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Hyderābād City (''Haidarābād'') ((シンド語:حیدرآباد), ), headquarters of the district of
Sindh province of Pakistan traces its early history to ''Neroon'',〔Page 67 ,Karachi, the show window of Sind by M. Hanif Raza Published in 1984, Editions Mystique (Karachi)〕〔Page 221 ,Sindh, the land of Indus civilisation by Syed Abdul Quddus Published in 1992, Royal Book Co. (Karachi, Pakistan)〕 a
Sindhi ruler of the area from whom the city derived its previous name,
Neroon Kot. Its history dates back to medieval times, when ''
Ganjo Takker'' (Barren Hill), a nearby hilly tract, was used as a place of worship. Lying on the most northern hill of the ''Ganjo Takker'' ridge, just east of the river Indus, it is the third largest city in the province and the eighth largest in the country with an expanse over three hillocks part of the most northerly hills of the Ganjo Takker range, 32 miles east of the Indus with which it is connected by various routes leading to Gidu Bandar.
Hyderabad, as the historic capital of Sindh, is the centre of all the provincial communications: road, rail, waterways and air. From the date of its foundation (1768), its manufactures-ornamented silks, silver- and gold-work, and lacquered ware-have been the chief in the province, and during its heyday had gained prizes at the industrial exhibitions of Europe. Some noteworthy antiquities are the tombs' of the Kalhora jagirani and Talpur rulers.
==Early history==
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