HYDERABAD CITY
Hyderabad is main city of Sindh, the second largest of province and 8th largest city of Pakistan
Hyderabad is a city located
in the Sindh province of Pakistan. It is the second-largest city in Sindh and
8th largest in Pakistan.
The city was founded in 1768 by Mian Ghulam Shah Kalhoro of the
Kalhora Dynasty, Hyderabad served as a provincial capital until the British
transferred the capital to Karachi in 1843.
The city is located on the east
bank of the Indus River and is roughly 150 kilometres 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 Kms, Jamshoro at 8.1 Kms, Hattri at 5.0 KMs and Husri at 7.5 Kms.
The city was named in honour
of Hazar Ali, the fourth caliph and cousin of the Prophet Muhammad SAW. Hyderabad's name
translates literally as "Lion City" - from hayder, meaning
"lion," and ābād, which is a suffix indicating a settlement.
"Lion" references Ali's valour in battle, and so he is often referred
to as Ali Hydar, roughly meaning "Ali the Lion heart," by South Asian
Muslims.
The River Indus was changing
course around 1757, resulting in periodic floods of the then capital of the
Kalhora dynasty, Khudabad. Mian 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. 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. The Shah of
Iran later gifted the city a stone which purportedly bears the imprint of Ali's
feet. The stone was placed in the Qadamgah Maula Ali, which then became a place
of pilgrimage.
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. The fort was
completed in 1769, and is spread over 36 acres. Mian Ghulam Shah also built the
"Shah Makki Fort," commonly known as Kacha Qila, to fortify the tomb
of the Sufi saint Shah Makki.
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. A portion of the population of Khudabad
migrated to the new capital, including Sonaras, Amils 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. The attempt failed, and
Hyderabad continued to prosper while New Khudabad was abandoned by 1814. A
formal plan for the city was laid out by Sarfraz Khan in 1782.
Mir Fateh Ali Khan Talpur
captured the city of Khudabad from the Kalhoros in 1773, and made the city his
capital. He then captured Hyderabad in 1775,[8] 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.[8] Celebrations were held in
1792 to mark his formal entry in the Pacco Qillo fort,[8] 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 center. Lohana Hindus from
Afghanistan migrated to the city and set up ship as metalworkers. The city's
goldsmiths, silversmiths, and leather tanners began to export their Hyderabadi
wares abroad. The city's textile industry boomed with the arrival of Susi and
Khes cotton cloth and handicrafts from towns in rural Sindh. The city's became
renowned for its calligraphers and bookbinders, while its carpet dealers traded
carpets from nearby Thatta.
Henry Pottinger traveled up
the Indus River in the early 1830's on behalf of the British. He claimed to
have seen 341 ships over the course of 19 days at Hyderabad, indicating its
importance as a major trading center by this time. 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.
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. Mir Murad Ali was pressured into accepting an 1838
treaty which resulted in the stationing of a British Resident in the city. 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. In 1839, they were pressured into forcing
another treaty that guaranteed the British trade and security privileges.
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. 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.
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. Following Sindhi'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. The work was
then shipped from Bombay to Egypt in order to be sold as souvenirs to tourists
there.] Hyderabadi traders also spread east towards Singapore and Japan as well.
Unable to fulfill demand for its products, Hyderabad's traders began to import
crafts from Kashmir, Varanasi, China, and Japan to ease demand. Sindwork
handicrafts thus placed Hyderabad at the center of a new trading network that
was almost entirely dominated by Hindus from the city's mercantile Bhaiband
segment of the Lohana caste, although the artisans themselves were primarily
Muslim.
The city's jail was built in
1851, and the Municipality of Hyderabad was established in 1853. 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
Hyderabad's Rani Bagh
("Queen's Garden") was established as Das Gardens in 1861, and was
re-christened in honour of Queen Victoria.[8] British-style schools were
introduced in Hyderabad by the 1860s, while the St Joseph Missionary School was
established in 1868. Further European schools were opened, while Hyderabad's
Hindu and Muslim elite established schools for their respective communities
throughout the British colonial period. A hospital, psychiatric institution,
and quarters for officials were built in 1871. By 1872, 43,088 people lived in
the city. The city by 1873 had 20 KMs of metaled roads that were lit at
night by kerosene lamps. 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 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.
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.
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 Presid
ency in terms of population. By 1907, the Gazetteer of Sindh claimed that 5,000 Hyderabadi merchants were to be found dispersed throughout the world. The city's Navalrai Clock Tower was built in 1914. Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore remarked in the early 20th century that Hyderabad was the "most fashionable" city in all of India.
ency in terms of population. By 1907, the Gazetteer of Sindh claimed that 5,000 Hyderabadi merchants were to be found dispersed throughout the world. The city's Navalrai Clock Tower was built in 1914. Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore remarked in the early 20th century that Hyderabad was the "most fashionable" city in all of India.
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. 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. 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.
The Hindus who departed had
played a major role in the city's economy, and formed the majority of the
Hyderabad's population. 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. By 1951, 66% of the city was made up of Muhajirs. 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.
Animosity between Urdu and
Sindhi speakers first arose in 1967; it intensified under the Pakistan People's
Party government in the 1970s, which were widely perceived by Muhajirs to be a
pro-Sindhi administration. 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.
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. 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. On 30 Sep 1988, militants from the
Sindh Progressive Party drove into Muhajir dominated areas in the city, and
opened indiscriminate fire in busy crossroads. 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. 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. Further ethnic disturbances occurred in May 1990, including a
police-led siege of the Pacco Qillo fortress in the center of Hyderabad, in
which Muhajir activists claim 150 were killed. 2 bombings on trains in
Hyderabad killed 10 people in 2000.
Much of Hyderabad's public
spaces have been encroached upon by illegally-constructed homes and businesses.
Much of the city's historic structures are badly neglected. with little
preservation being undertaken by the provincial administration.
Hyderabad is home to
1,732,693 people as per the 2017 Census of Pakistan. 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. Historical population of the
city is as under:-
Historical population
|
||
Year
|
Population
|
Increase (%)
|
1941
|
135,000
|
-
|
1951
|
242,000
|
+79.3%
|
1961
|
435,000
|
+79.8%
|
1972
|
629,000
|
+44.6%
|
1981
|
752,000
|
+19.6%
|
1998
|
1,166,894
|
+55.2%
|
2017
|
1,732,693
|
+48.5%
|
Hyderabad was a majority
Sindhi Hindu city prior to 1948, when many migrated to India and elsewhere
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. 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.
Following the arrival of
Muhajirs, Hyderabad became a majority Urdu-speaking city, with Muhajirs making up
66% of the city's population. The arrival of Pashtuns and Punjabis from
northern Pakistan further diversified the city's ethnic composition over the
next few decades, 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 Sindhi, Urdu speaking Muhajirs, Brahuis,
Punjabis, Pashtuns, Memons and Baloch people.
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.
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 Syeds came 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. 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.
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 Amil Hindus 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 Amils were recruited
into colonial administration. The Amils formed the Amil Colony, which was where
some of Hyderabad's finest colonial architecture was found. The Bhaiband clan,
also of the Lohana caste, dominated commerce in the city. 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.
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. The most famous incline,
the Tilak Incline, is named after the early 20th century independence activist
Lokmanya Tilak.
The industrial sector
contributes 25% to the GDP of Pakistan, with a major concentration of industry
in an arc stretching from Karachi to Hyderabad.[46] 75% of Sindh's industry is
located in the Karachi-Hyderabad region. 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. Hyderabad is an important commercial center 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. The glass industry employs an estimated 300,000-350,000 people in
manufacturing units centered on the Churi Parah neighborhood. The industry
frequently uses recycled glass as material for its bangles. Hyderabad is
surrounded by fertile alluvial plains, and is a major commercial center for the
agricultural produce of the surrounding area, including millet, rice, wheat,
cotton, and fruit.
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 Pervez Musharraf again divided it into
four more districts Matiyari, Tando Allahyar, Tando Mohammad Khan and
Hyderabad. Hyderabad district was subdivided into following four talukas
·
Hyderabad City Taluka
·
Hyderabad Taluka (rural)
·
Tando Jam
·
Latifabad
·
Qasimabad
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