^Library of Congress. Library of Congress Office, New Delhi (1987).Accessions List, South Asia, Volume 6. E.G. Smith for the U.S. Library of Congress Office, New Delhi.
^Mahotsav, Amrit. "Battle of Dholpur in 1803". amritmahotsav.nic.inGovernment of India."At the same time, the British also helped the Jats led by Rana Kirat Singh, to win the Gohad region from the Scindias. As part of an arrangement made by the Company, Rana Kirat Singh was given Dholpur and the former took over Gohad. Thus, the Dholpur state was formed and Rana Kirat Singh was declared its ruler in 1805."
^Khan, Iqbal Ghani (2002). "Technology and the Question of Elite Intervention in Eighteenth-Century North India". In Barnett, Richard B. (ed.).Rethinking Early Modern India. Manohar Publishers & Distributors. p. 271.ISBN978-81-7304-308-6. "Thus we witness the Ruhelas accepting an exceptionally talented non-Afghan, an adopted Jat boy, as their nawab, purely on the basis of his military leadership; ..."
^Irvine, W. (1971).Later Mughal. Atlantic Publishers & Distri. p. 118. Retrieved30 July 2022.Once Daud was sent against the village of Bankauli, in pargana Chaumahla, with which his employer was at feud. Along with the plunder taken on this occasion Daud obtained possession of a Jat boy seven or eight years of age, whom he caused to be circumcised and then adopted under the name of Ali Muhammad Khan.
^Gupta, Hari Ram (1999) [1980].History of the Sikhs. Vol. III: Sikh Domination of the Mughal Empire (1764–1803) (2nd rev. ed.).Munshiram Manoharlal. p. 11.ISBN978-81-215-0213-9.OCLC165428303. "The real founder of the Rohilla power was Ali Muhammad, from whom sprang the present line of the Nawabs of Rampur. Originally a Hindu Jat, who was taken prisoner when a young boy by Daud in one of his plundering expeditions, at village Bankauli in the parganah of Chaumahla, and was converted to Islam and adopted by him."
^Low, D. A. (1991).Political Inheritance of Pakistan (illustrated ed.). Springer. p. 35.ISBN9781349115563."Other Sidhu Jat families established the state of Faridkot, the jagirs of Kaithal and Arnauli, and a host of lesser fiefs."
^Arora, A. C. (1984). "Ranjit Singh's Relations with the Jind State". In Singh, Fauja; Arora, A. C. (eds.).Maharaja Ranjit Singh: Politics, Society, and Economy.Punjabi University. p.86.ISBN978-81-7380-772-5.OCLC557676461. "Even before the birth of Ranjit Singh, cordial relations had been established between the Sukarchakia Misal and the Phulkian House of Jind. ... the two Sikh Jat chiefships had cultivated intimate relationship with each other by means of a matrimonial alliance. Maha Singh, the son of the founder of Sukarchakia Misal, Charat Singh, was married to Raj Kaur, the daughter of the founder of the Jind State, Gajpat Singh. The marriage was celebrated in 1774 at Badrukhan, then capital of Jind1, with pomp and grandeur worthy of the two chiefships. ... Ranjit Singh was the offspring of this wedlock."