Role Poet | Name Shan-ul-Haq Haqqee Spouse Begum Salma Haqqee | |
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Born 15 December 1917Delhi, British India ( 1917-12-15 ) Notable awards Tamgha-e-Quaid-i-Azam, Sitara-e-Imtiaz Died October 11, 2005, Mississauga, Canada | ||
Mushaira-Shan Ul Haq Haqqee, Urdu Poet and Linguist
Shan-ul-Haq Haqqee (Urdu: شان الحق حقی), Sitara-e-Imtiaz, Tamgha-e-Quaid-i-Azam, was a notable Urdu poet, writer, journalist, broadcaster, translator, critic, researcher, linguist and lexicographer of Pakistan.
Contents
- Mushaira Shan Ul Haq Haqqee Urdu Poet and Linguist
- Bhula do ranj kee batoun mein kiya hai
- Contribution to Urdu
- As a lexicographer
- Death
- References
Born in Delhi, Haqqee acquired his BA from Aligarh Muslim University. He obtained a Master's in English literature from St. Stephen's College, Delhi. His father, Ehtashamuddin Haqqee, wrote short stories, a study of Hafez, Tarjuman-ul-Ghaib, a translation of Diwan-i-Hafiz in verse and compiled a dictionary.
Haqqee recited his first ghazal at an annual poetic gathering of St. Stephen's College.
Bhula do ranj kee batoun mein kiya hai
Contribution to Urdu
Haqqee published two anthologies of poems, Tar-i-Pairahan (1957) and Harf-i-Dilras (1979). He also published ghazals under the title, Dil ki Zaban.
His other publications include:
His autobiography was serialized in the Urdu journal Afkaar. He also translated Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra and Chanakya Kautilya's Arthashastra.
He also wrote other genres of poetry, such as Peheylian, Kehmukarnian, and Qitat-i-Tareekhi.
As a lexicographer
In addition to his regular professional duties, he remained associated with the Urdu Dictionary Board for 17 years from 1958 to 1975, compiling a 22-volume dictionary. He compiled two other dictionaries. Farhang-e-Talaffuz is a pronouncing dictionary of Urdu published by the National Language Authority. The Oxford English-Urdu Dictionary is a translation of the eighth and ninth editions of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary.
In addition to libraries in South Asia, some of Haqqee's books are found in the Library of Congress and the University of Toronto Library.
Death
He died from complications of lung cancer in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada while under his daughter's care on 11 October 2005. He was 87. Haqqee left five sons and one daughter. Like his wife, teacher Salma Haqqee, who died exactly two years earlier, he was buried in Mississauga, Canada.