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Telangana High Court

The Telangana High Court is the High Court for the Indian state of Telangana. Founded by the 7th Nizam Mir Osman Ali Khan, initially, it was set up as High Court of Hyderabad for the then Princely State of Hyderabad Deccan and later renamed High Court of Andhra Pradesh, as it was set up on 5 November 1956 under the States Reorganisation Act, 1956.The Andhra Pradesh High Court was renamed as High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad in view of the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh state.

Telangana High Court
Telangana High Court Building
Established1 January 2019 (4 years ago) (1 January 2019)
JurisdictionTelangana
LocationHyderabad, Telangana
Coordinates17°22′09″N 78°28′19″E / 17.369181°N 78.472039°E / 17.369181; 78.472039Coordinates: 17°22′09″N 78°28′19″E / 17.369181°N 78.472039°E / 17.369181; 78.472039
Composition methodExecutive selection subject to qualification
Authorized byConstitution of India & Andhra Pradesh Reorganization Act, 2014
Judge term lengthmandatory retirement by age of 62
Number of positions24 {Permanent 18; Addl. 6}
Websitetshc.gov.in
Chief Justice
CurrentlyUjjal Bhuyan
Since28 June 2022

The President of India, on 26 December 2018, issued orders bifurcating The High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad for the State of Telangana and the State of Andhra Pradesh into High Court of Andhra Pradesh with the principal seat at Amaravati and High Court for the State of Telangana with the principal seat at Hyderabad. The bifurcation and the constitution of separate High Courts for Telangana and Andhra Pradesh came into effect from 1 January 2019.

From 2 June 2014, after the Andhra Pradesh Reorganisation Act, 2014 came into force, it was renamed and served as a common high court for both of the states until 1 January 2019. A separate high court was established for Andhra Pradesh and inaugurated on 1 January 2019 and it was named as Andhra Pradesh High Court.

The seat of the high court is in Hyderabad and has been sanctioned for 24 judges.

History of the judiciary

The State of Andhra Pradesh was formed in 1956 by the separation of the merger of the Andhra State which was formed in the year 1953 from erstwhile Madras state and the Telangana area of Hyderabad Deccan which was acceded by Government of India on 17 September 1948 after the Nizam's rule. On 1 January 2019, Telangana High Court was bifurcated into Andhra Pradesh High Court and Telangana High Court after the formation of the state of Telangana.

History of High Court building

The High Court stands on the south bank of the River Musi. This is one of the finest buildings in the city, built in red and white stones in Saracenic style, by Nizam VII Mir Osman Ali Khan the ruler of the princely state of Hyderabad.

The plan of the High Court was drawn up by Shankar Lal of Jaipur and the local engineer who executed the design was Mehar Ali Fazil. Its chief engineer was Nawab Khan Bahadur Mirza Akbar Baig. The construction started on 15 April 1915 and was completed on 31 March 1919. On 20 April 1920 the High Court building was inaugurated by the seventh Nizam Mir Osman Ali Khan.

While digging the foundation for the High Court, ruins of the Qutb Shahi Palaces, namely Hina Mahal and Nadi Mahal were unearthed. The High Court looks beautiful and impressive from the Naya Pul Bridge at sunset.

After its construction, a silver model of the High Court with a silver key was presented to the Nizam VII Mir Osman Ali Khan by the Judiciary during the Silver Jubilee Celebrations in 1936. The facsimile of the buildings was perfectly carved in a thick sheet of silver weighing about 300 kg. The model is now in the Nizam's Museum in Purani Haveli.

The main building of the High Court was constructed in the year 1919 by the then Nizam's Government accommodating six judges besides accommodation for the office staff, record rooms and Advocates' Hall.[1]

After the formation of Andhra Pradesh

When the High Court of Andhra Pradesh was formed in 1956 as a consequence of States Reorganisation Act, the number of judges was increased to 12. The existing accommodation was inadequate to meet the requirements of the larger High Court and so the additional building was constructed in 1958–59. The entire office rooms, record rooms, chambers of advocates (42 in all) and the rooms for law officers were located in this building. The record rooms, Officer rooms in the main building were modified to provide chambers and Court Hall accommodation for 14 Judges.

