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Location 1 University of Rawalpindi: Private Main Grand Trunk Rd, near DHA-1, opposite High Court, Rawalpindi. 2 ... Muslim Law College Private Multiple locations 49
Location of Pakistan. Legal education in Pakistan was initiated before independence and dates back to the 1800s. The first legal education institution was established under the name of ‘University Law College’ (Now Punjab University Law College) in 1868.
Rawalpindi: 1970 General Public 13 Fatima Jinnah Women University: Rawalpindi: 1998 General Public 14 Rawalpindi Medical University: Rawalpindi: 1974 Medical Public 15 National University of Medical Sciences: Rawalpindi: 2015 Medical Public 16 Rawalpindi Women University: Rawalpindi: 2019 General Public 17 Government Viqar-un-Nisa Women ...
Deobandi is a term used for a revivalist movement [1] in Islam. It is centered primarily in India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Bangladesh and has recently spread to the United Kingdom and has a presence in South Africa.
The college has one of the oldest law library in Pakistan.The library is an important resource centre, primarily intended to provide undergraduate and postgraduate students with the books, law journals and reading materials they need for their studies, as well as having a valuable and ever increasing collection of legal works.
Institutions founded before the colonial era and which are still in operation: . University of Al-Qarawiyyin, Morocco, the oldest existing, continually operating and the first degree-awarding educational institution in the world according to UNESCO and Guinness World Records.
Rawalpindi's Hindu and Sikh population, who had made up 33.72% and 17.32% of the city, [44] migrated en masse to the newly independent Dominion of India after anti-Hindu and anti-Sikh pogroms in western Punjab, while Muslim refugees from India settled in the city following anti-Muslim pogroms in eastern Punjab and northern India.
Madrassas of Pakistan are Islamic seminaries in Pakistan, known in Urdu as Madaris-e-Deeniya (literally: religious schools). Most madrassas teach mostly Islamic subjects such as tafseer (interpretation of the Quran), hadith (thousands of sayings of Muhammad), fiqh (Islamic law) and Arabic (the language of the Quran); [1] but include some non-Islamic subjects (such as logic, philosophy ...