Home
Contact Us
Sitemap
Tuesday Mar 16, 2010
Introduction
Sikh Gurus
Sikh History
Sikh Way of Life
Sikh Gurudwaras
Sikh Scriptures
Sikh Youth
Sikhism Review
Resources
Home
Site Search
Main Menu
Home
Sikh Gurus
Historical Events
Sikh Scriptures
Gurudwaras:India
Gurudwaras :Pakistan
Gurudwaras World
Golden Temple
Sikh Way of Life
Sikh Youth
Sikh Warriors
Sikh Martyrs
Sikh Women
Famous Sikhs
Sikh Ethics
Sikh Prayers
Sikhism FAQs
Sikh History Timeline
Guru Stories
Punjab
Punjabi Cuisine
Sikh Organisations
Glossary of SikhTerms
Sikh Matrimonials
Europeans in Sikh History
Paypal Donate
Translate Site
Select Language
English
Arabic
Bulgarian
Chinese (Simplified)
Chinese (Traditional)
Croatian
Czech
Danish
Dutch
Finnish
French
German
Greek
Hindi
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Norwegian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Spanish
Swedish
Catalan
Filipino
Hebrew
Indonesian
Latvian
Lithuanian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Albanian
Estonian
Galician
Hungarian
Maltese
Thai
Turkish
Persian
Afrikaans
Malay
Swahili
Irish
Welsh
Belarusian
Icelandic
Macedonian
Yiddish
Search
Search Keyword:
Search
All words
Any words
Exact Phrase
Ordering:
Newest First
Oldest First
Most Popular
Alphabetical
Section/Category
Search Only:
Articles
Menus
Categories
Sections
Search Keyword
talvandi
Total: 58 results found.
Display #
5
10
15
20
25
30
50
100
All
Page 1 of 6
1.
Bhatinda District
(Punjab/Punjab Districts)
... by train to Bhatinda and then proceed to Talwandi Sabo by road. According to Bhai Santokh Singh, Sri Gur Pratap Suraj Granth, Guru Gobind Singh, during his stay at
Talvandi
Sabo visited Bathinda in 1706 ...
2.
Bala Janam Sakhi
(Scriptures/Scriptures)
Bala Janam Sakhi BALA JANAM SAKHI, The Janam Sakhis of the Bala tradition owe both their name and their reputation to Bhai Bala, a SandhuJa^ from Guru Nanak's village of
Talvandi
. According ...
3.
Bhai Jai Ram
(Biographies/Gurus Family Members)
... Punjab. He was married to Bibi Nanaki, daughter of Kalian Chand and sister of Guru Nanak, in 1475 at
Talvandi
Rai Bhoi. Guru Nanak stayed with them for several years at Sultanpur, where Bhai Jai Ram had ...
4.
Bhai Jai Ram
(Biographies/Gurus Family Members)
... He was married to Bibi Nanaki, daughter of Kalian Chand and sister of Guru Nanak, in 1475 at
Talvandi
Rai Bhoi. Guru Nanak stayed with them for several years at Sultanpur, where Bhai Jai Ram had secured ...
5.
Baba Lalu
(Biographies/Gurus Family Members)
Baba Lalu Baba Lalu (1444-1542), paternal uncle of Guru Nanak and the son of Baba Shiv Ram and Mata Banarasi, was born at
Talvandi
Rai Bhoi, present-day Nankana Sahib in Pakistan. He was the younger ...
6.
Mata Tripta Ji
(Biographies/Gurus Family Members)
... have been brought up by Mata Banarasi,2 his paternal grandmother. She was the mother of two sons, Kalu and Lalu, and wife of Shiv Ram, resident of
Talvandi
Rai Bhoi Ki, now called Nankana Sahib. Much ...
7.
Bhai Kalu Mehta
(Biographies/Gurus Family Members)
... in present-day Amritsar district of Punjab. Before the birth of Nanak, the family moved to
Talvandi
Rai Bhoi Ki, now known as Nankana Sahib, in presentday Sheikliupura district of Pakistan. Here Baba Shiv ...
8.
Baba Rama
(Biographies/Gurus Family Members)
... Ki
Talvandi
(near Lahore). She moved to the present-day Nankana Sahib, which is the modern name of Rai Bhoe Ki
Talvandi
. It was in Nankana Sahib that Guru Nanak was born; the founder of the Sikh faith. ...
9.
Mata Bhirai
(Biographies/Gurus Family Members)
... Mata Tripta, who was destined to become Nanak's mother. When Mata Tripta was married to Mahita Kalu, as was the custom then, she move to the residence of her husband which was Rai Bhoe Ki
Talvandi
(near ...
10.
Baba Shiv Ram
(Biographies/Gurus Family Members)
... now the site of Gurdwara Dera Sahib, 10 km east of Naushahra Pannuan in present-day Amritsar district of Punjab. At some point before the birth of Nanak, they moved to the village of Rai Bhoi Ki
Talvandi
, ...
«
Start
Prev
1
2
3
4
5
6
Next
End
»
Sponsored Links
No material from the Site be reproduced or used by anyone without the written permission from Gateway to Sikhism.