Mirat ul akhbar

  1. Digital District Repository Detail
  2. Overview on Ain
  3. Parsi Reform Movements Sikh Reform Movements
  4. Digital District Repository Detail
  5. Overview on Ain
  6. Parsi Reform Movements Sikh Reform Movements
  7. Parsi Reform Movements Sikh Reform Movements


Download: Mirat ul akhbar
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Digital District Repository Detail

Digital District Repository Detail | Digital District Repository | History Corner | Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav, Ministry of Culture, Government of India This page uses Javascript. Your browser either doesn't support Javascript or you have it turned off. To see this page as it is meant to appear please use a Javascript enabled browser. Decades before the Indian National Congress (1885) was conceived, the Indian nationalist movement had achieved its embryonic form through the rising wave of print media in the nation in the early 19 th century. Dissident journalists made their journals the mouthpiece to speak truth to power. Although born in Hoogly district, Raja Rammohan Roy who was one of the earliest pioneers of free press in India, had made Calcutta his arena of work, publishing his Persian journal, Mirat-ul-Akhbar. The top brass of the East India Company had veritable anxieties about the rising whirlwind of print media and its social ramifications. In 1823 things came to a boiling point, when acting Governor-General John Adam deported the English journalist, John Silk Buckingham back to England for his Calcutta Journal, which criticized the Company maladministration. This was followed by a Press Ordinance which sought to curb the freedom of publication for any such material that could challenge the authority of the State. As a response, Indian journalists sent two memorials to the Supreme Court in Calcutta and the King-in-Council in London. In what came to be seen as a ‘dar...

Overview on Ain

• Study Material • Magazine Download • PYQ download • UPSC Notes • 1 minute read • Daily MCQ • Difference b/w • Full Forms • Free Courses • Free content for download • Video Lectures • UA Batches • Prelims • Environment • Agriculture • Geography • History-Freedom Struggle • Art & Culture • Polity • International relation • Sci & Tech • Economy • Mains • GS 1 • GS 2 • GS 3 • GS 4 • Exam Updates • UPSC Syllabus • Exam Dates • Results • Eligibility Criteria • Mains Syllabus • Prelims Syllabus • Notifications • Test & Practice • Daily MCQ • Prelims PYQs • Mains Questions • Rankers Guide • Topper Notes • Topper Interviews • Exam Tips • Paper Analysis The Ain-i-Akbari, or “Administration of Akbar,” is a 16th-century detailed text detailing the Mughal Empire’s administration under Emperor Akbar, written in Persian by his court historian, Abu’l Fazl. It is Volume III and the concluding portion of Abu’l-considerably Fazl’s longer document, the Akbarnama (Account of Akbar), which is also in three volumes. The Ain-i-Akbari is indeed the third volume of the Akbarnama, which contains administrative records on Akbar’s reign, comparable to a gazetteer. “It contains Emperor Akbar’s (i.e. manner of ruling), and is in fact the administrative report and statistical return of his administration as it was approximately 1590,” Blochmann explains. There are five books in the Ain-i-Akbari. The first volume, manzil-abadi, is about the imperial home and its upkeep, while the second, sipah-abadi, is...

Parsi Reform Movements Sikh Reform Movements

• The Parsi Religious Reform Association was founded at Bombay by Furdunji Naoroji and S.S. Bengalee in 1851. • They advocated the spread of women’s education. • They also wanted to reform their marriage customs. • Naoroji published a monthly journal, Jagat Mithra. • The momentum gathered through these reform movements and went a long way in uplifting the entire community. • Dadabai Naoroji and Naoroji Furdoonji were the pioneers of religious and social reform among the Parsi community. • For the progress of women and the spread of modern education they, together, started a journal Rast Goftar ("The Truth Teller") • Another important social reformer in the Parsi community was Sorabji Bengali. • Among the Sikhs, the movement for reform was started by the Singh Sabhas aimed at reforming the Sikh society • They were started at Amristar and Lahore. The two Sabhas merged together and played an important role in the spread of education. • The Khalsa College was founded at Amristar in 1892 and many schools were also started. • In the early decades of the 20th century, the Gurudwaras were under the control of priests and Mahants. • They treated them as their private property. • Both Shiromany Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee and the Akali Dal party aimed at handing over the control of the Gurudwaras to the representative of the Sikh community. • The leaders of the freedom movement supported them. • In 1925 a law was passed which gave the right of managing the Gurudwaras to the Shiro...

