Liaquat Ali Khan Listen (help and information); A Pakistani statesman, lawyer, and political theorist who was born on October 1, 1895, and died on October 16, 1951, was also known as Quaid-e-Millat (literally “Leader of the Nation”) or Shaheed-e-Millat (literally “Martyr of the Nation”). He was one of Pakistan’s most important founding fathers. Khan became Pakistan’s first prime minister on August 15, 1947, one day after the country gained its independence; From 1947 until his assassination in 1951, he also held cabinet positions as the first foreign minister, defense minister, and frontier regions minister. Before appearing in the role, Khan served as the first Indian finance minister for a brief period of time in the Interim Government that granted Pakistan and India their independence, which was led by Louis Mountbatten, the then-viceroy of India.

Muhammad Liaquat Ali Khan, was brought into the world in Karnal, English India. Notwithstanding being “considerate, amicable and socially famous” and coming from a distinguished family known for its magnanimity, his biographer Muhammad Reza Kazimi takes note of that little is known about his initial life and that which is must be sorted out from pieces of for the most part hagiographic compositions. The family guaranteed a Persian beginning returning to Nausherwan the Equitable, the Saasanid ruler of Persia, albeit this might be something like legend, and they were gotten comfortable Uttar Pradesh when of his granddad, Nawab Ahmad Ali Khan. They had embraced the Urdu language, and Liaquat was consequently a local Urdu speaker.
Nawab Ahmad Ali Khan’s family claims that he rose to such prominence that the British East India Company bestowed upon him titles like Nawab Bahadur, Shamsher Jang, and Rukun-al-Daulah, which they claim were later inherited by his sons. Because the family estates in Uttar Pradesh were reduced as a result of the Indian Rebellion in 1857, after which Uttar Pradesh itself ceased to be an autonomous area, the validity of those titles has been questioned.
His father wanted the young Liaqat Ali Khan to be educated in the British educational system, and his family had a great deal of respect for the Indian Muslim thinker and philosopher Syed Ahmad Khan. Consequently, Ali Khan was sent to the renowned Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) by his family, where he earned degrees in law and political science.