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Ahmad Shah I

Ahmad Shah I, born Ahmad Khan, was a ruler of the Muzaffarid dynasty, who reigned over the Gujarat Sultanate from 1411 until his death in 1442. He was the grandson of Sultan Muzaffar Shah who has been variously described as a Tank Rajput[1] or a Khatri convert from Punjab who had founded the Gujarat Sultanate in 1407.[2][3]

Ahmad Shah I
Sultan of Gujarat
Reign10 January 1411 - 1442
PredecessorMuzaffar Shah I
SuccessorMuhammad Shah II
Born1389
Died1442 (aged 52–53)
Burial1442
IssueDaud Khan, Zafar Khan
Names
Násir-ud-dunya Wad-dín Abúl fateh Ahmed Shah
DynastyMuzaffarid dynasty of Gujarat
FatherMuhammad Shah I (Tatar Khan)
ReligionIslam
Gujarat Sultanate
Muzaffarid dynasty
(1407–1573)
Gujarat under Delhi Sultanate (1298–1407)
Muzaffar Shah I (1391–1403)
Muhammad Shah I (1403–1404)
Muzaffar Shah I (1404–1411)
(2nd reign)
Ahmad Shah I (1411–1442)
Muhammad Shah II (1442–1451)
Ahmad Shah II (1451–1458)
Daud Shah (1458)
Mahmud Begada (1458–1511)
Muzaffar Shah II (1511–1526)
Sikandar Shah (1526)
Mahmud Shah II (1526)
Bahadur Shah (1526–1535)
Mughal Empire under Humayun (1535–1536)
Bahadur Shah (1536–1537)
(2nd reign)
Miran Muhammad Shah I
(Farooqi dynasty)
(1537)
Mahmud Shah III (1537–1554)
Ahmad Shah III (1554–1561)
Muzaffar Shah III (1561–1573)
Mughal Empire under Akbar (1573–1584)
Muzaffar Shah III (1584)
(2nd reign)
Mughal Empire under Akbar (1584–1605)

Early life

Ahmad Shah was born to Muhammad Shah I alias Tatar Khan who was a son of Muzaffar Shah I. Muhammad Shah I was probably killed by his uncle Shams Khan in favour of his father Muzaffar Shah when he imprisoned him.[4]

According to Mirat-i-Ahmadi, he abdicated the throne in favour of his grandson Ahmad Shah in 1410 due to his failing health. He died five months and 13 days later. According to Mirat-i-Sikandari, Ahmad Shah was going to an expedition to quell the rebellion of Kolis of Ashawal. After leaving Patan, he convened an assembly of Ulemas and asked a question that should he took retribution of his father's unjust death. Ulemas replied in favour and he got the written answers. He returned to Patan. Ahmad Shah succeeded him with the title of Nasir-ud-dunya Wad-din Abul fateh Ahmad Shah at the age of 19 in 1411.[5][6][7]

Reign

War of succession

 
Jama Mosque of Ahmedabad was built by him in 1424.
 
Copper coins of Ahmad Shah I

Soon after assuming power, his cousin Moid-ud-din Firuz Khan, governor of Vadodara, allying himself with Hisam or Nizam-ul-Mulk Bhandari and other nobles, collected an army at Nadiad, and, laying claim to the crown, defeated the king's followers. Jivandas, one of the insurgents, proposed to march upon Patan, but as the others refused a dispute arose in which Jivandas was slain, and the rest sought and obtained Ahmad Shah's forgiveness. Moid-ud-din Firuz Khan went to Khambhat and was there joined by Masti Khan, son of Muzaffar Shah, who was governor of Surat; on Ahmad Shah's advance they fled from Khambhat to Bharuch, to which fort Ahmad Shah laid siege. As soon as the king arrived, Moid-ud-din's army went over to the king, and Masti Khan also submitted. After a few days Ahmad Shah sent for and forgave Moid-ud-din, and returned to Asawal (future Ahmedabad). Moid-ud-din was moved from Vadodara to Navsari.[8][7]

Foundation of Ahmedabad

Ahmad Shah, while camping on the banks of the Sabarmati river, saw a hare chasing a dog. The sultan was intrigued by this and asked his spiritual adviser for explanation. The sage pointed out unique characteristics in the land which nurtured such rare qualities which turned a timid hare to chase a ferocious dog. Impressed by this, the sultan, who had been looking for a place to build his new capital in the centre of his domain.[9] In the following year (1413–14 AD) Ahmad Shah defeated Asha Bhil, chief of Asawal.[7] Ahmad Shah laid the foundation of the city at the site of Asawal on 26 February 1411[10] (at 1.20 pm, Thursday, the second day of Dhu al-Qi'dah, Hijri year 813[11]) at Manek Burj. He chose it as the new capital on 4 March 1411.[12][13] Ahmad Shah, in honour of four Ahmads: himself, his religious teacher Shaikh Ahmad Khattu Ganj Baksh, and two others, Kazi Ahmad and Malik Ahmad, named it Ahmedabad.[A][9][13] The new capital was surrounded by the Bhadra Fort.

He built Ahmad Shah's Mosque and Jama Mosque (1424) in Ahmedabad.

