Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Urdu-speaking people

Urdu-speaking people
اہلِ زبانِ اردو
The phrase Zuban-e-Urdu-e-Mualla or "Language of the Exalted Camp"
Total population
68.62 million[1] (2019)
Regions with significant populations
India (diasporic Urdu Belt, a regional belt that consists of Hindi-Urdu belt states, many speakers live in various cities in Deccan Plateau)
Pakistan (Muhajirs in Karachi, Hyderabad & mainly across large cities in Sindh and other large Pakistani cities)
 India50,772,631 (2011)[2]
 Pakistan14,706,159 - 30,000,000 (2017 census & 2013)[3][4][5][a]
 United States397,502 (2013)[6]
United Kingdom United Kingdom270,000 (2011)[7]
 Canada210,815 (2016)[8]
 Australia69,131 (2016)[9]
Languages
Urdu
Religion
Islam, small minority Christianity and Judaism

  • ^a The figure for Pakistan includes only first language Urdu-speakers, known as Muhajirs, and not other ethnic groups of Pakistan who may fluently speak Urdu as a first or second language, numbering up to an additional 94 million.[10]

Native speakers of Urdu are spread across South Asia.[note 1][11][12] The vast majority of them are Muslims of the Hindi–Urdu Belt of northern India,[note 2][13][14][15] followed by the Deccani people of the Deccan plateau in south-central India (who speak Deccani Urdu), and most of the Muhajir people of Pakistan.[16][5] The historical centres of Urdu speakers include Delhi and Lucknow.[17][18] Another defunct variety of the language was historically spoken in Lahore for centuries before the name "Urdu" first began to appear. However, little is known about this defunct Lahori variety as it has not been spoken for centuries.[19]

The term "Urdu-speakers" does not encompass culturally non-native speakers who may use Urdu as a first or second language, which would additionally account for a much larger number of total speakers in South Asia.[10]

History

From the early Muslim kingdoms developed Indian Muslim clan-groups who were well-rooted social groups that acted as warrior lineages providing court officers and military soldiers. These evolving communities or tribes played a key role in providing a local Muslim leadership.[20] The language developed at the time of Sultans of Dehli due to the mixture of people, likely to be soldiers, from Turkish, Arabic, Persian, Afghan and Indian background.

Mughal Empire

As early as 1689, Europeans used the label "Moors dialect", which simply meant "Muslim",[21] to describe Urdu, the language associated with the Muslims in North India,[22] such as John Ovington, who visited India during the reign of Mughal emperor Aurangzeb:[23]

The language of the Moors is different from that of the ancient original inhabitants of India, but is oblig'd to these Gentiles for its characters. For though the Moors dialect is peculiar to themselves, yet it is destitute of Letters to express it; and therefore in all their Writings in their Mother Tongue, they borrow their letters from the Heathens, or from the Persians, or other Nations.

Fall of the Mughal Empire

The rural Upper Doab and Rohilkhand was dominated by a literate and homogenous elite, who embraced a distinctive Indo-Persian style of culture. This service gentry, performing both clerical and military service for the Mughal empire and its successor states, provided cultural and literary patronage that contninued, even after the political decilne, to act as preservers of Indo-Persian traditions and values.[24]

The end of Muslim rule saw a large number of unemployed Indian Muslim horsemen, who were employed in the army of the East India Company.[26] Thus 75% of the cavalry branch of the British army was composed of a social group referred to as the "Hindustani Mahomedans". This included Indian Muslim Baradaris of the Urdu-Hindustani Belt such as the Ranghar (Rajput Muslims), Sheikhs, Sayyids, Mughals, and Indianized Pathans.[27][28] British officers such as Skinner, Gardner and Hearsay had become leaders of irregular cavalry that preserved the traditions of Mughal cavalry, which had a political purpose because it absorbed pockets of cavalrymen who might otherwise become disaffected plunderers.[29] The Governor-general insisted that it was incumbent upon the British to "give military employment" to various north Indian Muslim soldiers, particularly those "formerly engaged in military service of the Native powers".[30] The lingua franca spoken in the army was a form of Urdu referred to in colonial usage as "military Hindustani".[31]

7th Hussars, charging a body of the Mutineer's Cavalry, Alam Bagh, Lucknow

The Indian Rebellion of 1857 was initiated by the 3rd Bengal Light Cavalry in Meerut, which was composed mainly of Indian Muslims.[32] The mutineers made for Delhi, where its garrison revolted, massacring its British population, and installed Bahadur Shah Zafar as its nominal leader. The spread of the word that the British had been expelled from Delhi, interpreted as the breakdown of British authority, acted as a catalyst for mutiny as well as revolt. Regiments in other parts of northern India only revolted after Delhi had fallen.[33] British characterizations of Muslims as fanatics took the fore during and after the Great Rebellion, as well as produced the Indian Muslims as a unified, cogent group, who were easily agitated, aggressive, and inherently disloyal.[34]

