his eldest son Baba Gurditta in 1638 Shah Jahan attempted political means to undermine the Sikh tradition by dividing and influencing the succession 27 The Mughal ruler gave land grants to Gurditta s eldest son Dhir Mal living in Kartarpur and attempted to encourage Sikhs to recognise Dhir Mal as the rightful successor to Hargobind Dhir Mal issued statements in favour of the Mughal state and critical of his grandfather Hargobind died at Kiratpur Rupnagar Punjab on 28 February 1644 but before his death he rejected his eldest grandson Dhir Mal s politics and nominated Guru Har Rai Dhir Mal s younger brother instead to succeed him as the Guru 27 The pattern was repeated when Guru Har Rai chose his second son as his successor instead of his eldest son Samarth Ramdas and Guru Hargobind edit nbsp Guru Hargobind and Samarth RamdasAccording to Sikh tradition based on an old Punjabi manuscript Panjah Sakhian Samarth Ramdas met Guru Hargobind at Srinagar in the Garhval hills The meeting corroborated in a Marathi source Ramdas s Bakhar by Hanumant Swami written in 1793 probably took place in the early 1630s during Samarth Ramdas s pilgrimage travels in the north and Hargobind s journey to Nanakmata in the east It is said that as they came face to face with each other Hargobind had just returned from a hunting excursion He was fully armed and rode a horse I had heard that you occupied the Gaddi of Guru Nanak said the Maratha saint Ramdas and asked what sort of sadhu was he Hargobind replied Internally a hermit and externally a prince Arms mean protection to the poor and destruction of the tyrant Guru Nanak had not renounced the world but had renounced Maya 32 Death editHe nominated his grandson to succeed him as the seventh Guru Har Rai He died in 1644 at Kiratpur Sahib a town on the banks of the River Sutlej and was cremated on the banks of the river where now stands Gurdwara Patalpuri Sahib 1 Battles and skirmishes editMain article List of Battles of Guru Hargobind Battle of Sangrana 1628 Battle of Rohilla 1630 Battle of Amritsar 1634 Battle of Lahira 1634 Battle for Maham Battle of Padiala Battle of Kiratpur Battle of Kartarpur 1635 Battle of Phagwara 1635 33 Popular culture editThe animated Punjabi movie Dastaan E Miri Piri is about Guru Hargobind and his contribution to the Sikh faith and community 34 The life story and teachings of Guru Hargobind influenced the 2023 season theme and artwork of the Dallas Cowboys football team 35 36 37 Gallery edit nbsp Guru Arjan seated middle with a young Hargobind left nbsp Guru Hargobind depicted alongside Ani Rai and Atal Rai nbsp Guru Hargobind out riding nbsp Bhai Rupa Chand right with Guru Hargobind left nbsp Fresco artwork of Guru Hargobind seated nbsp Ancient Painting of Guru Hargobind nbsp Mid 17th century portrait of Guru Hargobind holding a bird of preySee also editMata Kaulan Akal SenaReferences edit a b c d e f g Fauja Singh 2009 HARGOBIND GURU 1595 1644 Encyclopaedia of Sikhism Punjabi University Patiala Retrieved 8 December 2019 a b c d HS Syan 2013 Sikh Militancy in the Seventeenth Century IB Tauris ISBN 978 1780762500 pages 48 55 John F Richards 1995 The Mughal Empire Cambridge University Press pp 97 98 177 178 ISBN 978 0 521 56603 2 a b Hargobind Sikh Guru Encyclopedia Britannica Quote Hargobind sixth Sikh Guru who developed a strong Sikh army and gave the Sikh religion its military character in accord with the instructions of his father Guru Arjan 1563 1606 the first Sikh martyr who had been executed on the order of the Mughal emperor Jahangir After Jahangir s death 1627 the new Mughal emperor Shah Jahan persecuted the Sikh community in earnest The Sikhs under Hargobind Sahib defeated Shah Jahan s armies four times crushing the myth of Mughal invincibility To the Sikh ideals of his predecessor Guru Hargobind thus added another the right and duty of the Sikhs to defend their faith by the sword if necessary a b HS Singha 2009 Sikh Studies Book 7 Hemkunt Press ISBN 978 8170102458 pages 18 19 a b c d e f g h i Singh Prithi Pal 2006 The History of Sikh Gurus Lotus Press pp 69 70 ISBN 9788183820752 a b c Pashaura Singh 2005 Understanding the Martyrdom of Guru Arjan Archived 20 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine Journal of Philosophical Society 12 1 pp 29 62 Louis E Fenech Martyrdom in the Sikh Tradition Oxford University Press pages 118 121 a b V D Mahajan 1970 Muslim Rule In India S Chand New Delhi p 223 Fenech and McLeod 2014 Historical Dictionary of Sikhism 3rd Edition Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1442236004 page 145 W H McLeod 2009 The A to Z of Sikhism Scarecrow p 88 ISBN 978 0 8108 6344 6 Fenech Louis E McLeod W H 11 June 2014 Historical