Hyderabad Sindh

Hyderabad, Sindh

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Hyderabad

حیدر آباد
Clockwise from top: Tomb of Mian Ghulam Kalhoro, Tomb of a Talpur Mir, Rani Bagh, Navalrai Market Clocktower, Tombs of Talpur Mirs
Clockwise from top: Tomb of Mian Ghulam Kalhoro, Tomb of a Talpur Mir, Rani Bagh, Navalrai Market Clocktower, Tombs of Talpur Mirs
Hyderabad is located in Sindh
Hyderabad
Hyderabad
Location in Pakistan
Coordinates: 25°22′45″N 68°22′06″ECoordinates25°22′45″N 68°22′06″E
Country Pakistan
Province Sindh
DistrictHyderabad District
Autonomous towns5
Number of Union councils20
Government
 • TypeMunicipal Corporation
 • MayorTayyab Hussain
 • Deputy MayorSyed Suhail Mehmood Mashadi
Area
 • Total319 km2 (123 sq mi)
Elevation
13 m (43 ft)
Population
 (2017)[1]
 • Total6,234,309
 • Density20,000/km2(51,000/sq mi)
Demonym(s)Hyderabadi
Time zoneUTC+5 (PST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+6 (PDT)
Area code(s)022
WebsiteN/A
Hyderabad (Sindhi and Urduحيدرآباد‎; (/ˈhdərəbɑːd/ (About this soundlisten)) is a city located in the Sindh province of Pakistan. Located 140 kilometres east of Karachi, Hyderabad is the 2nd largest in Sindh province by population, and the 8th largest city in Pakistan.[2] Founded in 1768 by Mian Ghulam Shah Kalhoro of the Kalhora Dynasty, Hyderabad served as the capital until the British transferred the capital to Karachi in 1843.

Etymology[edit source]

The city was named in honour of Ali,[3] the fourth caliph and cousin of the Prophet Muhammad. Hyderabad's name translates literally as "Lion City" - from haydar, meaning "lion," and ābād, which is a suffix indicating a settlement. "Lion" references Ali's valour in battle,[4] and so he is often referred to as Ali Haydar, roughly meaning "Ali the Lionheart," by South Asian Muslims.

History[edit source]

Founding[edit source]

Pacco Qillo was built on a limestone outcropping known as Ganjo Takkar.
The River Indus was changing course around 1757, resulting in periodic floods of the then capital of the Kalhora dynastyKhudabadMian Ghulam Shah Kalhoro decided to shift the capital away from Khudabad, and founded Hyderabad in 1768 over a limestone ridge on the eastern bank of the Indus River known as Ganjo Takkar, or "Bald Hill." The small hill is traditionally believed to have been the location of the ancient settlement of Neroon Kot, a town which had fallen to the armies of Muhammad Bin Qasim in 711 CE.[5][6] When the foundations were laid, the city came to be known by the nickname Heart of the Mehran.
Devotees of Imam Ali advised Mian Ghulam Shah Kalhoro to name the city in honour of their Imam.[6] The Shah of Iran later gifted the city a stone which purportedly bears the imprint of Ali's feet.[6] The stone was placed in the Qadamgah Maula Ali, which then became a place of pilgrimage.[6]

Kalhora[edit source]

The tomb of Mian Sarfraz Kalhoro.
In 1768, Mian Ghulam Shah Kalhoro ordered a fort to be built on one of the three hills of Hyderabad to house and defend his people. The fort was built using baked clay bricks, earning it the name Pacco Qillo, meaning Strong Fort in Sindhi.[7] The fort was completed in 1769, and is spread over 36 acres.[6] Mian Ghulam Shah also built the "Shah Makki Fort," commonly known as Kacha Qila, to fortify the tomb of the Sufi saint Shah Makki.[8]
Hyderabad remained the Kalhora capital during the period in which Sindh was united under their rule. Attracted by the security of the city, Hyderabad began to attract artisans and traders from throughout Sindh, thereby resulting in the decline of other rival trading centres such as Khudabad.[6]A portion of the population of Khudabad migrated to the new capital, including SonarasAmils and Bhaibands. Those groups retained the term "Khudabadi" in the names of their communities as a marker of origin.
Mian Ghulam Shah died in 1772, and was succeeded by his son, Sarfraz Khan Kalhoro. In 1774, Sarfraz Khan built a "New" Khudabad north of Hala in memory of the old Kalhoro capital, and attempted to shift his capital there.[6] The attempt failed, and Hyderabad continued to prosper while New Khudabad was abandoned by 1814.[6] A formal plan for the city was laid out by Sarfraz Khan in 1782.[5]

