Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x98002947> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 16 of
16
with 100 triples per page.
- s0026749x98002947 date "1998".
- s0026749x98002947 doi "10.1017/s0026749x98002947".
- s0026749x98002947 first "Muzaffar".
- s0026749x98002947 isCitedBy Adil_Shahi_dynasty.
- s0026749x98002947 isCitedBy Delhi_Sultanate.
- s0026749x98002947 isCitedBy Qutb_Shahi_dynasty.
- s0026749x98002947 issue "2".
- s0026749x98002947 journal "Modern Asian Studies".
- s0026749x98002947 last "Alam".
- s0026749x98002947 pages "317–349".
- s0026749x98002947 publisher "Cambridge University Press".
- s0026749x98002947 quote ""Hindavi was recognized as a semi-official language by the Sor Sultans and their chancellery rescripts bore transcriptions in the Devanagari script of the Persian contents. The practice is said to have been introduced by the Lodis ."".
- s0026749x98002947 quote ""Ibrahim Adil Shah, who ascended the throne in Bijapur, the Deccan, in 942/1535-36, is reported to have proclaimed Hindavi as the language of his government, entrusting all the important administrative and financial offices to the Brahmans."".
- s0026749x98002947 quote ""Ibrahim Qutb Shah encouraged the growth of Telugu and his successor Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah patronized and himself wrote poetry in Telugu and in Dakhni. Abdullah Qutb Shah instituted a special office to prepare the royal edicts in Telugu . While administrative and revenue papers at local levels in the Qutb Shahi Sultanate were prepared largely in Telugu, the royal edicts were often bilingual.'06 The last Qutb Shahi Sultan, Abul Hasan Tana Shah, sometimes issued his orders only in Telugu, with a Persian summary given on the back of the farmans."".
- s0026749x98002947 title "The pursuit of Persian: Language in Mughal Politics".
- s0026749x98002947 volume "32".