Suku Gurjar (Indonesian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Suku Gurjar" in Indonesian language version.

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  • Mayaram, Shail (2017). "The Story of the Gujars". Dalam Vijaya Ramaswamy. Migrations in Medieval and Early Colonial India. Taylor & Francis. hlm. 67. ISBN 978-1-351-55825-9. The heterogenous category that is variously called gujar/Gujjar/Gurjara. 
  • Mayaram, Shail (2017). "The Story of the Gujars". Dalam Vijaya Ramaswamy. Migrations in Medieval and Early Colonial India. Taylor & Francis. hlm. 67. ISBN 978-1-351-55825-9. 
  • Kothiyal, Tanuja (14 March 2016). Nomadic Narratives: A History of Mobility and Identity in the Great Indian Desert (dalam bahasa Inggris). Cambridge University Press. hlm. 249–250. ISBN 978-1-107-08031-7. The cultural image of the Gujar is of an ignorant herder though the historical claims of Gujar past also associate them with Gurjara-Pratiharas, with long migrations through Thar. However, as the Devnarayan epic reveals, any Rajput link that the Gujars may claim, comes from multi-caste marriages that are contracted in the course of the epic rather than any other claim to descent from the older kshatriya clan. The original ancestor of the Gujars is a Rajput, who marries a Brahmin woman. 
  • Kothiyal, Tanuja (14 March 2016). Nomadic Narratives: A History of Mobility and Identity in the Great Indian Desert (dalam bahasa Inggris). Cambridge University Press. hlm. 265. ISBN 978-1-107-08031-7. from gradual transformation of mobile patoral and tribal groups into landed sedentary ones. The process of settlement involved both control over mobile resources through raids, battles and trade as well as channelizing of these resources into agrarian expansion. Kinship structures as well as marital and martial alliances were instrumental in this transformation. ... In the colonial ethnographic accounts rather than referring to Rajputs as having emerged from other communities, Bhils, Mers, Minas, Gujars, Jats, Raikas, all lay a claim to a Rajput past from where they claim to have 'fallen'. Historical processes, however, suggest just the opposite. 
  • Baij Nath Puri (1975). The History of the Gurjara-Pratihāras. Oriental Publishers & Distributors. hlm. 14–17. 
  • Singh 2012, hlm. 48 & 51.

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  • "Nuristan". Program for Culture & Conflict Studies. Naval Postgraduate School. October 2009. Diakses tanggal 4 November 2013. 

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