SGGS - History - Summary
A brief history and summary of the Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji.
The Guru Granth Sahib as is popularly known today was originally called POTHI from the time of Guru Nanak. In 1539 he handed the first Pothi to Guru Angad Dev. It was passed to Guru Amardas and Guru Ramdas and it was in 1601 that Guru Arjan Dev Ji started compiling the Granth Sahib. He completed the Granth Sahib in 1604. In August 1604 he installed the Granth at Harmandir Sahib and named it " POTHI SAHIB".
The scribe for the Pothi Sahib was Bhai Gurdas, who was a maternal uncle of Guru Arjan. In 1605, Empror Akbar examined the Granth in detail after receiving complaints from various jealous quarters - both Hindu & Muslim. Akbar, however liked it very much for its divinity. He summoned the complainants and punished them and as a mark of respect offered 51 Gold Coins for the Granth.
The Granth stayed in Amritsar from 1604 till 1635. It was then moved to Kirtarpur Sahib by Guru Hargobind. In 1644, this original Granth was stolen by Dhirmal - a grandson of Guru Hargobind.
In 1706 a second version of the Granth was compiled by Guru Gobind Singh. The scribe for this was Bhai Mani Singh - a classmate of Guru Gobind Singh. Four copies of this Granth were made by Bhai Deep Singh.
In 1708, Granth Sahib was declared the spiritual Guru of the Sikhs by Guru Gobind Singh at Nanded in the Southern part of India - now known as Hazur Sahib.
The Guru Granth Sahib is composed of 1430 pages in total. The details of the composers of the Bani are as follows:-
| A. | Gurus | No. of Compositions |
| 1. GURU NANAK | 972 | |
| 2. GURU ANGAD | 62 | |
| 3. GURU AMARDAS | 907 | |
| 4. GURU RAMDAS | 679 | |
| 5. GURU ARJAN | 2,218 | |
| 6. GURU HARGOBIND | Tune of 9 Vaars out of 22 | |
| 7. GURU TEGH BAHADUR | 115 | |
| 8. GURU GOBIND SINGH | 1 Page 1429 |
| B. | Relatives of Sikh Gurus | No. of Compositions |
| Baba Sundar | 1 Page 966 | |
| C. | Bards of Gurus | |
| Mardana | 3 Page 553 | |
| Sata & Balvand | 1 Page 966 | |
| D. | Bhagats | |
| Sheikh Farid | 134 | |
| Jai Dev | 2 | |
| Kabir | 541 | |
| Namdev | 60 | |
| Ravidas | 41 | |
| Beni | 3 | |
| Trilochan | 4 | |
| Ramanand | 1 | |
| Dhanna | 4 | |
| Bhikhan | 2 | |
| Sadhna | 1 | |
| Pipa | 1 | |
| Sain | 1 | |
| Paramanand | 1 | |
| Surdas | 1 | |
E . |
Court ( House of Gurus) Poets | |
| Swayas in praise of the first 5 Gurus | 123 |
In the compilation of the Bani, at least 10 different languages have been used in the Guru Granth Sahib. The main languages and their authors are listed below.
| 1 | Arabic | Namdev. |
| 2 | Sanskrit | Guru Nanak, Guru Arjan & Others. |
| 3 | Persian | Guru Arjan |
| 4 | Punjabi | All Gurus who composed , Sheikh Farid & Others. |
| 5 | Hindi | Kabir |
| 6 | Sindhi | Guru Arjan |
| 7 | Lehndhi | Guru Arjan |
| 8 | Dakhi | Guru Arjan |
| 9 | Bengali | Jaidev |
| 10 | Marathi | Nam Dev & Trilochan. |
All the Bani in the Guru Granth Sahib is classified in different Ragas except for the first Hymn JAPJI & the Swayas and Sloks at the end.
NOTE: This information has been compiled from a few Sikh Historians who are well known in the Sikh World.