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Sindh was the site of one of the Cradle of civilizations, the Bronze Age Indus Valley civilisation that flourished from about 3000 B.C. and declined rapidly 1,000 years later, following the Indo-Aryan migrations that overran the region in waves between 1500 and 500 B.C. [1] The migrating Indo-Aryan tribes gave rise to the Iron Age vedic ...
Raja Dahir of Sindh had refused to return Arab rebels from Sindh [6] [7] and Meds and others. [8] Med pirates shipping from their bases at Kutch , Debal and Kathiawar [ 8 ] during one of their raids had kidnapped Muslim women traveling from Sri Lanka to Arabia , thus providing a casus belli [ 8 ] [ 9 ] against Sindhi King Dahir . [ 10 ]
This is a list of the monarchs of Sindh (Sindhi: سنڌ جا بادشاهہَ, romanized: Sindh Jā Bādshāha), from the establishment of the Rai dynasty around 489 AD until the conquest of Sindh from the Talpur dynasty by the East India Company in 1843.
Military history of Sindh (1 C, 17 P) Mohenjo-daro (29 P) S. Samma dynasty (7 P) ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; ...
Chach Nama (Sindhi: چچ نامو; Urdu: چچ نامہ; "Story of the Chach"), also known as the Fateh nama Sindh (Sindhi: فتح نامه سنڌ; "Story of the Conquest of Sindh"), and as Tareekh al-Hind wa a's-Sind (Arabic: تاريخ الهند والسند; "History of Hind and Sind"), is one of the historical sources for the history of Sindh.
The Kalhora dynasty (Persian: خاندان کلهوره عباسيه ) was a Sindhi Muslim Kalhora tribe dynasty based in the region of Sindh, present day Pakistan.The dynasty governed much of Sindh and parts of Kutch (present-day Gujarat, India) between 1701 and 1783 from their capital of Khudabad, before shifting to Hyderabad from 1768 onwards. [2]
The Brahmin dynasty (c. 632–712), [2] also known as the Chacha dynasty [3] or Silaij dynasty, [4] was a Hindu [5] dynasty that ruled the Sindh region, succeeding the Rai dynasty. Most of the information about its existence comes from the Chach Nama, a historical account of the Chach-Brahmin dynasty. [6]
Administrative Map of Sindh 1608~1700 A.D. In 1972, G. M. Syed proposed the formation of an independent nation for the Sindhis under the name Sindhudesh.He was the first nationalist politician in Pakistan to call for the independence of Sindh in a Pakistan divided by the liberation of Bangladesh. [8]