Consolidation of Sultanate

During 1414, Moid-ud-din Firuz Khan and Masti Khan again revolted, and, joining the Rao of Idar State, took shelter in that fortress. A force under Fateh Khan was despatched against the rebels, and finally Firuz Khan and the Rao of Idar were forced to flee by way of Kheralu. Moid-ud-din now persuaded Rukn Khan governor of Modasa, fifty miles north of Ahmedabad, to join. They united their forces with those of Badri-ula, Masti Khan, and Ranmal-the Rao of Ídar and encamped at Rangpura, an Ídar village about five miles from Modasa and began to strengthen Modasa and dig a ditch round it. The Ahmad Shah camped before the fort and offered favourable terms. The besieged bent on treachery asked the Ahmad Shah to send Nizam-ul-Mulk the minister and certain other great nobles. The Sultan agreed, and the besieged imprisoned the envoys. After a three days’ siege Modasa fell. Badri-ula and Rukn Khan were slain, and Firuz Khan and the Rao of Ídar fled. The imprisoned nobles were released unharmed. The Rao seeing that all hope of success was gone, made his peace with the king by surrendering to him the elephants, horses and other baggage of Moid-ud-din Firuz Khan and Masti Khan, who now fled to Nagor, where they were sheltered by Shams Khan Dandani. Ahmad Shah after levying the stipulated tribute departed. Moid-ud-din Firuz Khan was afterwards slain in the war between Shams Khan and Rana Mokal of Chittor. In 1414–15 AD, Uthman Ahmed and Sheikh Malik, in command at Patan, and Sulaiman Afghan called Azam Khan, and Ísa Salar rebelled, and wrote secretly to Sultan Hushang of Malwa Sultanate, inviting him to invade Gujarat, and promising to seat him on the throne and expel Ahmad Shah. They were joined in their rebellion by Jhala Satarsalji of Patdi and other chiefs of Gujarat. Ahmad Shah despatched Latif Khan and Nizam-ul-Mulk against Sheikh Malik and his associates, while he sent Imad-ul-Mulk against Sultan Hushang, who retired, and Imad-ul-Mulk, after plundering Malwa, returned to Gujarat. Latif Khan, pressing in hot pursuit of Satarsal and Sheikh Malik, drove them to Sorath. Ahmad Shah returned to Ahmedabad.[14][7]

Sorath and Junagadh

Sorath was ruled by Chudasama king Ra Mokalasimha. He had to move the capital from Junagadh to Vanthali due to order from the Governor of Gujarat Zafar Khan (grandfather of Ahmad Shah) on behalf of Delhi Sultan Firuz Shah Tughluq. Zafar Khan had occupied his capital Junagadh in 1395-96. In 1414, his son Meliga regained Junagadh and also gave refuge to some of rebels (probably Jhala chief Satrasal). This irked Ahmad Shah and he attacked Sorath. Ahmad Shah won pitched battle at Vanthali in 1413. Later he imposed siege of Junagadh in 1414. Meliga retired to the hill fortress of Girnar. Ahmad Shah, though unable to capture the hill, gained the fortified citadel of Junagaḍh. Finding further resistance vain, the chief tendered his submission, and Junagaḍh was admitted among the tributary states. Several other Sorath chief also submitted. Sayad Abul Khair and Sayad Kasim were left to collect the tribute, and Ahmad Shah returned to Ahmedabad.[15][7][16][17]

 
Partially damaged Rudra Mahalaya Temple of Sidhpur was destroyed and western part of it was converted in congregational mosque by Ahmad Shah in 1415. Surviving ruins in 1874.

The partially damaged Rudra Mahalaya Temple of Siddhpur was further destroyed and the western part of it converted into a congregational mosque (Jami mosque) by him in 1415.[18][19][20] From Siddhpur, he advanced to Dhar in Malwa. Hindu kings believed that he is attacking Hindu pilgrimage places to bolster his image. So they formed an alliance in 1416 which included Idar, Champaner, Zalod and Nandod. Sultan Hushang Shah of Malwa also agreed to help them.[21][7]

In 1399, Ahmad aka Malek II, the ruler of Khandesh died. He had divided his kingdom in his princes. Nasir was given east part while Iftikhar aka Hasan was given west. Nasir established Burhanpur in 1400[B] and also won nearby fort of Asir from Hindu king. Hasan settled in Thalner. Nasir won Thalner from Hasan and imprisoned him, with help of his relative Hushang Shah of Malwa, before he receive help from Ahmad Shah. Nasir attacked and imposed siege of Nandarbar and Sultanpur of Gujarat Sultanate in 1417. Ahmed sent an expedition against Nasir of Asir under Malik Mahmud Barki or Turki and left for Modasa. When the Malik reached Nandoḍ he found that Gheirat Khan had fled to Malwa and that Nasir had retired to Thalner. The Malik advanced, besieged and took Thalner, capturing Nasir whom Ahmed forgave and dignified with the title of Khan.[22][7]

The alliance of Hindu kings rebelled knowing that Ahmad Shah is busy in his expedition against Nasir. As Ahmad Shah returned quickly and went to Modasa, the rebellion broke and all kings returned to their states including Hushang Shah. After quelling these rebellions Ahmad Shah despatched Nizam-ul-Mulk to punish the jhala rajput ruler of Mandal near Viramgam, and himself marched to Malwa against Sultan Hushang in 1418. He reached Ujjain where both armies fought battle. Ahmad Shah won and Hushang Shah took refuge in Mandu. In November 1419, he imposed siege on Champaner (Pavagadh) but later the king Trimbakdas of Champaner relented and agreed to give annual tribute in February 1420. Ahmad Shah later attacked and ravaged Sankheda-Bahadurpur in March 1420. He built a fort at Sankheda and a mosque within the fort; he also built a wall round the town of Mangni, and then marched upon Mandu. On the way ambassadors from Sultan Hushang met him suing for peace. Ahmad Shah later forgave Hushang Shah. On returning towards Champaner, again laid waste the surrounding country. He returned to Ahmedabad in May 1420.[23][7]

