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Syed Mujtaba Ali (Bengali: সৈয়দ মুজতবা আলী, Bengali pronunciation: [soi̯od̪ mud͡ʒt̪ɔba ali]; 13 September 1904 – 11 February 1974) was a Bengali writer, journalist, travel enthusiast, academic, scholar and linguist.
Deshe Bideshe (Bengali: দেশে বিদেশে) is the first book and one of the most famous works of Bengali author, journalist, travel enthusiast, academic, scholar and linguist Syed Mujtaba Ali.
Syed Mujtaba Ali, author, journalist, travel enthusiast, academician, scholar and linguist. Syed Murtaza Ali, writer and historian; Syed Pir Badshah, Persian-language writer; Syed Rayhan ad-Din, celebrated Persian-language writer; Syed Shah Israil, considered to be Sylhet's first author
Syed Murtaza Ali (1 July 1902 – 9 August 1981) was a Bangladeshi writer. [1] He was the elder brother of writer and linguist Syed Mujtaba Ali . [ 1 ] He is noted for his works relating to the histories of Chittagong , Sylhet and Jaintia .
Syed Mujtaba Ali: 1926 Bengali author, journalist, academic, scholar and linguist [1] [2] Ahmed Ali: Urdu writer [3] Akshay Kumar Jain: 1940 LLB journalist; former editor of Navbharat Times; Padma Bhushan recipient [4] Arfa Khanum Sherwani: journalist [5] Asghar Wajahat: Phd Hindi scholar, fiction writer, novelist and playwright [6] Asrar ul ...
Paasikivi with her mother and father. Annikki Paasikivi (1898–1950) was a Finnish architect. She was the daughter of Juho Kusti Paasikivi (the seventh president of Finland) and his wife Anna Matilda Forsman.
His mother was Syeda Zebunessa Khatun, daughter of Khan Bahadur Syed Sikandar Ali. Writers Syed Mujtaba Ali and Syed Murtaza Ali were Shegufta's maternal uncles. [2] He traced his maternal descent from Shah Ahmed Mutawakkil, a local holy man and a Syed of Taraf, though apparently unrelated to Taraf's ruling Syed dynasty. [5]
Syed Muazzem Ali was born on 18 July 1944 into a Bengali Muslim Syed family of Khandakars from the Sylhet district, Assam Province in British Raj. [5] He traced his paternal descent from Shah Syed Ahmed Mutawakkil, a Sufi Peer and a Syed of Taraf, though apparently unrelated to Taraf's ruling Syed dynasty. [6]