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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Atiya_FyzeeAtiya Fyzee - Wikipedia

    Atiya Fyzee (1 August 1877 – 4 January 1967; also known as Atiya Fyzee-Rahamin, Atiya Begum, Shahinda, Atiya Begum Fyzee Rahamin) was an Indian author and the first woman from South Asia to attend the University of Cambridge.

  2. 28 de oct. de 2010 · Atiya Fyzee became a key figure in the cultural and intellectual history of South Asia. Atiya’s legend, sometimes contradictory and often exoticized, was formed in the last years of her life when she lived in Karachi after the Partition.

  3. On 1 September 1906, a young, unveiled Muslim woman, Atiya Fyzee (1877–1967), boarded a steamboat that began a historical travel from India to Britain. During her sojourn, Atiya recorded her experiences and observations in a diary. This book is about her life, writing, and travels.

  4. Belonging to the prominent Tyabji clan of Bombay, Atiya was one of the first elite Indian Muslim women to receive a modern education, appear in public unveiled and participate in women’s organizations.

  5. This chapter examines the global networks forged by South Asians in Edwardian Britain through the eyes of Atiya Fyzee, a Muslim woman from Bombay.1 This era is perhaps the least well- served in existing literature on Indian travellers, students and settlers in...

  6. 26 de mar. de 2021 · Taking an ‘analogical’ approach to the issue, this study reads the saga of Atiya Fyzees relationship with Shibli Nomani and Allama Iqbal as a plausible allegor.

  7. The Fyzee family was a branch of the extended Tyabji clan. Writer Atiya Fyzee (1877-1967) belonged to this illustrious family tree, and Badruddin Tyabji was her maternal great uncle. She was a great traveller and an iconoclastic woman worthy of note in the history of South Asian literature.