Urdu nationalism

Syed Ahmed Khan and Mohsin-ul-Mulk

Even in later days, the same clans were dominant groups in the associations in the defence of Urdu and district Muslim Leagues which were among the first forays of Muslims into electoral and pressure-group politics.[35] In the19th century, Sir Syed Ahmed Khan and his followers such as Mohsin-ul-Mulk further advocated for the adoption of Urdu as the language of Indian Muslims, and led organizations such as the Anjuman-i Taraqqi-i Urdu and Urdu Defence Association, which won popular support in the Aligarh Movement and the Deoband Movement.[36] It was made the official language of British India in 1825 and got large opposition from the Hindus and thus sparking the Hindi-Urdu controversy in 1867. This resulted in Sir Syed's Two Nation Theory in 1868. The Urdu language was used in the emergence of a political Muslim self-consciousness.[37] Syed Ahmed Khan converted the existing cultural and religious entity among Indian Muslims into a separatist political force, throwing a Western cloak of nationalism over the Islamic concept of culture. Furthermore, in 2008 Syed Nadeem Ahmed brought forward the idea of Urdu Nationalism by presenting his theory of "Urdu Qaum" based on Urdu language and culture. The distinct sense of value, culture and tradition among Indian Muslims originated from the nature of Islamization of the Indian populace during the Muslim conquests in the Indian subcontinent.[38]

Clans

The Biradari, a term of Persian origin literally translating to "brotherhood",[39] is the word used for a social unit based on kinship such as tribe or clan.[40] The chief of the Biradari is the "Sardar", who is usually an elder man annually elected as the greatest man in the Biradari. Decisions on important matters are taken only after consulting the Biradari, and once taken binding on every member, especially in rural life.[41]

Despite their tribal geneaologies tracing to foreign regions, these elites embellished rural seats and traditions within India, developing a sense of pride in home (watan). Families of Muslim service people from gentry families were bound together by tight marriage alliances, which often became permanent arrangements.[42] Bitter factionalism over between clans over land-rights was also a common feature of society.[43]

Bilgrami

The Sadaat-i Bilgram are a tribe of Indian Muslim Sayyid families who inhabit the historic district of Bilgram in Hardoi district.[44] The Bilgrami Sayyid were important power brokers in the southern part of Awadh, and remained an important and influential clan, throughout the Middle Ages.[45] The Bilgrami Sayyids were supporters of the Indo-Muslim Shaikhzada faction of Munim Khan II during the reign of the Emperor Bahadur Shah I. When Ruh-ul-Amin Khan of Bilgram reportedly entered state service with only 60 horsemen and foot soldiers, the Grand Vizier Munim Khan created him a mansab of 6000 and made him his close associate.[46]

In the 20th century, Syed Hussain Bilgrami was one of the early leaders of the Muslim League.[47]

Barha

The Barha tribe of Sayyids are an Indian Muslim community claiming Zaidi Sayyid descent who are named after the Barha country in Uttar Pradesh between Meerut and Saharanpur.[48] Their settlements, known as Qasbas, are named Behra Sadaat.[49] Due to their reputation for bravery, to the point of recklessness, the Barah tribe held the hereditary right to lead the vanguard of the Army of the Mughal Empire in every battle.[50][51] 6 years after Aurangzeb's death, the Barha Sayyid nobles became highly influential in the Mughal Court under leadership of the Sayyid Brothers, Qutb-ul-Mulk and Hussain Ali Khan, who became de-facto sovereigns of the empire when they began to make and unmake emperors.[52][53] The Sayyids had developed a sort of common brotherhood among themselves and took up the cause of every individual as an insult to the whole group and an infringement to the rights of Sayyids in general.[54]

In the 20th century, Mohsin-ul-Mulk founded the Urdu Defence Association, or the Anjuman-i Taraqqi-i Urdu, committed to the perpetuation of the Urdu language.[4][55]

Alvi

The former president of Pakistan, Arif Alvi

The Alvis (the term derived from the Arabic term al-Alawi, meaning 'of Ali') are those who claim descent from the 4th Rashidun caliph, Ali ibn Abi Talib (the cousin, son-in-law, and companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad), through his wives whom he married after the death of Fatima, the prophet's daughter. In the Indian subcontinent, they settled mainly in Hyderabad and present-day Uttar Pradesh. The former president of Pakistan, Arif Alvi belongs to the same Alvi clan.[56] Like Urdu-speaking people, the Alvis of Kakori are referred to as Moulvizadigan (Moulvis) or Makhdûmzadigan (Makhdûms) indicating whether they are descendants of Mullah Abu Bakr Jami Alavi, who settled in Kakori in 1461 or descendants of Qari Amir Saifuddin Alavi, who settled in Kakori in 1552, they are mostly known as Shaikh.[57]

Ansari

Mughal Portrait of Lutfullah Khan Sadiq Panipati

The Ansaris who claim origin from the descendants of Abu Ayyub al-Ansari (the stand-bearer of the Islamic prophet, in Medina), mainly through the 13th century Khwaja Abdullah Pir Haravi, inhabited the town of Panipat.[58] Prominent Ansaris in the pre-modern era include Lutfullah Khan Sadiq, the governor of Shahjahanabad under the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah. His brother Sher Afkan Panipati possessed an armed train composed solely of Indian Muslims or Hindustanis.[59] In the modern era, the Urdu poet Altaf Hussain Hali,[60] wrote the book Musaddas-e Hali is considered by Pakistani scholars as an important text leading to the development of the Pakistan Movement.[61][62] Many other towns were also inhabited by the descendants of Abdullah Ansari. Lucknow's Firangi Mahal is home to many Ansari scholars, Saharanpur, Kakori, Gorakhpur, Aligarh and Yusufpur.[63] Indian political activist Muhammad Mian Mansoor Ansari hailed from the Saharanpur branch of the family. Many great figures also arose from the Yusufpur branch of the family such as Dr. Mukhtar Ahmed Ansari, Qazi Faridul Haq Ansari, Shaukatullah Shah Ansari and former Indian Vice-President, Hamid Ansari.[64][65]

