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10 October 2012

1969, 17th Feb, Mirza Ghalib (Poet) - Death Centenary India 20nP

1969,  Mirza Ghalib (Poet)  India 


1969, 17th Feb, Mirza Ghalib (Poet) - Death Centenary India 20nP

           Text                                   : 1797-1869 Ghalib  India 20nP 1969
           Condition                        : Ø = used/cancelled
Stamp Issue Date:17/02/1969
Postage Stamp Denomination:0.20
Postal Stamp Serial Number:0585
Postal Stamp Name:MIRZA GHALIB
Philatelic Stamp Description:The design is horizontal and depicts a portrait of Ghalib on the left side of the stamp. In the background script is shown and a seal appears at the right in middle portion of stamp.
Stamp Currency:P
Stamp Type:COMMEMORATIVE
Stamp Language:English
Stamp Overall Size:4.06 x 2.2
Postal Stamp Print Size:3.80 X 2.0 cms.
Number of Stamps Per Sheet:50
Stamp Perforations:14 x 14,1/
Postal Stamp Shape:Horizontal
Postage Stamp Paper:Unwatermarked paper
Indian Stamp Process:Photogravure
Number of stamps printed:30,00,000
Stamp Printed At:India Security Press
Indian Stamp's Color:Mineral Red and Raw Sienna
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THIS ISSUE HONOURS MIRZA GHALIB (1797-1869), KNOWN AS ‘KING OF GHAZALS”. HE WAS A GREAT URDU POET OF EXCELLENCE. THE STAMP FEATURES HIS PORTRAIT.



Stamp Information:Asad Ullah Beg Khan, famous in later life as Mirza Ghalib was born at Agra on 27th December, 1797. His father who was a wealthy nobleman died when Ghalib was only five years old. He was then brought up by an uncle who too died while the boy was hardly nine. A small pension in lieu of the family Jagir was sanctioned for the maintanance of Ghalib and his younger brother. According to the custom of the times, Ghalib was married at a young age. His father-in-law, Mirza Ilahi Buksh, was a poet of distinction at Delhi. Ghalib?s marriage thus introduced him to the exclusive literary circles of the age. His marriage also resulted in Ghalib moving from Agra and making Delhi his permanent home. Ghalib lived a life of luxury at Delhi, but spent most of his leisure in reading or writing Persian and Urdu verse. An important development was his journey to and return from Calcutta between the years 1826 and 1829, Ghalib undertook the trip for securing a larger share of his patrimony but his efforts ended in failure. However, there were compensations. He visited Lucknow, Varanasi and other places during the course of his journey and got acquainted with literary trends at these places and at Calcutta. This wasa a valuable experience and helped in enlarging his poetic horizon and he returned to Delhi a wiser if a sadder man. The next few years witnessed considerable literary activity on the part of Ghalib. His collection of Urdu poems, ?Diwan-E-Ghalib?, was published in 1841. Another important publication was ?Panj Ahang?, a voluminous work in Persian which appeared in 1849. The next important phase of his life coincided with the First War of Independence in 1857 and its aftermath. Earlier, he had come close to Bahadur Shah Zafar, the last Moghul Emperor and had been appointed as the court historian. This made him suspect in the eyes of the Britain when they returned to Delhi after the upheaval. Ghalib gives a vivid account to conditions at Delhi at the time in his Persian work, ?Dastan bu?.




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