In 1420-21, he started building and repairing forts and establishing military outposts to strengthen state from attacks. He built the forts of Dahod on the Malwa frontier and of Jitpur in Lunawada. In 1421 he repaired the fort in the town of Kahreth, otherwise called Meimun in Lunavaḍa, which had been built by Ulugh Khan Sanjar in the reign of Sultan Ala-ud-din Khalji and changed the name to Sultanpur. In December 1421, he advanced against Malwa and took the fort of Mesar. He attacked and received tributes from other border states before he reached Mandu in March 1422. Hushang Shah was in Jajnagar (Orissa) at that time. After 48 days of unsuccessful siege and several clashes, Ahmad Shah had to moved to Ujjain in May due to incoming monsoon. He again imposed siege in September 1421 but Hushang Shah had returned to Mandu with large number of war elephants from Orissa. Ahmad Shah left Mandu knowing that it would be difficult to win. He moved and camped Sarangpur when he was reached by ambassadors sent by Hushang Shah for treaty of peace. Ahmad Shah agreed but, on the night of 26 December 1421, an army of Hushang Shah attacked the camp. Ahmad Shah repelled the attack but had to endure heavy casualty. Hushang Shah took refuge in fort of Sarangpur. Ahmad Shah again laid siege to Sarangpur. Failing to take the fort, Ahmad Shah decided to return Ahmedabad on 7 March 1423 but he was chased by an army of Hushang Shah. Both armies met and after fierce battle, Ahmad Shah won. He returned to Ahmedabad on 23 May 1423.[24][7]

Idar and Ahmadnagar

He spent next two years without any wars and focused on administration and agriculture development. He had known that Rao Punja of Idar State had held talks with Hushang Shah during the last battles. He attacked Idar in 1425. Rao Punja left to hills but the state was ravaged. To keep permanent check on Idar, Ahmad Shah established town of Ahmadnagar (now Himatnagar), on the banks of the Hathmati river, eighteen miles south-west of Idar in 1426 and completed its fort in 1427. Rao Punja left in hiding but kept attacking soldiers and supplies of Sultanate. In 1428, Rao Punja died in ambush with soldiers. In 1428, Ahmad Shah ravaged Vishalnagar (now Visnagar) and ordered to capture all domains of Idar. He later made peace with Harrai, son of Punja, and reverted his state to him on condition of tribute. Ahmad Shah had to again attack and capture Idar in November 1428 when Harrai did not pay tribute. He took the fort and built also an assembly mosque.[25][26][27][7]

Fearing that their turn would come next the jhala rajput king of Zalawad and Kanha apparently chief of Dungarpur fled to Nasir Khan of Asir. Nasir Khan gave Kanha a letter to Ahmad Shah Bahmani, to whose son Ala-ud-din Nasir's daughter was married, and having detached part of his own troops to help Kanha they plundered and laid waste some villages of Nandurbar and Sultanpur. Sultan Ahmed sent his eldest son Muhammad Khan with Mukarrabul Mulk and others to meet the Dakhanis who were repulsed with considerable loss. On this Sultan Ahmed Bahmani, under Kadr Khan Dakhani, sent his eldest son Ala-ud-din and his second son Khan Jehan against the Gujaratis. Kadr Khan marched to Daulatabad and joining Nasir Khan and the Gujarat rebels fought a great battle near the pass of Manek Puj, six miles south of Nandgaon in Nasik. The confederates were defeated with great slaughter. The Dakhan princes fled to Daulatabad and Kanha and Nasir Khan to Kalanda near Chalisgaum in south Khandesh.[7]

Mahim and Baglan

In 1429, on the death of Kutub Khan, the Gujarat governor of the island of Mahim (now neighbourhood of Mumbai), Ahmad Shah of Bahmani Sultanate smarting under his defeats, ordered Hasan Izzat, otherwise called Malik-ut-Tujjar, to the Konkan and by the Malik's activity the North Konkan passed to the Deccans. On the news of this, Ahmad Shah sent his youngest son Zafar Khan, with an army under Malik Iftikhar Khan, to retake Mahim. A fleet, collected from Diu, Ghogha and Khambhat sailed to the Konkan, attacked Thane by sea and land, captured it, and regained possession of Mahim.[7]

In 1431, Ahmad Shah advanced upon Champaner, and Ahmad Shah Bahmani, anxious to retrieve his defeat at Mahim, marched an army into and Baglan, and laid it waste. This news brought Ahmad Shah back to Nandurbar. Destroying Nandod he passed to Tambol, a fort in Baglan which Ahmad Shah Bahmani was besieging, defeated the besiegers and relieved the fort. He then went to Thane, repaired the fort, and returned to Gujarat by way of Sultanpur and Nandurbar. In 1432, after contracting his son Fateh Khan in marriage with the daughter of the Rai of Mahim to the north of Bassein (now Vasai), Ahmad Shah marched towards Nagor, and exacted tribute and presents from the Raval of Dungarpur. From Dungarpur he went to Mewad, enforcing his claims on Bundi and Kota, two Hara Rajput states in south-east Rajputana. He then entered the Delvada country, levelling temples and destroying the palace of Rana Mokalsingh, the chief of Chittor. Then he invaded Nagor in the country of the Rathoḍs, who submitted to him. After this he returned to Gujarat, and during the next few years was warring principally in Malwa, where, according to Farishtah, his army suffered greatly from pestilence and famine.[7]

Death

 

Ahmed died in 1442 in the fifty-third year of his life and the thirty-third of his reign and was buried in the mausoleum, Badshah no Hajiro, near Manek Chowk, Ahmedabad.[28][7]

His after-death title is Khudaigan-i-Maghfur the Forgiven Lord.[7] His queens were buried at Rani no Hajiro, just opposite his mausoleum.