Talpur[edit source]

The Tombs of Talpur Mirs date from the 18th century.
Mir Fateh Ali Khan Talpur captured the city of Khudabadfrom the Kalhoros in 1773, and made the city his capital. He then captured Hyderabad in 1775,[6] and shifted his capital there in 1789 after Khudabad once again flooded. Renovation and reconstruction of the city's fort began in 1789, and lasted for 3 years.[6] Celebrations were held in 1792 to mark his formal entry in the Pacco Qillo fort,[6]which he made his residence and held court.
Talpur rule maintained Hyderabad's security, and the city continued to attract migrants from throughout Sindh, turning the city into a major regional centre. Lohana Hindus from Afghanistan migrated to the city and set up ship as metalworkers.[6] The city's goldsmiths, silversmiths, and leather tanners began to export their Hyderabadi wares abroad.[6] The city's textile industry boomed with the arrival of Susi and Khes cotton cloth and handicrafts from towns in rural Sindh.[6] The city's became renowned for its calligraphers and bookbinders, while its carpet dealers traded carpets from nearby Thatta.[6]
Henry Pottinger traveled up the Indus River in the early 1830s on behalf of the British.[9] He claimed to have seen 341 ships over the course of 19 days at Hyderabad, indicating its importance as a major trading centre by this time.[6] Hyderabad's goods were mostly exported to markets in Khorasan, India, Turkestan, and Kashmir - though some Hyderabadi wares were displayed at The Great Exhibition of 1851 in London.[6]
In order to use the Indus River for commercial navigation to Punjab, the British signed a treaty with the rulers of Hyderabad and Khairpur that guaranteed the British free passage along the Indus and through Sindh.[9] Mir Murad Ali was pressured into accepting an 1838 treaty which resulted in the stationing of a British Resident in the city.[9] The British also signed a treaty of "eternal friendship" with the Talpur rulers of Hyderabad in the early 19th century, who promised not to allow the French to set up residency in Sindh.[9] In 1839, they were pressured into forcing another treaty that guaranteed the British trade and security privileges.[9]

British[edit source]

Hyderabad's Badshahi Bungalowwas built as the palace of Prince Mir Hassan Ali Khan Talpur in 1863.
Hyderabad in the late 1800s. The triangular structures on the rooftops are wind catchers, funneling cool breezes into homes below.
The British defeated the city's Talpur rulers at the Battle of Hyderabad on 24 March 1843. The provincial capital was then transferred to Karachi by the British general Sir Charles Napier. Being the last stronghold in Sindh, the conquered city was the final step in the British Conquest of Sindh.[10] Following the success of the British, several of the city's Talpur Mirs rulers were exiled and died in Calcutta. Their bodies were eventually brought back to Hyderabad, and were buried in the Tombs of the Talpur Mirs located at the northern edge of the Ganjo Hill.[5]
Hyderabad's prosperity did not initially decline after the shifting of Sindh's capital to Karachi. Merchants there forged links with the commercial community in Hyderabad, and began exporting Hyderabadi wares to distant markets.[6] Following Sindh's assimilation into the Bombay Presidency in 1847, the city emerged as hub for a style of handicrafts known as Sindwork that was peddled in Bombay, and prized by its European residents for its perceived authenticity of style.[11] The work was then shipped from Bombay to Egypt in order to be sold as souvenirs to tourists there.[11] Hyderabadi traders also spread east towards Singapore and Japan as well.[11]Unable to fulfill demand for its products, Hyderabad's traders began to import crafts from KashmirVaranasiChina, and Japan to ease demand.[11]Sindwork handicrafts thus placed Hyderabad at the centre of a new trading network that was almost entirely dominated by Hindus from the city's mercantile Bhaiband segment of the Lohana caste,[11]although the artisans themselves were primarily Muslim.[12]
The city's jail was built in 1851,[6] and the Municipality of Hyderabad was established in 1853.[10] In the Pacco Qillo the British kept the arsenal of the province, transferred from Karachi in 1861, and the palaces of the ex-Amirs of Sind that they had taken over. In 1857, when the Indian mutiny raged across the South Asia, the British held most of their regiments and ammunition in this city. Though the city did not witness major fighting, the British demolished the large round tower that once stood outside of Pacco Qillo, deeming it a potential risk to their rule were it to fall into the hands of rebels.[6]
Hyderabad's Rani Bagh ("Queen's Garden") was established as Das Gardens in 1861, and was re-christened in honour of Queen Victoria.[6] British-style schools were introduced in Hyderabad by the 1860s, while the St Joseph Missionary School was established in 1868.[6] Further European schools were opened, while Hyderabad's Hindu and Muslim elite established schools for their respective communities throughout the British colonial period.[6] A hospital, psychiatric institution, and quarters for officials were built in 1871.[6] By 1872, 43,088 people lived in the city.[10] The city by 1873 had 20 kilometers of metalled roads that were lit at night by kerosene lamps.[6] The newly built urban quarters of Saddar and Soldier Bazaar further expanded the city.
The British built a rail network throughout the western part of South Asia in the 1880s, and purchased the private Scinde Railway to connect the province to Kabul trade routes. The rail network would later be called the North-Western State Railway. The Kotri Bridge was completed in 1900 to traverse the Indus, and link Hyderabad to Karachi.[6] Hyderabad's economy grew as a result of improved transportation. The city increasingly developed into a consumer market under British rule, and the city's exports began to decline, though increased transit trade allowed the city's economy to continue growing.[6]
In 1901, 69,378 people lived in the city. Hinduism was the most dominant religion with 43,499 followers, while 24,831 Muslims made up the largest religious minority. The city ranked seventh in the Bombay Presidency in terms of population.[10] By 1907, the Gazetteer of Sindh claimed that 5,000 Hyderabadi merchants were to be found dispersed throughout the world.[11] The city's Navalrai Clock Tower was built in 1914.[13] Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore remarked in the early 20th century that Hyderabad was the "most fashionable" city in all of India.[14]

