Hazara (other)
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Hazara (other)
Hazara may refer to: Ethnic groups * The Hazaras, a Persian-speaking people of Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran * Aimaq Hazara, Aimaq's subtribe of Hazara origin * Hazarawal, a Hindko-speaking people of the Hazara region of northern Pakistan * Hazara-i-Karlugh Places Afghanistan * Hazaristan or Hazarajat, a historic region of Afghanistan Pakistan * Hazara, a region in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province ** Hazara Division, an administrative division ** Hazara District, a former district (until 1976) ** Hazara University, in Mansehra, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa * Hazara, Swat, a village in Swat District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa * Hazara Town, an area on the outskirts of Quetta, Balochistan * Takht Hazara, a village in Punjab People with the name * Faiz Mohammad Kateb Hazara * General Muhammad Musa Khan Hazara * Abdul Khaliq Hazara (assassin) * Abdul Khaliq Hazara (politician) * Kulsoom Hazara (karateka) See also * Hazar (other) * Hazari (other) * Hazra (disambigu ...
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Hazaras
The Hazaras ( fa, , Həzārə; haz, , Āzərə) are an ethnic group and the principal component of the population of Afghanistan, native to, and primarily residing in the Hazaristan (Hazarajat) region in central Afghanistan and generally scattered throughout Afghanistan. They are one of the largest ethnic groups in Afghanistan, and are also significant minority groups in neighboring Pakistan, mostly in Quetta, and as well as in Iran. They speak the Hazaragi dialect of Persian, which is mutually intelligible with Dari, one of the two official languages of Afghanistan. Hazaras are considered to be one of the most persecuted groups in Afghanistan, and their persecution has occurred various times across previous decades. Etymology The etymology of the word "Hazara" remains disputed, but some have differing views on the term. * Babur, founder of the Mughal Empire in the early 16th century, records the name "Hazara" in Baburnama. He has mentioned "Hazara" as "Turkoman Hazaras ...
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General Muhammad Musa Khan Hazara
General Muhammad Musa Khan ( ur, ; ) was a Pakistan Army senior general who served as the 4th Commander-in-Chief of Pakistan Army from 1958 to 1966, under President Ayub Khan. Following his tenure as C-in-C of the Army, he later became a politician. Gaining commission as a Second lieutenant in the British Indian Army, Khan served with distinction in the Burma and North African campaigns as part of the Allied effort in World War II. Following the Partition of India in 1947, he opted for the Dominion of Pakistan, subsequently transferring his military service to the newly created Pakistan Army. He led forward combat brigades against India during the First Kashmir War in 1947–1948, and eventually ascended the ranks to become C-in-C after the Pakistan Army imposed martial law in the country following the 1958 coup d'état. Khan gained notability and public fame throughout Pakistan when he was in command of the Pakistan Army during the Second Kashmir War with India in 1965 ...
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Hazaran
Hazaran (Hazar, Hezar) is the name of a massif of the Central Iranian Plateau, Kerman Province, Iran, an eastern outlier of the Zagros Mountains. With an elevation of 4500 metres, it is the highest peak in Kerman Province. The jebal Barez chain is a continuation to the south-east. The Halil River rises in the Bid Khan region. The massif is situated in the area encircled by the cities of Kerman, Bardsir, Sirjan, Baft, Jiroft and Bam. Made chiefly of Eocene andesite and pyroclastic rocks, Mount Hazar or Hazaran is situated in a central Iranian range, Sahand-Bazman volcanic range or belt, a mountain range which was formed mainly during Eocene volcanism and that stretches approximately from Sahand Volcano in the north-west of Iran to Bazman Volcano in the south-east of Iran. Major peaks: * Kuh-e Hazaran (Kūh-e Hazār) 4500 m * Kuh Shah 4380 m * Kuh-e Palvar 4229 m * Kuh-e Jupar 4150 m * Kuh-e Khabr 3856 m * Kuh-e Bidkhan 3424 m See also * List of Ultras of West Asia T ...
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Hazara Expedition Of 1888
The Hazara Expedition of 1888, also known as the Black Mountain Expedition or the First Hazara Expedition, was a military campaign by the British against the tribes of Kala Dhaka (then known as the Black Mountains of Hazara) in the Hazara region of what is now Pakistan. On 18 June 1888, two British officers and four Gurkha soldiers were killed in an altercation between British reconnaissance patrols and antagonistic tribes. As a response, the Hazara Field Force was assembled and began its march on 4 October 1888, after an ultimatum had not been satisfied by the tribes by October 2, 1888.Raugh, Harold E''The Victorians at War, 1815-1914: An Encyclopedia of British Military History'' Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2004, pp. 163-164, . The first phase of the campaign ended with the Hassanzai and Akazai tribes requesting an armistice on October 19, 1888. The second phase of the campaign targeted the tribes that lived north of Black Mountain such as the Allaiwals The Allaiwal is a tribe of ...
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Hasara
Hasara is a village and municipality in Gulmi District in the Lumbini Zone of central Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census The 1991 Nepal census was a widespread national census conducted by the Nepal Central Bureau of Statistics. Working with Nepal's Village Development Committees at a district level, they recorded data from all the main towns and villages of each ... it had a population of 2645 persons living in 500 individual households. References External linksUN map of the municipalities of Gulmi District Populated places in Gulmi District {{Gulmi-geo-stub ...