Construction of Annexe

 
The main gate of High Court, Hyderabad

By 1970, the institution of cases of the High Court has gone up to 35,000 as against 20,000 in 1958. The number of judges increased from 14 to 32. To provide additional accommodation for Judges, Staff and Advocates and Law Officers, the third building was proposed and the work was completed in 1976. The Law Officers strength was increased from 8 to 18 by 1980 and the institution of cases had gone up to 55,593 cases. In 1979 a plan was drawn for the four-storey Annexe building and due to lack of funds that could not be taken up. There are currently 32 Court Halls and 38 Chambers located in the High Court main building and Annexe buildings. The present building for which the foundation stone is being laid by the Honourable Chief Justice will have eight Court Halls and eight Chamber for the Judges. Some of the Court Halls located in the Verandahs and in the office rooms will be restored to their original position. The institution of cases had risen from 20,078 from 1958 to 1982, 123 including miscellaneous cases in 1985. Now the pendency of cases in High Court as on 24 July 1987 are 84,855 (i.e., 66,276 main cases + 18,579 miscellaneous cases). The Government of India is contemplating to raise the strength of the Judges of this High Court to 36 and in such case, more funds have to be released for the construction of Annexe buildings. After the completion of this building, the main building and Annexes buildings can locate 32 Court Halls and 38 Chambers.

2009 Major fire

On 31 August 2009 a major accidental fire broke out through the building reportedly causing severe damage to the library housing rare England law reports, Privy Council journals and a life-size portrait of the Nizam and portraits of judges. However, the records of the court are reportedly safe. The structural integrity of the building also may have been compromised.[2][3]

The Judges

The Telangana High Court sits at Hyderabad and has jurisdiction over the state of Telangana. It may have a maximum of 42 Judges of which 32 may be permanently appointed and 10 may be additionally appointed. Currently, it has 32 judges.[4]

Permanent judges

# Judge Date of joining Date of retirement
1 Ujjal Bhuyan (CJ) 17 October 2011 1 August 2026
2 Ponugoti Naveen Rao 12 April 2013 14 July 2023
3 Abhinand Kumar Shavili 21 September 2017 7 October 2025
4 Tadakamalla Vinod Kumar 26 August 2019 16 November 2026
5 Annireddy Abhishek Reddy 26 August 2019 6 November 2029
6 Kunuru Lakshman 26 August 2019 7 June 2028
7 Bollampally Vijaysen Reddy 2 May 2020 21 August 2032
8 Lalitha Kanneganti 2 May 2020 4 May 2033
9 Perugu Sree Sudha 15 October 2021 5 June 2029
10 Chillakur Sumalatha 15 October 2021 4 December 2034
10 Gurijala Radha Rani 15 October 2021 28 June 2025
12 Munnuri Laxman 15 October 2021 23 December 2027
13 Noonsavath Tukaramji 15 October 2021 23 January 2035
14 Addula Venkateshwara Reddy 15 October 2021 14 April 2023
15 Patlolla Madhavi Devi 15 October 2021 27 December 2027
16 Kasoju Surendhar 24 March 2022 10 January 2030
17 Surepalli Nanda 24 March 2022 3 April 2031
18 Mummineni Sudheer Kumar 24 March 2022 19 May 2031
19 Juvvadi Sridevi 24 March 2022 9 August 2034
20 Natcharaju Shravan Kumar Venkat 24 March 2022 17 August 2029
21 Gunnu Anupama Chakravarthy 24 March 2022 20 March 2032
22 Maturi Girija Priyadarsini 24 March 2022 29 August 2026
23 Sambasivarao Naidu 24 March 2022 31 July 2024
24 Anugu Santhosh Reddy 24 March 2022 20 June 2023
25 Devaraju Nagarjun 24 March 2022 14 August 2024
26 Chada Vijaya Bhaskar Reddy 4 August 2022 27 June 2030
27 E. V. Venugopal 16 August 2022 15 August 2029
28 Nagesh Bheemapaka 16 August 2022 7 March 2031
29 P. Elamadar 16 August 2022 3 June 2029
30 K. Sharath 16 August 2022 28 January 2033

