Waiting List for Attached Department Four (4) Rooms Better Accommodatio WL Name Father's Name Designation Department BPS Date of Date of CNIC No
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more
Recommended publications
-
List of Previous Papers
455 LIST OF PREVIOUS PAPERS PRESENTED AT PROCEEDINGS 456 List of Previous Papers presented at Proceedings Centenary Celebration (1912 – 2012) 457 PAKISTAN ENGINEERING CONGRESS LIST OF PAPERS PRESENTED AT ANNUAL PROCEEDINGS “M” Indicates that the Paper was awarded the Congress Medal “Km” Indicates that the Paper was awarded the Kennedy Medal S. No. Title of Paper and Name of the Author VOLUME - I - 1913 (1912-14)—(Out of Print) 1 Grain Elevators and their Application to the Punjab Wheat Transport Problem. - Victor Bayley. 2 The Formation of Land by Rivers and Torrents in the Punjab. - A. J. Wadley. 3 Auxiliary Reservoirs for Irrigation in the Punjab. - C. E. Blaker 4 Dams and Storage Reservoirs. - F. W. Schonemann. 5 Concrete Work in New Loco Shops, Lahore. - J. A. Bell. 6 Reinforced Concrete Pile Foundations in the West Beyne Bridge. - E. A. C. Lister. 7 The Mechanical Equipment of Irrigation Works. - John Ashford. VOLUME - II - 1914 (1914-15)-- (Out of Print) 8 The Hindustan - Thibet Road. - A. R. Astbury 9 The Development of Canal Falls for the Production of Artificial Fertilizers. – Captain B. C. Battye. 10 Tube Wells. - T. A. Miller Brownlie. 11 The Design of Canal Head works. - F. W. Schonemann. 12 Maintenance of Marala Weir. - Cecil A. Colyer. 13 Duty of Distributaries in Sandy Soils. - F. Marshall Purves. 14 Notes on Some Works on the Upper Swat Canal. - A. J. Wadley. 15 Some Notes on the Results of River Training in the Punjab. - F. J. Harvey. 16 Notes on the New Road Bridge over the River Ravi at Lahore. - D. -
Sanjay Subrahmanyam, Three Ways to Be Alien: Travails and Encounters in the Early Modern World
three ways to be alien Travails & Encounters in the Early Modern World Sanjay Subrahmanyam Subrahmanyam_coverfront7.indd 1 2/9/11 9:28:33 AM Three Ways to Be Alien • The Menahem Stern Jerusalem Lectures Sponsored by the Historical Society of Israel and published for Brandeis University Press by University Press of New England Editorial Board: Prof. Yosef Kaplan, Senior Editor, Department of the History of the Jewish People, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, former Chairman of the Historical Society of Israel Prof. Michael Heyd, Department of History, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, former Chairman of the Historical Society of Israel Prof. Shulamit Shahar, professor emeritus, Department of History, Tel-Aviv University, member of the Board of Directors of the Historical Society of Israel For a complete list of books in this series, please visit www.upne.com Sanjay Subrahmanyam, Three Ways to Be Alien: Travails and Encounters in the Early Modern World Jürgen Kocka, Civil Society and Dictatorship in Modern German History Heinz Schilling, Early Modern European Civilization and Its Political and Cultural Dynamism Brian Stock, Ethics through Literature: Ascetic and Aesthetic Reading in Western Culture Fergus Millar, The Roman Republic in Political Thought Peter Brown, Poverty and Leadership in the Later Roman Empire Anthony D. Smith, The Nation in History: Historiographical Debates about Ethnicity and Nationalism Carlo Ginzburg, History Rhetoric, and Proof Three Ways to Be Alien Travails & Encounters • in the Early Modern World Sanjay Subrahmanyam Brandeis The University Menahem Press Stern Jerusalem Lectures Historical Society of Israel Brandeis University Press Waltham, Massachusetts For Ashok Yeshwant Kotwal Brandeis University Press / Historical Society of Israel An imprint of University Press of New England www.upne.com © 2011 Historical Society of Israel All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America Designed and typeset in Arno Pro by Michelle Grald University Press of New England is a member of the Green Press Initiative. -
Islamic Gunpowder Empires : Ottomans, Safavids, and Mughals / Douglas E
