Sir Charles Wilkins,
the writer of the following observations on The Sikhs and their
College at Patna as an eminent orientalist of his times (1749 or
1750-1836). He was the son of the famous Walter Wilkins and was
born in 1749 or 1750. At the age of about twenty-one he arrived
in Bengal in 1770 as a writer in the East India Company's service.
Like most of the Englishmen of those days, he was highly interested
in the study of oriental languages. He devoted his leisure hours
to the study of Sanskrit and was the first Englishman to acquire
a thorough knowledge of that language and published a grammer of
it in 1779. Under the patronage of the then Governor General. Warren
Hastings, he translated the Hindu religious philosophical work,
the Bhagavad-Gita and deciphered many Sanskrit inscriptions. He
himself prepared the first Bengali and Persian types and set up
a printing-press at Calcutta for the oriental languages. He was
the right hand of Sir William Jones of revered memory in founding
the Asiatic Society of Bengal (later the Royal Asiatic Society of
Bengal), now the Asiatic Society at Calcutta and establishing the
well-known series of the Asiatick Researches.
After sixteen years' stay in India he returned
to England in 1786 and published his translations of the Sanskrit
book of fables, the Hitopdesha, and of Kalidas's drama Shakuntala.
In 1800 he was made the custodian of the vast collection of oriental
manuscripts taken away from the library of Tipu Sultan at Seringapatam,
and he was the first Librarian of the India House Library, London.
He was also a scholar of Islamic literature
and, in 1806, he edited Richardsons' Persian and Arabic Dictionary
which speaks so highly of the depth of Wilkin's learning. Two years
later in 1808 he produced another Sanskrit Grammer which was a greatly
an improved, or rather a re-written, edition of his first work on
the subject. In addition to these works he wrote a large number
of valuable papers on Indian subjects which created a good deal
of interest in England about the people of this country
For his deep scholarship and services to the
cause of literature, the University of Oxford conferred upon him
the degree of the Doctor of Civil Law (D. C. L.), and the Royal
Asiatic Society of Literature gave him their medal as "Princeps
Literature Sanskrita," and he was elected as an Associate of
the French Institute. He was also an LL. D. (Legum Doctor=Doctor
of Laws) and an F. R. S. (Fellow of the Royal Society). King George
IV was pleased to Knight him in 1833 and give him the badge of the
Guelphic Order. Three years later, Sir Charles Wilkins died on May
13, 1836, laden with honours and international fame as a pioneer
scholar of oriental literature.
These observations of Sir Charles on the 'Sikhs
and their College at Patna' were written for the Asiatic Society
from Benares on March 1. 1781, after he had paid a visit to the
Sikh temple Takht-Sahib (popularly known as Harmandir Sahib), the
birth-place of Guru Gobind Singh, on his way to that city, and were
published in the Asiatick Researches or Transactions of the Society,
1788. This is the first known account of the Sikh institutions written
by an Englishman, the only other accounts in English of any importance
written before this being from the pen of a French-Swiss gentleman
Major (afterwards Colonel) Antonie Louis Henri Polier (1741-1795)
written in 1780 as a memoir, and in 1776 in his letter of May 22
from Delhi to Colonel Ironside at Belgram.
I consider these observations of the learned
writer interesting and worthy of the attention of the students of
history and religion, and this is my only apology for placing them
before the readers after the lapse of over a century and a half.
It appears that like most of the other Sikh
temples in the country in those days, the Patna temple also was
running a flourishing Pathshala under the guidance of the priests.
It is, perhaps, therefore, that he calls the temple a 'College'.
There may be another reason also. The Schools
and Colleges were then called Dharamshalas or Pathshalas. The Gentleman
with whom Wilkins happened to be conversing about the Sikhs might
have called the temple a Sikh Dharamshala, as the Sikh temples are
so often called. This might also have led Wilkins to suppose that
it was a Sikh College.
It is most gratifying to find that the views
of the Sikhs in respect of their temples were as modern in the eighteenth
century as men of twentieth century are expected to hold. Every
man of whatever caste or creed was allowed to enter them. When Wilkins
asked the Sikhs present there "if
I might ascend into the hall. They said it was a place of worship
open to me and to all men". There were no restrictions
on the admission of anyone into the Sikh brotherhood, if he were
willing to be initiated into it. Wilkins tells us that they offered
to admit him into it.
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