Last modified: 2005-01-29 by rob raeside
Keywords: indian princely state | bahawalpur | crescent | star |
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Image after Ziggiotto (1998).
See also:from Filcher (1984)
:EMIRATE OF BAHAWALPUR
Princely States of Western Punjab, Present-day Pakistan - Sind
17 Gun Salute
Area: 42,564 sq.km
Acceded to Pakistan in 1955, Founded in 1701
Image after Ziggiotto (1998).
Flag of the Mir (Emir):
The personel standard of the Emir of Bahawalpur is entirely black with in the
center the crescent (points up)
and a star (5-pointed), surrounded by Arab invocations, placed:
a) below the two symbols, horizontally: "Sadiq Mohammed Abassi Khan, Farmanraway
Mamlikat Khudad
Dad Bahawalpur".
b). on both sides (but the extremes don't touch the former
ones): that is the
"Khalma-i-Shahadad"
c) and on top two small words, one beside the other in a half-circle:
- on the left: "Wa Fatehun Quareeb"
- on the right: "Nusrun Min Allah"
- in the center: 786 (for Bismillah Sharif)
This flag was adopted by the Souvereign in 1935 after his pilgrimage to Mecca; note that Emir Sadiq Mohammed
Khan V reigned
1907-1947.
The Emir of Bahawalpur claims descent from the Abbassid Caliphs and he is the
Head of the "Deodpatra"
brotherhood, a patriarchal confederation, rather than a state. The Abbassids
adopted black as their dynastic
color, like Caliph Walid, whose army, led by Muhammed bin-Khasim, penetrated in
712 in India.
Chrystian Kretowicz, 28 January 2003
Chrystian noted Arab invocations, placed:
a) below the two symbols, horizontally: "Sadiq Mohammed Abassi Khan, Farmanraway
Mamlikat Khudad Dad Bahawalpur".
This is not really Arabic but probably Dari or Urdu. Nevertheless, the words are
mostly Arabic derived and mean, I think, more or less (is that hedged enough?)
"The Honorable Mohammed Abassi Khan, Ruler (?) of the Kingdom of Khudad and (?)
Bahawalpur."
> b. on both sides (but the extremes don't touch the former ones): that is the "Khalma-i-Shahadad"
That is, the Shahada, or Muslim creed. The lettering is too small to read, but
it doesn't look to me as if what's on the hoist side is just a repetition of the
words that begin to the fly side of the central emblem. The beginning of the
script does appear to say "Ashhadu an la ilahi illa Allah... (I testify that
there is no god but God...), but it looks to me as if something else follows
after the ending phrase of the Shahada "Mu