“Douglas Streusand has contributed a masterful comparative analysis and an up-to- S date reinterpretation of the significance of the early modern Islamic empires. This T book makes profound scholarly insights readily accessible to undergraduate stu- R dents and will be useful in world history surveys as well as more advanced courses.” —Hope Benne, Salem State College E U “Streusand creatively reexamines the military and political history and structures of the SAN Ottoman, Safavid, and Mughal empires. He breaks down the process of transformation and makes their divergent outcomes comprehensible, not only to an audience of special- ists, but also to undergraduates and general readers. Appropriate for courses in world, early modern, or Middle Eastern history as well as the political sociology of empires.” D —Linda T. Darling, University of Arizona “Streusand is to be commended for navigating these hearty and substantial historiogra- phies to pull together an analytical textbook which will be both informative and thought provoking for the undergraduate university audience.” GUNPOWDER EMPIRES —Colin Mitchell, Dalhousie University Islamic Gunpowder Empires provides an illuminating history of Islamic civilization in the early modern world through a comparative examination of Islam’s three greatest empires: the Otto- IS mans (centered in what is now Turkey), the Safavids (in modern Iran), and the Mughals (ruling the Indian subcontinent). Author Douglas Streusand explains the origins of the three empires; compares the ideological, institutional, military, and economic contributors to their success; and L analyzes the causes of their rise, expansion, and ultimate transformation and decline. Streusand depicts the three empires as a part of an integrated international system extending from the At- lantic to the Straits of Malacca, emphasizing both the connections and the conflicts within that AMIC system. -
PRINT CULTURE and LEFT-WING RADICALISM in LAHORE, PAKISTAN, C.1947-1971
PRINT CULTURE AND LEFT-WING RADICALISM IN LAHORE, PAKISTAN, c.1947-1971 Irfan Waheed Usmani (M.Phil, History, University of Punjab, Lahore) A THESIS SUBMITTED FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY SOUTH ASIAN STUDIES PROGRAMME NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF SINGAPORE 2016 DECLARATION I hereby declare that this thesis is my original work and it has been written by me in its entirety. I have duly acknowledged all the sources of information which have been used in the thesis. This thesis has also not been submitted for any degree in any university previously. _________________________________ Irfan Waheed Usmani 21 August 2015 ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENT First I would like to thank God Almighty for enabling me to pursue my higher education and enabling me to finish this project. At the very outset I would like to express deepest gratitude and thanks to my supervisor, Dr. Gyanesh Kudaisya, who provided constant support and guidance to this doctoral project. His depth of knowledge on history and related concepts guided me in appropriate direction. His interventions were both timely and meaningful, contributing towards my own understanding of interrelated issues and the subject on one hand, and on the other hand, injecting my doctoral journey with immense vigour and spirit. Without his valuable guidance, support, understanding approach, wisdom and encouragement this thesis would not have been possible. His role as a guide has brought real improvements in my approach as researcher and I cannot measure his contributions in words. I must acknowledge that I owe all the responsibility of gaps and mistakes in my work. I am thankful to his wife Prof. -
Ethnicity, Space, and Politics in Afghanistan
University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Urban Studies Senior Seminar Papers Urban Studies Program 11-2009 Ethnicity, Space, and Politics in Afghanistan Benjamin Dubow University of Pennsylvania Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/senior_seminar Dubow, Benjamin, "Ethnicity, Space, and Politics in Afghanistan" (2009). Urban Studies Senior Seminar Papers. 13. https://repository.upenn.edu/senior_seminar/13 Suggested Citation: Benjamin Dubow. "Ethnicity, Space, and Politics in Afghanistan." University of Pennsylvania, Urban Studies Program. 