M Harunur Rashid (archaeologist) explained

M Harunur Rashid
Native Name:এম হারুনুর রশিদ
Native Name Lang:bn
Birth Date:1925
Birth Place:Rasulullahbad Village, Brahmanbaria district, Bengal, British India (now Bangladesh)
Death Place:Dhaka, Bangladesh
Education:PhD (Archaeology)

M Harunur Rashid (1925 – 10 October 2010) was a Bangladeshi archaeologist, educationist and museum curator, who excavated archaeological sites in Pakistan and Bangladesh.[1]

Education

Rashid passed the matriculation in 1940 from Abu Torab High School in Chittagong and then passed IA in 1942 from Dhaka College. He obtained Bachelor of Arts (Honors) in 1945 and Master of Arts in history in 1946 from the University of Dhaka. He earned his PhD from Cambridge University in 1968.[1]

Career

Rashid joined Bhairab College as a lecturer in History and then he moved to join the Archaeology of Pakistan. He worked as a curator at Lahore Museum and later joined the Taxila Museum. Along with British archaeologist Mortimer Wheeler, he excavated Banbhore, Taxila, Harappa, Mohenjo-daro and many other sites of Pakistan.[1] These excavations along with "...the principal finds of all classes formed the necessary foundation..." of Early South-East Bengal History between 6th and 13th centuries A.D.[2]

After 1971 Rashid started working as a senior official in the Directorate of Archaeology until 1982. He also compiled and edited the volume on Bangladesh Archaeology in 1979.[1] [3]

He worked as a visiting professor at the Department of History, Jahangirnagar University in Savar. He also taught at the Institute of Fine Arts and History Department of the University of Dhaka.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bhuiyan, Mokammal H . 2012 . Rashid, M Harunur . http://en.banglapedia.org/index.php?title=Rashid,_M_Harunur . Islam . Sirajul . Sirajul Islam . Jamal . Ahmed A. . Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh . Second . Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
  2. Book: Rashid, Dr. M. Harunur . 2008 . The Early History of South-East Bengal In the Light of Archaeological Material . Dhaka . Itihash Academy . xii . 421540232.
  3. Web site: Resources: Journals. Department of Archaeology Bangladesh. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120214044531/http://www.archaeology.gov.bd/resource.php?c=J. 2012-02-14.