Syed Muhammad Latif | |
Birth Date: | 1851 |
Birth Place: | Lahore, British Punjab |
Death Date: | 1902 (aged 51) |
Death Place: | Lahore |
Parents: | Syed Muhammad Azeem |
Era: | 19th-century |
Main Interests: | History, Urdu poetry |
Alma Mater: | Calcutta University |
Influences: | Sir Syed Ahmed Khan |
Syed Muhammad Latif (1851–1902) was a 19th-century Punjabi scholar and historian.
Muhammad Latif was born at Lahore in 1851, two years after the annexation of Punjab into the British Raj following the second Anglo-Sikh war. He belonged to an educated family his father Syed Muhammad Azeem (1815–1885) founded The Lahore Chronicle in 1850, a pioneering English-language newspaper of British Punjab. Latif received a western-style education at Calcutta University which helped him to pursue a career in judiciary.
Latif started as a translator, and subsequently reader, in the Punjab Chief Court. He rose to the position of assistant commissioner of Hoshiarpur in 1880, and then also held the judicial charges of Lahore, Multan, Jalandhar, Gujranwala, Jhang and Gurdaspur, working in almost all notable places in Punjab. He was given the title of Khan Bahadur in 1892 as well as Shams-ul-Ulema in 1897 for his "History of the Punjab".
Latif was married to a niece of Syed Ahmed Khan in 1875.
Latif was a member of various associations, including Amjuman-i-Punjab and Bengal Asiatic Society. He was also a fellow of University of the Punjab, Lahore. He was a polyglot, and knew Punjabi, Arabic, Persian, English and Urdu.
Latif's Diwan was published in 1870. However, he is mainly known for his works on history. His Tarikh-i-Panjab Mah-halaat-i-Shar Lahore was published in 1888 in Urdu. Notable English works of Latif include: