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*[[Mia Golam Parwar]] (born 1959), Bangladeshi politician
*[[Mia Golam Parwar]] (born 1959), Bangladeshi politician
*[[Arbab Ghulam Rahim]] (born 1957), Pakistani politician
*[[Arbab Ghulam Rahim]] (born 1957), Pakistani politician
*[[Ghulam Raziq]] (born 1932), Pakistani hurdler
*[[Ghulam Raziq]] (1932-1989), Pakistani hurdler
*[[Golam Shabbir Sattar]] (born 1962), Bangladeshi vice-chancellor of the [[University of Rajshahi]]
*[[Golam Shabbir Sattar]] (born 1962), Bangladeshi vice-chancellor of the [[University of Rajshahi]]
*[[Ghulam Arieff Tipoo]] (1931–2024), Chief Prosecutor of the International Crimes Tribunal
*[[Ghulam Arieff Tipoo]] (1931–2024), Chief Prosecutor of the International Crimes Tribunal

Revision as of 02:22, 17 July 2024

Ghulam (Arabic: غلام, ALA-LC: ghulām) is an Arabic word meaning servant, assistant, boy, or youth. It is used to describe young servants in paradise. It is also used to refer to slave-soldiers in the Abbasid, Ottoman, Safavid and to a lesser extent, Mughal empires, as described in the article Ghilman, which is the plural form of the word.

It is traditionally used as the first element of compounded Muslim male given names, meaning servant of ..., mostly in Persian (where it is pronounced Gholâm) and in Urdu. In both Persian and Urdu, the particle al- is not used with ghulam (unlike compounds formed with ʿabd; e.g. Gholammohammad, Gholamhoseyn, Gholamali... and Abd al-Muhammad, Abd al-Husayn, Abd al-Ali...). Since the 20th century, Ghulam has also been used as an independent given name and surname.

People with the given name (not in compound)

People with the surname

List of compounded given names with first part Ghulam

See also