Read Empire of the Sikhs Online
Authors: Patwant Singh
Ranjit Singh's relationships with,
15
,
68â74
,
81
,
153â71
role in Sikh society,
57â8
,
73
,
219
Yahiya Khan (Mughal commander),
49
,
53
Yar Mohammad Khan Barakzai,
122â3
,
183
Zakariya Khan, governor,
47
,
49
,
53
Zam Zama (gun),
115
Zaman Shah, governor,
52â3
,
65â7
,
72â3
,
109
,
111
Zapata, Emiliano,
209
Zorawar Singh (son of Guru Gobind Singh),
42â3
Maharaja Ranjit Singh Listening to the Guru Granth Sahib at the Golden Temple
by August Theodor Schoefft,
c.
1850
Woodcuts depicting the Gurus (above) and (below) the Harmandir Sahib (Golden Temple), both dating from
c.
1870
An early watercolour showing traditional Sikh warriors
A study of Sikh arms and armour by W.G. Osborne, 1838; published in his book
The Court and Camp of Runjeet Sing,
1840
A late-eighteenth-century steel and gold sikh helmet
Mid-nineteenth-century jewelled Sikh shield with hunting scenes
Ranjit Singh on horseback with his army; sketch by W.G. Osborne, 1838; published in
The Court and Camp of Runjeet Sing
Ranjit Singh's sword. Mounts are of solid gold with an emblem of a lion on guard on the sword hilt. The blade is made of watered steel.
The two Dogra brothers: Gulab Singh by C.S. Hardinge, 1846 (left) and Dhian Singh
Raja Lal Singh (left) and Raj Tej Singh; both watercolour on ivory
Ranjit Singh in 1838, drawn by Emily Eden
Fakir Azizuddin, Ranjit Singh's confidant, by W.O. Osborne, 1838, published in
The Court and Camp of Runjeet Sing