Ranghar

The Ranghar were classified as an "agricultural tribe" by the British Raj administration and were recruited heavily in the British Indian Army ,[66] especially in Skinner's Horse. the Ranghars were the nucleus of the 3rd Bengal Light Cavalry which captured Delhi in 1857[27]

Barabasti

Barabasti refers to a Biradari of Indian Pathans named after their origin from twelve villages known as Barah Basti in Bulandshahr, where "Barah" means "twelve" in Hindustani, similar to the naming of the Indian Muslim Barah Sayyids of Muzaffarnagar.[67] Like other Pathans in Northern India, they are quite Indian in language, manners and appearance.[68] In the War of 1857, Abdul Latif Khan of Khanpur, the head of the Barah Basti Pathans raised the standard of revolt against the East India Company,[69] writing a petition to the Mughal Emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar promising to come to the Dehli court, and to bring some elephants with him, representing that he had been unwell.[70] Nawab Walidad Khan of Malagarh occupied Aligarh and Khurja and attracted to his standard the fanatic Muslims of Barah Basti community from which many of the sowars of the Irregular Cavalry were recruited, along with the Sayyids of Shikarpur,[71] and his 'near relation' Ismail Khan, who was the kotwal of Meerut and had served in the Skinner's Horse.[72]

Lalkhani

The Lalkhanis are Muslim Rajput converts from the Bargujar tribe, who assimilated to Lalkhani identity after their conversion.[73] The Lalkhanis held estates in the districts of Bulandshahr.[74] Nahar Ali Khan, who received the Taluqa of Pitampur from the Emperor Shah Alam II in 1774, offered resistance against the East India Company with his nephew Dunde Khan.[75] Mir Muhammad Baquar Ali Khan was the Raja Of Pindrawal while Nawab Saeed-ul-Mulk Chhatari, the last Prime Minister of the Nizam of Hyderabad, was one of the most prominent politicians of the All-India Muslim League.[73]

Gardezi

The Gardezi tribe of Manikpur are an Indian community of Sayyids who had settled in Manikpur since the 12th century.[76] In the 1700s, Raji Muhammad Khan who belonged to the Gardezi tribe of Manikpur was the Mir-i-Atish, or artillery chief, of the Mughal Emperor Jahandar Shah after he had blown up prince Jahan Shah's powder magazines.[77]

Bangash

Nawab Muhammad Khan Bangash ca 1730

The first immigrants to Mau were the descendants of the Khwaja Bayazid Ansari, the ethnic Ormur leader and founder of the Roshaniyya movement who had settled in Mau and Shamsabad. Muhammad Khan Bangash, the first Hindustani Pathan mercenary,[78][79] was rewarded with the jagir of Farrukhabad area.[80] He was so illiterate that he did not understand a single word of Persian or Pashto.[81][82] Being few in number, the bulk of Muhammad Khan's soldiers were elite slaves known as 'disciples', primarily Hindu Rajputs and sometimes Brahmins who were adopted, converted to Islam and submitted to a regime of religious, literary and military training which was focused on the transformation of the recruit's identity, who played a significant role as a kind of artificial family in-group attached to their patron. Before Muhammad Khan's death, the separation between the various tribes and castes broke down, forming a homogenous group, so that Muhammad Khan had founded his own Indian Muslim tribe or caste. To increase his independence from his nobles further, he continued to encourage immigration of Pashtuns of the Bangash and Afridi clan in Tirah. In India they were referred to as qaum-i-bangash which became a wider and more diffused label. [83]

Turk

1.5 million residents in the regions of Moradabad, Amroha and Sambhal, belonging to an Indian Muslim brotherhood descending from Turks, primarily from the era of the Delhi Sultanate. According to Professor Abhay Singh, these community originate from the era of the Turkan-e-Chahalgani, the Corps of Forty Turkic slave emirs, whose power was broken up by Ghiyas ud din Balban, and as a result they fled and settled down in the different villages of Katehr, near Badayun which was an important centre of the empire. They primarily speak Urdu and are Indian Muslims in customs, traditions, and language.[84] Suspicious of outside interference, the Turk villages are closely knit together into a Biradari (brotherhood) whose affairs are controlled by annually elected Sardars, the chief of the Biradari. they control all the activities of the community both internally and in relation with the outside world. The delinquent is severely ostracised which in their parlance, the man punished is not respectable enough to smoke the same Huqqa or drink from the same bowl as the honourable Biradari. If the offender repends and expresses a desire to retrieve his guilt, he must atone by means of a grand feast to the community. Occasions of celebration in the villages include the event of Ghazi Salar Masud's invasion on his way to Bahraich, which are celebrated with wrestling and fencing matches.[85]

