Bagrian

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English[edit]

Proper noun[edit]

Bagrian

  1. A village in Sangrur District, in Punjab, India.
    • 1884, Thomas Gordon Walker, Final report on the revision of settlement, 1878-83, of the Ludhiána district in the Panjáb[1], page 61:
      There are two or three famous Langars or almshouses, well known throughout the country. That of Bagrián lies 40 miles south of Ludhiána.
    • 1987, William Hewat MacLeod, Karine Schomer, The Sants: studies in a devotional tradition of India, Motilal Banarsidass, →ISBN, page 261:
      Bagrian is in Ludhiana District [not true in 2006], seven and one half miles north-west of Nabha [correct].
    • 1996, Joseph Davey Cunningham, H.L.O. Garrett, History of the Sikhs from the Origin of the Nation to the Battles of the Sutlej, Asian Educational Services, →ISBN, page 62:
      Dharam Singh, the ancestor of the respectable Bhais of Bagrian, a place between the Sutlej and Jumna, was likewise a follower of Har Rai.

Anagrams[edit]