Modern[edit source]

The City of Hyderabad served as the capital of Sindh province between 1947 and 1955. The Partition of British India resulted in the large-scale exodus of much of the city's Hindu population, though like much of Sindh, Hyderabad did not experience the widespread rioting that occurred in Punjab and Bengal.[15] In all, less than 500 Hindu were killed in Sindh between 1947-48 as Sindhi Muslims largely resisted calls to turn against their Hindu neighbours.[16] Hindus did not flee Hyderabad en masse until riots erupted in Karachi on 6 January 1948, which sowed fear in Sindhi Hindus despite the fact that the riots were local and regarded Sikh refugees from Punjab seeking refuge in Karachi.[15]
The Hindus who departed had played a major role in the city's economy, and formed the majority of the Hyderabad's population.[11] The vacuum left by the departure of much of the city's Hindu population was quickly filled by newly arrived refugees from India, known as Muhajirs.[17] By 1951, 66% of the city was made up of Muhajirs.[18] Though Hyderabad became a majority Urdu-speaking city in the 1940s, the arrival of Pashtuns and Punjabis from northern Pakistan further diversified the city's ethnic composition over the next few decades.[17]
Animosity between Urdu and Sindhi speakers first arose in 1967,[6] it intensified under the Pakistan People's Party government in the 1970s, which were widely perceived by Muhajirs to be a pro-Sindhi administration.[19] Violence erupted between Urdu and Sindhi speakers during riots in 1971 when the provincial government wished to impose Sindhi-language requirements on Urdu speakers, and again in 1972 in reaction to the 1972 Sindhi Language Bill.[19]
The Khuda Ki Basti housing scheme was launched in Hyderabad 1981 as a way to provide housing to low-income residents by forming local cooperatives pool funds to gradually provide increased services that would in turn be managed by community members.[20] Success of the project resulted in the programme being launched in Karachi as well.
The late 1980s saw turbulent ethnic rioting between Sindhis and Muhajirs.[21] On 30 September 1988, militants from the Sindh Progressive Party drove into Muhajir dominated areas in the city, and opened indiscriminate fire in busy crossroads.[19] The so-called "Hyderabad Massacre" resulted in the deaths of over 60 people in a single day, and more than 250 deaths in total. In a backlash, more than 60 Sindhi speaking people were gunned down in Karachi.[21][22] The city began to divide itself ethnically, and the Muhajir population migrated en masse from Qasimabad and the interior of Sindh into Latifabad. Similarly, Sindhis moved to Qasimabad from Hyderabad and Latifabad.[21][23][24]Further ethnic disturbances occurred in May 1990, including a police-led siege of the Pacco Qillo fortress in the centre of Hyderabad,[19] in which Muhajir activists claim 150 were killed.[25] 2 bombings on trains in Hyderabad killed 10 people in 2000.[26]
Much of Hyderabad's public spaces have been encroached upon by illegally-constructed homes and businesses.[6] Much of the city's historic structures are badly neglected,[6] with little preservation being undertaken by the provincial administration.