Legacy

 
The Teen Darwaza (Triple Gateway) in Ahmedabad, built by Ahmad Shah I

He is honoured for his bravery, skill, and success as a war leader as well as for his piety and his justice. His piety showed itself in his respect for three great religious teachers: Sheikh Rukn-ud-din, the representative of Sheikh Moinuddin Chishti, the great Khwajah of Ajmer; Sheikh Ahmed Khattu who is buried at Sarkhej Roza, Ahmedabad; and the Bukharan Sheikh Burhan-ud-din known as Kutbi Alam the father of the more famous Shah Alam.[7]

Of Ahmed's justice two instances are recorded. Sitting in the window of his palace watching the Sabarmati in flood Ahmed saw a large earthen jar float by. The jar was opened and the body of a murdered man was found wrapped in a blanket. The potters were called and one said the jar was his and had been sold to the headman of a neighbouring village. On inquiry the headman was proved to have murdered a grain merchant and was hanged. The second case was the murder of a poor man by Ahmed's son-in-law. The Kazi found the relations of the deceased willing to accept a blood fine and when the fine was paid released the prince. Ahmed hearing of his son-in-law's release said in the case of the rich fine is no punishment and ordered his son-in-law to be hanged.[7]

Notes

  1. ^ Shaikh Ahmad Khattu is buried at Sarkhej Roza. Kazi Ahmad is buried at Patan and Malik Ahmad is buried near Kalupur Gate in Ahmedabad.
  2. ^ Nasir had named Burhanpur after Sufi saint Burhanuddin.

References

  1. ^
    • Stein, Burton (2010-04-12). A History of India. John Wiley & Sons. p. 142. ISBN 978-1-4051-9509-6. Ahmedabad in Gujarat received its great congregational mosque in 1423, though it had been a province of Delhi since 1297. It was built by Ahmad Shah, a converted Rajput, who, when governor, declared the province an independent sultanate in 1411.
    • Chandra, Satish (2004). Medieval India ( From Sultanat to the Mughals), PART ONE Delhi Sultanat ( 1206-1526). Har-Anand Publications. p. 218. ISBN 9788124110645.
    • Muzaffar Husain Syed, Syed Saud Akhtar, BD Usmani (2011). Concise History of Islam. p. 271.
    • Kapadia, Aparna (2018). Gujarat: The Long Fifteenth Century and the Making of a Region. Cambridge University Press. p. 8. ISBN 9781107153318.
    • Edward James Rapson, Sir Wolseley Haig, Sir Richard Burn (1965). The Cambridge History of India: Turks and Afghans, edited by W Haig, 1965. Cambridge. p. 294.
    • Mahajan, VD (2007). History of Medieval India. S. Chand. p. 245. ISBN 9788121903646.
    • Jenkins, Everett (2010). The Muslim Diaspora - A comprehensive reference to the spread of Islam in Asia, Africa, Europe and the America, 570 - 1799. McFarland & Company Inc. p. 275. ISBN 9780786447138.
    • Jutta, Jain-Neubauer (1981). The Stepwells of Gujarat: In Art- Historical perspective. p. 62.
    • Saran, Kishori Lal (1992). The legacy of Muslim Rule in India. Aditya Prakashan. p. 233. ISBN 9788185689036.
    • Lane-Pool, Stanley (2014). Mohammadan Dyn: Orientalism V 2 - volume 2, page -312 , writer. p. 312. ISBN 9781317853947.
  2. ^ Wink, André (2003-11-15). Al-Hind, Volume 3 Indo-Islamic Society, 14th- 15th Centuries. Brill. p. 143. ISBN 978-90-474-0274-9.
  3. ^ Khān, ʻAlī Muḥammad (1965). Mirat-i-Ahmadi: A Persian History of Gujarat. Oriental Institute. p. 34.
  4. ^ Nayak 1982, pp. 66–72.
  5. ^ Taylor 1902, pp. 6–7.
  6. ^ Nayak 1982, pp. 73–74.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q James Macnabb Campbell, ed. (1896). "II. ÁHMEDÁBÁD KINGS. (A. D. 1403–1573.)". History of Gujarát. Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency. Vol. I(II). The Government Central Press. pp. 236–241.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  8. ^ Nayak 1982, pp. 74–75.
  9. ^ a b "Lonely planet". Lonely Planet.
  10. ^ Pandya, Yatin (14 November 2010). "In Ahmedabad, history is still alive as tradition". dna. Retrieved 26 February 2016.
  11. ^ . Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation. Archived from the original on 23 February 2016. Retrieved 27 February 2016. Jilkad is anglicized name of the month Dhu al-Qi'dah, Hijri year not mentioned but derived from date converter
  12. ^ Google Books 2015, p. 249.
  13. ^ a b Nayak 1982, p. 76.
  14. ^ Nayak 1982, pp. 75–81.
  15. ^ Nayak 1982, pp. 81–82.
  16. ^ Watson, James W., ed. (1884). Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency : Kathiawar. Vol. VIII. Bombay: Government Central Press. pp. 497–498.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  17. ^ Harold Wilberforce-Bell (1916). The History of Kathiawad from the Earliest Times. London: William Heinemann. pp. 75–76.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  18. ^ Burgess; Murray (1874). "The Rudra Mala at Siddhpur". Photographs of Architecture and Scenery in Gujarat and Rajputana. Bourne and Shepherd. p. 19. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
  19. ^ . Official website of Gujarat Tourism. Archived from the original on 8 April 2016. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
  20. ^ Patel, Alka (2004). "Architectural Histories Entwined: The Rudra-Mahalaya/Congregational Mosque of Siddhpur, Gujarat". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 63 (2): 144–163. doi:10.2307/4127950. JSTOR 4127950.
  21. ^ Nayak 1982, pp. 82–83.
  22. ^ Nayak 1982, pp. 83–85.
  23. ^ Nayak 1982, pp. 85–89.
  24. ^ Nayak 1982, pp. 89–95.
  25. ^ Nayak 1982, pp. 95–98.
  26. ^ Sen, Sailendra (2013). A Textbook of Medieval Indian History. Primus Books. pp. 114–115. ISBN 978-9-38060-734-4.
  27. ^ More, Anuj (October 18, 2010). "Baba Maneknath's kin keep alive 600-yr old tradition". The Indian Express. Archived from the original on April 11, 2013. Retrieved February 21, 2013.
  28. ^ Nair-Gupta, Nisha (2017-01-19). "Was Ahmedabad's founder Ahmed Shah a wise ruler or an ambitious tyrant?". Scroll.in. Retrieved 2017-02-10.
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Bibliography

