WELLESLEY PAPERS. Private correspondence and letters of Lord Wellesley, Governor-General of India (1798-1805), at the British Library and Museum, London, important for the light it throws on British policy towards the cis-Sutlej region and towards the Sikh Darbār. Part of this correspondence relating to the Afghān threat to British India in the closing decade of the eighteenth century has been published in Martin R. Montogomery's The Despatches, Minutes and Correspondence of the Marquess of Wellesley (London, 1836-37, 5 volumes), and R.P. Pearse's Memoirs (London, 1846, 3 vols.).

        The correspondence dealing with Shāh Zamān's apprehended invasion of India was published in the Blue Book, XV (ii), 1806.

        Some of the important documents in the Wellesley Papers are correspondence with the President, Board of Control, regarding the possibility of a Sikh Afghān coalition for an invasion of Delhi and Oudh (1798); letters and Home Government despatches to Wellesley pertaining to the possible Sikh Afghān-French-Ṭīpū Marāṭhā combination against the British Indian Government and the latter's measures to counteract the apprehended threat (1798-99).

BIBLIOGRAPHY

    Hasrat, B.J., The Punjab Papers. Hoshiarpur, 1970

B. J. Hasrat