The word ‘ Urdu ‘ is derived from
Turkish word ‘ Ordu ‘ meaning ‘ Army Camp ‘ or ‘Lashkar ‘ . Exact origin of ‘
Urdu ‘ is some what difficult to trace; but many different theories have been developed
to explain it. Mohammad Hussain Azad, an eminent Indian scholar, believes that
Brij Bhasha, a dialect of Western Hindi, is the mother language of Urdu. Later
on the invasion of Delhi by Muslims engrafted many Persian elements, which
resulted in the creation of a new hybrid language called Urdu.
Mehmud Sherani, on the contrary,
maintains that Urdu language originated due to the interaction and intermixing
of Muslim soldiers and locals (Hindus) after the conquest of Punjab and sindh
by Mehmud of Ghazni. During this era many Punjabi words and idioms got
interwoven in Hindi of Delhi and thus a new language came into being.
But the most established theory
relating the origination, evolution and development of Urdu language is that
Urdu is a conglomeration of many different languages manly Arabic, Persian,
Pashtu, Turkish, Hindi and some local dialects of India. Muslims ruled over
India for about 1,000 years. Muslim army comprised of soldiers of different
origins and nationalities speaking different languages. Interaction among these
soldiers and with the locals led to the development of a new language, mutually
understood by all. This new language named as ‘ Urdu ‘ proved to be a unifying
communication tool between the Muslim soldiers during their conquest of ancient
India (including Mayanmar).
Languages do not originate
overnight, they take centuries to evolve and develop, similarly it took about 5
to 6 centuries to standardize grammatical structure of urdu. Origin of Urdu is
traced back to the mid of 10th and beginning of 11th century, but these were
the formative years of Urdu language and no significant either literary or
grammatical work was done during this period; in the initial years of its birth
it was only used as a communication lingo. This hybrid language was called ‘
Hindvi ‘ or ‘ Dehlvi ‘ and was written in ‘ Devnagri ‘ Script. Later on in 14th
century this language was introduced in Southern India (Hyderabad Deccan), here
also the vocabulary of hindvi expanded many words and idioms of local languages
were embedded. People start calling this new version of language spoken in
Southern India as ‘ Deccani ‘ . The expansion of vocabulary continued and it
changed from ‘ Deccani ‘ to ‘ Rekhta ‘ , and this Rekhta is believed to be the
forerunner of modern Urdu language. The standardization of Rekhta(Urdu) took
place in 16th and 17th century during the reign of Shah Jehan and Aurangzeb
Alamgir, when synthetic character of Urdu acquired a complete form and greater
content and power.
Like most other languages of the
world, Urdu also started its literature through poetry.
Amir Khusro(1253-1325) a remarkable
scholar of Persian and Arabic is considered to be the first ever poet of urdu
language. He composed his poems in the then prevailing ‘ Hindvi ‘ language.
Wali Deccani (1635-1707) and Quli Qutab Shah are believed to be the
predecessors of Amir Khusro. Other eminent poets of this era were
Mir Taqi Mir(1727-1810)
Mushafi(1750-1785)
Mir Dard(1720-1785)
Qaim Chand Puri(1724-1794)
Haider Ali Atish(1778-1846)
Ustad Zauk
Mir Babr Ali Anis(1802-74)
Mirza Asad Ullah Khan
Galib(1797-1869) is the greatest poet of urdu language .
He was a specialized Ghazal poet and
his work is still popular among the masses.
Urdu poetry did not take his final
form until 17th century when it was declared the official language of court.
The 18th century saw a phenomenal rise in urdu literature especially urdu
poetry. It was at this time when Urdu replaced Persian as lingua franca of the
region.
Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar is
also highly esteemed among urdu poets because of his unique style. Amongst the
poets of 19th century Allama Mohamad Iqbal(1877-1938) stands out, because he
was the first one who introduced revolutionary concepts and ideas in his
poetry. Faiz Ahmad Faiz is the most well-known and an distinguished poet of
modern era. His work revolves around the concepts of communism and social
justice. Beside others Sufi Saints have also contributed a lot in Urdu poetry.