  • Taylor, Georg P. (1902). . Vol. XXI. Mumbai: Royal Asiatic Society of Bombay. hdl:2015/104269. Archived from the original on 2017-03-01. Retrieved 2017-03-03.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Nayak, Chhotubhai Ranchhodji (1982). ગુજરાતમાંની ઇસ્લામી સલ્તનતનો ઈતિહાસ (ઇ.સ. ૧૩૦૦થી ઇ.સ.૧૫૭૩ સુધી) [History of the Islamic Sultanate in Gujarat (1300 AD to 1573 AD)] (in Gujarati). Ahmedabad: Gujarat University.
  • Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency: Ahmedabad. Google Books 2015. 7 January 2015. pp. 248–262. Retrieved 1 February 2015.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.

ahmad, shah, other, peoples, same, name, ahmad, shah, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, 2022, born, ahmad, khan, ruler, muzaffarid,. For other peoples of the same name see Ahmad Shah This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article May 2022 Ahmad Shah I born Ahmad Khan was a ruler of the Muzaffarid dynasty who reigned over the Gujarat Sultanate from 1411 until his death in 1442 He was the grandson of Sultan Muzaffar Shah who has been variously described as a Tank Rajput 1 or a Khatri convert from Punjab who had founded the Gujarat Sultanate in 1407 2 3 Ahmad Shah ISultan of GujaratReign10 January 1411 1442PredecessorMuzaffar Shah ISuccessorMuhammad Shah IIBorn1389Died1442 aged 52 53 Burial1442Ahmad Shah s Tomb AhmedabadIssueDaud Khan Zafar KhanNamesNasir ud dunya Wad din Abul fateh Ahmed ShahDynastyMuzaffarid dynasty of GujaratFatherMuhammad Shah I Tatar Khan ReligionIslamGujarat SultanateMuzaffarid dynasty 1407 1573 Gujarat under Delhi Sultanate 1298 1407 Muzaffar Shah I 1391 1403 Muhammad Shah I 1403 1404 Muzaffar Shah I 1404 1411 2nd reign Ahmad Shah I 1411 1442 Muhammad Shah II 1442 1451 Ahmad Shah II 1451 1458 Daud Shah 1458 Mahmud Begada 1458 1511 Muzaffar Shah II 1511 1526 Sikandar Shah 1526 Mahmud Shah II 1526 Bahadur Shah 1526 1535 Mughal Empire under Humayun 1535 1536 Bahadur Shah 1536 1537 2nd reign Miran Muhammad Shah I Farooqi dynasty 1537 Mahmud Shah III 1537 1554 Ahmad Shah III 1554 1561 Muzaffar Shah III 1561 1573 Mughal Empire under Akbar 1573 1584 Muzaffar Shah III 1584 2nd reign Mughal Empire under Akbar 1584 1605 This box viewtalkedit Contents 1 Early life 2 Reign 2 1 War of succession 2 2 Foundation of Ahmedabad 2 3 Consolidation of Sultanate 2 4 Idar and Ahmadnagar 2 5 Mahim and Baglan 3 Death 4 Legacy 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 BibliographyEarly life EditAhmad Shah was born to Muhammad Shah I alias Tatar Khan who was a son of Muzaffar Shah I Muhammad Shah I was probably killed by his uncle Shams Khan in favour of his father Muzaffar Shah when he imprisoned him 4 According to Mirat i Ahmadi he abdicated the throne in favour of his grandson Ahmad Shah in 1410 due to his failing health He died five months and 13 days later According to Mirat i Sikandari Ahmad Shah was going to an expedition to quell the rebellion of Kolis of Ashawal After leaving Patan he convened an assembly of Ulemas and asked a question that should he took retribution of his father s unjust death Ulemas replied in favour and he got the written answers He returned to Patan Ahmad Shah succeeded him with the title of Nasir ud dunya Wad din Abul fateh Ahmad Shah at the age of 19 in 1411 5 6 7 Reign EditWar of succession Edit Jama Mosque of Ahmedabad was built by him in 1424 Copper coins of Ahmad Shah I Soon after assuming power his cousin Moid ud din Firuz Khan governor of Vadodara allying himself with Hisam or Nizam ul Mulk Bhandari and other nobles collected an army at Nadiad and laying claim to the crown defeated the king s followers Jivandas one of the insurgents proposed to march upon Patan but as the others refused a dispute arose in which Jivandas was slain and the rest sought and obtained Ahmad Shah s forgiveness Moid ud din Firuz Khan went to Khambhat and was there joined by Masti Khan son of Muzaffar Shah who was governor of Surat on Ahmad Shah s advance they fled from Khambhat to Bharuch to which fort Ahmad Shah laid siege As soon as the king arrived Moid ud din s army went over to the king and Masti Khan also submitted After a few days Ahmad Shah sent for and forgave Moid ud din and returned to Asawal future Ahmedabad Moid ud din was moved from Vadodara to Navsari 8 7 Foundation of Ahmedabad Edit Ahmad Shah while camping on the banks of the Sabarmati river saw a hare chasing a dog The sultan was intrigued by this and asked his spiritual adviser for explanation The sage pointed out unique characteristics in the land which nurtured such rare qualities which turned a timid hare to chase a ferocious dog Impressed by this the sultan who had been looking for a place to build his new capital in the centre