Urdu

Please post your comments and suggestions for this article.

Comment by Jamshed on September 28th, 2014 at 8:19 am

Hi,

I would like to suggest the following to be added to your Online dictionaries section at http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Urdu

http://www.urdu-english.com
Free Urdu picture dictionary and lessons

Regards,

Jamshed

Comment by Jennifer Tanabe on September 29th, 2014 at 3:05 pm

Thank you, Jamsehd, for your feedback. The site you suggested will be added to the External links section of our article.

Comment by Anthropolophile on November 13th, 2021 at 10:15 pm

I would like to request a change of information regarding the genesis of the language. Although the name “urdu” did indeed appear in the greater area of Delhi, the language itself did not. It arrived there by the Ghaznavids in the 12th century AD, whom brought it from Lahore.

I present the following quotes and their sources which support this claim, a couple of which include it’s more historical name:

*”The very word Urdu came into being as the original Lashkari dialect, in other words, the language of the army.”

-Geography of the South Asian Subcontinent: A Critical Approach

* “The Punjab presumably felt the impact of Persian before any other part of India, starting in the Ghaznavid period. Bailey believes that “the formation of Urdu began as soon as the Ghaznavi forces settled in Lahore in 1027”

-Literacy in the Persianate World: Writing and the Social Order

“As we have seen , Mahmud Shirani places the origin of Urdu in the eleventh century, relating it to the Ghaznavi rule over the Panjab”

– A House Divided: The Origin and Development of Hindi/Hindavi

“Grahame Bailey , after analysing them , came to the conclusion that “the formation of Urdu began as soon as the Ghaznavi forces settled in Lahore , i . e . in 1027 ””

-Rise of Muslims in Indian Politics An Analysis of Developments from 1885 to 1906

“Mahmud Shirani places the origin of Urdu in the eleventh century, relating. It to the Ghaznavi rule over the Punjab”.

– History of Printing and Publishing in India: Origins of printing and publishing in the Hindi heartland

“Urdu begins , as it must as a matter of commonsense have begun , as soon as the Ghaznavi armies got to Lahore in 1027 – and Lahore was nowhere near the area of Khari ( and still less that of Braj and Avadhi)”

– Central Asian Review Volume 15 1967

“The language in which these texts were written was similar to Urdu, which was to develop much later. The assertion is based on the premise that this early Urdu-like language was derived from Ghaznavid Persian”

– A Comprehensive History of Medieval India Twelfth to the Mid-eighteenth Century

“The origins of Urdu date back to the period of Ghaznavid rule in the Panj?b in the sixth / twelfth century .”

-The Cambridge History of Islam: Volume 2B, Islamic Society and Civilisation Volume 2, Part 2 1977

“its early development took place in Punjab following the Ghaznavid conquest of Punjab whence Punjabi language came to be influenced by Turko-Persian language”

– Early Urdu Historiography By Javed Ali Khan · 2005

“The origin of Urdu dates back to the period of the Ghaznavid rule in the Punjab”

– History of Islam: Classical period, 1206-1900 C.E

“It is generally agreed that the early Muslim invasions of the Punjab (from 1027) fused Persian with its heavy Arabic content with Old Punjabi”

-The Sufis of Bijapur, 1300-1700 Social Roles of Sufis in Medieval India

“The formation of Urdu began in 1027 when Mahmud ‘ s armies were stationed at Lahore.”

– Islam and Pakistan’s Identity

“The birth of Urdu language was the direct result of the synthesis between the invading armies of Mahmud of Ghazni with the civilian population of the Indian cities. The word Urdu itself means Lashkar, derived from the Turkish language meaning armies.”

– The Essentials of Indian Culture by K.K.Khullar

“Those who ascribe the origin of Urdu to Delhi and its environs ignore the considerable chunk of 177 of earlier history of uninterrupted interaction of Persian and Punjabi. Their theory also fails to explain the existence of Urdu in the South in the form of Dakhani of a large number of Punjabi words and grammatical constructions. In view of this background, it seems that the late professor Mahmood Sherwani and Professor Zore were right in holding that urdu was born in Punjab. There is ample historical and literary evidence to support this view.”

-Prince, Poet, Lover, Builder, Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah, the Founder of Hyderabad by Narendra Luther

“In fact this mixture of locals and foreigners gave birth to the language of Urdu in Lahore that was called Lashkari Zuban (language of army) at that time.”

-Lahore During the Ghaznavid Period by Khalid Kanwal

Comment by Jennifer Tanabe on November 14th, 2021 at 10:45 am

Thank you for your comment.
I will study your feedback and make changes to the text of the article as appropriate.
Thank you again for taking the time to help make NWE a valuable information resource.

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