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词条 Sadaat-e-Bara
释义

  1. History and origin

  2. Villages

  3. See also

  4. References

  5. External links

{{short description|Community of Sayyids}}{{refimprove|date=March 2017}}{{Infobox ethnic group
|group= Sadaat-e-Bara or Sadaat Bahera
|popplace = • {{flagcountry|India}} • {{flagcountry|Pakistan}}
|langs = • Urdu • Hindi • Awadhi
|rels= • Islam 100% •
|related= • Sayyid • Arab • Sayyid of Uttar Pradesh• Sadaat Amroha• Gardezi Sadaat • Sadaat-e-Sirsi * Sadaat-e-Bilgram • Sadaat-e-Saithal}}Sadaat-e-Bahera, sometimes pronounced Sadaat-e-Bahara, are a community of Sayyids, originally from a group of twelve villages situated in the Muzaffarnagar district of Uttar Pradesh in India. This community had considerable influence during the reign of the Mughal Empire. Its members were also found in Karnal District and Haryana, Gujarat & Karnataka state in India.Some of the members of this community have migrated to Pakistan after independence and have settled in Karachi, Khairpur State in Sind and Lahore.[1]

History and origin

The ancestor of Bārha Sayyids, Sayyid Abu'l Farah Al Hussaini Al Wasti, left his original home in Wasit, Iraq, with his twelve sons at the end of the 10th century or the beginning of the 11th century CE and migrated to India, where he obtained four estates in Punjab. Over time, Abu'l Farah's descendants took over Bārha riyasat (township) in Muzzafarnagar.[2]

There are four sub-divisions of Barha Sadaat in Muzaffarnagar area:[3]

  1. the Tihaanpuri, whose chief town was Jansath, belong to Syed Najm uddin
  2. the Chatraudi, whose chief town was Sambhalhera, belong to syed abu'l Fazaail Al Wasti,
  3. the Kundliwal, whose chief town was Mujhera, belong to Syed Daoud.
  4. the Jajneri, whose chief town was Bidauli, belong to Syed Abu'l Faraaish,

The origin of the Sadaat-e-Bara or Barha is traced to Sayyid Abu'l Farah Al Hussaini Al Wasti, son of Sayyid Daud Al Hussaini, who came to Ghazni in Afghanistan, from Wasit, at the invitation of Mahmud Ghaznavi. He had twelve sons of whom four settled in four villages Kundli Tihanpur, Jajner and Chhat-Banur, near the city of Patiala. These four sons founded a number of clans, the main ones being Chhatrodi, Kundliwal, Tihanpuri and Jajneri, from the villages assigned to them.[4]

Another descendant of Sayyid Abu'l Farah was Syed Mustufa Dada (Rahmatullah Alay) AlHussaini (Thasra Village- Gujarat, India)& his brothers Syed Alaad(Alauddin, Rahmatullah Alay) AlHussaini( Gothada Village -Savli-Gujarat, India) & Syed Nateeb (Rahmatullah Alay) AlHussaini ( Pali Village Sevalia-Gujarat, India)came During the Hazrat Sultan Mahmud Begada (Rahmatullah Alay) Sultanate 1484 AD & Syed Mustufa's son Syed Muhammed AlHussaini Qazi-ul-qazat who was given a post of Chief justice and a grant of three villages in Sarnal, Gujarat by emperor Aurangzeb in 1674 AD and he migrated there. These three brothers' descendants form the branched of Sadat Bárha in Gujarat (Thasra, Pali & Gothada).

When the Sayyids came to India from Central Asia they chose to settle in Muzaffarnagar; these people were called the Saiyids of Barha or (Sadaat-e-Barah)]. The area has one of the largest concentrations of Sayyids in India.

Villages

{{unreferenced section |date=March 2017}}

Some of the villages where Barha Sayyids can be found are:

[

  • Thasra {{dn|date=March 2019}},

Added by Bilal Syed, Thasra.

  • Chitora{{dn|date=February 2019}}, founded by Mir Jawwad Ali
  • Behra Sadaat
  • Kakrouli{{dn|date=February 2019}}
  • Miranpur
  • Amya{{dn|date=February 2019}} founded by Sayyed Panah Ali zaidi
  • Kithora founded by Sayyed Nusrat Yar Khan
  • Mujhera
  • Kawal
  • Sikrehra Khola
  • Jansath
  • Rasoolpur said distt. Bijnor founded by sayyed mohmmad ali
  • Tissa Sadat founded by Syed Mahmood Khan Chhatrodi

See also

  • Sadaat
  • Sadaat-e-Bilgram

References

1. ^People of India Uttar Pradesh Volume XLII Part Three page 1247 Manohar Publications
2. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=95Q3AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA126&dq=Sayyids+of+North+India&hl=en&sa=X&ei=E2zAUIGBHYKImQWguoCwAg&ved=0CC4Q6AEwADgo#v=onepage&q=Sayyids&f=false The Encyclopaedia of Islam: Supplement : Parts 1-2], page 126, Clifford Edmund Bosworth, Brill Archive, 1980
3. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=GY8gAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA12&dq=Sayyids+of+Bilgram&hl=en&sa=X&ei=4DLAUMy-EZGIrAenwYHoCQ&ved=0CDoQ6AEwBDhG#v=onepage&q=Mohan&f=false Memoirs on the history, folk-lore, and distribution of the races of the North Western Provinces of India], Sir Henry Miers Elliot, Trübner & co., 1869
4. ^ain-e-Akbari Abul Fazal Henry Beveridge's translation Footnote on Sayyeds of Barha

External links

  • http://therepublicofrumi.com/msrangeela.htm
{{Indian Muslim}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Saadat-E-Bara}}

7 : Pakistani people of Iraqi descent|Social groups of Pakistan|Muhajir communities|Muslim communities of India|Social groups of Uttar Pradesh|Muslim communities of Uttar Pradesh|Muzaffarnagar district

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