Mirat

Correct Answer - Option 1 : Raja Rammohan Roy The correct answer Raja Rammohan Roy. • Raja Rammohan Roy was one of the pioneers of the Indian renaissance movement in the late 18th and early 19th century CE. • He was proficient in Sanskrit, Persian, English and knew Arabic, Latin and Greek. • In his early years, he was employed by the East India Company. • He supported the establishment of the Hindu College in Calcutta (1817). • He started a Bengali weekly newspaper 'Sambad Kaumudi' in 1819. • He established two organizations: • The Atmiya Sabha (1815) • The Brahmo Samaj (1828) • Mirat-ul-Akhbar (1823) was the first Persian journal established by Raja Rammohan Roy. Categories • • (31.9k) • (8.8k) • (764k) • (248k) • (2.9k) • (5.2k) • (664) • (121k) • (72.1k) • (3.8k) • (19.6k) • (1.4k) • (14.2k) • (12.5k) • (9.3k) • (7.7k) • (3.9k) • (6.7k) • (63.8k) • (26.6k) • (23.7k) • (14.6k) • (25.7k) • (530) • (84) • (766) • (49.1k) • (63.8k) • (1.8k) • (59.3k) • (24.5k)

Mirat

Persian-language journal edited by Raja Rammohan Roy Mirat-ul-Akhbar Editor Founded 12 April 1822 Language Ceased publication 4 April 1823 Mirat-ul-Akhbar ( مرآت‌الاخبار; lit. ' Mirror of News ') was a Mirat-ul-Akhbar was not well-received by the colonial government, Mirat-ul-Akhbar on the same day. The journal's final issue listed his criticisms of the Ordinance. See also [ ] • • References [ ] • Rizwan Ullah (15 July 2001). The Milli Gazete . Retrieved 12 July 2015. • Social Ideas and Social Change in Bengal 1818-1835. Brill Archive. p.91. GGKEY:8YWY14NBR66 . Retrieved 12 July 2015. • Joanne Shattock (16 March 2017). Journalism and the Periodical Press in Nineteenth-Century Britain. Cambridge University Press. p.253. 978-1-107-08573-2 . Retrieved 23 April 2020. • Sonwalkar, Prasun (3 September 2015). Journalism Studies. 16 (5): 633–634.

Digital District Repository Detail

Digital District Repository Detail | Digital District Repository | History Corner | Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav, Ministry of Culture, Government of India This page uses Javascript. Your browser either doesn't support Javascript or you have it turned off. To see this page as it is meant to appear please use a Javascript enabled browser. Decades before the Indian National Congress (1885) was conceived, the Indian nationalist movement had achieved its embryonic form through the rising wave of print media in the nation in the early 19 th century. Dissident journalists made their journals the mouthpiece to speak truth to power. Although born in Hoogly district, Raja Rammohan Roy who was one of the earliest pioneers of free press in India, had made Calcutta his arena of work, publishing his Persian journal, Mirat-ul-Akhbar. The top brass of the East India Company had veritable anxieties about the rising whirlwind of print media and its social ramifications. In 1823 things came to a boiling point, when acting Governor-General John Adam deported the English journalist, John Silk Buckingham back to England for his Calcutta Journal, which criticized the Company maladministration. This was followed by a Press Ordinance which sought to curb the freedom of publication for any such material that could challenge the authority of the State. As a response, Indian journalists sent two memorials to the Supreme Court in Calcutta and the King-in-Council in London. In what came to be seen as a ‘dar...

Overview on Ain

• Study Material • Magazine Download • PYQ download • UPSC Notes • 1 minute read • Daily MCQ • Difference b/w • Full Forms • Free Courses • Free content for download • Video Lectures • UA Batches • Prelims • Environment • Agriculture • Geography • History-Freedom Struggle • Art & Culture • Polity • International relation • Sci & Tech • Economy • Mains • GS 1 • GS 2 • GS 3 • GS 4 • Exam Updates • UPSC Syllabus • Exam Dates • Results • Eligibility Criteria • Mains Syllabus • Prelims Syllabus • Notifications • Test & Practice • Daily MCQ • Prelims PYQs • Mains Questions • Rankers Guide • Topper Notes • Topper Interviews • Exam Tips • Paper Analysis The Ain-i-Akbari, or “Administration of Akbar,” is a 16th-century detailed text detailing the Mughal Empire’s administration under Emperor Akbar, written in Persian by his court historian, Abu’l Fazl. It is Volume III and the concluding portion of Abu’l-considerably Fazl’s longer document, the Akbarnama (Account of Akbar), which is also in three volumes. The Ain-i-Akbari is indeed the third volume of the Akbarnama, which contains administrative records on Akbar’s reign, comparable to a gazetteer. “It contains Emperor Akbar’s (i.e. manner of ruling), and is in fact the administrative report and statistical return of his administration as it was approximately 1590,” Blochmann explains. There are five books in the Ain-i-Akbari. The first volume, manzil-abadi, is about the imperial home and its upkeep, while the second, sipah-abadi, is...

