History, asked by kamalgharty4, 3 days ago

Write a short note.
1. Kabiguru Rabindranath Tagore 2. Margaret Elizabeth Noble (Bhagini Nivedita) Nawab Salimullah 3 Nawab salimullah.I know answer but my answer is to long.​

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Answered by dishakm888
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Answer:

Explanation:

Kabiguru Rabindranath Tagore :

A Bengali polymath known as Gurudev, Rabindranath Tagore (born 7 May 1861; died 7 August 1941) transformed Indian art, Bengali literature, and music in the late 19th and early 20th centuries with contextual modernism. Gitanjali's author, who was recognised for his "profoundly sensitive, fresh, and beautiful verse," won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913, making him the first non-European to do so. His "elegant prose and magical poetry" are still largely unheard of outside Bengal, despite the fact that in translation his poetry was seen as mercurial and spiritual. Tagore liberated Bengali literature from conventional models based on ancient Sanskrit by introducing new prose and verse forms as well as the use of colloquial language. He had a significant impact on bringing the best of Indian culture to the West and vice versa. He is often recognized as the best creative artist of the contemporary Indian subcontinent and vice versa.

Margaret Elizabeth Noble (Bhagini Nivedita) :

One of the finest political and intellectual philosophers of the 19th century, Sister Nivedita openly identified herself as an Indian nationalist despite having been born abroad. She was simultaneously a scholar, philosopher, educator, social worker, artist, and feminist. In the brief time she lived, she was able to have an impact on an entire generation of people who would later determine India's fate in the 20th century. Her grandfather was an Irish rebel who happened to be born as Margaret Elizabeth Noble in an Irish family. Since she lost her father Samuel Richmond Noble when she was ten, her childhood was terrible. She began working as a teacher at the young age of 17 shortly after finishing school. Noble spoke with the while a teacher in Keswick, Ireland, I had conflicts with Western ideas. Later, she moved to Wimbledon, a pivotal period in her career that helped her to develop many of the concepts that would shape the rest of her life.

Nawab salimullah:

The biggest Muslim zamindar in British Bengal and Assam, situated in modern-day Dhaka, Bangladesh, was known as the Nawab of As a reward for the first Nawab's dedication and contributions to social welfare initiatives, Queen Victoria bestowed the title of nawab—similar to the British peerage—on the family head.

Despite not being sovereigns, the Nawabs of Dhaka were crucial to the politics of South Asia and its interactions with other countries. The family was a part of the Ahsan Manzil palace's Dhaka Nawab estate. The head of the family and estate was known as the "Nawab of Dhaka" beginning in 1843. The was Khwaja Alimullah. When Queen Victoria made the title hereditary, Khwaja Abdul Ghani was the first holder of the title and the first Nawab of Dhaka.

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