FIRST ASSEMBLY-27 APRIL, 1937 to 1945
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Vernacular Culture in Punjab
Farina Mir. The Social Space of Language: Vernacular Culture in British Colonial Punjab. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2010. 294 pp. $40.00, cloth, ISBN 978-0-520-26269-0. Reviewed by Lisa Mitchell Published on H-Asia (May, 2012) Commissioned by Sumit Guha (The University of Texas at Austin) Farina Mir’s history of the vibrant Punjabi during the colonial period (as some colonial ad‐ qissa genre of oral and later printed literary pro‐ ministrators predicted), nor became the founda‐ duction contributes to an important growing body tion for an ethno-linguistic political assertion (as of work that explores colonial-era domains that happened elsewhere). Not only did Punjabi not existed beyond the direct interest and interven‐ quietly disappear, but it also carried out what Mir tion of the British colonial state. Utilizing late shows to be a vibrant parallel life to the official nineteenth- and early twentieth-century primary language of state patronage in the Punjab, Urdu. sources that have not featured prominently with‐ She traces this historical process by focusing on in histories of the colonial era, Mir’s careful atten‐ Punjabi’s literary and linguistic resilience rather tion to the Punjabi language and its role within than framing her analysis in terms of resistance, what she calls the “Punjabi literary formation” of‐ and argues that “Punjabi’s survival and continu‐ fers an important complement to the histories of ous vitality through the colonial period signals a literary production in Indian languages that re‐ discernible limit to colonial dominance in British ceived direct colonial administrative patronage, India” (p. -
Gazetteers Organisation Revenue Department Haryana Chandigarh (India) 1998
HARYANA DISTRICT GAZETTEEERS ------------------------ REPRINT OF AMBALA DISTRICT GAZETTEER, 1923-24 GAZETTEERS ORGANISATION REVENUE DEPARTMENT HARYANA CHANDIGARH (INDIA) 1998 The Gazetteer was published in 1925 during British regime. 1st Reprint: December, 1998 © GOVERNMENT OF HARYANA Price Rs. Available from: The Controller, Printing and Stationery, Haryana, Chandigarh (India). Printed By : Controller of Printing and Stationery, Government of Haryana, Chandigarh. PREFACE TO REPRINTED EDITION The District Gazetteer is a miniature encyclopaedia and a good guide. It describes all important aspects and features of the district; historical, physical, social, economic and cultural. Officials and other persons desirous of acquainting themselves with the salient features of the district would find a study of the Gazetteer rewarding. It is of immense use for research scholars. The old gazetteers of the State published in the British regime contained very valuable information, which was not wholly reproduced in the revised volume. These gazetteers have gone out of stock and are not easily available. There is a demand for these volumes by research scholars and educationists. As such, the scheme of reprinting of old gazetteers was taken on the initiative of the Hon'ble Chief Minister of Haryana. The Ambala District Gazetteer of 1923-24 was compiled and published under the authority of Punjab Govt. The author mainly based its drafting on the assessment and final reports of the Settlement Officers. The Volume is the reprinted edition of the Ambala District Gazetteer of 1923-24. This is the ninth in the series of reprinted gazetteers of Haryana. Every care has been taken in maintaining the complete originality of the old gazetteer while reprinting. -
A Journey to the End of Indo-Persian