Parsi Reform Movements Sikh Reform Movements

• The Parsi Religious Reform Association was founded at Bombay by Furdunji Naoroji and S.S. Bengalee in 1851. • They advocated the spread of women’s education. • They also wanted to reform their marriage customs. • Naoroji published a monthly journal, Jagat Mithra. • The momentum gathered through these reform movements and went a long way in uplifting the entire community. • Dadabai Naoroji and Naoroji Furdoonji were the pioneers of religious and social reform among the Parsi community. • For the progress of women and the spread of modern education they, together, started a journal Rast Goftar ("The Truth Teller") • Another important social reformer in the Parsi community was Sorabji Bengali. • Among the Sikhs, the movement for reform was started by the Singh Sabhas aimed at reforming the Sikh society • They were started at Amristar and Lahore. The two Sabhas merged together and played an important role in the spread of education. • The Khalsa College was founded at Amristar in 1892 and many schools were also started. • In the early decades of the 20th century, the Gurudwaras were under the control of priests and Mahants. • They treated them as their private property. • Both Shiromany Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee and the Akali Dal party aimed at handing over the control of the Gurudwaras to the representative of the Sikh community. • The leaders of the freedom movement supported them. • In 1925 a law was passed which gave the right of managing the Gurudwaras to the Shiro...

Parsi Reform Movements Sikh Reform Movements

• The Parsi Religious Reform Association was founded at Bombay by Furdunji Naoroji and S.S. Bengalee in 1851. • They advocated the spread of women’s education. • They also wanted to reform their marriage customs. • Naoroji published a monthly journal, Jagat Mithra. • The momentum gathered through these reform movements and went a long way in uplifting the entire community. • Dadabai Naoroji and Naoroji Furdoonji were the pioneers of religious and social reform among the Parsi community. • For the progress of women and the spread of modern education they, together, started a journal Rast Goftar ("The Truth Teller") • Another important social reformer in the Parsi community was Sorabji Bengali. • Among the Sikhs, the movement for reform was started by the Singh Sabhas aimed at reforming the Sikh society • They were started at Amristar and Lahore. The two Sabhas merged together and played an important role in the spread of education. • The Khalsa College was founded at Amristar in 1892 and many schools were also started. • In the early decades of the 20th century, the Gurudwaras were under the control of priests and Mahants. • They treated them as their private property. • Both Shiromany Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee and the Akali Dal party aimed at handing over the control of the Gurudwaras to the representative of the Sikh community. • The leaders of the freedom movement supported them. • In 1925 a law was passed which gave the right of managing the Gurudwaras to the Shiro...

Mirat

Persian-language journal edited by Raja Rammohan Roy Mirat-ul-Akhbar Editor Founded 12 April 1822 Language Ceased publication 4 April 1823 Mirat-ul-Akhbar ( مرآت‌الاخبار; lit. ' Mirror of News ') was a Mirat-ul-Akhbar was not well-received by the colonial government, Mirat-ul-Akhbar on the same day. The journal's final issue listed his criticisms of the Ordinance. See also [ ] • • References [ ] • Rizwan Ullah (15 July 2001). The Milli Gazete . Retrieved 12 July 2015. • Social Ideas and Social Change in Bengal 1818-1835. Brill Archive. p.91. GGKEY:8YWY14NBR66 . Retrieved 12 July 2015. • Joanne Shattock (16 March 2017). Journalism and the Periodical Press in Nineteenth-Century Britain. Cambridge University Press. p.253. 978-1-107-08573-2 . Retrieved 23 April 2020. • Sonwalkar, Prasun (3 September 2015). Journalism Studies. 16 (5): 633–634.