Amrohi Sadaat

The 7th Irregular cavalry recruited a large number of Indian Sayyids from the Bareilly region, as well as Indian Pathans and Muslim Rajputs.[86]

The Sadaat-i-Amroha belong mainly to the Naqvi sub-group, because they are descendants of the Sufi saint Syed Sharfuddin Shah Wilayat. The Amrohi Sayyids formed the military and service gentry of the region in the Mughal empire.[87] Amroha became a hereditary jagir, as the family of Saiyyid Khwaja Ahmad Khan, sadat-i-Amroha, held pargana Amroha in their jagir for about a hundred years.[88] When the Marathas invaded and plundered Rohilkhand, the country of Western Uttar Pradesh was burnt with the exception of Amroha owing to a few thousand Amrohi Sayyid soldiers that drove out and conciliated with the Marathas.[89] According to the Urdu poet, Mir Taqi Mir, it was a Sayyid of Amroha, Syed Sadaat Ali, who convinced him to pursue poetry in Urdu, the verse which resembled Persian poetry, which was the "language of Hindustan by the authority of the king".[90][91]

Rohillas of Shahjahanpur

The first use of the term Rohilla was in the 1600s, to refer to the community of Diler Khan Rohilla, who was born in India,[92] and was the founder of his community in Shahjahanpur and Hardoi.[93] This community over generations had become culturally closer to the Awadh than to the Rohillas of Rampur, and sympathized with the Nawab of Awadh.[94] A large number were recruited in the army of Ghulam Muhammad Khan of Rampur during the Second Rohilla War. A large number led by Diler Khan betrayed the Nawab of Rampur and defected to the side of the Nawab of Awadh.[95][96][97] Khan Barkat Ali Khan who belonged to the Shahjahanpur Pathans as a risaldar rendered services to the British during the Anglo-Sikh War of 1848. After his retirement he settled down in Lahore and devoted work to the Anjuman-i-Islamiya. He gave constant support to the Aligarh Movement and to Sayyid Ahmad Khan, and was instrumental in the establishment in the first Girls School at Lahore.[98]

Muslim Kambohs

Viqar-ul-Mulk Kamboh

The Kamboh tribe likely originated in Punjab.[99][100] The Muslims are referred to by the name of Zuberi. The Kamboh Sheikhs were found among the irregular cavalry but rarely enlisted in the infantry. Muhammad Khan or Nawab Khair Andesh Khan, a prominent Kamboh Nawab of Meerut in the reign of Shah Jahan and Aurangzeb, built a fort in Meerut, the gate of which is the Khairnagar Darwaza. In 1690 he also built the Khairul Masjid wal Mu'abid in the heart of Meerut city, as well as Khairandeshpur in Etawah.[101]

Qidwai

The Qidwai are a tribe of Indian Muslims who claim descent from the Bani Israil.[102] The Qidwai were recruited in the household cavalry of Shuja-ud-Daula, which was mainly composed of the Sheikhzadi.[103][102] These clans had not taken any profession other than a soldier or a civil officer.[104] Abdul Majid Daryabadi belonged to the Qidwai clan in Daryabad[105] and FS Hussain belonged to the Qidwai in Lucknow.

Bukhari Sayyid

Portrait of Shaikh Farid Bukhari

Medieval sources refer to a specific group of Indian Shaikhzadas called the Bukhari Sayyids. These were descendants of Makhdum Jahanian or Jalal Bukhari who was born in Multan in Punjab, and so in recent history were immigrants from the Punjab, but retained the title Bukhari due to genealogical links to the saint Jalaluddin Bukhari. By the 16th century, they had lived for several generations in Hindustan and were Indian Muslims associated with specific regions in Hindustan. Among these was Shaikh Farid Murtaza Khan, the Indian Muslim of Delhi who was the Mir Bakhshi of Akbar and Jahangir. The Bukhari Sayyids, the Barha Sayyids and the Kambohs were specially favoured for high military posts. Jahangir mentioned the great commanders and armies as involved in the Deccan campaigns with Shah Jahan as a prince, especially the Sayyids of Barha and Bukhara, the Shaikhzadas, the Hindustani Pathans and the Rajputs, to the campaigns in Kandahar.[106][107] The current Shahi Imam of the Jāmi’ah Masjid in Delhi is a Bukhari Sayyid.[108]

Culture

Cuisine

Indo-Persian cultural synthesis meant that Indo-Persian influence played a large role in the making of Indo-Muslim cuisine in Northern India.[109] Characteristic ingredients of this cuisine include onions and garlic, spices such as cloves, cardamom, nutmeg, mace, back pepper and cinnamon, and use of yoghurt, cream and butter.[110] Special dishes include biryani,[111] qorma, kofta, seekh kabab, nihari, haleem, nargisi koftay, roghani naan, naan, sheer-khurma (dessert), other Indo-Persian origin flat-breads and chai (sweet, milky tea). [citation needed]

Geographic distribution

Distribution of Pakistanis speaking Urdu as a first language in 1998

Although the majority of Urdu-speakers reside in Pakistan (including 30 million native speakers,[5] and up to 94 million second-language speakers),[10] where Urdu is the national and official language, most speakers who use Urdu as their native tongue live in northern India, where it is one of 22 official languages.[112]

