( February 2020) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message)Īfter the completion of his education, Nanautavi became the editor of the press at Matbah-e-Ahmadi. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. It is commonly accepted that Nanautawi did not appear in the college exams. Gīlāni says that, Nanautawi studied with Mamluk Ali Nanautawi, but not the syllabus of the college, rather studied at his home. Nanautawi stayed in Delhi for around five or six years, and graduated, aged seventeen. He says that, the name of Nanautawi appeared in the official registry of the college in the first year and argues, "whatsoever it is, but it is not right that he gained education there, since the starting". Manazir Ahsan Gilani has tried to reconcile the reports concerning Nanautawi's education at the college. According to Ashraf Ali Thanwi, "Mamluk Ali, the teacher of Rashid Ahmad Gangohi and Nanautawi was a government employee at Dār al-Baqā", in Delhi, which suggests that Nanautawi possibly studied there. He studied the major books with Mamluk Ali, including " mantiq" and philosophy, and few other books with Mufti Sadruddīn. According to Asir Adrawi, "Nanautawi although was enrolled in the college, he would take private classes at his teachers home, instead of the college". In 1844, Nanautawi joined the Delhi College, where he studied with Mamluk Ali Nanautawi. Wakīl enrolled his grandson in the Persian class of Muḥammad Nawāz Sahāranpūri, under whom, Nanautawi, then aged twelve, completed Persian studies. Thereafter, his mother sent him to Saharanpur, where his maternal grandfather Wajīhuddīn Wakīl, who was a poet of Urdu and Persian, lived. Under the instruction of Mehtab Ali, Nanautawi completed the primary books of Arabic grammar and syntax. The teacher at this "madrasa" was Mehtab Ali, the uncle of Mahmud Hasan Deobandi. Aged nine, Nanautawi moved to Deoband where he studied at the madrasa of Karamat Hussain. Nanautawi was schooled at Nanauta, where he memorized the Quran and learned calligraphy. Nanautawi was born in 1832 (either in Sha'ban or Ramadan, 1248 AH) into the Siddiqi family of Nanauta, a town near Saharanpur, India. The "nasab" meets Qasim ibn Muhammad ibn Abi Bakr after 44 links. His nasab ( patronymic) is: Muhammad Qāsim ibn Asad Ali ibn Ghulam Shāh ibn Muhammad Bakhsh ibn Alāuddīn ibn Muhammad Fateh ibn Muhammad Mufti ibn Abd al-Samī ibn Muhammad Hāshim His ism ( given name) was Muhammad Qasim. Further information: Siddiqi family of Nanauta
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