Chapter 8 The Antipodes of “Progress”: A Journey to the End of Indo-Persian Nile Green Siyahat ki gun hain na mard-e safar hain (We do not seize the advantages of travel, nor are we intrepid voyagers.) Hali, Mosaddas (1879) … Die Grenzen meiner Sprache bedeuten die Grenzen meiner Welt. (The limits of my language mean the limits of my world.) Ludwig Wittgenstein, Tractatus (1922) ⸪ In the last decades of the nineteenth century, Indians effectively stopped producing Persian prose after over eight hundred years of using the language for literature, statecraft, and science.1 At the public level, the obvious turning point was Persian’s administrative replacement by the East India Company with English and the vernaculars between 1832 and 1837.2 As Tariq Rahman This essay is dedicated to the memory of Omar Khalidi with whom I had hoped to write a short book about travelers from his beloved Hyderabad. For archival and other assistance, I am grateful to Teresa Jones (Worcestershire History Centre), Alf Russell (Wolverhampton City Archives) and the staff of the Library of Birmingham and the Birmingham Pen Museum. I am also thankful to the custodians of the Salar Jung Library (particularly direc- tor A. Negender Reddy) and the Salar Jung Museum for their assistance during my previous research visits to Hyderabad. 1 For historical overviews of Indo-Persian, see T.N. Devare, A Short History of Persian Literature at the Bahmani, Adil Shahi and Qutb Shahi Courts (Poona: T.N. Devare, 1961); and Muhammad Abdul Ghani, History of Persian Language and Literature at the Mughal Court, 3 vols. -
Pakistan Was Suspended by President General Musharaff in March Last Year Leading to a Worldwide Uproar Against This Act
A Coup against Judicial Independence . Special issue of the CJEI Report (February, 2008) ustice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, the twentieth Chief Justice of Pakistan was suspended by President General Musharaff in March last year leading to a worldwide uproar against this act. However, by a landmark order J handed down by the Supreme Court of Pakistan, Justice Chaudhry was reinstated. We at the CJEI were delighted and hoped that this would put an end to the ugly confrontation between the judiciary and the executive. However our happiness was short lived. On November 3, 2007, President General Musharaff suspended the constitution and declared a state of emergency. Soon the Pakistan army entered the Supreme Court premises removing Justice Chaudhry and other judges. The Constitution was also suspended and was replaced with a “Provisional Constitutional Order” enabling the Executive to sack Chief Justice Chaudhry, and other judges who refused to swear allegiance to this extraconstitutional order. Ever since then, the judiciary in Pakistan has been plunged into turmoil and Justice Chaudhry along with dozens of other Justices has been held incommunicado in their homes. Any onslaught on judicial independence is a matter of grave concern to all more so to the legal and judicial fraternity in countries that are wedded to the rule of law. In the absence of an independent judiciary, human rights and constitutional guarantees become meaningless; the situation capable of jeopardising even the long term developmental goals of a country. As observed by Viscount Bryce, “If the lamp of justice goes out in darkness, how great is the darkness.” This is really true of Pakistan which is presently going through testing times. -
Malir-Karachi
Malir-Karachi 475 476 477 478 479 480 Travelling Stationary Inclass Co- Library Allowance (School Sub Total Furniture S.No District Teshil Union Council School ID School Name Level Gender Material and Curricular Sport Total Budget Laboratory (School Specific (80% Other) 20% supplies Activities Specific Budget) 1 Malir Karachi Gadap Town NA 408180381 GBLSS - HUSSAIN BLAOUCH Middle Boys 14,324 2,865 8,594 5,729 2,865 11,459 45,836 11,459 57,295 2 Malir Karachi Gadap Town NA 408180436 GBELS - HAJI IBRAHIM BALOUCH Elementary Mixed 24,559 4,912 19,647 4,912 4,912 19,647 78,588 19,647 98,236 3 Malir Karachi Gadap Town 1-Murad Memon Goth (Malir) 408180426 GBELS - HASHIM KHASKHELI Elementary Boys 42,250 8,450 33,800 8,450 8,450 33,800 135,202 33,800 169,002 4 Malir Karachi Gadap Town 1-Murad Memon Goth (Malir) 408180434 GBELS - MURAD MEMON NO.3 OLD Elementary Mixed 35,865 7,173 28,692 7,173 7,173 28,692 114,769 28,692 143,461 5 Malir Karachi Gadap Town 1-Murad Memon Goth (Malir) 408180435 GBELS - MURAD MEMON NO.3 NEW Elementary Mixed 24,882 4,976 19,906 4,976 4,976 19,906 79,622 19,906 99,528 6 Malir Karachi Gadap Town 2-Darsano Channo 408180073 GBELS - AL-HAJ DUR MUHAMMAD BALOCH Elementary Boys 36,374 7,275 21,824 14,550 7,275 29,099 116,397 29,099 145,496 7 Malir Karachi Gadap Town 2-Darsano Channo 408180428 GBELS - MURAD MEMON NO.1 Elementary Mixed 33,116 6,623 26,493 6,623 6,623 26,493 105,971 26,493 132,464 8 Malir Karachi Gadap Town 3-Gujhro 408180441 GBELS - SIRAHMED VILLAGE Elementary Mixed 38,725 7,745 30,980 7,745 7,745 30,980 123,919 -
