K. Uppi Saheb

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

K. Uppi Saheb, or Kottal Uppi Saheb Bahadur, (1891–1972) was an Indian politician and social worker from Kannur, north Kerala. Kottal Uppi, from an elite Mappila family from north Malabar with a mercantile background, was educated at Tellicherry Brennen College and Mohammedans College, Madras. He was elected to the Madras Legislative Council from a Muslim seat in 1923. He was re-elected to the legislative council in 1926 (as a Congress member supported by the Swaraj Party). He is said to have maintained "tenuous and cautious" links with the Khilafat Movement at this time. He was later elected to the Imperial Legislative Assembly from West Coast and Nilgiris, Muhammadan (1930). rdf:langString
rdf:langString K. Uppi Saheb
rdf:langString Kottal Uppi
rdf:langString Kottal Uppi
xsd:date 1973-05-11
rdf:langString Kottayam, Kuthuparamba
xsd:integer 65562930
xsd:integer 1050016350
xsd:integer 1891
rdf:langString Kottal Uppi
xsd:date 1973-05-11
rdf:langString * Tellicherry Moplah School * Tellicherry Brennen College * Mohammedans College, Madras
rdf:langString * Mayan Adhikari
rdf:langString * All-India Muslim League * Indian Union Muslim League
rdf:langString Kayyumma
rdf:langString K. Uppi Saheb, or Kottal Uppi Saheb Bahadur, (1891–1972) was an Indian politician and social worker from Kannur, north Kerala. Kottal Uppi, from an elite Mappila family from north Malabar with a mercantile background, was educated at Tellicherry Brennen College and Mohammedans College, Madras. He was elected to the Madras Legislative Council from a Muslim seat in 1923. He was re-elected to the legislative council in 1926 (as a Congress member supported by the Swaraj Party). He is said to have maintained "tenuous and cautious" links with the Khilafat Movement at this time. He was later elected to the Imperial Legislative Assembly from West Coast and Nilgiris, Muhammadan (1930). Along with K. M. Seethi Saheb, B. Pocker and M. Mohammed Ismail, Uppi Saheb was one of the principal leaders of All-India Muslim League in Madras Presidency from the mid-1930s. After the partition of India in 1947, the All-India Muslim League was succeeded by Indian Union Muslim League (1951) in the new Dominion of India. He served as the Assembly Leader of the Muslim League (ML) in Madras Legislative Assembly. He later ceased to be a Member of the Assembly on the re-organization of States.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3895

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