Target Exam

CUET

Subject

History

Chapter

Medieval India: Bhakti Sufi Traditions

Question:

Read the passage and answer the question:

Baba Guru Nanak (1469-1539) was born in a Hindu merchant family in a village called Nankana Sahib near the river Ravi in the predominantly Muslim Punjab. He trained to be an accountant and studied Persian. He was married at a young age but he spent most of his time among Sufis and bhaktas. He also traveled widely. The message of Baba Guru Nanak is spelled out in his hymns and teachings. These suggest that he advocated a form of nirguna bhakti. He firmly repudiated the external practices of the religions he saw around him. For Baba Guru Nanak, the Absolute or “rab” had no gender or form. He proposed a simple way to connect to the Divine by remembering and repeating the Divine Name, expressing his ideas through hymns called “shabad” in Punjabi, the language of the region. Baba Guru Nanak would sing these compositions in various ragas while his attendant Mardana played the rabab. Baba Guru Nanak organized his followers into a community. He set up rules for congregational worship (sangat) involving collective recitation.

Arrange the following Gurus Of Sikhism in chronological order:

A- Guru Tegh Bahadur
B- Guru Angad
C- Guru Gobind Singh
D- Guru Arjan

Choose the correct answer from the given options:

Options:

C, A, D, B

C, D, B, A

B, D, C, A

B, D, A, C

Correct Answer:

B, D, A, C

Explanation:

The correct answer is Option 4 - B, D, A, C

B- Guru Angad
D- Guru Arjan
A- Guru Tegh Bahadur
C- Guru Gobind Singh

The ten Sikh Gurus in order are:

  1. Guru Nanak Dev
  2. Guru Angad Dev
  3. Guru Amar Das
  4. Guru Ram Das
  5. Guru Arjan Dev
  6. Guru Har Gobind Singh
  7. Guru Har Rai
  8. Guru Har Krishan
  9. Guru Tegh Bahadur
  10. Guru Gobind Singh