Additional judges

# Judge Date of joining
1 J. Srinivas Rao 16 August 2022
2 Namavarapu Rajeshwar Rao 16 August 2022
Vacant

Chief Justices

S.No. Chief Justice Tenure
Hyderabad State High Court
1 Muhammad Muslehuddin[5]
2 Nizamat Jung[6]
United Andhra Pradesh High Court
3 Koka Subba Rao 1956–1958
4 P. Chandra Reddy 1958–1964
5 P. Satyanarayana Raju 1964–1965
6 Manohar Pershad 1965–1966
7 N.D. Krishna Rao 1966–1966
8 P. Jagan Mohan Reddy 1966–1969
9 N. Kumarayya 1969–1971
10 K.V.L. Narasimham 1971–1972
11 Gopal Rao Ekbote 1972–1974
12 S. Obul Reddi 1974–1976 & 1977–1978
13 B. J. Divan 1976–1977
14 Avula Sambasiva Rao 1978–1979
15 Challa Kondaiah 1979–1980
16 Alladi Kuppu Swami 1980–1982
17 Konda Madhava Reddy 1982–1984
18 Koka Ramachandra Rao 1984–1984
19 P. Chennakesav Reddi 1985–1985
20 K. Bhaskaran 1985–1988
21 Yogeshwar Dayal 1988–1991
22 S.C. Pratap 1991–1992
23 S.B. Majumdar 1992–1993
24 Sundaram Nainar Sundaram 1993–1994
25 Saiyed Sagir Ahmed 1994–1995
26 Prabha Shankar Mishra 1995–1997
27 Umesh Chandra Banerjee 1998
28 Manmohan Singh Liberhan 1998–2000
29 S. B. Sinha 2000–2001
30 Dr A.R. Lakshmanan 2001–2002
31 Devinder Gupta 2003–2005
32 G.S. Singhvi 2005–2007
33 Anil Ramesh Dave 2007–2010
34 Nisar Ahmad Kakru 2010–2011
35 Madan Lokur 2011–2012
36 Pinaki Chandra Ghose 2012–2013
37 Kalyan Jyoti Sengupta 2013–1 June 2014
High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad
38 Kalyan Jyoti Sengupta 2 June 2014 – 2015
39 Dilip Babasaheb Bhosale 2015
40 T.B. Radhakrishnan July 7, 2018- December 31, 2018
S.No. Chief Justice Tenure
Telangana High Court
1 T.B. Radhakrishnan January 1, 2019 – April 2, 2019
2 Raghvendra Singh Chauhan June 22, 2019 - January 6, 2021
3 Hima Kohli January 7, 2021 - August 30, 2021
4 Satish Chandra Sharma October 11, 2021 - June 27, 2022
5 Ujjal Bhuyan June 28, 2022 - Incumbent

Present Registrars of High Court

  1. Registrar General- Dr. D. Nagarjun
  2. Registrar (Judicial I)- G.V.Subramaniam
  3. Registrar (Judicial II)-K Gangadhara rao
  4. Registrar (Administration) - K.Sujana
  5. Registrar (I.T.)-cum-Central Project Coordinator (IT & E-Committee related)- D. Ramakanth
  6. Registrar (Vigilance) - K.Sai Rama Devi
  7. Registrar (Management)-V Ramesh
  8. Registrar (Protocol)-T Venkateswara Rao
  9. District Judge (Enquiries)
  10. Registrar (Recruitment)

Present Unit Heads

  1. Adilabad - M. R. Sunitha
  2. Karimnagar - G.Bhavani Chandra
  3. Khammam - P Chandrashekara Prasad
  4. Mahabubnagar -S Premavathi
  5. Medak - B Papi Reddy
  6. Nalgonda - S Jagjeevan Kumar
  7. Nizamabad -Kunchala Suneetha
  8. Rangareddy - R Tirupathi
  9. Warangal - Nandikonda Narsing Rao
  10. Hyderabad-City Civil Court - Renuka Yara
  11. Hyderabad-City Small Causes Court -V B Nirmala Geethamba
  12. Hyderabad-Metropolitan Sessions Court - E Tirumala Devi
  13. Hyderabad- Principal CBI - B R Madhusudhan Rao

See also

References

  1. ^ "About Us".
  2. ^ . www.deccanchronicle.com. Archived from the original on 3 September 2009.
  3. ^ "India News: Today's latest updates and breaking news from India, Live India News".
  4. ^ "HON'BLE JUDGES PROFILE". hc.tap.nic.in. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
  5. ^ Rao, C. Hayavadana, "Hakim-ud-Daula", The Indian Biographical Dictionary (1915), retrieved 28 September 2019
  6. ^ Iyer, N. V (1947). Sir Nizamat Jung; a short study. Place of publication not identified: Nizam Silver Jubilee Press. OCLC 28357691.