of his domain 9 In the following year 1413 14 AD Ahmad Shah defeated Asha Bhil chief of Asawal 7 Ahmad Shah laid the foundation of the city at the site of Asawal on 26 February 1411 10 at 1 20 pm Thursday the second day of Dhu al Qi dah Hijri year 813 11 at Manek Burj He chose it as the new capital on 4 March 1411 12 13 Ahmad Shah in honour of four Ahmads himself his religious teacher Shaikh Ahmad Khattu Ganj Baksh and two others Kazi Ahmad and Malik Ahmad named it Ahmedabad A 9 13 The new capital was surrounded by the Bhadra Fort He built Ahmad Shah s Mosque and Jama Mosque 1424 in Ahmedabad Consolidation of Sultanate Edit During 1414 Moid ud din Firuz Khan and Masti Khan again revolted and joining the Rao of Idar State took shelter in that fortress A force under Fateh Khan was despatched against the rebels and finally Firuz Khan and the Rao of Idar were forced to flee by way of Kheralu Moid ud din now persuaded Rukn Khan governor of Modasa fifty miles north of Ahmedabad to join They united their forces with those of Badri ula Masti Khan and Ranmal the Rao of Idar and encamped at Rangpura an Idar village about five miles from Modasa and began to strengthen Modasa and dig a ditch round it The Ahmad Shah camped before the fort and offered favourable terms The besieged bent on treachery asked the Ahmad Shah to send Nizam ul Mulk the minister and certain other great nobles The Sultan agreed and the besieged imprisoned the envoys After a three days siege Modasa fell Badri ula and Rukn Khan were slain and Firuz Khan and the Rao of Idar fled The imprisoned nobles were released unharmed The Rao seeing that all hope of success was gone made his peace with the king by surrendering to him the elephants horses and other baggage of Moid ud din Firuz Khan and Masti Khan who now fled to Nagor where they were sheltered by Shams Khan Dandani Ahmad Shah after levying the stipulated tribute departed Moid ud din Firuz Khan was afterwards slain in the war between Shams Khan and Rana Mokal of Chittor In 1414 15 AD Uthman Ahmed and Sheikh Malik in command at Patan and Sulaiman Afghan called Azam Khan and Isa Salar rebelled and wrote secretly to Sultan Hushang of Malwa Sultanate inviting him to invade Gujarat and promising to seat him on the throne and expel Ahmad Shah They were joined in their rebellion by Jhala Satarsalji of Patdi and other chiefs of Gujarat Ahmad Shah despatched Latif Khan and Nizam ul Mulk against Sheikh Malik and his associates while he sent Imad ul Mulk against Sultan Hushang who retired and Imad ul Mulk after plundering Malwa returned to Gujarat Latif Khan pressing in hot pursuit of Satarsal and Sheikh Malik drove them to Sorath Ahmad Shah returned to Ahmedabad 14 7 Sorath and JunagadhSorath was ruled by Chudasama king Ra Mokalasimha He had to move the capital from Junagadh to Vanthali due to order from the Governor of Gujarat Zafar Khan grandfather of Ahmad Shah on behalf of Delhi Sultan Firuz Shah Tughluq Zafar Khan had occupied his capital Junagadh in 1395 96 In 1414 his son Meliga regained Junagadh and also gave refuge to some of rebels probably Jhala chief Satrasal This irked Ahmad Shah and he attacked Sorath Ahmad Shah won pitched battle at Vanthali in 1413 Later he imposed siege of Junagadh in 1414 Meliga retired to the hill fortress of Girnar Ahmad Shah though unable to capture the hill gained the fortified citadel of Junagaḍh Finding further resistance vain the chief tendered his submission and Junagaḍh was admitted among the tributary states Several other Sorath chief also submitted Sayad Abul Khair and Sayad Kasim were left to collect the tribute and Ahmad Shah returned to Ahmedabad 15 7 16 17 Partially damaged Rudra Mahalaya Temple of Sidhpur was destroyed and western part of it was converted in congregational mosque by Ahmad Shah in 1415 Surviving ruins in 1874 The partially damaged Rudra Mahalaya Temple of Siddhpur was further destroyed and the western part of it converted into a congregational mosque Jami mosque by him in 1415 18 19 20 From Siddhpur he advanced to Dhar in Malwa Hindu kings believed that he is attacking Hindu pilgrimage places to bolster his image So they formed an alliance in 1416 which included Idar Champaner Zalod and Nandod Sultan Hushang Shah of Malwa also agreed to help them 21 7 In 1399 Ahmad aka Malek II the ruler of Khandesh died He had divided his kingdom in his princes Nasir was given east part while Iftikhar aka Hasan was given west Nasir established Burhanpur in 1400 B and also won nearby fort of Asir from Hindu king Hasan settled in Thalner Nasir won Thalner from Hasan and imprisoned him with help of his relative Hushang Shah of Malwa before he receive help from Ahmad Shah Nasir attacked and imposed siege of Nandarbar and