The Urdu-speaking community is also present in other parts of the subcontinent with a historical Muslim presence, such as the Deccanis, the Biharis[16] and Dhakaiyas (who speak Dhakaiya Urdu) in Bangladesh,[113] the Urdu-speaking members of the Madheshi community in Nepal,[114] some Muslims in Sri Lanka[115] and a section of Burmese Indians.[116]

In addition, there are Urdu-speakers present amongst the South Asian diaspora, most notably in the Middle East,[117] North America (notably the United States and Canada),[117][118] Europe (notably the United Kingdom),[119] the Caribbean region,[119] Africa (notably South Africa and Mauritius),[119] Southeast Asia (notably Singapore)[120] and Oceania (notably Australia[9] and Fiji).[119]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Urdu" does not broadly refer to the Hindustani language, but merely the literary-register (or style) of the macrolanguage self-identified as a spoken language predominantly by Muslims in South Asia, hence accounting Modern Standard Hindi as a separate entity statistically.
  2. ^ During early days of British India, North Indian people of many faiths, including Hindus, self-identified as Urdu-speakers prior to the mid-19th century, after which they self-identified as Hindi-speakers.

References

  1. ^ Urdu at Ethnologue (22nd ed., 2019) Closed access icon
  2. ^ "Census of India 2011: Language" (PDF). Office of the Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India. 2011. Retrieved 28 May 2020.
  3. ^ "POPULATION BY MOTHER TONGUE, SEX AND RURAL/ URBAN" (PDF). pbs.gov.pk. Pakistan Bureau of Statistics. 2017. Retrieved 2023-03-14.
  4. ^ a b Hasnain, Khalid (2021-05-19). "Pakistan's population is 207.68m, shows 2017 census result". Dawn. Archived from the original on 2022-10-17. Retrieved 2022-11-12.
  5. ^ a b c Carl Skutsch (7 November 2013). Encyclopedia of the World's Minorities. Taylor & Francis. pp. 2234–. ISBN 978-1-135-19395-9.
  6. ^ "Detailed Languages Spoken at Home and Ability to Speak English for the Population 5 Years and Over for United States: 2009-2013".
  7. ^ "2011 Census: Quick Statistics". Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 11 April 2015.
  8. ^ "Census Profile, 2016 Census, Canada". Government of Canada, Statistics Canada. 8 February 2017. Retrieved 6 October 2020.
  9. ^ a b Ali, Waqar (23 November 2018). "Find out how many people speak Urdu in your suburb". SBS News. Retrieved 19 July 2020.
  10. ^ a b c Čedomir Nestorović (28 May 2016). Islamic Marketing: Understanding the Socio-Economic, Cultural, and Politico-Legal Environment. Springer. pp. 142–. ISBN 978-3-319-32754-9.
  11. ^ Joseph, Ammu (2004). Just Between Us: Women Speak about Their Writing. Women's World, India. ISBN 978-81-88965-15-1.
  12. ^ Mir, Raza (2014-06-15). The Taste of Words: An Introduction to Urdu Poetry. Penguin UK. ISBN 978-93-5118-725-7.
  13. ^ Roy, Arundhati (1 September 2020). Azadi: Freedom. Fascism. Fiction. Haymarket Books. ISBN 978-1-64259-380-8. The language known variously as Urdu/Hindi/Hindustani, and in an earlier era, Hindavi, was born on the streets and in the bazaars of North India. Khari Boli, spoken in and around Delhi and what is now western Uttar Pradesh, is the base language of which the Persian lexicon came to be added. Urdu, written in the Persian-Arabic script, was spoken by Hindus and Muslims across North India and the Deccan Plateau. ... The partitioning orf Urdu began in earnest in the second half of the nineteenth century, after the failed 1857 Ware of Independence (known to the British as the Mutiny), when India ceased to be merely an asset of the East India Company.
  14. ^ Ginsburgh, V.; Weber, S. (8 April 2016). The Palgrave Handbook of Economics and Language. Springer. ISBN 978-1-137-32505-1. Urdu is a stylized version of the colloquial language spoken by both Muslims and Hindus in what is now central north India.
  15. ^ Farooqi, M. (2012). Urdu Literary Culture: Vernacular Modernity in the Writing of Muhammad Hasan Askari. Springer. ISBN 978-1-137-02692-7. Historically speaking, Urdu grew out of interaction between Hindus and Muslims. He noted that Urdu is not the language of Muslims alone, although Muslims may have played a larger role in making it a literary language. Hindu poets and writers could and did bring specifically Hindu cultural elements into Urdu and these were accepted.
  16. ^ a b Claire Alexander; Joya Chatterji; Annu Jalais (6 November 2015). The Bengal Diaspora: Rethinking Muslim migration. Routledge. pp. 96–. ISBN 978-1-317-33593-1.
