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Mirabai
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===Sikh literature=== [[File: Manuscript of the Adi Granth from the Bhai Banno recension named "Bhai Banno Vali Bir", kept at Gurdwara Bhai Banno Sahib, Kanpur Uttar Pradesh, India.jpg|thumb|Manuscript of the [[Guru Granth Sahib|Adi Granth]] from the Bhai Banno [[recension]] named "Bhai Banno Vali Bir" which contains compositions of Mirabai within it. Kept at [[Gurdwara]] Bhai Banno Sahib, Kanpur Uttar Pradesh, India]] When the [[Guru Granth Sahib|Adi Granth]] was compiled in 1604, a copy of the text was given to a Sikh named Bhai Banno who was instructed by [[Guru Arjan]] to travel to Lahore to get it bound. While doing so, he made a copy of the codex, which included compositions of Mirabai. These unauthorized additions were not included in the standardized edition of the scripture by the Sikh gurus, who rejected their inclusion.<ref>Clary, Randi Lynn. '''Sikhing’a husband: Bridal imagery and gender in Sikh scripture''. Rice University, 2003.</ref><ref>Singh, Pashaura. "Recent Research and Debates in Adi Granth Studies." ''Religion Compass'' 2.6 (2008): 1004-1020.</ref><ref>Zelliot, Eleanor. "The Medieval Bhakti Movement in History: An Essay on the Literature in English." ''Hinduism''. Brill, 1982. 143-168.</ref><ref>Singh, Pashaura. "Scriptural adaptation in the Adi Granth." ''Journal of the American Academy of Religion'' 64.2 (1996): 337-357.</ref> ''Prem Ambodh Pothi'', a text attributed to [[Guru Gobind Singh]] and completed in 1693 CE, includes poetry of Mira Bai as one of sixteen historic ''bhakti saints'' important to [[Sikhism]].<ref>JS Hawley and GS Mann (2014), Culture and Circulation: Literature in Motion in Early Modern India (Editors: Thomas De Bruijn and Allison Busch), Brill Academic, {{ISBN|978-9004264472}}, pages 113-136</ref>
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