Amjad Hyderabadi Birth name Syed Ahmed Hussain(Urdu: سيد احمد حسين‎; 1888–1961), better known by the pen-name Amjad Hyderabadi (امجد حيدرابادى), was an Urdu and Persian Ruba'i poet from Hyderabad, India. In Urdu poetic circles he is also known as Hakim-al-Shuara.[1]

Ahmed Hussain
Born(1878-01-01)1 January 1878
Hyderabad State, British India
Died31 January 1961(1961-01-31) (aged 73)
Hyderabad, India
Pen nameAmjad Hyderabadi امجد حيدرابادى
OccupationRuba'i Poet
PeriodNizam's era
GenreRuba'i
SubjectHumanity, Philosophy

During the rule of Nizam of Hyderabad, a flood occurred on 28 September 1908) on the River Musi. Hyderabadi was one of the 150 people who saved their lives by hanging on to the branches of a tamarind tree. He later wrote a poem "Qayamat-e-Soghra" (The Minor Doomsday) detailing his experience. To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the tragedy, Satyanarayana Danish recited this poem.[2][3]

The Warsi Brothers, an Indian Qawwali musical group, regularly recited his poems in their Qawali in various countries.[4]

Life

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Hyderabadi was born in Hyderabad Deccan into a small family.

He saw his entire family, including his mother, wife and daughter get washed away in the Musi River flood of 1908 and he was the only survivor in his family. Most of his Ruba'i reflects his depression at the loss of his family.[2] This is an example:

Itni Dar'ya May Bhi Na Duba Amjad Dub'nay Valo Ko Bus Ek Chul'lu Kafi Hai [This quote needs a citation]

Books written by Amjad Hyderabadi

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  • Rubaiyat Amjad Hyderabadi[5]
  • Adabi ijlas wo Mushaera

Books on Amjad Hyderabadi

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  • Hakeem Al Shuara Amjaad Hyderabadi[6]
  • Masterpieces of Urdu Rubaiyat by K C Kanda.[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Nawab Bahadur Yar Jang – BAHADUR YAR JANG ACADEMY".
  2. ^ a b "Hyderabad marks 100th anniversary of Great Musi floods". 28 September 2008.
  3. ^ "Hyderabad observes 100th anniversary of Musi flood".
  4. ^ "आ आ इधर आ, फिर माँग, फिर माँग (क़व्वाली) - aa aa idhar aa, phir maa.Ng, phir maa.Ng (Qavvaalii) / गैर फिल्म-(Non-Film)".
  5. ^ "rubaiyat-e-amjad". Rekhta. Retrieved 20 February 2024.
  6. ^ bahaduryarjangacademy.com
  7. ^ Kanda, K. C. (January 1996). Urdu Rubaiyat. Sterling Publishers Pvt., Limited. ISBN 9788120718272.

Further reading

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