External links

  • Official website
  • Judicial District Units of Telangana

telangana, high, court, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 202. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Telangana High Court news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Telangana High Court is the High Court for the Indian state of Telangana Founded by the 7th Nizam Mir Osman Ali Khan initially it was set up as High Court of Hyderabad for the then Princely State of Hyderabad Deccan and later renamed High Court of Andhra Pradesh as it was set up on 5 November 1956 under the States Reorganisation Act 1956 The Andhra Pradesh High Court was renamed as High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad in view of the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh state Telangana High CourtTelangana High Court BuildingEstablished1 January 2019 4 years ago 1 January 2019 JurisdictionTelanganaLocationHyderabad TelanganaCoordinates17 22 09 N 78 28 19 E 17 369181 N 78 472039 E 17 369181 78 472039 Coordinates 17 22 09 N 78 28 19 E 17 369181 N 78 472039 E 17 369181 78 472039Composition methodExecutive selection subject to qualificationAuthorized byConstitution of India amp Andhra Pradesh Reorganization Act 2014Judge term lengthmandatory retirement by age of 62Number of positions24 Permanent 18 Addl 6 Websitetshc wbr gov wbr inChief JusticeCurrentlyUjjal BhuyanSince28 June 2022The President of India on 26 December 2018 issued orders bifurcating The High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad for the State of Telangana and the State of Andhra Pradesh into High Court of Andhra Pradesh with the principal seat at Amaravati and High Court for the State of Telangana with the principal seat at Hyderabad The bifurcation and the constitution of separate High Courts for Telangana and Andhra Pradesh came into effect from 1 January 2019 From 2 June 2014 after the Andhra Pradesh Reorganisation Act 2014 came into force it was renamed and served as a common high court for both of the states until 1 January 2019 A separate high court was established for Andhra Pradesh and inaugurated on 1 January 2019 and it was named as Andhra Pradesh High Court The seat of the high court is in Hyderabad and has been sanctioned for 24 judges Contents 1 History of the judiciary 2 History of High Court building 2 1 After the formation of Andhra Pradesh 2 2 Construction of Annexe 2 3 2009 Major fire 3 The Judges 3 1 Permanent judges 3 2 Additional judges 4 Chief Justices 5 Present Registrars of High Court 6 Present Unit Heads 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory of the judiciary EditThe State of Andhra Pradesh was formed in 1956 by the separation of the merger of the Andhra State which was formed in the year 1953 from erstwhile Madras state and the Telangana area of Hyderabad Deccan which was acceded by Government of India on 17 September 1948 after the Nizam s rule On 1 January 2019 Telangana High Court was bifurcated into Andhra Pradesh High Court and Telangana High Court after the formation of the state of Telangana History of High Court building EditThe High Court stands on the south bank of the River Musi This is one of the finest buildings in the city built in red and white stones in Saracenic style by Nizam VII Mir Osman Ali Khan the ruler of the princely state of Hyderabad The plan of the High Court was drawn up by Shankar Lal of Jaipur and the local engineer who executed the design was Mehar Ali Fazil Its chief engineer was Nawab Khan Bahadur Mirza Akbar Baig The construction started on 15 April 1915 and was completed on 31 March 1919 On 20 April 1920 the High Court building was inaugurated by the seventh Nizam Mir Osman Ali Khan While digging the foundation for the High Court ruins of the Qutb Shahi Palaces namely Hina Mahal and Nadi Mahal were unearthed The High Court looks beautiful and impressive from the Naya Pul Bridge at sunset After its construction a silver model of the High Court with a silver key was presented to the Nizam VII Mir Osman Ali Khan by the Judiciary during the Silver Jubilee Celebrations