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Sadaat-e-Bilgram : ウィキペディア英語版 | Sadaat-e-Bilgram
The Saadat-e-Bilgram are a Muslim community found in the state of Uttar Pradesh in India. Despite this, many have migrated to Pakistan. They also known as the Bilgrami Sayyid (or Syed), and Bilgrami is often used as a surname.〔People of India Uttar Pradesh Volume XLII Part Three edited by A Hasan & J C Das〕 == Origin ==
The Sadaat Bilgram are a group of Sayyid families who inhabit the historic town of Bilgram in Hardoi District. Saadat-e-Bilgram literally means the Sayyid of the town of Bilgram. These Hussaini Sayyids first migrated from Wasit, Iraq in the thirteenth century.〔(Essays in Arabic Literary Biography: 1350 - 1850 ), Roger M. A. Allen, Joseph Edmund Lowry, Terri DeYoung, Devin J. Stewart, Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, 30-Dec-2009〕 Their ancestor, Syed Mohammad Sughra, a Zaidi Sayyid of Iraq arrived in India during the rule of Sultan Iltutmish. In 1217-18 the family conquered and settled in Bilgram.〔(Islam in South Asia in Practice ), Barbara D. Metcalf, Princeton University Press, 08-Sep-2009〕 The Sayyid commanded a Muslim army that overcame the Bhars, who were the traditional rulers of the Hardoi region, and was granted an estate centred on the town of Bilgram, where the Sayyid settled down. died in 1247, his tomb was constructed by Syed Mohammad Muhsin son of Syed Mohammad Said in 1738-39.〔(Indian Archaeology, a Review ), Archaeological Survey of India., 1979〕 Syed Mohammad Sughra Sixth in descent from Syed Mohammad Sughra was Syed Abdul Farah of Wasit (from him are descendants of most renowned Sayyid families in Northern India, the Barhah and Bilgram Sayyids; and in Khairabad, Fatehpur Haswa and at many other places brancehs of same stem are found.〔(The imperial gazetteer of India, Volume 13 ), Sir William Wilson Hunter, Trübner & co., 1887〕), who was the ancestor of the Saadat-e-Bara, another community of Sayyids.〔Rulers, townsmen and bazaars : North Indian society in the Age of British Expansion 1770-1870 by Christopher Alan Bayly Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1983〕 The Bilgrami Sayyid were important power brokers in southern part of Awadh, and remained an important and influential clan, throughout the Middle Ages. They provided several taluqdar families, and were substantial landowners.〔People of India Uttar Pradesh Volume XLII Part Three edited by A Hasan & J C Das〕
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