Aliya High School for Boys

Aliya High School for Boys previously known as Madrassa-e-Aliya is a government owned school located at Gunfoundry, Hyderabad.[1]

Aliya High School for Boys
Location
Aliya High School for Boys
Aliya High School for Boys
Gunfoundry, Hyderabad

India
Coordinates17.3992418°N 78.473442°E / 17.3992418; 78.473442
Information
Funding typeState Government
Established1872
Founded1872
FounderThe Nizams

History

The school was established in 1872 during the reign of the Nizams for the elite and served the city's nobility, was supposedly one of the best schools in Hyderabad till the 1960s.

It was managed by Anglo-Indians, but after Operation Polo the school management was brought under the control of the state government which reportedly brought about its downfall. The school building is listed as a heritage building. The school was renamed 1948, the school then known as Madrassa-e-Aliya was founded by Salar Jung I in the Nizam College premises. The school which once served the elite and the nobility now caters to the children of poor.[2][3]

Alumni

gollark: <@498244879894315027> What are you trying to access it *from*?
gollark: Look, it says there, > By design, the POST request method requests that a web server accepts the data enclosed in the body of the request message, most likely for storing it.
gollark: The urlencoded MIME type/format doesn't mean it's sent in the URL, just that it uses similar encoding to query strings.
gollark: POST data isn't in the URL though, it's sent as the body.
gollark: The reason they *do* is probably just consistency with other methods (it would be very annoying if they worked very differently to GET routing-wise) and so requests can be routed to the right handler more easily.

See also

References

  1. "Aliya, Mahbubia to stay as govt institutes". Times of India. 9 July 2003.
  2. Baseerat, Bushra (8 January 2012). "'School for the elite' lies in a shambles". Times of India.
  3. Akula, Yuvraj (27 December 2016). "Once an elite school, now in shambles". Telangana Today. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
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