Demographics[edit source]

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1941135,000—    
1951242,000+79.3%
1961435,000+79.8%
1972629,000+44.6%
1981752,000+19.6%
19981,166,894+55.2%
20171,732,693+48.5%
Source: [27][28]

Population[edit source]

Hyderabad is home to 1,732,693 people as per the 2017 Census of Pakistan.[29] The city gained 565,799 residents since the 1998 Census, representing an increase of 48.5% - the lowest growth rate of the ten largest Pakistani cities.[30]
Sindhi woman on the banks of the River Indus in the outskirts of Hyderabad

Ethnicity[edit source]

Hyderabad was a majority Sindhi Hindu city prior to 1948,[11] when many migrated to India and elsewhere[31] after the independence of Pakistan 1947. Hindus who departed had played a major role in the city's economy, and formed the majority of the Hyderabad's population.[11] The vacuum left by the departure of much of the city's Hindu population was quickly filled by the newly arrived Urdu speaking Muslim refugees from India, known as Muhajirs.[17]
Following the arrival of Muhajirs, Hyderabad became a majority Urdu-speaking city, with Muhajirs making up 66% of the city's population.[18] The arrival of Pashtuns and Punjabis from northern Pakistan further diversified the city's ethnic composition over the next few decades,[17] and by 1998, the percentage of Urdu speakers had fallen to 58%. Most Punjabis and Pakhtuns are distinct and separately living near the railway station and its vicinity. The city therefore has cosmopolitan atmosphere with multiethnic and multicultural communities. The city is now a multi-ethnic and has a mix of SindhiUrdu speaking MuhajirsBrahuisPunjabisPashtunsMemons and Baloch people.

Religion[edit source]

Religions in Hyderabad
ReligionsPercent
Islam
94.0%
Hinduism
5.0%
Others
1.0%
Hyderabad is noteworthy in Sindh and Pakistan generally for its comparative tolerance towards religious and ethnic minorities. The spread of Islamist militancy and extremism has been stymied in large parts of Sindh by vibrant civil society, and Sindh's progressive politics.[32]
The city has a long association with Sufism. In the 18th Century Syeds from Multan migrated and settled in the city's Tando Jahania neighbourhood, making it a sacred place for Muslims. The Syedscame from Uch Sharif, via Jahanian, 42 km from Multan). They were mostly descendants of Jahaniyan Jahangasht - a Sufi saint who is popular in Sindh and southern Punjab.[33][34][35][36]Hyderabad is near some of Sindh's most important Sufi shrines, being situated 49 kilometres (30 mi) from the joint Muslim-Hindu Shrine at Odero Lal, 59.3 kilometres (36.8 mi) from the Shrine of Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai, 146 kilometres (91 mi) from the Shrine of Lal Shahbaz Qalandar.[37]
Hindus once formed the majority in Hyderabad prior to 1948, and today account for the largest religious minority in Hyderabad - forming 5% of the total population of the city. Hyderabad's AmilHindus clan of the Lohana caste had been employed previously the Talpur Mirs for their Persian language proficiency and skills in bureaucracy - this role continued under the British as the Amilswere recruited into colonial administration.[6] The Amils formed the Amil Colony, which was where some of Hyderabad's finest colonial architecture was found.[6] The Bhaiband clan, also of the Lohana caste, dominated commerce in the city.[38]
While Christians account for 1% of the total population, Hyderabad is the seat of a Diocese of the Church of Pakistan and has five churches and a cathedral.

Geography[edit source]

Sunset over the Indus at Hyderabad.

