The first stamp is an Official stamp from
the Indian state of Hyderabad...The Char Minar
HYDERABAD
Hyderabad city, the capital of the State of the same name, has many splendid buildings—Osmania University, the
High Court, the State Library and the Falaknuma palace, considered to be one of the finest modern buildings in
India. It has many fine public gardens, an interesting museum and a zoo, while nearby are two beautiful lakes
known as Osman Sagar and Himayat Sagar, the old fort of Golconda and the tombs of the Qutb Shahi kings.
Eighty-two miles from Hyderabad, in the pleasant little hill town of Bidar on a plateau 2,300 ft. above sea level, are
the ruins of beautiful buildings of the Bahmani kings.
Other places of archaeological interest in Hyderabad State are the Naganatha temple of Aundha in Parbhani district,
the great temple of Palampet in Warangal district, the Mahadeva temple of Ittagi in Raichur district and the Vishnu
temple of Dishpalli in Nizamabad district. The Naganatha temple closely resembles the famous temple of Halebid
in Mysore. Magnificent specimens of Muslim architecture are the Jama Masjid of Gulbarga with its entire area of
36,720 sq. ft. roofed over (unlike any other mosque in India), the Chand Minar of Daulatabad, 210 ft. high and 70
ft. in circumference at the base, the Madrasah of Mahmud Gawan at Bidar and the Char Minar of Hyderabad, built
in 1549, unique among Indian monuments.
Indians are the second highest ethnic group to become Australians.
Between 2007 and 2009 12,464 passed the citizenship test.
The Char Minar in 1955
