Urdu and Islamic literature in the Indian subcontinent
The general need for Hindus and Hindus in the Indian subcontinent (India and Pakistan) has developed the innovative colloquial language known as Urdu, which was the middle of Persian and Hindi, and can be described as the Persian character of Western Hindi, almost all of whose vocabulary is Persian and Indian.
The term "Urdu" is of Turkish origin and is familiar in the Persian language of the Alexandrian historians. It has been adopted in India since the era of the Sultans of Delhi by Prince Khadr Khan (817-824 AH / 1414-1421 AD), the son of Sultan Alaeddin Khalji, used in the army and the tiles. During the Age of the Great Mongols (1526-1707 AD) in India, the term "Urdu" was generally used to refer to the imperial camp. In the late 11th century AD, the language of the camp was called. This language itself, as well as its early local literature, is much older than its present name, "Urdu". From the 13th to the 18th century, Urdu was referred to as "Indian" or given certain dialects such as "Dokniyya" and "Gujarat" May be confusing as its jurisprudence and ethics remain quite different from the languages known today as Hindi and Gujarati.