  17. ^ Schmidt, Ruth Laila (8 December 2005). Urdu: An Essential Grammar. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-71319-6. Historically, Urdu developed from the sub-regional language of the Delhi area, which became a literary language in the eighteenth century. Two quite similar standard forms of the language developed in Delhi, and in Lucknow in modern Uttar Pradesh. Since 1947, a third form, Karachi standard Urdu, has evolved.
  18. ^ Mahapatra, B. P. (1989). Constitutional languages. Presses Université Laval. p. 553. ISBN 978-2-7637-7186-1. Modern Urdu is a fairly homogenous language. An older southern form, Deccani Urdu, is now obsolete. Two varieties however, must be mentioned viz. The Urdu of Delhi, and the Urdu of Lucknow. Both are almost identical, differing only in some minor points. Both of these varieties are considered 'Standard Urdu' with some minor divergences.
  19. ^ Brian Spooner; William L. Hanaway, eds. (19 March 2012). Literacy in the Persian World: Writing and Social Order. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2012. p. 296. ISBN 978-1934536568.
  20. ^ C.A. Bayly (2012). Rulers, Townsmen and Bazaars:North Indian Society in the Age of British Expansion: 1770–1870. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-908873-7.
  21. ^ sir Richard Francis Burton, Luis Vaz de Camoens (1881). Camoens: his life and his Lusiads, a commentary: Volume 2. Oxford University. p. 573.
  22. ^ Henk W. Wagenaar, S. S. Parikh, D. F. Plukker, R. Veldhuijzen van Zanten (1993). Allied Chambers transliterated Hindi-Hindi-English dictionary. Allied Publishers. ISBN 9788186062104.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  23. ^ John Ovington (1994). A Voyage to Surat in the Year 1689. Asian Educational Services. p. 147.
  24. ^ Sandria B. Freitag (1989). Collective Action and Community Public Arenas and the Emergence of Communalism in North India. University of California Press. p. 104. ISBN 9780520064393.
  25. ^ Narindar Saroop (1983). Gardner of Gardner's Horse, 2nd Lancers, Indian Army. Abhinav Publications. p. 67.
  26. ^ Kim A. Wagner (2009). Stranglers and Bandits: A Historical Anthology of Thuggee. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-569815-2.
  27. ^ a b Sumit Walia (2021). Unbattled Fears: Reckoning the National Security. Lancer Publishers. p. 125. ISBN 9788170623311.
  28. ^ Calcutta Review 1956. University of Calcutta. 1956. p. 38.
  29. ^ Christopher Alan Bayly, C. A. Bayly (1996). Empire and Information: Intelligence Gathering and Social Communication in India, 1780-1870. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521663601.
  30. ^ Joseph Sramek (2011). Gender, Morality, and Race in Company India, 1765-1858. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 9780230337626.
  31. ^ Nile Green (2009). Islam and the Army in Colonial India. Cambridge University Press. p. 143. ISBN 9780521898454.
  32. ^ Ikram ul-Majeed Sehgal (2002). Defence Journal:Volume 5, Issues 9-12. University of Michigan. p. 37.
  33. ^ Rudrangshu Mukherjee (2002). Awadh in Revolt, 1857-1858:A Study of Popular Resistance. Permanent Black. p. 65. ISBN 9788178240275.
  34. ^ Ilyse R. Morgenstein Fuerst (2017). Indian Muslim Minorities and the 1857 Rebellion. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 46. ISBN 9781786732378.
  35. ^ C.A. Bayly (2012). Rulers, Townsmen and Bazaars North Indian Society in the Age of British Expansion: 1770–1870.
  36. ^ R. Upadhyay. "Urdu Controversy – is dividing the nation further". South Asia Analysis Group. Archived from the original on 11 March 2007.
  37. ^ Editor:Richard V. Weekes (1984). Muslim Peoples: Maba. Greenwood Press. p. 826. ISBN 9780313246401. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  38. ^ Viśva Mohana Pāṇḍeya (2003). Historiography of India's Partition: An Analysis of Imperialist Writings. Atlantic Publishers & Distributors. p. 26. ISBN 9788126903146.
  39. ^ Harjot Oberoi (1994). The Construction of Religious Boundaries. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226615936.
  40. ^ Shenila Khoja-Moolji (2018). Forging the Ideal Educated Girl:The Production of Desirable Subjects in Muslim South Asia. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520970533.
  41. ^ Khan Amanat (1938). Agriculture and Live Stock In India Vol-viii. The Imperial Council Agriculture Research. p. 485.
  42. ^ C.A. Bayly (2012). Rulers, Townsmen and Bazaars:North Indian Society in the Age of British Expansion: 1770–1870. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-908873-7.
  43. ^ C.A. Bayly (2012). Rulers, Townsmen and Bazaars. CUP Archive. p. 352. ISBN 9780521310543.