in 1936 The facsimile of the buildings was perfectly carved in a thick sheet of silver weighing about 300 kg The model is now in the Nizam s Museum in Purani Haveli The main building of the High Court was constructed in the year 1919 by the then Nizam s Government accommodating six judges besides accommodation for the office staff record rooms and Advocates Hall 1 After the formation of Andhra Pradesh Edit When the High Court of Andhra Pradesh was formed in 1956 as a consequence of States Reorganisation Act the number of judges was increased to 12 The existing accommodation was inadequate to meet the requirements of the larger High Court and so the additional building was constructed in 1958 59 The entire office rooms record rooms chambers of advocates 42 in all and the rooms for law officers were located in this building The record rooms Officer rooms in the main building were modified to provide chambers and Court Hall accommodation for 14 Judges Construction of Annexe Edit The main gate of High Court Hyderabad By 1970 the institution of cases of the High Court has gone up to 35 000 as against 20 000 in 1958 The number of judges increased from 14 to 32 To provide additional accommodation for Judges Staff and Advocates and Law Officers the third building was proposed and the work was completed in 1976 The Law Officers strength was increased from 8 to 18 by 1980 and the institution of cases had gone up to 55 593 cases In 1979 a plan was drawn for the four storey Annexe building and due to lack of funds that could not be taken up There are currently 32 Court Halls and 38 Chambers located in the High Court main building and Annexe buildings The present building for which the foundation stone is being laid by the Honourable Chief Justice will have eight Court Halls and eight Chamber for the Judges Some of the Court Halls located in the Verandahs and in the office rooms will be restored to their original position The institution of cases had risen from 20 078 from 1958 to 1982 123 including miscellaneous cases in 1985 Now the pendency of cases in High Court as on 24 July 1987 are 84 855 i e 66 276 main cases 18 579 miscellaneous cases The Government of India is contemplating to raise the strength of the Judges of this High Court to 36 and in such case more funds have to be released for the construction of Annexe buildings After the completion of this building the main building and Annexes buildings can locate 32 Court Halls and 38 Chambers 2009 Major fire Edit On 31 August 2009 a major accidental fire broke out through the building reportedly causing severe damage to the library housing rare England law reports Privy Council journals and a life size portrait of the Nizam and portraits of judges However the records of the court are reportedly safe The structural integrity of the building also may have been compromised 2 3 The Judges EditThe Telangana High Court sits at Hyderabad and has jurisdiction over the state of Telangana It may have a maximum of 42 Judges of which 32 may be permanently appointed and 10 may be additionally appointed Currently it has 32 judges 4 Permanent judges Edit Judge Date of joining Date of retirement1 Ujjal Bhuyan CJ 17 October 2011 1 August 20262 Ponugoti Naveen Rao 12 April 2013 14 July 20233 Abhinand Kumar Shavili 21 September 2017 7 October 20254 Tadakamalla Vinod Kumar 26 August 2019 16 November 20265 Annireddy Abhishek Reddy 26 August 2019 6 November 20296 Kunuru Lakshman 26 August 2019 7 June 20287 Bollampally Vijaysen Reddy 2 May 2020 21 August 20328 Lalitha Kanneganti 2 May 2020 4 May 20339 Perugu Sree Sudha 15 October 2021 5 June 202910 Chillakur Sumalatha 15 October 2021 4 December 203410 Gurijala Radha Rani 15 October 2021 28 June 202512 Munnuri Laxman 15 October 2021 23 December 202713 Noonsavath Tukaramji 15 October 2021 23 January 203514 Addula Venkateshwara Reddy 15 October 2021 14 April 202315 Patlolla Madhavi Devi 15 October 2021 27 December 202716 Kasoju Surendhar 24 March 2022 10 January 203017 Surepalli Nanda 24 March 2022 3 April 203118 Mummineni Sudheer Kumar 24 March 2022 19 May 203119 