Engineers in India: Industrialisation, Indianisation and the State, 1900-47
Engineers in India: Industrialisation, Indianisation and the State, 1900-47 A P A R A J I T H R AMNATH July 2012 A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Imperial College London Centre for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine DECLARATION This thesis represents my own work. Where the work of others is mentioned, it is duly referenced and acknowledged as such. APARAJITH RAMNATH Chennai, India 30 July 2012 2 ABSTRACT This thesis offers a collective portrait of an important group of scientific and technical practitioners in India from 1900 to 1947: professional engineers. It focuses on engineers working in three key sectors: public works, railways and private industry. Based on a range of little-used sources, it charts the evolution of the profession in terms of the composition, training, employment patterns and work culture of its members. The thesis argues that changes in the profession were both caused by and contributed to two important, contested transformations in interwar Indian society: the growth of large-scale private industry (industrialisation), and the increasing proportion of ‘native’ Indians in government services and private firms (Indianisation). Engineers in the public works and railways played a crucial role as officers of the colonial state, as revealed by debates on Indianisation in these sectors. Engineers also enabled the emergence of large industrial enterprises, which in turn impacted the profession. Previously dominated by expatriate government engineers, the profession expanded, was considerably Indianised, and diversified to include industrial experts. Whereas the profession was initially oriented towards the imperial metropolis, a nascent Indian identity emerged in the interwar period. -
The Indian Title Badge: 1911-1947 Jim Carlisle, OMSA No
The Journal of the Orders and Medals SocieW of America The Indian Title Badge: 1911-1947 Jim Carlisle, OMSA No. 5577 ing George V, on the occasion of the Delhi Durbar, Kintroduced the India Title Badge on 12 December 1911 to be conferred, as a symbol of honor and respect, on the holders of a title conferred by the King-Emperor. The Badge was a step-award in three classes given to civilians and Viceroy’s commissioned officers of the Indian Army for faithful service or acts of public welfare. Awards of the Badge began in January 1912. In many ways, the Badge is a cross between the Imperial Service Medal and the Kaisar-I-Hind. As with the Imperial Service Medal (ISM), it was awarded for long and faithful service to members of the civil and provincial services. Unlike the ISM it was also awarded to members of the military as well as to civilians not in the civil service. It was similar to the Kaisar-I-Hind in that there were three classes to the award as well as being awarded for service in India. Unlike the Kaisar-I- Hind, its award was restricted to non-Europeans. Unlike either of these awards, the India Title Badge also provided a specific title in the form of a personal distinction to the recipient. Specifics regarding the titles will be provided below. It is interesting to note that a title granted with the 1st India Title Badge, Class III- obverse Class of the Badge is identical to that granted to recipients of the Order of British India 1 st Class, Sardar Bahadur. -
Leoisla Tive Assembly Debates
