Hyderabadi Muslims are a community of
Urdu-speaking
Muslims from the area that used to be the
princely state of Hyderabad,
India. With its origins in the Muslim
Bahmani Sultanate and then
Deccan sultanates, the culture became defined in the latter half of the reign of the
Nizam dynasty in Hyderabad. The culture exists today in
Hyderabad and among the Hyderabadi Muslim diaspora around the world, in particular,
Pakistan,
Saudi Arabia, the
Arab states of the Persian Gulf,
USA,
Canada and the
United Kingdom.
History
The
Deccan plateau acted as a bulwark sheltering
South India from the invasions and political turmoil that affected North India. This allowed the Muslim-ruled state of Hyderabad to develop a distinctive culture during the
Qutb Shahi dynasty,
Mughal Aurangzeb and later the Asaf Jahi dynasty of the
Nizams.
According to
Time, the
seventh Nizam was the richest man in the world during the late 1940s.
The
Nizam was the Muslim ruler of the vast princely Hyderabad State. The capital city of
Hyderabad was primarily Urdu-speaking Muslim until the
Incorporation of Hyderabad into India and the subsequent rise to dominance of Telugu-speaking people of
Andhra. The state's economy was agrarian, and Hyderabad was primarily a government and administrative hub, run mostly (but far from exclusively) by Muslims. The aristocracy,
jagirdars and
deshmukhs (wealthy landowners), and even minor government officials, could afford to hire servants, usually also Muslims, in a social order...
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