Mujadid e Kashamara Muhammad Din Fauq محمد دین فوق Fouq | |
---|---|
Born | Muhammad Din Dar Sialkot |
Died | |
Other names | Poet of the Kashmir |
Notable work | Tareekh- e Aqwaam e Kashmir, Tareekh e Aqwaam e Poonch, Tareekh e Aqwaam e Jammu, Mukammal Tareekh- e Kashmir |
Era | 20th-century poetry |
Region | British Indian Empire |
Main interests | Kashmiri poetry, history book author |
Notable ideas | Two-nation theory, Conception of Muslim Conference |
Muhammad Din Fauq was a historian of Kashmir. He was a pioneer of journalism in Jammu and Kashmir. [1] [2]
To espouse the cause of the Kashmiris as well as to extend solidarity, various organisations were formed before Partition of India. Prominent among them were the All India Muslim Kashmiri Conference and the All India Kashmir Committee. The former was established at Lahore in 1908 with Allama Iqbal and Muhammad Din Fauq as its prominent leaders. [3]
He wrote extensively on the Valley's history, folklore and geography. He published a history of Kashmir in 1910. In 1936 Fauq published an exhaustive survey on the origins and histories of Kashmir's well known families and communities. The survey has been described as being of considerable interest from the anthropological point of view. [4]
Mujadid e Kashamara Muhammad Din Fauq محمد دین فوق Fouq | |
---|---|
Born | Muhammad Din Dar Sialkot |
Died | |
Other names | Poet of the Kashmir |
Notable work | Tareekh- e Aqwaam e Kashmir, Tareekh e Aqwaam e Poonch, Tareekh e Aqwaam e Jammu, Mukammal Tareekh- e Kashmir |
Era | 20th-century poetry |
Region | British Indian Empire |
Main interests | Kashmiri poetry, history book author |
Notable ideas | Two-nation theory, Conception of Muslim Conference |
Muhammad Din Fauq was a historian of Kashmir. He was a pioneer of journalism in Jammu and Kashmir. [1] [2]
To espouse the cause of the Kashmiris as well as to extend solidarity, various organisations were formed before Partition of India. Prominent among them were the All India Muslim Kashmiri Conference and the All India Kashmir Committee. The former was established at Lahore in 1908 with Allama Iqbal and Muhammad Din Fauq as its prominent leaders. [3]
He wrote extensively on the Valley's history, folklore and geography. He published a history of Kashmir in 1910. In 1936 Fauq published an exhaustive survey on the origins and histories of Kashmir's well known families and communities. The survey has been described as being of considerable interest from the anthropological point of view. [4]