  44. ^ Essays in Arabic Literary Biography: 1350 - 1850, Roger M. A. Allen, Joseph Edmund Lowry, Terri DeYoung, Devin J. Stewart, Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, 30-Dec-2009
  45. ^ People of India Uttar Pradesh Volume XLII Part Three edited by A Hasan & J C Das
  46. ^ Muzaffar Alam (1986). The Crisis of Empire in Mughal North India. Oxford University Press, Bombay. p. 21.
  47. ^ "Eminent Mussalmans". archive.org. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
  48. ^ William Irvine (1971). Later Mughal. Atlantic Publishers & Distri. p. 202.
  49. ^ Justin Jones (2011). Shi'a Islam in Colonial India:Religion, Community and Sectarianism. Cambridge University Press. p. 11. ISBN 9781139501231.
  50. ^ William Irvine (1971). Later Mughal. Atlantic Publishers & Distri. p. 202.
  51. ^ Rajasthan Institute of Historical Research (1975). Journal of the Rajasthan Institute of Historical Research: Volume 12. Rajasthan Institute of Historical Research.
  52. ^ Sen, Sailendra (2013). A Textbook of Medieval Indian History. Primus Books. p. 193. ISBN 978-9-38060-734-4.
  53. ^ Mohammad Yasin. Upper India Publishing House. 1958. p. 18.
  54. ^ Mohammad Yasin (1958). A Social History of Islamic India, 1605-1748. p. 18.
  55. ^ Muslim Politics and Leadership in the South Asian Sub-continent |publisher=Institute of Islamic History, Culture and Civilization, Islamic University (Islamabad)
  56. ^ "ARIF ALVI". Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf. 20 May 2017.
  57. ^ People of India: Uttar Pradesh, Volume XLII, edited by A. Hasan & J. C. Das, p. 1301.
  58. ^ Masuma Hasan (2022). Pakistan in an Age of Turbulence. Pen and Sword. p. 4. ISBN 9781526788634.
  59. ^ Delhi Through Ages: Ancient and medieval Delhi. the University of Michigan. 1995. p. 1995. ISBN 9788174881380.
  60. ^ Syeda Saiyidain Hameed, 'Introduction', Hali's Musaddas: A Story in Verse of the Ebb and Tide of Islam (New Delhi: HarperCollins, 2003), p. 24.
  61. ^ Raja, Masood Ashraf (2010). Constructing Pakistan: Foundational Texts and the Rise of Muslim National Identity, 1857–1947. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195478112
  62. ^ Indo-iranica: Volume 29. Iran Society (Kolkata, India). 1976.
  63. ^ Ansaris of Yusufpur, Mahmud Ansari, 2013
  64. ^ https://www.heritagetimes.in/mukhtar-ansari/
  65. ^ https://www.britannica.com/biography/Mukhtar-Ahmad-Ansari
  66. ^ Mazumder, Rajit K. (2003). The Indian Army and the Making of Punjab. Orient Longman. p. 105. ISBN 978-81-7824-059-6.
  67. ^ Proceedings:Volume 55. Indian History Congress. 1995. p. 435.
  68. ^ Henry Walter Bellew (1891). An Inquiry Into the Ethnography of Afghanistan. Oriental University Institute.
  69. ^ Kripal Chandra Yadav (1980). Delhi in 1857: Volume 1. Academic Press. p. 294.
  70. ^ Yadav (1980). Delhi in 1857: The trail of Bahadur Shah. Academic Press. p. 294.
  71. ^ Fleetwood Williams (1858). Narrative of Events Attending the Outbreak of Disturbances and the Restoration of Authority in the District of Meerut in 1857-58. Government Press. p. 59.
  72. ^ Bengal, Past & Present:Journal of the Calcutta Historical Society · Volume 86. Calcutta Historical Society. 1967. p. 47.
  73. ^ a b People of India Uttar Pradesh Volume XLII Part Two edited by A Hasan & J C Das
  74. ^ Robinson, Francis (2007). Separatism Among Indian Muslims: The Politics of the United Provinces. Cambridge University Press. pp. 19–20. ISBN 9780521048262.
  75. ^ Prag Narain Bhargava (1911). Who's who in India:Parts 4-8. Newul Kishore Press.
  76. ^ William Charles Benett (1870). A Report on the Family History of the Chief Clans of the Roy Bareilly District. p. 5.
  77. ^ William Irvine (1971). Later Mughal. p. 186.
  78. ^ Bhasin, Rakesh (21 May 2018). Dastan-e-Awadh: A Momentous Journey from Faizabad to Lucknow. Notion Press. ISBN 978-1-64249-882-0.
  79. ^ Jos Gommans (2017). The Indian Frontier: Horse and Warband in the Making of Empires. Routledge. ISBN 9781351363563.
  80. ^ Nile Green · (2012). Sufism:A Global History. John Wiley & Sons. p. 144. ISBN 9781405157612.
  81. ^ Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal:Volume 47. Asiatic Society (Kolkata, India), Asiatic Society of Bengal. 1878. p. 331. Muhammad Khan, being a mere soldier, did not understand a single word of Persian, Turki or Pushtu
  82. ^ Irvine, William (1879). A History of the Bangash Nawabs of Farrukhabad: From 1713 to 1771 A.D. G.H. Rouse.
  83. ^ C. A. Bayly (1988). Rulers, Townsmen and Bazaars:North Indian Society in the Age of British Expansion, 1770-1870. p. 119.