Location[edit source]

Located at 25.367 °N latitude and 68.367 °E longitude with an elevation of 13 metres (43 ft), Hyderabad is located on the east bank of the Indus River and is roughly 150 kilometres (93 mi) away from Karachi, the provincial capital. Two of Pakistan's largest highways, the Indus Highway and the National Highway join at Hyderabad. Several towns surrounding the city include Kotri at 6.7 kilometres (4.2 mi), Jamshoro at 8.1 kilometres (5.0 mi), Hattri at 5.0 kilometres (3.1 mi) and Husri at 7.5 kilometres (4.7 mi).

Climate[edit source]

Hyderabad has a hot desert climate (Köppen BWh), with warm conditions year-round. The city is famous for its winds which moderate the otherwise hot climate.[39] As a result, Hyderabadi homes traditionally feature "wind-catching" towers that funnel breezes down into living quarters in order to alleviate heat.[6]
The period from mid-April to late June (before the onset of the monsoon) is the hottest of the year, with highs peaking in May at 41.4 °C (106.5 °F). During this time, winds that blow usually bring along clouds of dust, and people prefer staying indoors in the daytime, while the breeze that flows at night is more pleasant. Winters are warm, with highs around 25 °C (77 °F), though lows can often drop below 10 °C (50 °F) at night. The highest temperature of 50 °C (122 °F) was recorded on 25 May 2018, while the lowest temperature of 1 °C (34 °F) was recorded on 8 February 2012.
In recent years, Hyderabad has seen great downpours. In February 2003, Hyderabad received 105 millimetres (4.13 in) of rain in 12 hours, leaving many dead.[40][41] The years of 2006 and 2007 saw close contenders to this record rain with death tolls estimated in the hundreds. The highest single-day rain total of 250.7 millimetres (9.87 in) was recorded on 12 September 1962, while the wettest month was September 1962, at 286 millimetres (11.26 in).
hideClimate data for Hyderabad, Pakistan
MonthJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecYear
Record high °C (°F)33.3
(91.9)
38.2
(100.8)
43.4
(110.1)
46.0
(114.8)
48.4
(119.1)
48.5
(119.3)
45.5
(113.9)
43.9
(111.0)
45.0
(113.0)
44.0
(111.2)
41.0
(105.8)
36.0
(96.8)
48.5
(119.3)
Average high °C (°F)25.0
(77.0)
28.1
(82.6)
33.9
(93.0)
38.9
(102.0)
41.6
(106.9)
40.2
(104.4)
37.4
(99.3)
36.3
(97.3)
36.8
(98.2)
37.2
(99.0)
31.9
(89.4)
26.3
(79.3)
34.5
(94.0)
Average low °C (°F)11.1
(52.0)
13.6
(56.5)
18.5
(65.3)
23.0
(73.4)
26.2
(79.2)
28.1
(82.6)
27.8
(82.0)
26.7
(80.1)
25.3
(77.5)
22.3
(72.1)
17.3
(63.1)
12.5
(54.5)
21.0
(69.9)
Record low °C (°F)3.3
(37.9)
4.0
(39.2)
9.0
(48.2)
12.0
(53.6)
19.0
(66.2)
20.0
(68.0)
21.4
(70.5)
22.8
(73.0)
20.6
(69.1)
15.0
(59.0)
6.0
(42.8)
3.0
(37.4)
3.0
(37.4)
Average rainfall mm (inches)1.2
(0.05)
3.9
(0.15)
5.1
(0.20)
5.8
(0.23)
3.5
(0.14)
13.9
(0.55)
56.7
(2.23)
60.8
(2.39)
21.4
(0.84)
1.5
(0.06)
2.1
(0.08)
2.0
(0.08)
177.9
(7)
Mean monthly sunshine hours272.8257.1288.3288.0313.1279.0235.6251.1285.0306.9279.0272.83,328.7
Source #1: [42]
Source #2: HKO (sun only, 1969–1989) [43]

Topography[edit source]

The city was initially founded on a limestone ridge on the eastern bank of the Indus River known as Ganjo Takkar, or "Bald Hill." The limestone outcropping provided several scenic vistas in the city, as well as inclined routes.[6] The most famous incline, the Tilak Incline, is named after the early 20th century independence activist Lokmanya Tilak.[6]

Economy[edit source]