The short story in Urdu began with
Munshi Premchand ‘ s ‘ Soz-e-Vatan ‘ . Mohammad Hasan Askari, Sajjad Zaheer,
Rajinder Singh Bedi, Krishan Chandar, Saddat Hassan Manto, Ismat Chugtaii,
Mumtaz Muffati, Ahmad Nadeem Qasmi and Ashafaq Ahmad are counted among leading
lights of Urdu short story.
Novel writing in Urdu can be traced
to Nazir Ahmed (1836-1912 CE) who composed several novels like Mirat-ul-Urus
(1869 CE), Banat-un-Nash (1873 CE), Taubat-un-Nasuh (1877 CE) etc. Realism in
urdu novel was introduced by PremChand. Mirza Mohamad Hadi Ruswa, Sajjad Haider
Yaldrem, Niaz Fateh Puri, Abdul Haleem Sharar, Ratan Nath Sharshar are the
pioneer Urdu novelists. Khadija mastur, Intizar Hussain, Bano Qudssiya, Aziz
Ahmed are the urdu novel writers of modern times.
Akbar Allahabadi (1846-1921) was the
pioneer among the Urdu humorists and satirists. Majeed Lahori, Mehdi Ali Khan,
Patras Bokhari (1898-1958), Mirza Farhatullah Beg, Shafiq-ur-Rahman, Azim Baig
Chughtai, Ibn-e-Insha, Mushfiq Khwaja, Mushtaq Ahmed Yousifi, K.L.Kapur, Amjad
Hussain, Mujtaba Hussain, Himayatullah and Talib Khundmeri are the other
leading names in the field of humour
In the first half of the nineteenth
century, drama started appearing at Urdu scene. The first dramatist is believed
to be Amant Lucknowi, and his drama Indar Sabha is considered as the first Urdu
drama. Urdu drama has made a lot of progress in recent years. Imtiaz Ali Taj,
Agha Hashar Kashmiri, Amjad Islam Amjad, Haseena Moin, Fatim Suriya Bajiha are
the most distinguished play writers of present day.
The word ‘ Urdu ‘ is derived from
Turkish word ‘ Ordu ‘ meaning ‘ Army Camp ‘ or ‘Lashkar ‘ . Exact origin of ‘
Urdu ‘ is some what difficult to trace; but many different theories have been
developed to explain it. Mohammad Hussain Azad, an eminent Indian scholar,
believes that Brij Bhasha, a dialect of Western Hindi, is the mother language
of Urdu. Later on the invasion of Delhi by Muslims engrafted many Persian
elements, which resulted in the creation of a new hybrid language called Urdu.
Mehmud Sherani, on the contrary, maintains that Urdu language originated due to
the interaction and intermixing of Muslim soldiers and locals (Hindus) after
the conquest of Punjab and sindh by Mehmud of Ghazni. During this era many
Punjabi words and idioms got interwoven in Hindi of Delhi and thus a new language
came into being. But the most established theory relating the origination,
evolution and development of Urdu language is that Urdu is a conglomeration of
many different languages manly Arabic, Persian, Pashtu, Turkish, Hindi and some
local dialects of India. Muslims ruled over India for about 1,000 years. Muslim
army comprised of soldiers of different origins and nationalities speaking
different languages. Interaction among these soldiers and with the locals led
to the development of a new language, mutually understood by all. This new
language named as ‘ Urdu ‘ proved to be a unifying communication tool between
the Muslim soldiers during their conquest of ancient India (including
Mayanmar). Languages do not originate overnight, they take centuries to evolve
and develop, similarly it took about 5 to 6 centuries to standardize
grammatical structure of urdu. Origin of Urdu is traced back to the mid of 10th
and beginning of 11th century, but these were the formative years of Urdu
language and no significant either literary or grammatical work was done during
this period; in the initial years of its birth it was only used as a
communication lingo. This hybrid language was called ‘ Hindvi ‘ or ‘ Dehlvi ‘
and was written in ‘ Devnagri ‘ Script. Later on in 14th century this language
was introduced in Southern India (Hyderabad Deccan), here also the vocabulary
of hindvi expanded many words and idioms of local languages were embedded.