2009. This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/senior_seminar/13 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Ethnicity, Space, and Politics in Afghanistan Abstract The 2004 election was a disaster. For all the unity that could have come from 2001, the election results shattered any hope that the country had overcome its fractures. The winner needed to find a way to unite a country that could not be more divided. In Afghanistan’s Panjshir Province, runner-up Yunis Qanooni received 95.0% of the vote. In Paktia Province, incumbent Hamid Karzai received 95.9%. Those were only two of the seven provinces where more than 90% or more of the vote went to a single candidate. Two minor candidates who received less than a tenth of the total won 83% and 78% of the vote in their home provinces. For comparison, the most lopsided state in the 2004 United States was Wyoming, with 69% of the vote going to Bush. This means Wyoming voters were 1.8 times as likely to vote for Bush as were Massachusetts voters. Paktia voters were 120 times as likely to vote for Karzai as were Panjshir voters. -
In: O Guru, O Iniciador E Outras Variações
\ FREDRIK BARTH [organização: Tomke Lask 1 ColeçãokjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBAOypog1'apbos Direção:Antonio Carlos deSouza Lima I. Processos e escolhas: estudos de sociologia política Elisa Pereira Reis 2. O guru, o iniciador e outras variações antropológicas o guru) O iniciador Frtdrik Barth [organizarão: Tomk, LaskPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA1 e outras variações antropológicas 3. Criatividade social, subjetividade coletiva ;]A e a modernidade brasileira contemporânea !~f.,<if+J l/;.-, v [os! Maurício Domingues UNIDADE ..L J... t; I /.:z..r:tJ~J. NA CHAMADA 501,''-=+' "( t-I"f G? <.:\,;.:.\ " ..•". '.'''l..,. "r,y T V __ .__ ~EX ;~~~1K'8~ C~ DO PRECO ~ ~2. DATA 170 - O l: Tradução l-l'-I'I 6 q ~ t John Cunha Comeiford :11"10107l~403 1"" "1 «., r.IE 301.28282g /,,- c· ~~fp ( c. lJi\liCAlP ~~~SiJ.;!-!rlç.~Cl! .•. Copyrighc Cl 2000. Fredrik Barrh SumáriokjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA TrtHiUfio Jobn Cunba Comerjord IMutrc t Oouloundo pelo PPGAS/Muscu N~.:ionJIJ R,yistio ütnic« Apresentação - Tomke Lask 7 Antonio Csrlo: deSouza Lima Projeto Cr4fieo l prtp.,llfio . Os grupos étnicos e suas fronteiras 25 Contra Capa Aidentidade pathan esuamanutenção 69 Processos étnicos na fronteira entre os Pathan e os Baluchi 95PONMLKJIHGFEDCBA BARTH. FredrikA J O guru. o iniciador e outras variações antropolôgicas. - Fredrik Buth. A análise da cultura nas sociedades complexas 107 Tradução de John Cunha Comerford. Rio de [aneiro: Contra C'P' Livrari•. 2000. O guru e o iniciador: transações de conhecimento e [lj'pographos n" 2] - 2H p.: 1+ • 21 cm. moldagem da cultura no sudeste da Ásia e na Melanésia 141 Por um maior naturalismo na conceptualização das sociedades 167 Inclui Bibliografi a. -
Central Asia
Central Asia The Library of Dr. Eden Naby including books from the Library of Prof. Richard Nelson Frye 1,041 titles in ca. 1,150 volumes Central Asia The Library of Dr. Eden Naby Dr. Eden Naby (PhD 1975, Columbia University) is a distinguished Iranian-Assyrian cultural historian of Central Asia and the Middle East. A contributing editor on modern Assyria for the "Encyclopædia Iranica," she is the widow of Professor Richard Nelson Frye. Dr. Naby has conducted research, taught and published on minority issues in countries from Turkey to Tajikistan. Her work on Afghanistan and on the Assyrians is outstanding in the field of cultural survival. Dr. Naby was born in the once-important Assyrian village of Golpashan, near Urmia, in Iran. After taking her undergraduate degree at Temple University in 1964, she served in the Peace Corps in Afghanistan, and on receiving her PhD, she taught in Iran. In 1980 she led a CBS 60 Minutes team for the first ever filming of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Dr. Naby was also featured in Charlie Wilson's War (2008) with Dan Rather. In addition to her scholarly work as a lecturer and publishing writer, Dr. Naby has devoted much of her time since 1979 to establishing endowments at United States universities to promote the preservation of Assyrian archives. These endowments, especially at Harvard University, are providing a basis for the preservation of research materials, especially now in the diaspora. Dr. Naby’s husband, the late Professor Richard Nelson Frye, was a renowned scholar of Iranian and Central Asian Studies, and Aga Khan Professor Emeritus of Iranian Studies at Harvard University. -