Sultanpur of Gujarat Sultanate in 1417 Ahmed sent an expedition against Nasir of Asir under Malik Mahmud Barki or Turki and left for Modasa When the Malik reached Nandoḍ he found that Gheirat Khan had fled to Malwa and that Nasir had retired to Thalner The Malik advanced besieged and took Thalner capturing Nasir whom Ahmed forgave and dignified with the title of Khan 22 7 The alliance of Hindu kings rebelled knowing that Ahmad Shah is busy in his expedition against Nasir As Ahmad Shah returned quickly and went to Modasa the rebellion broke and all kings returned to their states including Hushang Shah After quelling these rebellions Ahmad Shah despatched Nizam ul Mulk to punish the jhala rajput ruler of Mandal near Viramgam and himself marched to Malwa against Sultan Hushang in 1418 He reached Ujjain where both armies fought battle Ahmad Shah won and Hushang Shah took refuge in Mandu In November 1419 he imposed siege on Champaner Pavagadh but later the king Trimbakdas of Champaner relented and agreed to give annual tribute in February 1420 Ahmad Shah later attacked and ravaged Sankheda Bahadurpur in March 1420 He built a fort at Sankheda and a mosque within the fort he also built a wall round the town of Mangni and then marched upon Mandu On the way ambassadors from Sultan Hushang met him suing for peace Ahmad Shah later forgave Hushang Shah On returning towards Champaner again laid waste the surrounding country He returned to Ahmedabad in May 1420 23 7 In 1420 21 he started building and repairing forts and establishing military outposts to strengthen state from attacks He built the forts of Dahod on the Malwa frontier and of Jitpur in Lunawada In 1421 he repaired the fort in the town of Kahreth otherwise called Meimun in Lunavaḍa which had been built by Ulugh Khan Sanjar in the reign of Sultan Ala ud din Khalji and changed the name to Sultanpur In December 1421 he advanced against Malwa and took the fort of Mesar He attacked and received tributes from other border states before he reached Mandu in March 1422 Hushang Shah was in Jajnagar Orissa at that time After 48 days of unsuccessful siege and several clashes Ahmad Shah had to moved to Ujjain in May due to incoming monsoon He again imposed siege in September 1421 but Hushang Shah had returned to Mandu with large number of war elephants from Orissa Ahmad Shah left Mandu knowing that it would be difficult to win He moved and camped Sarangpur when he was reached by ambassadors sent by Hushang Shah for treaty of peace Ahmad Shah agreed but on the night of 26 December 1421 an army of Hushang Shah attacked the camp Ahmad Shah repelled the attack but had to endure heavy casualty Hushang Shah took refuge in fort of Sarangpur Ahmad Shah again laid siege to Sarangpur Failing to take the fort Ahmad Shah decided to return Ahmedabad on 7 March 1423 but he was chased by an army of Hushang Shah Both armies met and after fierce battle Ahmad Shah won He returned to Ahmedabad on 23 May 1423 24 7 Idar and Ahmadnagar Edit He spent next two years without any wars and focused on administration and agriculture development He had known that Rao Punja of Idar State had held talks with Hushang Shah during the last battles He attacked Idar in 1425 Rao Punja left to hills but the state was ravaged To keep permanent check on Idar Ahmad Shah established town of Ahmadnagar now Himatnagar on the banks of the Hathmati river eighteen miles south west of Idar in 1426 and completed its fort in 1427 Rao Punja left in hiding but kept attacking soldiers and supplies of Sultanate In 1428 Rao Punja died in ambush with soldiers In 1428 Ahmad Shah ravaged Vishalnagar now Visnagar and ordered to capture all domains of Idar He later made peace with Harrai son of Punja and reverted his state to him on condition of tribute Ahmad Shah had to again attack and capture Idar in November 1428 when Harrai did not pay tribute He took the fort and built also an assembly mosque 25 26 27 7 Fearing that their turn would come next the jhala rajput king of Zalawad and Kanha apparently chief of Dungarpur fled to Nasir Khan of Asir Nasir Khan gave Kanha a letter to Ahmad Shah Bahmani to whose son Ala ud din Nasir s daughter was married and having detached part of his own troops to help Kanha they plundered and laid waste some villages of Nandurbar and Sultanpur Sultan Ahmed sent his eldest son Muhammad Khan with Mukarrabul Mulk and others to meet the Dakhanis who were repulsed with considerable loss On this Sultan Ahmed Bahmani under Kadr Khan Dakhani sent his eldest son Ala ud din and his second son Khan Jehan against the Gujaratis Kadr Khan marched to Daulatabad and joining Nasir Khan and the Gujarat rebels fought a great battle near the pass of Manek Puj six miles south of Nandgaon in