People start calling this new version of language spoken in Southern India as ‘
Deccani ‘ . The expansion of vocabulary continued and it changed from ‘ Deccani
‘ to ‘ Rekhta ‘ , and this Rekhta is believed to be the forerunner of modern
Urdu language. The standardization of Rekhta(Urdu) took place in 16th and 17th
century during the reign of Shah Jehan and Aurangzeb Alamgir, when synthetic
character of Urdu acquired a complete form and greater content and power. Like
most other languages of the world, Urdu also started its literature through
poetry.
Amir Khusro(1253-1325) a remarkable
scholar of Persian and Arabic is considered to be the first ever poet of urdu
language. He composed his poems in the then prevailing ‘ Hindvi ‘ language.
Wali Deccani (1635-1707) and Quli Qutab Shah are believed to be the
predecessors of Amir Khusro. Other eminent poets of this era wereMir Taqi
Mir(1727-1810)Mushafi(1750-1785)Mir Dard(1720-1785)Qaim Chand
Puri(1724-1794)Haider Ali Atish(1778-1846)Ustad ZaukMir Babr Ali
Anis(1802-74)Mirza Asad Ullah Khan Galib(1797-1869) is the greatest poet of
urdu language . He was a specialized Ghazal poet and his work is still popular
among the masses.Urdu poetry did not take his final form until 17th century
when it was declared the official language of court.
The 18th century saw a phenomenal
rise in urdu literature especially urdu poetry. It was at this time when Urdu
replaced Persian as lingua franca of the region. Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah
Zafar is also highly esteemed among urdu poets because of his unique style.
Amongst the poets of 19th century Allama Mohamad Iqbal(1877-1938) stands out,
because he was the first one who introduced revolutionary concepts and ideas in
his poetry. Faiz Ahmad Faiz is the most well-known and an distinguished poet of
modern era. His work revolves around the concepts of communism and social justice.
Beside others Sufi Saints have also contributed a lot in Urdu poetry. The short
story in Urdu began with Munshi Premchand ‘ s ‘ Soz-e-Vatan ‘ . Mohammad Hasan
Askari, Sajjad Zaheer, Rajinder Singh Bedi, Krishan Chandar, Saddat Hassan
Manto, Ismat Chugtaii, Mumtaz Muffati, Ahmad Nadeem Qasmi and Ashafaq Ahmad are
counted among leading lights of Urdu short story. Novel writing in Urdu can be
traced to Nazir Ahmed (1836-1912 CE) who composed several novels like
Mirat-ul-Urus (1869 CE), Banat-un-Nash (1873 CE), Taubat-un-Nasuh (1877 CE)
etc.
Realism in urdu novel was introduced
by PremChand. Mirza Mohamad Hadi Ruswa, Sajjad Haider Yaldrem, Niaz Fateh Puri,
Abdul Haleem Sharar, Ratan Nath Sharshar are the pioneer Urdu novelists.
Khadija mastur, Intizar Hussain, Bano Qudssiya, Aziz Ahmed are the urdu novel
writers of modern times. Akbar Allahabadi (1846-1921) was the pioneer among the
Urdu humorists and satirists. Majeed Lahori, Mehdi Ali Khan, Patras Bokhari
(1898-1958), Mirza Farhatullah Beg, Shafiq-ur-Rahman, Azim Baig Chughtai,
Ibn-e-Insha, Mushfiq Khwaja, Mushtaq Ahmed Yousifi, K.L.Kapur, Amjad Hussain,
Mujtaba Hussain, Himayatullah and Talib Khundmeri are the other leading names
in the field of humour In the first half of the nineteenth century, drama
started appearing at Urdu scene. The first dramatist is believed to be Amant
Lucknowi, and his drama Indar Sabha is considered as the first Urdu drama. Urdu
drama has made a lot of progress in recent years. Imtiaz Ali Taj, Agha Hashar
Kashmiri, Amjad Islam Amjad, Haseena Moin, Fatim Suriya Bajiha are the most
distinguished play writers of present day.
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