Not being a born Hyderabadi, I
had read quite a few books to know about the city of my current domicile. Of
these, “Hyderabad – A Biography “ by
Narendra Luther is my most favourite. This book gives a detailed account of the
period prior to city’s birth in 1591, and then presents an unbroken chronicle
of it till the current age. From Bhagnagar, to Hyderabad to Cyberabad everything is covered in it in perfect
detail. It combines the popular history with research based historiography in a
very engrossing manner. Oral history, interviews, recordings of eminent
personalities have been very aptly used.
The Qutb Shahi Dynasty starting
with Sultan Quli, Qtub-ul-Mulk and ending with Abul Hasan Tana Shah ruled here
from 1518 to 1699, over eight Sultans. Then from 1720 to 1948 ten different rulers of Ashaf Jah dynasty rule over the
area ( seven of them were titled Nizam for technical reasons ), culminating into its merger with independent India in 1948.
Hyderabad is the daughter of
Golconda Fort, which stands in ruin now, eight kilometers away from the center
of the city. The fort was built about thousand years ago, during the Kakatiya
rule. Rudramba Devi, the queen of Kakatyiya ruled for thirty four years from
1262 to 1296.. His grand son another courageous ruler, continued ruling till
1323, whereafter he was defeated by Ulugh Khan ( later known as Mohammad Bin
Tughlaq ) and was imprisoned and taken to Delhi. This maverick ruler shifted
the capital of Indian empire from Delhi to Devagiri in the south, which was
later renamed Daulatabad. In 1346 in violation of the Tughlaq rule, the locals
choose a leader called ” Zafar” as their king, who founded the Bahmani dynasty
and ruled the area from 1347 to 1518, first from Gulbarga and then from Bidar. During
the rule of Mohammad III, Sultan Quali, the son of a fugitive chieftain from
Hamadan across the river Oxmania, up the north-west of Afganisthan, entered the
service of Bahamani rulers and ultimately became the governor of Tilang
province, which was controlled from the Golkonda fort. He had the ultimate
power on Golkonda and vicinity after the death of Mohammad III. Sultan Quali,
the first ruler of Qutb Shahi Dynasty started expanding his empire from the
Golkonda in 1518, from where this book really starts.
Ibraihim the 4th ruler
of the Qutb Shahi dynasty of Golkonda , in a confederation arrangement with the
sultans of Ahmednagar, Bijapur and Bidar waged battle against Ram Raja the ruler
of Vijayanagar and defeated and finished him. Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah, the next
Sultan loved and married a Hindu common girl called Bhagmati and her village and adjoining areas were
converted into a township at Sultan’s order and was called Bhagnagar, the
predecessor of Hyderabad. Char Minar was also built inside this township.
Master civil engineers and craftsmen were brought from Iran. After Bhagmati
died leaving a girl child Hyder Bakshi, the courtiers of the Sultan could convince him to change the
name of the city from Bhagnagar to Hyderabad, and thus Hyderabad was born.
The City of Hyderabad was praised
very liberally by the then Indian and foreign travelers to the city.
Particularly the French Travellers Tavernier and Thevenot were all praise for
the magnificence of the city. It comes out in that age and time the Sultans
used to have European physicians for their health care at Hyderabad.
After passage of time and
generations, the rule came to the hand of Tana Shah, the last Sultan
of the Qutb Shahi Dynasty in 1672. Tana Shah was very liberal, poetic minded,
merciful and it is told that he was
instrumental in resurrection of Kuchipuddi form of dance, which in those days
were practiced by Brahmin boys, and girls were prohibited. He made many
tactical mistakes and somehow earned enmity from the Mogul emperor at Delhi. One of the reasons could be his hobnobbing with Shivaji,, the Marathi King
Shivaji and his clan at the behest of his Prime Minister Madanna. Ultimately he had to sign a humiliating treaty with the Moguls and sacrifice
the life of his Hindu Prime Minister Madanna, But emperor Aurangjeeb was not happy with the treaty and he personally
came to Golconda to lay a siege of the place in January 1687. Even after many
months of siege no advance could be made by the Moguls. They had debacle after
debacle. Their many plans failed. But Tana Shah had accepted a defeat mentally
and made again many mistakes. Ultimately with the help of bribes Moguls were
able to open the gate of the Golconda fort and enter there. He was finally
arrested and taken to Daulatabad to spend rest 13 years of his life in Jail.
There were some turmoil after the
death of Aurangjeeb and finally in 1720
the first Nijam was appointed to rule Hyderabad at the behest of the Emperor in
in Delhi. Hyderabad remained a rich place and the 10th ruler Mir
Osman Ali Khan ( but called 7th Nizam because of some title issue of a few of his
predecessors) although a miserly person,
was supposed to be one of the richest persons of the world. First under the
Moguls and then under the British, the Nizams of Hyderabad had some
semi-independent, loosely subjected status. The British used to keep Residency Officers in Hyderabad to oversee
their interest, but in matters of administration Nizams enjoyed a good deal of
freedom. In Hyderabad land revenue was less than British India and income tax
was non-existent. But there was an interesting system of Nazar for the Nizam.