Juvvadi Sridevi 24 March 2022 9 August 203420 Natcharaju Shravan Kumar Venkat 24 March 2022 17 August 202921 Gunnu Anupama Chakravarthy 24 March 2022 20 March 203222 Maturi Girija Priyadarsini 24 March 2022 29 August 202623 Sambasivarao Naidu 24 March 2022 31 July 202424 Anugu Santhosh Reddy 24 March 2022 20 June 202325 Devaraju Nagarjun 24 March 2022 14 August 202426 Chada Vijaya Bhaskar Reddy 4 August 2022 27 June 203027 E V Venugopal 16 August 2022 15 August 202928 Nagesh Bheemapaka 16 August 2022 7 March 203129 P Elamadar 16 August 2022 3 June 202930 K Sharath 16 August 2022 28 January 2033Additional judges Edit Judge Date of joining1 J Srinivas Rao 16 August 20222 Namavarapu Rajeshwar Rao 16 August 2022VacantChief Justices EditS No Chief Justice TenureHyderabad State High Court1 Muhammad Muslehuddin 5 2 Nizamat Jung 6 United Andhra Pradesh High Court3 Koka Subba Rao 1956 19584 P Chandra Reddy 1958 19645 P Satyanarayana Raju 1964 19656 Manohar Pershad 1965 19667 N D Krishna Rao 1966 19668 P Jagan Mohan Reddy 1966 19699 N Kumarayya 1969 197110 K V L Narasimham 1971 197211 Gopal Rao Ekbote 1972 197412 S Obul Reddi 1974 1976 amp 1977 197813 B J Divan 1976 197714 Avula Sambasiva Rao 1978 197915 Challa Kondaiah 1979 198016 Alladi Kuppu Swami 1980 198217 Konda Madhava Reddy 1982 198418 Koka Ramachandra Rao 1984 198419 P Chennakesav Reddi 1985 198520 K Bhaskaran 1985 198821 Yogeshwar Dayal 1988 199122 S C Pratap 1991 199223 S B Majumdar 1992 199324 Sundaram Nainar Sundaram 1993 199425 Saiyed Sagir Ahmed 1994 199526 Prabha Shankar Mishra 1995 199727 Umesh Chandra Banerjee 199828 Manmohan Singh Liberhan 1998 200029 S B Sinha 2000 200130 Dr A R Lakshmanan 2001 200231 Devinder Gupta 2003 200532 G S Singhvi 2005 200733 Anil Ramesh Dave 2007 201034 Nisar Ahmad Kakru 2010 201135 Madan Lokur 2011 201236 Pinaki Chandra Ghose 2012 201337 Kalyan Jyoti Sengupta 2013 1 June 2014High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad38 Kalyan Jyoti Sengupta 2 June 2014 201539 Dilip Babasaheb Bhosale 201540 T B Radhakrishnan July 7 2018 December 31 2018S No Chief Justice TenureTelangana High Court1 T B Radhakrishnan January 1 2019 April 2 20192 Raghvendra Singh Chauhan June 22 2019 January 6 20213 Hima Kohli January 7 2021 August 30 20214 Satish Chandra Sharma October 11 2021 June 27 20225 Ujjal Bhuyan June 28 2022 IncumbentPresent Registrars of High Court EditRegistrar General Dr D Nagarjun Registrar Judicial I G V Subramaniam Registrar Judicial II K Gangadhara rao Registrar Administration K Sujana Registrar I T cum Central Project Coordinator IT amp E Committee related D Ramakanth Registrar Vigilance K Sai Rama Devi Registrar Management V Ramesh Registrar Protocol T Venkateswara Rao District Judge Enquiries Registrar Recruitment Present Unit Heads EditAdilabad M R Sunitha Karimnagar G Bhavani Chandra Khammam P Chandrashekara Prasad Mahabubnagar S Premavathi Medak B Papi Reddy Nalgonda S Jagjeevan Kumar Nizamabad Kunchala Suneetha Rangareddy R Tirupathi Warangal Nandikonda Narsing Rao Hyderabad City Civil Court Renuka Yara Hyderabad City Small Causes Court V B Nirmala Geethamba Hyderabad Metropolitan Sessions Court E Tirumala Devi Hyderabad Principal CBI B R Madhusudhan RaoSee also EditHigh Courts of India Category Establishments in Hyderabad StateReferences Edit About Us HC up in flames Deccan Chronicle www deccanchronicle com Archived from the original on 3 September 2009 India News Today s latest updates and breaking news from India Live India News HON BLE JUDGES PROFILE hc tap nic in Retrieved 4 February 2019 Rao C Hayavadana Hakim ud Daula The Indian Biographical Dictionary 1915 retrieved 28 September 2019 Iyer N V 1947 Sir Nizamat Jung a short study Place of publication not identified Nizam Silver Jubilee Press OCLC 28357691 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Telangana High Court Official website Judicial District Units of Telangana Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Telangana High Court amp oldid 1131514970, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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