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 India on Syed Ahmad Khan 1998

A commemorative postage stamp on the Death Centenary of Sir Syedan Muslim pragmatist, reformist, philosopher from British India :

Syed Ahmad Taqvi bin Syed Muhammad MuttaqiAligarh Muslim UniversityIssued by India

Issued on Mar 27, 1998

Issued for : The Department of Posts is happy to issue this stamp, to pay homage to this great Indian social reformer and educationist of the 19th century; Sir Syed Ahmad Khan.

Credits :
Stamp
: Aligarh Muslim University
FDC
: Smt. Alka Sharma
Cancellation : Smt. Alka Sharma

Type : Stamp, Mint condition

Colour : Single Colour

Denomination : 200 Paise

Overall size : 3.91 x 2.90 cms.

Printing size : 3.55 x 2.54 cms.

Perforation : 13 x 13

Paper : Imported un w/m Adhesive Gravure Coated Stamp Paper in reels 47 cms. width

Stamps Printed : 0.4 Million

Number per issue sheet : 35

Printing Process : Photogravure

Printer : India Security Press, Nashik

Name : Syed Ahmad bin Syed Muhammad Muttaqi

Born on Oct 17, 1817 at Delhi, New Delhi, British India

Died on Mar 27, 1898 at Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh, British India

About : 

  • Sir Syed Ahmad Khan was born at Delhi on April 17, 1817 in a family with tradition of service in Mughal royal courts. He received primary education rather unsystematically at home. Nonetheless he developed an acquaintance with the profession of letters by occasionally contributing to Sayyidulakhbar, one of the pioneers among the Urdu newspapers of India. He joined East India Company as a petty judicial officer and worked at different places in Delhi and Uttar Pradesh. He retired in 1878 from the post of subordinate judge under the British government in India, with the title of Companion of the order of the Star of India which was conferred on him in 1869 in London where he had gone to study the English method of education and also to collect material from the British Museum and other libraries for a book on the life of Prophet Muhammad. After his retirement he was made a Knight Commander of the Star of India and was also taken on the Governor-General’s Council. In 1881 he was again nominated to the Council, where he continued for five years. In 1882, he was made a member of the Government-appointed Education Commission.
  • His literary activities started mainly in 1847 with a graphic study of Delhi monuments in his important archaeological work, Asar Ussanadid. The work was translated into French in 1861 by Garcin de Tassy, which introduced the author to the western world. Subsequently, in 1864, Syed Ahmad Khan was made an honorary fellow of the Royal Asiatic Society of London, and in 1869 an honorary doctorate was conferred on him by the University of Edinburgh.
  • In the later part of his life he settled at Aligarh and devoted his energy to uplifting the muslim society of India socially, educationally and religiously. In 1875, he succeeded in establishing, in the teeth of opposition by the muslim orthodoxy the Muhammadan AngloOriental College which was raised in 1920 to the present Aligarh Muslim University. In 1886, he founded Muhammadan Educational Congress which was a non-political organisation to promote liberal education amongst the muslims.
  • As a religious thinker, he stood for rationalism and for fresh interpretation of religion in the light of the changing conditions of society. In this field again he laid the foundation of a new school of thought (Ilm-i Kalam), which brought with it a revaluation of the traditional social ethics of the Muslim community.
  • Text : National Biographies.
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[…] a state of their own in order to preserve and perpetuate their identity as a distinct nation. Sir Syed Ahmad Khan was the first to openly proclaim the existence of two different and distinct nations in […]

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[…] Saiyed Mir Hasan’s advice, who was a great admirer of Syed Ahmad Khan, Iqbal’s father gave him English education and consequently he prosecuted his studies at the […]

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[…] Sir Syed Ahmad Khan’s enthusiasm to improve the living conditions of the down cast Muslim Community of the Sub-continent remained high and fervent even after the establishment of a College, because he could fore-see that Aligarh Institution was not strong enough to cater to the needs of the Muslim community of British India. He believed that it was extremely necessary that the Muslims of India should be provided with a plat-form where they could assemble and evolve a common ground of understanding and line of action. In order to accomplish his goals, Sir Syed Ahmad Khan under-took extensive tours of the country and it was quite encouraging and inspiring that his movement received a tremendous, favourable response in the Punjab. […]

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[…] 1875, Syed Ahmad Khan established the M.A.O. College at Aligarh and expressed the hope “that this college […]

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