LEOISLA TIVE ASSEMBLY DEBATES FRIDAY, 16th JANUARY, 1931 Vol. I-No.3 OFFICIAL REPORT OONTENTS. Members Sworn. Election of the Standing Finance Oommittee. Election of the Standing Finance Oommittee for Railways. Election of Members to the Governing Body of the Imperial Oouncil of Agricultural Research. The Indian Ports (Amendment) Bill-Introduced. DELHI GOVERNMENT OF INDIA PREBB 1931 'Price 'Fi'De A. nnas., LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY. Friday, 16th January, 1931. .. The Assembly met in the Assembly Chamber of the Council HOllSe at Eleven of the Clock, Mr. R. K. Shanmukham Chetty in the Chair. MEMBERS SWORN: Rai Bahadur Pandit Triloki Nath Bhargava, M. L. A. (Fyzabad Division: Non-Muhammadan Rural); Kumar Gupteshwar Prasad Singh, M. L. A. (Gaya cum Monghyr: Non-Muhalromadan); Mr. James Hezlett, C.I.E., M. L. A. (Assam: Nominated Official). ELECTION OF THE STANDING FINANCE 90MMITTEE. Mr. Chairman: The House will now proceea to elect Memoers not ex- ceeding fourteen in number to the Standing Finance Committee. There were originally 32 candidates who were nominated, but the following have since withdrawn: Mr. B. Sitaramaraju, Mr. M. Maswood, a.nd Haji Chaudhury Muhammad Ismail Khan. ' The ballot papers will now be supplied to Honourable Memb"ers in tlie order in which I ~all them. (The ballot was toen taken.) ELECTION OF THE STANDING FINANCE COMMITl'EE FOR . RAILWAYS. - ,. Xr. Chairman: The House will now proceed to elect 11 Members 00 the Standing Finance Committee for Railways. Out of 37 candidates originally nominated, the following have since withdrawn ,their candidatu~e:- Mr. C, S. Ranga Iyer, KunwBlr Raghubir Singh, Mr. -
Makers-Of-Modern-Sindh-Feb-2020
Sindh Madressah’s Roll of Honor MAKERS OF MODERN SINDH Lives of 25 Luminaries Sindh Madressah’s Roll of Honor MAKERS OF MODERN SINDH Lives of 25 Luminaries Dr. Muhammad Ali Shaikh SMIU Press Karachi Alma-Mater of Quaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah Sindh Madressatul Islam University, Karachi Aiwan-e-Tijarat Road, Karachi-74000 Pakistan. This book under title Sindh Madressah’s Roll of Honour MAKERS OF MODERN SINDH Lives of 25 Luminaries Written by Professor Dr. Muhammad Ali Shaikh 1st Edition, Published under title Luminaries of the Land in November 1999 Present expanded edition, Published in March 2020 By Sindh Madressatul Islam University Price Rs. 1000/- SMIU Press Karachi Copyright with the author Published by SMIU Press, Karachi Aiwan-e-Tijarat Road, Karachi-74000, Pakistan All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any from or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passage in a review Dedicated to loving memory of my parents Preface ‘It is said that Sindh produces two things – men and sands – great men and sandy deserts.’ These words were voiced at the floor of the Bombay’s Legislative Council in March 1936 by Sir Rafiuddin Ahmed, while bidding farewell to his colleagues from Sindh, who had won autonomy for their province and were to go back there. The four names of great men from Sindh that he gave, included three former students of Sindh Madressah. Today, in 21st century, it gives pleasure that Sindh Madressah has kept alive that tradition of producing great men to serve the humanity. -
Honour Killing in Sindh Men's and Women's Divergent Accounts
Honour Killing in Sindh Men's and Women's Divergent Accounts Shahnaz Begum Laghari PhD University of York Women’s Studies March 2016 Abstract The aim of this project is to investigate the phenomenon of honour-related violence, the most extreme form of which is honour killing. The research was conducted in Sindh (one of the four provinces of Pakistan). The main research question is, ‘Are these killings for honour?’ This study was inspired by a need to investigate whether the practice of honour killing in Sindh is still guided by the norm of honour or whether other elements have come to the fore. It is comprised of the experiences of those involved in honour killings through informal, semi- structured, open-ended, in-depth interviews, conducted under the framework of the qualitative method. The aim of my thesis is to apply a feminist perspective in interpreting the data to explore the tradition of honour killing and to let the versions of the affected people be heard. In my research, the women who are accused as karis, having very little redress, are uncertain about their lives; they speak and reveal the motives behind the allegations and killings in the name of honour. The male killers, whom I met inside and outside the jails, justify their act of killing in the name of honour, culture, tradition and religion. Drawing upon interviews with thirteen women and thirteen men, I explore and interpret the data to reveal their childhood, educational, financial and social conditions and the impacts of these on their lives, thoughts and actions. -