Dictionary of Sikhism Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 3601 1 Suraj Mal SikhiWiki free Sikh encyclopedia www sikhiwiki org Retrieved 21 July 2022 Grewal J S Sikh History from Persian Sources Translations of Major Texts ISBN 978 8185229171 p 62 Guru Hargobind son of Guru Arjan ate meat and took to hunting Most of their the Guru s followers adopted his practice HS Syan 2013 Sikh Militancy in the Seventeenth Century IB Tauris pp 48 49 98 ISBN 978 1780762500 Sikh history from Persian sources translations of major texts J S Grewal Irfan Habib Indian History Congress Session New Delhi Tulika 2001 p 4 ISBN 81 85229 17 1 OCLC 47024480 Even Guru Hargobind was sent as a prisoner to the fort of Gwalior on account of the arrears of fine imposed upon Guru Arjan However this was not the only cause of Guru Hargobind s difficulties He had begun to wear the sword and adopted the appearance of a soldier he used to hunt and to maintain servants He came into armed conflict with the gumashtas officials of Shah Jahan and had to leave Ramdaspur for Kartarpur in the Jalandhar Doab There too he had to fight quite a few battles before he moved to Phagwara and then to Kiratpur in the territory of the refractory hill chief Tara Chand There too Guru Hargobind maintained seven hundred horses in his stables three hundred horsemen and sixty musketeers His headquarters served as a place of refuge for refractory individuals The Dabistan thus provides extremely useful evidence on the change in the attitude of the Mughal Emperors towards the Gurus and the change in the attitude of Guru Hargobind towards the State a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Phyllis G Jestice 2004 Holy People of the World A Cross cultural Encyclopedia Volume 1 ABC CLIO pp 345 346 ISBN 9781576073551 a b c d Arvind Pal Singh Mandair 2013 Sikhism A Guide for the Perplexed A amp C Black p 48 ISBN 9781441117083 The Sikh Review Volumes 42 43 Issues 491 497 Sikh Cultural Centre 1994 pp 15 16 Raj Pal Singh 2004 The Sikhs Their Journey Of Five Hundred Years Pentagon Press pp 22 23 ISBN 9788186505465 Surjit Singh Gandhi 2007 History of Sikh Gurus Retold 1606 1708 C E Atlantic Publishers amp Dist p 52 ISBN 9788126908585 Jasbir Singh Sarna 2014 The Sikh Shrines in Jammu amp Kashmir p 28 ISBN 9788186741306 Surjit Singh Gandhi 2007 History of Sikh Gurus Retold 1606 1708 C E Atlantic Publishers amp Distributors p 506 ISBN 9788126908592 Joseph Davey Cunningham H L O Garrett 2012 A History of the Sikhs from the Origin of the Nation to the Battles of the Sutlej Asian Educational Services p 57 ISBN 9788120609501 Jaques Tony 2007 Dictionary of Battles and Sieges Greenwood Publishing Group p 860 ISBN 978 0 313 33536 5 Retrieved 31 July 2010 Sikhism Origin and Development By Dalbir Singh Dhillon p121 In the year A D 1632 Shah Jahan revived his religious policy and issued of his policy the Gurdwara and a Baoli at Lahore was destroyed and a mosque was erected over its place a b c d Arvind Pal Singh Mandair 2013 Sikhism A Guide for the Perplexed A amp C Black pp 48 49 ISBN 9781441117083 a b Cunningham Joseph Davey A History Of The Sikhs 1853 ed London John Murray p 55 Cunningham Joseph Davey A History Of The Sikhs 1853 ed London John Murray p 53 Gujral Maninder S 19 December 2000 CHANDU SHAH The Sikh Encyclopedia Retrieved 3 September 2022 Chandu Shah SikhiWiki free Sikh encyclopedia www sikhiwiki org Retrieved 3 September 2022 Singh Sangat 2010 The Sikhs In History 2nd ed Singh Brothers p 48 ISBN 978 8172052768 Harbans Kaur Sagoo 2001 Banda Singh Bahadur and Sikh Sovereignty Deep amp Deep Publications p 38 ISBN 9788176293006 Dastaan E Miri Piri IMDb Monet Jazz 7 September 2023 Carpe omnia Dallas Cowboys intend to seize everything in 2023 Inside The Star Retrieved 8 September 2023 Kaur Kamaljit 7 September 2023 ਅਮਰ ਕ ਚ ਨ ਸ ਨਲ ਫ ਟਬ ਲ ਲ ਗ ਦ ਟ ਮ Dallas Cowboys ਨ ਜਰਸ ਤ ਲਗ ਈ ਜਰਨ ਲ ਹਰ ਸ ਘ ਨਲ ਆ ਦ ਤਸਵ ਰ Dallas Cowboys team of the National Football League in America put the picture of General Hari Singh Nalua on the jersey Rozana Spokesman in Punjabi Retrieved 8 September 2023 Gehlken Michael 7 September 2023 What is Carpe Omnia Mike McCarthy s 2023 theme for Cowboys is about seizing everything Dallas News Retrieved 8 September 2023 Further reading editDr Harjinder Singh Dilgeer 2012 SIKH HISTORY in 10 volumes Sikh University Press External links edit nbsp India portal nbsp Biography portal nbsp Punjab portalGuru HargobindPreceded byGuru Arjan Sikh Guru25 May 1606 3 March 1644 Succeeded byGuru Har Rai Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guru Hargobind amp oldid 1212384774, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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