The Mughal Empire
Chapter 5 8 THE MUGHAL EMPIRE ike the Ottomans, the Mughals carried the dilemma of post-Abbasid L politics outside the Arid Zone and resolved it. Unlike the Ottomans, the Mughals did not expand the frontiers of Muslim political power, ex- cept on some fringes. They established a new polity ruled by an estab- lished dynasty in territory that Muslims already ruled. The dynastic setting and the environment—physical, social, and cultural—requires careful explanation in order to make the Mughal success comprehensible. This section describes the multiple contexts in which the Mughal Empire developed and then summarizes the most important characteristics of the Mughal polity. Historians have traditionally identified Babur as the founder of the Mughal Empire and considered his invasion of northern India in 1526 as the beginning of Mughal history. Both the identification and date are mis- leading. Babur’s grandson, Akbar, established the patterns and institutions that defined the Mughal Empire; the prehistory of the empire dates back to Babur’s great-great-grandfather Timur’s invasion of north India in 1398. Because Timur remained in Hindustan (literally, “the land of Hin- dus”; the Persian word for northern India) only a short time and his troops sacked Delhi thoroughly, historians have traditionally treated his incur- sion as a raid rather than an attempt at conquest. Timur, however, did not attempt to establish direct Timurid rule in most of the areas he conquered; 201 202 5 – THE MUGHAL EMPIRE he generally left established dynasties in place or established surrogates of his own. His policy in Hindustan was the same; he apparently left one Khizr Khan as his governor in Delhi. -
Hindustani Fanatics, India's Pashtuns, and Deobandism
H INDUSTANI F ANATICS , I NDIA ’ S P AS H TUNS , AND D EOBANDISM – C ONNECTIONS Cultural & Geographic Research TRIBAL ANALYSIS CENTER September 2009 Hindustani Fanatics, India’s Pashtuns, and Deobandism – Connections H INDUSTANI F ANATICS , I NDIA ’ S P AS H TUNS , AND D EOBANDISM – C ONNECTIONS Copyright © 2009 Tribal Analysis Center, LTD All Rights Reserved Cultural & Geographic Research TRIBAL ANALYSIS CENTER About Tribal Analysis Center Tribal Analysis Center, 6610-M Mooretown Road, Box 159. Williamsburg, VA, 23188 Hindustani Fanatics, India’s Pashtuns, and Deobandism – Connections Hindustani Fanatics, India’s Pashtuns, and Deobandism – Connections There are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to one who is striking at the root. Henry David Thoreau … but the wretched Rohillas had no country; the country they had left had long been possessed by others, and where were these miserable people to seek for a place of shelter – from the persecution of whom? Of Englishmen – natives of a country renowned for its justice and humanity. They will carry their melancholy tale into the numerous tribes and nations among whom they are scattered, and you may depend upon it the impression which it will make, will, sooner or later, have its effect.1 Charles James Fox The British literature about the military problems they encountered with the Pashtun2 tribes in the region lying along the border with Afghanistan is filled with references to antagonists they referred to as “Hindustani Fanatics.” Again and again, the huge British Empire went to war with these people, but they are little understood. The purpose of this paper is to explain who the “Fanatics” were, their tribal connection, and their links to both Islamic extremism and Deobandism. -
Il Giardino Indo-Islamico Mughal
Corso di Laurea magistrale (ordinamento ex D.M. 270/2004) in Antropologia Culturale, Etnologia, Etnolinguistica Tesi di Laurea L’effimera arte dei giardini islamici: il giardino indo-islamico mughal Relatore Ch. Dott.sa Sara Mondini Laureando Giulia Cazzola Matricola 818770 Anno Accademico 2015 / 2016 This page is intentionally left blank 2 Sommario Premessa ............................................................................................................................ 5 Introduzione ...................................................................................................................... 