The industrial sector contributes 25% to the GDP of Pakistan, with a major concentration of industry in an arc stretching from Karachi to Hyderabad.[44] 75% of Sindh's industry is located in the Karachi-Hyderabad region.[45] The Sindh Industrial Trading Estate, home to 439 industrial units, was established on the outskirts of Hyderabad in 1950 which prospered with until the urban violence of the 1980s. Much of the city's industrial base was weakened by ethnic violence in urban Sindh in the 1980s, although poor infrastructure and supply of electricity has also hampered growth.[46]
Hyderabad is an important commercial centre where industries includes: textiles, sugar, cement, manufacturing of mirror, soap, ice, paper, pottery, plastics, tanneries, hosiery mills and film. There are hide tanneries and sawmills. Handicraft industries, including silver and gold work, lacquer ware, ornamented silks, and embroidered leather saddles, are also well established.
Hyderabad produces almost all of the ornamental glass bangles in Pakistan, as well as layered glass inlay for jewelry.[47] The glass industry employs an estimated 300,000-350,000 people in manufacturing units centred on the Churi Parah neighbourhood.[46][48] The industry frequently uses recycled glass as material for its bangles.[48]
Hyderabad is surrounded by fertile alluvial plains, and is a major commercial centre for the agricultural produce of the surrounding area, including millet, rice, wheat, cotton, and fruit.[49]

Cityscape[edit source]

Local architecture[edit source]

Hyderabad's local architectural patterns reflect the region's harsh climate and local customs. Walls of most traditional-style buildings were made of mud bricks, which helped keep the structure cool in summer and warm in winter.[20] Hyderabad is famed for its heat-relieving winds,[39] and so homes also featured wind-catchers that directed cool breezes into each homes' living quarters.[6]
Residential structures in Hyderabad's Old City, and in Hirabad typically have a small inward facing courtyard that afforded privacy from the city's streets. Walls facing the street are typically plain, though the home may display an elaborate entryway.[20] Inner courtyards and doorways of more elaborate homes would be decorated with jharoka balconies, floral motifs, ornamented ceilings, and decorative arches.[39] Most residential homes, however, were utilitarian in design.[39]
Homes built during the British colonial period contain introduced architectural elements like balconies and decorative columns as part of an elaborate outward-facing façade.[20] Such examples can be found in the Saddar neighbourhood of Hyderabad. Large decorated windows were featured as part of Hyderabad's colonial style in order to ventilate the building.[39] Tall and multi-sectional windows with stained glass windows became a hallmark of Hyderabad's colonial-era architecture.[39] Homes of wealthy residents, especially among the city's Bhaiband community, the presence of windows was a marker of status, and allowed wealthy Hindus to practice the custom of purdah.[39] Balconies were sometimes affixed to the front of a building, and were typically made of wood or cast-iron.[39] Such homes would also sometimes have painted façades.[39]

Civic administration[edit source]

Before the government of Abubaker Nizamani, the District Hyderabad included the present-day District of Badin. The longest-serving mayor of Hyderabad was Jamil Ahmed, who served from 1962 to 1971.
In 2005/2006, General Pervaiz Musharraf again divided it into four more districts Matiyari, Tando Allahyar, Tando Mohammad Khan and Hyderabad. Hyderabad district was subdivided into four talukas[50]
  1. Hyderabad City Taluka
  2. Hyderabad Taluka (rural)
  3. Latifabad
  4. Qasimabad

Judiciary[edit source]

Court of District & Sessions Judge Hyderabad was established in 1899 under the subordination of Judicial Commissioner of Sindh.

Transportation[edit source]

Road[edit source]

The M-9 motorway is a 6 lane motorway that connects Hyderabad to Karachi, 136 kilometres away. The city will also be connected to Sukkur by the M-6 motorway, being built as part of the wider China-Pakistan Economic Corridor. From Sukkur, motorways will continue onwards to MultanLahoreIslamabadFaisalabad, and Peshawar.

Rail[edit source]

Hyderabad Junction railway stationserves as the city's main rail station.
Hyderabad Junction railway station serves as the city's main rail station. Passenger services are provided exclusively by Pakistan Railways. The city's station is serviced by the Allama Iqbal Express to Sialkot, the Badin Express, and the Khyber Mail to Peshawar. Hyderabad has trains to NawabshahBadinTando Adam JunctionKarachi, and points in northern Pakistan.

Air[edit source]

Hyderabad Airport is no longer served by commercial air traffic. The last services were suspended in 2013. Passengers must now instead rely entirely on Karachi's Jinnah International Airport.