Invitation were sent to nobels
and officials on Id and birthdays, People invited were expected to meet the
Nizam with some coins and gold coins.
Registers were kept to see that everyone has attended. The Nizam would keep
the gold coins in one bag and the other coins in another bag. The Nizam would
even send Khasa, the part of royal meal to the nobles, who are supposed to come
back with nazars to the Nizam shortly. Fruits would be sold from the Nizam’s
personal gardens to the nobles, who would have to pay hefty price for the same,
say Rs 24/- for a mango, even in those days. Whatever, the Nizam woild like would
have to be offered as nazar. The Falaknama palace, was also presented as a
nazar to the 6th Nizam and so
was the King Kothi to 7th Nizam. There is story in the book how the
Nizams took some costly books to read and they were never returned.
In June 1947, when the shape of
the political future of India became known, the Nizam declared that he would
join neither India , nor Pakistan, but would assume independence, which was an untenable position for a landlock state with very little defense strength. The following
years saw lot of communal tension in the city and the state and the infamous
razakars took root in the city, to help the Nizam achieving his dreams. In December 1947, Razvi imposed a new
government on Nizam and Mir Laik Ali was appointed the Prime Minister. The atrocities of the razakars increased and
resistance from a section of the right minded enlightened Muslims against the
razakars also increased simultaneously. Shoebullah Khan fell a martyr to the
cause of communal amity. Other persons offering resistance to the razakars,
Akbar Ali Khan, Mehdi Ali and Fareed Mirza however survived. There was blood in the streets of the city.
At one count around this time Nizam had 42 wives and a force of 31660 persons, of these about 17000 numbers were in Subsidiary Force and Hyderabad Contingent, which were under British control.
At one count around this time Nizam had 42 wives and a force of 31660 persons, of these about 17000 numbers were in Subsidiary Force and Hyderabad Contingent, which were under British control.
Finally the Indian Army took
control over Hyderabad headed by General Choudhury, the commander for the Nizam’s
Army was General El Edroos. It was a
short one sided battle with not much bloodshed. On 7th March, 1950,
the City wok up to a sensational story that Laik Ali, the last Prime Minister
of Nizam VII kept under house arrest,
has been able to reach Pakistan. In the mean time the new constitution of India
was promulgated, The full bench of the High Court in August 11, 1950 gave a
decision that the detention of Laik Ali was repugnant to the Article 22 of the
Constitution of India beyond January 26, 1950, and hence anyone helping him to escape was not culpable. Razvi the field marshals of the razakars, was
charged in several cases including the murder of Shoebullah Khan. However, only
one case of Bibinagar dacoity could legally survive and he was put in the
Chanchalguda Jail in Hyderabad and later to Yervada Jail in Pune. He was released from jail
in September 1957 , he came to Hyderabad, nominated Abdul Wahid Owaisi, as the
head of Ittehad, am organization formed by him, and left for Pakistan. In Pakistan Razvi started his law
practice amongst the refugees from India. He died in Pakistan in 1970, and in
the same year Laik Ali also dies in New York.
On 6th March, 1952 the
first elected government was sworn in with oath of office being administered by
the Nizam. The government was headed by Mr. Burgula Ramkrishna Rao of Mehboobnagar district. He was the Chief Minister of Hyderabad.
After him there were twenty Chief
Minister of Andhra Pradesh ( the language based state formed later), of which
eleven times the title of the Chief Minister was “Reddy” and five times it was “Rao”.
Two of the Chief Ministers of Andhra Pradesh, Neelam Sanjeeva Reddy and P V
Narasimha Rao later on held the position of
President of India and Prime Minister of India respectively at different
times. The longest serving Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh was Nara Chandrababu Naidu.
As proposed by Congress, policy
since 1920, Andhra Pradesh was created on the basis of “one language one state”
On October 1, 1953, Andhra Pradesh was formed comprising of eleven Telugu
speaking districts of the erstwhile Madras state. ( Madras state was later
renamed as Tamilnadu).
Hyderabad was trifurcated, and the Telugu speaking districts were merged with
the new state.The cultural difference between the areas of costal Andhra and
those in the direct vicinity of Nizam’s rules were different and so were their attitude
to life. These people, loosely called themselves as from Telengana, till date feel that they have been given a raw deal and
all the riches, even jobs, of Hyderabad and
Telengana region have been wrongfully appropriated to the people from other
regions of Andhra Pradesh, they want two states, or three states, though speaking the
same Telugu language.
During his later years with the
help of his Financial Advisors and lawyers Nizam made several trusts with
monetary endowment from his side for the well being of the people who were
related to him or who lived in the King Kothi with him, and he provided
reasonable to good amount for everyone of them. In last few years Nizam had
reduced the nazrana amount to between five to eleven rupees. Someone presented
him a gold coin during that time, and he said curtly “ You think I am poor?”.
Then he placed his hand on the coin and said “I have accepted it, now you can
take it back”.
These chronicle and much more are
in this book, which is a must read for everyone who loves Hyderabad.