Sir muhammad iqbal biography definition

  • Muhammad iqbal influenced by
  • Allama iqbal famous for
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  • Muhammad Iqbal

    Allama


    Dr Muhammad Iqbal
    محمد اِقبال‎

    Allama Muhammad Iqbal

    Born

    Muhammad Iqbal


    (1877-11-09)9 November 1877

    Sialkot, Punjab Province, British India,
    (now in Punjab, Pakistan)

    Died21 April 1938(1938-04-21) (aged 60)

    Lahore, Punjab, British India
    (now in Punjab, Pakistan)

    NationalityBritish Indian
    Other namesPoet of the East
    شاعر مشرق‎
    Alma materScotch Mission College (F.A.)
    Government College(B.A., M.A.)
    University of Cambridge(B.A.)
    University of Munich(Ph.D.)
    Notable workThe Secrets of the Self, The Secrets of Selflessness, Message from the East, Persian Psalms, Javid Nama (more works)
    Era20th-century philosophy
    RegionBritish India

    Main interests

    Urdu poetry, Persian poetry, Law

    Notable ideas

    Two-nation theory, Allahabad Address

    Allama Muhammad Iqbal (November 9, 1877 – April 21, 1938), widely known as Allama Iqbal, was a Muslimpoet a

    by Luke Wilkinson

    Know, then, ’tis the connecting thread of days
    That stitches up thy life’s loose manuscript;
    This selfsame thread sews us a shirt to wear,
    Its needle the remembrance of old yarns. [. . .]
    Thy present thrusts its head up from the past,
    And from thy present shall thy future stem.
    If thou desirest everlasting life,
    Break not the thread between the past andnow
    And the far future. What is life? A wave
    Of consciousness of continuity,
    A gurgling wine that flames the revellers.

    —Muhammad Iqbal, Rumuz-i Bekhudi (1918)


    Temporality and eternality, history and philosophy, mysticism and theology—there are many dialectical couplets that Muhammad Iqbal (1877-1938) weaves together in these few lines of Persian verse. This may seem surprising to many who have heard Iqbal’s name, which is frequently followed by the title of “father of Pakistan.” Iqbal, however, is also known among many Muslims in South Asia and Iran for his Urdu and Persian poetry a

  • sir muhammad iqbal biography definition
  • South Asia
    Modern era

    Name: Sir Muhammad Iqbāl
    Urdu spelling - محمد اقبال
    Birth: November 9, 1877
    Death: April 21, 1938
    School/tradition: Sunni
    Main interests
    poetry, history, metaphysics, Islam
    Notable ideas
    Two-Nation Theory
    Influences Influenced
    Rumi; Johann Wolfgang von Goethe; Thomas Walker Arnold Pakistan movement
    This article contains Indic text. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks or boxes, misplaced vowels or missing conjuncts instead of Indic text.

    Sir Muhammad Iqbāl (Urdu:محمد اقبال) (November 9, 1877 – April 21, 1938) was an IndianMuslimpoet, philosopher, and politician, whose poetry in Persian and Urdu fryst vatten regarded as among the greatest in modern times.[1] Also famous for his work on religious and political philosophy in Islam, he fryst vatten credited with first proposing the idea of an independent state for Indian Muslims, which would inspire the creation of sydasiatiskt land . He fryst vatten common