Education[edit source]

75% of males and 65% of females over the age of 10 were literate in Hyderabad District in 2010,[51]a region which includes rural areas around the city. In 2010-2011, 2.96 Billion Rupees were spend on public education in Hyderabad District,[51] and number which increased to 3.99 Billion Rupees in 2011-2012.[51] 26% of children in Hyderabad District were enrolled in paid private schools in 2010.[51]
The University of Sindh was founded in Karachi in 1947, before moving to Hyderabad in 1951. The Liaquat University of Medical and Health Sciences was founded in nearby Jamshoro in 1951.

Sports[edit source]

The Niaz Stadium of Hyderabad, with a seating capacity of 15,000 is home to the Hyderabad cricket team. It is known for Pakistani bowler Jalal-ud-Din's hat-trick, which was the first ever hat-trick taken by a bowler in an one-day match in 1982.[52] Hyderabad also has a hockey stadium.

Landmarks[edit source]

Media[edit source]

Literature[edit source]

As tradition goes, Sindh had always been a hub for Sufi poets. With a foothold on strong educational foundations, the city of Hyderabad was made into a refuge for thriving literary advocates. Of the few, Mirza Kalich Beg received education from the Government High School, Hyderabad and carried the banner of Sindhi literature across borders.[53] Modern novelists, writers, columnists and researchers like Musharraf Ali FarooqiGhulam Mustafa Khan and Qabil Ajmeri also hail from Hyderabad.
Hyderabad has served many Sindhi literary campaigns throughout the history of Pakistan as is evident from the daily newspapers and periodicals that are published in the city. A few worth mention dailies are the Kawish,[54] Ibrat,[55] and Daily Sindh.[56]

Radio and television[edit source]

With the inauguration of a new broadcasting house at Karachi in 1950, it was possible to lay the foundations for the Hyderabad radio station in 1951. The initial broadcast was made capable using 1 kW medium-wave transmitter. With the first successful transmissions on the FM 100 bandwidth in Karachi, Lahore and Islamabad in October 1998, the Government decided on opening transmissions to other cities where Radio Pakistan had found success. This made available the FM 101 bandwidth transmissions to Hyderabad and other cities in Sindh.[57]
A relief from the regular broadcasts in other cities, entertainment content on the Hyderabad radio gave birth to many a star whose names became an attribute to Hyderabad's richer media content. Among them were actor Shafi Mohammad, a young man who had recently finished his postgraduate degree from the University of Sindh.[58] Such fresh and young talent became a trademark to entertainment in Hyderabad.
Pakistan Television had only had half-a-decade broadcast success from 1963 to 1969 that people in the radio entertainment business felt destined to make a mark on the television circuits. Prominent radio personalities from the Hyderabad radio station like Shafi Muhammad Shah and Mohammad Ali left the airwaves to hone their acting skills on the television.[59] Television shows and content enriched with the inclusion of Hyderabadi names however PTV never opened a television station in Hyderabad.
While the year 2005 saw new FM regular stations set up at GawadarMianwaliSargodhaKohatBannu and Mithi, private radio channels began airing in and around Hyderabad. Of late, stations like Sachal FM 105 and some others have gained popularity. But the unavailability of an up-to-date news and current affairs platform renders the services of such stations of not much value to the masses but nonetheless appealing to youngsters.
As the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (abbreviated as PEMRA) gave licenses to private radio channels, so were television channels owned privately given a right to broadcast from the year 2002,[60] and Daily Kawish,[54] a prominent Sindhi newspaper published from Hyderabad opened a one-of-its-kind private Sindhi channel Kawish Television Network. Many followed in its path namely Sindh TVDhoom TV and Kashish TV premiering Sindhi content.

Notable people[edit source]

See also[edit source]

Notes[edit source]

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  5. Jump up to:a b c Mir Atta Muhammad Talpur. "The Vanishing Glory of Hyderabad (Sindh, Pakistan)" (PDF). UNIOR Web Journals]. Retrieved 1 April 2008.
  6. Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj Talpur, Mir Atta Muhammad (2007). "The Vanishing Glory of Hyderabad (Sindh, Pakistan)" (PDF)Web Journal on Cultural Patrimony. University of Naples. ISSN 1827-8868.
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  24. ^ Col. Ved Prakash (2011). Encyclopaedia of Terrorism in the World, Volume 1. Kalpaz publication. ISBN 978-81-7835-869-7. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
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References[edit source]

  • Biographical Encyclopedia of Pakistan 1963–1966 edition.

External links[edit source]


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