7 Capitolo 1 - La dinastia mughal .................................................................................... 10 Babur, la ‘Tigre’ .............................................................................................................. 13 Humayun, Naser Ad-Din ............................................................................................... 25 Akbar, Allahu-Akbar ....................................................................................................... 31 Jahangir, il ‘Conquistatore del mondo’ ........................................................................... 36 Shah Jahan, ‘Re del Mondo’ ........................................................................................... 39 Aurangzeb - Alangir , ‘Conquistatore dell’universo’ ..................................................... 45 Verso la disgregazione dell’Impero ............................................................................... -
The Diffusion of Islam in the Eastern Frontier of South Asia: ∗∗∗ a Fresh Approach
The Diffusion of Islam in the Eastern Frontier of South Asia: ∗∗∗ A Fresh Approach Mohammad Yusuf Siddiq ** Abstract: A hinterland in the old world of Islam, the early history of diffusion of Islamic civilization in Bengal is shrouded with mystery. Though the maritime and trade contacts between Arab world and Bengal can be traced during the early period of Islam, the religious and cultural interaction between these two far-fetched lands started growing only after the Muslim conquest of the region in the early 13th century. After the establishment of Muslim rule in the region, the mass conversion to Islam took place over centuries in different forms and phases. In my present research work, I have been able to make a major breakthrough in constructing history of early religious and cultural contact between the Arab world and Bengal using the substantively rich and hitherto untapped archaeological materials, namely epigraphic sources (i.e., Arabic inscriptions), scattered abundantly all over the region. A well-known French colonial administrator in North Africa once compared the world of Islam to a resonant box: the faintest sound in one corner reverberates through the whole. As elsewhere in the Arab-Islamic world, this apt metaphor finds expression also in the Bengal frontier. In spite of their many distinctive local cultural features, one soon discovers the most vibrant message among the Muslims of Bengal - the unity within the diversity - that is prevalent everywhere in the Arab-Islamic civilization . * This study was made possible through generous grants from Iran Heritage Foundation, London, U.K., Fondation Max Van Berchem, Geneva, Switzerland, and Higher Education Commission, Islamabad, Pakistan. -
In This Issue
VOLUME VII, ISSUE 13 u MAY 18, 2009 IN THIS ISSUE: BRIEFS..................................................................................................................................1 HIZB-UT TOWHID ADDS TO THE JIHADI CONUNDRUM IN BANGLADESH By Wilson John....................................................................................................................3 BRITISH HOSTAGE THREATENED WITH DEATH UNLESS ABU QATADA IS RELEASED FROM BRITISH PRISON By Raffaello Pantucci.............................................................................................4 Abu Qatada MOROCCo’S MULTI-PRONGED COUNTERTERRORISM STRATEGY By Mattew Chebatoris............................................................................................5 Terrorism Monitor is a publication of The Jamestown Foundation. THE SWAT CONFLICT: AN Arc OF INSTABILITY SPREADING FROM The Terrorism Monitor is AFGHANISTAN TO CENTRAL ASIA AND XINJIANG designed to be read by policy- By Syed Adnan Ali Shah Bukhari and Sadia Sulaiman....................................................8 makers and other specialists yet be accessible to the general public. The opinions expressed within are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily KUWAIT’S HAMID ABDALLAH AL-ALI DESCRIBES PENDING DEFEAT reflect those of The Jamestown OF AMERICANS IN AFGHANISTAN AND PAKISTAN Foundation. Shaykh Hamid Abdallah al-Ali, a leading Kuwait-based Salafist preacher and advocate of global jihad, has declared that Islam’s battle in Afghanistan Unauthorized reproduction or redistribution