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thesaurus/cnp01322020 Gobind Singh, Guru

Gobind Singh, Guru

Identifiant de la noticecnp01322020
URIhttp://data.cerl.org/thesaurus/cnp01322020
Genremasculin
Données biographiques1666 - 1708
Lieu de naissancePatna
Dernière modification2024-02-08

Note générale

Dixième et dernier guru Sikh. Succède à son père Guru Tegh Bahadur (en 1675). On lui attribue le "Dasam Granth". Fondateur de l'ordre du Khālsā (en 1699). Matière nom commun associée: Gourous sikh. Note de regroupement par domaine: Religion (200). Titre uniforme associé: Daśama Grantha.
10. Guru der Sikhs.
Note de regroupement par domaine: Religion (ouvrages généraux et comparatifs) (200)
Dernier gourou sikh
Source(s) consultée(s) en vain: GDEL

Plus d'information

Autres données biographiquesPatna, 1666-Nanded, 1708
26.12.1666-1708
Responsabilité intellectuelleAuteur
Langue(s) principale(s)Panjabi
ActivitéPersonen zu allgemeiner und vergleichender Religionswissenschaft, Personen zu nichtchristlichen Religionen (3.1p) (sswd)
Guru (gnd)
Note géographiqueIN (iso3166)
NationalitéIndian

Lieu d'activité

Lieu de naissancePatna
Birthplace
Lieu d'activitéNanded
Place of death. -- Lieu de mort

Entrées associées

Epoux / EpouseMātā Sundarī, 1667-1747
Beziehung familiaer. -- Ehefrau
Mātā Sundarī, 1667-1747
Beziehung familiaer. -- Ehefrau

Noms

RubriqueGobind Singh, Guru
utilisé dans: Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris
Gobinda Siṅgha, X., Guru
utilisé dans: Integrated Authority File (GND), Allemagne
Gobind Singh
utilisé dans: Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris
VarianteGobiṃda Siṃgha, X., Guru
Gobind Das
Panjabi
Gobind Rai
Panjabi
Gobind Singh
Gobind Singh, X., Guru
Gobind Singh Ji Maharaj
Panjabi
Gobinda Siṃha, Guru
Panjabi
Gobinda Siṅgha
Gobindasiṃha
Govind Singh
Govind Singh, Guru
Panjabi
Govind Singh, X., Guru
Govinda Siṃha
Govinda Siṃha, Guru
Hindi
Govinda Siṃha, X., Guru
Govinda Siṅgha, X., Guru
Guru Gobind Singh
Panjabi
Guru Govinda Siṃha
Hindi
Siṃgha, Gobiṃda, X., Guru
Siṃha, Govinda
Siṃha, Govinda, X., Guru
Singh, Gobind
Panjabi
Singh, Gobind, X., Guru
Singh, Govind, X., Guru
Singh Ji Maharaj, Gobind
Panjabi
Siṅgha, Gobinda
Siṅgha, Gobinda, X., Guru
Siṅgha, Govind, Guru, X
SWB-AK
Siṅgha, Govinda, X., Guru
Sri Guru Gobind Singh
गुरु गॊविन्द सिंह
Hindi
गॊविन्द सिंह, गुरु
Hindi
ਗੁਰੂ ਗੋਬਿੰਦ ਸਿੰਘ
Panjabi
ਗੋਬਿੰਦ ਸਿੰਘ, ਗੁਰੂ
Panjabi
ਗੋਬਿੰਦ ਸਿੰਘ, ੧੦, ਗੁਰੂ
[Gurmukhi]
ਸਿੰਘ, ਗੋਬਿੰਦ, ੧੦, ਗੁਰੂ
[Gurmukhi]
Gūband-Singh
Persian
گوبند سنگه
Persian
Singh, Gobind

Sources

Trouvé dansBEPI, 1979 : Gobind Singh. — Natl. bibliogr. of Indian lit. / gen. ed. B.S. Kesavan, 1970, vol. III, p. 249 : Gobind Singh. — A Dict. of indology / A.K. Roy, N.N. Gidwani, 1984 : Gobind Singh. — Encyclopaedia Indica / J.S. Sharma, 1975 : Gobind Singh. — Dict. de la civilisation indienne / L. Frédéric, 1987 : Govind Singh. — LC Authorities : Gobind Singh, Guru, 1666-1708 - http://authorities.loc.gov (2011-11-17). — BN Cat. 1980-1984. — BnF Service indien, 2011-11-17. — LCAuth. — LoC-NA. — Bachittar naatak : a weird, but preter natural and a terrestrial auto-biography / comp. by Guru Gobind Singh Ji Maharaj, 1978. — Jaap Sahib : the cosmology of Guru Gobind Singh / translated into French and English by Danielle Gill, Harjeet Singh Gill, 1994. — MSS Supplément persan 2049
SourcesBachittar naatak : a weird, but preter natural and a terrestrial auto-biography / comp. by Guru Gobind Singh Ji Maharaj, 1978
Jaap Sahib : the cosmology of Guru Gobind Singh / translated into French and English by Danielle Gill, Harjeet Singh Gill, 1994
depiction of ...
Object ID: 1998.95Designation: Guru Gobind SinghDate: approx. 1830Medium: Opaque watercolors on paperPlace of Origin: India | Punjab state | or | Pakistan | Punjab provinceCredit Line: Gift of the Kapany CollectionLabel: The religious leadership of Guru Nanak was continued after his death by several generations of disciples. By the time of Gobind Singh (1675- 1708), Sikhs were being persecuted and Sikh religious teachers dying in defense of their faith; Tegh Bahadur, the ninth guru and Gobind Singh' s father, was beheaded by the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb. In response to this persecution, Gobind Singh established the Khalsa (the Pure) as a community of Sikhs whose solidarity was proclaimed by participation in certain ceremonies and the adoption of such emblems as uncut hair. Gobind Singh organized these Sikhs into a military force, convincing them of the morality of their fight against oppression. The line of human gurus ended with the death of Gobind Singh. He appointed as his successor— and eternal guru— the Adi Granth (Primal Book), the holiest of Sikh texts.Portrait of the Tenth Guru, Gobind Singh, c. 1830, India or Pakistan, Punjab region, opaque watercolors and gold on paper, Asian Art Museum of San Francisco. Rendered in the manner of a princely equestrian portrait, this painting depicts Gobind Singh haloed and accompanied by three Sikh attendants.Culture: SikhSubject: portrait | horseOn display: noCollection: PAINTINGDimensions: H. 7 1/4 in x W. 6 in, H. 18.4 cm x W. 15.2 cm (image); H. 9 1/2 in x W. 8 1/4 in, H. 24.1 cm x W. 20.9 cm (overall)Department: SA
[Unknown authorUnknown author / http://67.52.109.59:8080/emuseum/view/objects/asitem/search$0040/1/title-asc/designation-asc?t:state:flow=976197da-6aa3-4624-8762-88c30dd1b633 -- Public domain -- http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Guru Gobind Singh.jpg]

Biographies

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