  84. ^ PRIYANGI AGARWAL (Oct 7, 2015). "Istanbul opens its eyes to Rohilkhand's 11 lakh Turks". The Times of India.
  85. ^ Khan Amanat (1938). Agriculture and Live Stock In India Vol-viii. The Imperial Council Agriculture Research. p. 486.
  86. ^ Calcutta Review 1956. University of Calcutta. 1956. p. 38.
  87. ^ C.A. Bayly (2012). Rulers, Townsmen and Bazaars:North Indian Society in the Age of British Expansion: 1770–1870. ISBN 978-0-19-908873-7.
  88. ^ Proceedings:Volume 50. Indian History Congress. 1990.
  89. ^ Poonam Sagar (1993). Maratha Policy Towards Northern India. Meenakshi Prakashan. p. 158.
  90. ^ Arthur Dudney (2015). Delhi:Pages From a Forgotten History. ISBN 9789384544317.
  91. ^ S. R. Sharma · (2014). Life, Times and Poetry of Mir. Partridge Publishing. p. 133. ISBN 9781482814781.
  92. ^ Athar Ali (1968). The Mughal Nobility Under Aurangzeb. p. 251. Dilir Khan Rohela - Birthplace: India
  93. ^ William Irvine (1971). Later Mughal. p. 117.
  94. ^ Adrian McNeil (2004). Inventing the Sarod:A Cultural History. Seagull Books. p. 52. ISBN 9788170462132.
  95. ^ "Explainer: Pakistan's main political parties". Aljazeera.com. 6 May 2013.
  96. ^ .L. Drake-Brockman (1909). District Gazetteers of the United Provinces of Agra and Oudh: Shahjahanpur. Supdt., Government Press, United Provinces.
  97. ^ Adrian McNeil (2004). Inventing the Sarod:A Cultural History. Seagull Books. p. 52. ISBN 9788170462132. Shahjahanpur, indeed, lying on the border between Awadh and Rohilkhand, formed a sort of debatable land between the two provinces but the sympathies and connections of the Shahjahanpur Pathans lay always with Awadh rather than the
  98. ^ S.M. Ikram (1995). Indian Muslims and Partition of India. Atlantic Publishers & Dist. p. 203. ISBN 9788171563746.
  99. ^ Ali, Imran (14 July 2014). The Punjab Under Imperialism, 1885-1947. Princeton University Press. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-4008-5958-0.
  100. ^ Singh, K. S.; Bhatia, A. K.; Sharma, Madan Lal (1994). Haryana. Anthropological Survey of India. p. 284. ISBN 978-81-7304-091-7.
  101. ^ Ahmed, Dr Mukhtar; Goswami, Heena (2022). "Nawab Khair Andesh Khan: A polymath of Mughal period". International Journal of History. 4 (1). University of Delhi: 100–106. ISSN 2706-9117.
  102. ^ a b Amaresh Misra (1998). Lucknow, Fire of Grace:The Story of Its Revolution, Renaissance and the Aftermath. HarperCollins Publishers India. ISBN 9788172232887.
  103. ^ Pradeep Barua (2005). The state at war in South Asia. p. 73.
  104. ^ Surya Narain Singh. Mittal Publications. 2003. p. 9.
  105. ^ Mabood 2019, p. 36.
  106. ^ Kenneth Pletcher. The History of India. Rosen Publishing Group.
  107. ^ Ellison Banks Findly (1993). Nur Jahan: Empress of Mughal India. Oxford University Press.
  108. ^ Nasir Raza Khan. Islam in India: History, Politics and Society. Manakin Press. p. 86.
  109. ^ Charmaine O' Brien (15 December 2013). The Penguin Food Guide to India. Penguin Books Limited. ISBN 9789351185758.
  110. ^ Ken Albala (2011). Food Cultures of the World Encyclopedia. Greenwood. p. 2011. ISBN 9780313376269.
  111. ^ "Pakistani food debate: Team Biryani Vs Team Pulao, who will win?". gulfnews.com. 20 January 2022. Retrieved 2023-01-02.
  112. ^ Pereltsvaig, Asya (2017-08-24). Languages of the World: An Introduction. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-17114-5.
  113. ^ Redclift, Victoria (2013-06-26). Statelessness and Citizenship: Camps and the Creation of Political Space. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-22032-6.
  114. ^ "Madhesh". Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization. 2020. Retrieved 16 July 2020.
  115. ^ Mahroof, M.M.M. (1992). "Urdu in Sri Lanka: Socio-Linguistics of a Minority Language". Islamic Studies. 31 (2): 185–201. JSTOR 20840072.
  116. ^ Jayati Bhattacharya; Coonoor Kripalani (1 March 2015). Indian and Chinese Immigrant Communities: Comparative Perspectives. Anthem Press. pp. 9, 121–. ISBN 978-1-78308-447-0.
  117. ^ a b Ruth Laila Schmidt (8 December 2005). Urdu: An Essential Grammar. Routledge. pp. 23–. ISBN 1-134-71320-7.
  118. ^ Karen Isaksen Leonard (2007). Locating Home: India's Hyderabadis Abroad. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-5442-2.
  119. ^ a b c d Tej K Bhatia; Ashok Koul (10 November 2005). Colloquial Urdu: The Complete Course for Beginners. Routledge. pp. 1–. ISBN 978-1-134-77970-3.
  120. ^ Torsten Tschacher (10 November 2017). Race, Religion, and the 'Indian Muslim' Predicament in Singapore. Taylor & Francis. pp. 235–. ISBN 978-1-315-30337-6.