Formerjudges16112018.Pdf
High Court, Madras Former Puisne Judges Adam Bittleston, Kt. - 1862 - 1870 Thomas William Lumisden Strange - 1862 - 1863 Henry Dominic Phillips - 1862 - 1864 Hatley Frere - 1862 - 1866 William Holloway - 1863 - 1877 Lewis Charles Innes, Kt. - 1865 - 1883 Charles Collett - 1867 - 1871 James Kernan, Q.C. - 1870 - 1889 John Robert Kindersley I.C.S. - 1877 - 1884 Tiruvarur Muthuswami Ayyar, Kt. - 1878 - 1895 Philip Perceval Hutchins, Kt. - 1883 - 1886 Francis Brandt - 1884 - 1887 George Arthur Parker, Kt. - 1886 - 1896 Francis Henry Wilkinson - 1887 - 1893 Horatio Hale Shephard, Kt. - 1888 - 1901 James William Best - 1893 - 1895 Subbayyar Subramania Ayyar, Kt. - 1895 - 1907 James Acworth Davies, Kt. - 1896 - 1906 Ralph Sillery Benson, Kt. - 1896 - 1913 Hungerford Tudor Boddam - 1896 - 1908 Vembakkam Bhashyam Ayyangar, Kt. - 1901 - 1904 Lewis Moore - 1904 - 1906 Leslie Creery Miller, Kt. - 1907 - 1914 John Edward Power Wallis - 1907 - 1914 James Hume Munro - 1907 - 1911 Chettur Sankaran Nair, Kt. - 1908 - 1915 Abdur Rahim, Kt. - 1908 - 1921 ..2.. Venkatarama Krishnaswami Ayyar - 1909 - 1911 Pudukode Rama Ayyar Sundara Ayyar - 1911 - 1913 William Bock Ayling, Kt. - 1910 - 1924 Francis Du Pre Oldfield, Kt. - 1912 - 1924 Thyagaraja Ayyar Sadasiva Ayyar, Kt. - 1912 - 1921 Faiz Hasan Badruddin Tyabji - 1913 - 1915 Charles Gordon Spencer, Kt. - 1914 - 1927 K. Srinivasa Ayyangar - 1915 - 1917 (Victor) Murray Coutts Trotter - 1915 - 1924 Thiruchenduri Vaidyanatha Seshagiri Ayyar - 1914 - 1920 James Herbert Bakewell - 1912 - 1920 William Watkin Phillips, Kt. - 1917 - 1930 Charles Frederick Napier - 1920 - 1921 Calamur Viravalli Kumaraswami Sastri, Kt. - 1914 - 1930 Cheruvari Krishnan, Kt. - 1920 - 1927 Vepa Ramesam, Kt. - 1920 - 1935 Charles Edwin Odgers, Kt. - 1921 - 1930 Muthiah David Devadoss, Kt. - 1921 - 1928 Mutha Venkatasubba Rao, Kt. -
Historical Sketch of Peasant Activism: Tracing Emancipatory Political Strategies of Peasant Activists of Sindh
International Journal Humanities and Social Sciences (IJHSS) ISSN (P): 2319-393X; ISSN(E): 2319-3948 Vol. 3, Issue 5, Sep 2014, 23-42 © IASET HISTORICAL SKETCH OF PEASANT ACTIVISM: TRACING EMANCIPATORY POLITICAL STRATEGIES OF PEASANT ACTIVISTS OF SINDH GHULAM HUSSAIN 1 & ANWAAR MOHYUDDIN 2 1MPhil Scholar, Department of Anthropology, Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad, Pakistan 2 Lecturer, Department of Anthropology, Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad, Pakistan ABSTRACT Peasant activism in Sindh is very diverse and has its own typical history. Temporally, it has been focused on contextual issues that demand more than just land reforms. Peasant activists have, over the years, pursued roughly articulated, expedient and highly diverse agendas that are enacted by the mix of civil society activists, NGOs and ethnic peasant activists. In this article, which is the result of ethnographic study and the analysis of secondary ethnographic and historical data, effort has been made to trace the formation of peasantivist agendas and strategies in Sindh, particularly tracing it from the peasant struggle of Shah Inayat in 17 th century. The introduction of exploitative Batai system during British rule, the consequent institutionalization of sharecropping, establishment of Hari Committee in 1930s, the launching of Batai Tehreek and Elati Tehreek have been traced in relation to shifting peasantivist agendas. Failure of peasant activists to bring about substantive land reforms and the recent process of NGO-ising of peasant activism, have been analyzed vis-à-vis historical past. KEYWORDS: Peasant Activism, Peasant Movements, N.G.Os INTRODUCTION In this study the genesis of exploitation in peasant communities of Sindh has been elaborated, and the historical analysis of some of the important peasant struggles, rebels, and movements have been done to understand where peasants and peasant activist in Sindh stands now.