Hakim Habibur Rahman

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hakim_Habibur_Rahman an entity of type: Thing

Hakim Habibur Rahman (Bengali: হাকিম হাবিবুর রহমান, Urdu: حکیم حبیب الرحمان)(23 March 1881 – 23 February 1947) was an Unani physician, litterateur, journalist, politician and chronicler in early 20th-century Dhaka, British India (now Bangladesh). rdf:langString
rdf:langString Hakim Habibur Rahman
rdf:langString Habibur Rahman
rdf:langString Habibur Rahman
xsd:date 1947-02-23
rdf:langString Dacca, Bengal Presidency, British India
xsd:date 1881-03-23
xsd:integer 10223421
xsd:integer 1091808933
rdf:langString Dhaka Madrasa
rdf:langString Shifaul Mulk
xsd:date 1881-03-23
rdf:langString Hakim Habibur Rahman
rdf:langString British India
xsd:date 1947-02-23
rdf:langString Al-Fariq,
rdf:langString Asudegan-e-Dhaka,
rdf:langString Dhaka Panchas Baras Pahle,
rdf:langString Hayat-e-Sukrat,
rdf:langString Masajid-e-Dhaka
rdf:langString Tazkiratul-Fujala,
rdf:langString Physician, writer, journalist, politician
rdf:langString Anjuman-e-Urdu
xsd:integer 1904
rdf:langString Hakim Habibur Rahman (Bengali: হাকিম হাবিবুর রহমান, Urdu: حکیم حبیب الرحمان)(23 March 1881 – 23 February 1947) was an Unani physician, litterateur, journalist, politician and chronicler in early 20th-century Dhaka, British India (now Bangladesh). Rahman was a close associate of Nawab Sir Khwaja Salimullah of the Dhaka Nawab Family. His two chronicles of Dhaka, Asudegan-e-Dhaka and Dhaka Panchas Baras Pahle, remain important primary source material for researchers working on Dhaka. His wide collection of manuscripts, coins, weapons and artefacts is preserved at the Dhaka University Library as the Hakim Habibur Rahman Collection. The Hakim Habibur Rahman Lane carries his name near his birthplace, the Choto Katra, a landmark in the old part of Dhaka.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 9125
xsd:gYear 1947
xsd:gYear 1904
xsd:gYear 1881
xsd:gYear 1947

data from the linked data cloud