Imran Khan's Early Life and Education



A quiet and shy boy in his youth, Khan grew up with his sisters in relatively affluent, upper middle-class circumstances and received a privileged 
education. He was educated at the Aitchison College and Cathedral School in Lahore, and then the Royal Grammar School Worcester in England, where he excelled at cricket.




Khan was brought into the world in Lahore on 5 October 1952. A few reports recommend he was brought into the world on 25 November 1952.[29][30][31][32] It was accounted for that 25 November was wrongly referenced by Pakistan Cricket Board authorities on his passport.[33][failed verification] He is the main child of Ikramullah Khan Niazi, a structural designer, and his significant other Shaukat Khanum, and has four sisters.[34] Long got comfortable Mianwali in northwestern Punjab, his fatherly family are of Pashtun identity and have a place with the Niazi tribe,[35][36] and one of his predecessors, Haibat Khan Niazi, in the sixteenth hundred years, "was one of Sher Shah Suri's driving commanders, as well similar to the legislative leader of Punjab."[37] Like his dad, Khan's mom was an ethnic Pashtun, who had a place with the Burki clan and whose precursors had been gotten comfortable the Jalandhar locale of Punjab for quite a long time. Following the making of Pakistan, she relocated to Lahore with the remainder of Khan's maternal relatives.[38] Khan's maternal family has delivered various cricketers, including the people who have addressed Pakistan,[34], for example, his cousins Javed Burki and Majid Khan.[35] Maternally, Khan is likewise a relative of the Sufi hero writer and designer of the Pashto letter set, Pir Roshan, who hailed from his maternal family's genealogical Kaniguram town situated in South Waziristan in the ancestral areas of northwest Pakistan.[39] His maternal family was situated in Basti Danishmanda, Jalandhar, India for around 600 years.[40][41]

A tranquil and modest kid in his childhood, Khan grew up with his sisters in moderately well-to-do, upper working class circumstances[42] and got special training. He was taught at the Aitchison School and House of God School in Lahore,[43][44] and afterward the Regal Punctuation School Worcester in Britain, where he succeeded at cricket. In 1972, he signed up for Keble School, Oxford where he concentrated on Way of thinking, Legislative issues and Financial matters, graduating in 1975.[45] A lover for school cricket at Keble, Paul Hayes, was instrumental in getting the confirmation of Khan, after he had been turned somewhere near Cambridge.[46]