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Hazra (other)
Hazra may refer to: *Hazara people, of Afghanistan * Həzrə (other), two places in Azerbaijan * Hazra, India, near Kolkata See also * Hazara (other) Hazara may refer to: Ethnic groups * The Hazaras, a Persian-speaking people of Afghanistan and Pakistan * Aimaq Hazara, Aimaq's subtribe of Hazara origin * Hazarawals, a Hindko-speaking people of the Hazara region of northern Pakistan * Hazara- ...
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Hazari (other)
Hazari may refer to: * something of, or related to, several of the entities referred to as "Hazara", particularly: ** the Hazaras, an ethnic group of Afghanistan ** Hazara, Pakistan, a region in northern Pakistan *Northern Hindko, also known as Hazari, an Indo-Aryan language of northern Pakistan * Hazari (caste), a caste in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh * Hazari, an alien species appearing in the "Think Tank" episode of ''Star Trek'' * Hezari, Chabahar, a village in Iran * Hezari, Qasr-e Qand, a village in Iran People named Hazari * Abdul Ghani Hazari (1921–1976), Bangladeshi poet and journalist * Joynal Hazari, Bangladeshi politician * Maheshwar Hazari (born 1971), Indian politician of Bihar * Nizam Hazari, Bangladeshi politician * Hazari Lal Chauhan, Indian politician from New Delhi * Hazari Prasad Dwivedi (1907–1979), Hindi writer and scholar See also * Hasari (other) * Hazare Hazare is an Indian surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Anna ...
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Hazar (other)
Hazar may refer to: *Hazar (name) *the Turkish for Khazar * Lake Hazar, Turkey *Hazar mountains, Iran *Hazar, Iran, a village in Kerman Province *Hazar, Turkmenistan, a city in Balkan Province, Turkmenistan See also * Hezar (other) * Hazara (other) * Hazare Hazare is an Indian surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Anna Hazare (born 1937), Indian social activist * Sanjay Hazare (born 1961), Indian cricketer and umpire * Vijay Hazare (1915–2004), Indian cricketer See also * Hazar (di ...
, a surname {{disambig, geo ...
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Kulsoom Hazara
Kulsoom Hazara (born 4 September 1988) is a Pakistani karateka. Background Hazara is the youngest of four children: three sisters and one brother and belongs to the Hazara community of Quetta, Balochistan. She lost her mother to cancer at the age of two and her father to a heart attack at the age of 9. On her father's death, her eldest sister, Fatima and her cousin and brother-in-law, Sarwar Ali became her guardians. In 2000, due to the sectarian violence in her hometown, she shifted to Karachi. The loss of her brother-in-law in 2003, proved traumatic and changed her life. Kulsoom completed 13th South Asian Games in Kathmandu, Nepal, she won a gold and silver medal despite an injury, securing a place as a prominent karateka woman in South Asia. Career Her father got her admitted to a karate club owned by Sarwar Ali, when she was five. National Hazara initially represented Pakistan Army before switching to WAPDA. She won her first national level gold medal in 2005. Owing ...
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Abdul Khaliq Hazara (assassin)
Abdul Khaliq known as Abdul Khaliq Hazara ( fa, عبدالخالق هزاره), (1916 — December 18, 1933) was a Hazara student who assassinated Mohammed Nadir Shah, King of Afghanistan on 8 November 1933, during an award distribution ceremony. He was quickly arrested, tortured and later executed by quartering along with most of his relatives. The assassination of Nadir Khan may have been done in revenge for the taxes and execution of Hazaras, and for actions of Ghulam Nabi Charkhi who was a former Afghanistan ambassador to Moscow who took part in the Afghan civil war of 1928-29 as a supporter of the previous ruler of Afghanistan, the reform-minded Amanullah Khan. Life Khaliq was born in 1916 in the Chindawol area of Kabul, Afghanistan. He was a student at Nejat High School. Khaliq witnessed the rise of King Nadir Khan from 1929 and the assassinations of Afghanistan's intellectuals and politicians. Nadir, who was a general of King Amanullah Khan, was summoned by Amanu ...
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Faiz Mohammad Kateb Hazara
Faiz Muhammad Kāteb ( prs, فیض‌محمد کاتب) also known as Kāteb () was a contemporary writer and historian. He was Afghan court chronicler, a skilled calligrapher and secretary to Habibullah Khan from 1901 to 1919.Kitab-e Tadakkor-e Enqilab, Translation: Shkirando as "Kniga Upominanii o Myatezhe" Moscow, 1988. p. 20 Early life Faiz Muhammad Kateb son of Saeed Muhammad () was born in 1860, in Zard Sang village of Nawur District of Ghazni Province, Afghanistan, he spent a part of his life in Nawur District another district of Ghazni, and died in Kabul on March 3, 1931. He was an ethnic Hazara and was of Muhammad Khwaja Hazara clan. Kateb spent his youth in Qarabagh District, tutored in Arabic and the Quran by local mullahs, in 1880 he and his family moved first to Nawur and then, because of sectarian strife, to Qandahar in the same year. In 1887 he left Qandahar for a year's travel that took him to Lahore and Peshawar where he spent some time studying English and ...
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