Khwaja Ghulam Farid

Khawaja Ghulam Farid
خواجہ غُلام فرید
Tomb of Ghulam Farid at Mithankot
Tomb of Ghulam Farid at Mithankot
Bornc. 1841/1845
Chachran, Bahawalpur, British India (present-day Punjab, Pakistan)
Died24 July 1901 (aged 56 or 60)
Chachran, Bahawalpur, British India (present-day Punjab, Pakistan)
Resting placeMithankot, Punjab, Pakistan
Notable workDiwan-e-Farid
Manaqab-e-Mehboobia
Fawaid Faridia

Khawaja Ghulam Farid (also romanized as Fareed; c. 1841/1845 – 24 July 1901) was a 19th-century Sufi poet and mystic from Bahawalpur, Punjab, belonging to the Chishti Order. Most of his work is in the local Multani, or what is now known as Saraiki. However, he also contributed to the Standard Punjabi, Urdu and Persian literature.[1][2][3]

  1. ^ Suvorova, Anna (22 July 2004). Muslim Saints of South Asia: The Eleventh to Fifteenth Centuries. Routledge Sufi Series. Routledge. p. 82. ISBN 978-1134-37005-4. Later on these assertions became the conventional tradition of the Sufi poetry that was summed up by the Punjabi poet-mystic Khwaja Ghulam Farid (1841–1901) in one of his kāfī:
  2. ^ Shackle, Christopher (2013). "Ghulām Farīd". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Rowson, Everett (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam (3rd ed.). Brill Online. doi:10.1163/1573-3912_ei3_COM_24430. ISSN 1873-9830.
  3. ^ Mir, Farina (2010). The Social Space of Language: Vernacular Culture in British Colonial Punjab. South Asia across the Disciplines. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 105–106. ISBN 978-0-520-26269-0.

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