Fatehnama

Fatehnama
فتح نامه
Dasam Granth
First verse couplet of the Fatehnamah in Nastaliq Script
Information
ReligionSikhism
AuthorGuru Gobind Singh
LanguagePersian
Period1704–1705
Verses23 and a half couplets extant (more than 100 couplets originally)

Fatehnama (“The Book of Conquest”;[1] Punjabi: ਫਤਿਹਨਾਮਾ (Gurmukhi)فتہ ناما (Shahmukhi); Persian: فتح نامه [Fatehnameh]), also known as Namah-i-Guru Gobind Singh or the Jangnamah (Gurmukhi: ਜੰਗਨਾਮਾ, Farsi: جنگ نامه) is a Persian composition attributed to Guru Gobind Singh.[2][3] It was contained within the Dasam Granth.[2]

  1. ^ Melikian-Chirvani, Assadullah Souren (2002). "The Shāh-Nāme Echoes in Sikh Poetry and the Origins of the Nihangs' Name". Bulletin of the Asia Institute. 16: 1–23. ISSN 0890-4464. JSTOR 24049156.
  2. ^ a b Singha, H.S. (2005). The Encyclopedia of Sikhism (Over 1000 Entries) (2nd ed.). Hemkunt Press. p. 71. FATEH NAMA: Fateh Nama is a composition by Guru Gobind Singh included in the Dasam Granth. It is believed to have been addressed to Emperor Aurangzeb prior to his letter known as Zafarnama and sent to him from Jatpura near Jagraon after the battle at Chamkaur and before the Guru learnt of the martyrdom of his two younger sons. It is a short letter comprising 23½ couplets in Persian. The theme is similar to that of the Zafarnama, though the tone is severer.
  3. ^ Singh, Harbans (2011). The Encyclopedia of Sikhism. Vol. 2: E-L (3rd ed.). Punjabi University, Patiala. p. 20.