Nasik The confederates were defeated with great slaughter The Dakhan princes fled to Daulatabad and Kanha and Nasir Khan to Kalanda near Chalisgaum in south Khandesh 7 Mahim and Baglan Edit In 1429 on the death of Kutub Khan the Gujarat governor of the island of Mahim now neighbourhood of Mumbai Ahmad Shah of Bahmani Sultanate smarting under his defeats ordered Hasan Izzat otherwise called Malik ut Tujjar to the Konkan and by the Malik s activity the North Konkan passed to the Deccans On the news of this Ahmad Shah sent his youngest son Zafar Khan with an army under Malik Iftikhar Khan to retake Mahim A fleet collected from Diu Ghogha and Khambhat sailed to the Konkan attacked Thane by sea and land captured it and regained possession of Mahim 7 In 1431 Ahmad Shah advanced upon Champaner and Ahmad Shah Bahmani anxious to retrieve his defeat at Mahim marched an army into and Baglan and laid it waste This news brought Ahmad Shah back to Nandurbar Destroying Nandod he passed to Tambol a fort in Baglan which Ahmad Shah Bahmani was besieging defeated the besiegers and relieved the fort He then went to Thane repaired the fort and returned to Gujarat by way of Sultanpur and Nandurbar In 1432 after contracting his son Fateh Khan in marriage with the daughter of the Rai of Mahim to the north of Bassein now Vasai Ahmad Shah marched towards Nagor and exacted tribute and presents from the Raval of Dungarpur From Dungarpur he went to Mewad enforcing his claims on Bundi and Kota two Hara Rajput states in south east Rajputana He then entered the Delvada country levelling temples and destroying the palace of Rana Mokalsingh the chief of Chittor Then he invaded Nagor in the country of the Rathoḍs who submitted to him After this he returned to Gujarat and during the next few years was warring principally in Malwa where according to Farishtah his army suffered greatly from pestilence and famine 7 Death Edit Ahmad Shah s Tomb Ahmedabad Ahmed died in 1442 in the fifty third year of his life and the thirty third of his reign and was buried in the mausoleum Badshah no Hajiro near Manek Chowk Ahmedabad 28 7 His after death title is Khudaigan i Maghfur the Forgiven Lord 7 His queens were buried at Rani no Hajiro just opposite his mausoleum Legacy Edit The Teen Darwaza Triple Gateway in Ahmedabad built by Ahmad Shah I He is honoured for his bravery skill and success as a war leader as well as for his piety and his justice His piety showed itself in his respect for three great religious teachers Sheikh Rukn ud din the representative of Sheikh Moinuddin Chishti the great Khwajah of Ajmer Sheikh Ahmed Khattu who is buried at Sarkhej Roza Ahmedabad and the Bukharan Sheikh Burhan ud din known as Kutbi Alam the father of the more famous Shah Alam 7 Of Ahmed s justice two instances are recorded Sitting in the window of his palace watching the Sabarmati in flood Ahmed saw a large earthen jar float by The jar was opened and the body of a murdered man was found wrapped in a blanket The potters were called and one said the jar was his and had been sold to the headman of a neighbouring village On inquiry the headman was proved to have murdered a grain merchant and was hanged The second case was the murder of a poor man by Ahmed s son in law The Kazi found the relations of the deceased willing to accept a blood fine and when the fine was paid released the prince Ahmed hearing of his son in law s release said in the case of the rich fine is no punishment and ordered his son in law to be hanged 7 Notes Edit Shaikh Ahmad Khattu is buried at Sarkhej Roza Kazi Ahmad is buried at Patan and Malik Ahmad is buried near Kalupur Gate in Ahmedabad Nasir had named Burhanpur after Sufi saint Burhanuddin References Edit Stein Burton 2010 04 12 A History of India John Wiley amp Sons p 142 ISBN 978 1 4051 9509 6 Ahmedabad in Gujarat received its great congregational mosque in 1423 though it had been a province of Delhi since 1297 It was built by Ahmad Shah a converted Rajput who when governor declared the province an independent sultanate in 1411 Chandra Satish 2004 Medieval India From Sultanat to the Mughals PART ONE Delhi Sultanat 1206 1526 Har Anand Publications p 218 ISBN 9788124110645 Muzaffar Husain Syed Syed Saud Akhtar BD Usmani 2011 Concise History of Islam p 271 Kapadia Aparna 2018 Gujarat The Long Fifteenth Century and the Making of a Region Cambridge University Press p 8 ISBN 9781107153318 Edward James Rapson Sir Wolseley Haig Sir Richard Burn 1965 The Cambridge History of India Turks and Afghans edited by W Haig 1965 Cambridge p 294 Mahajan VD 2007 History of Medieval India S Chand p 245 ISBN 9788121903646 Jenkins Everett 2010 The Muslim Diaspora A comprehensive reference to the spread of Islam in Asia Africa Europe and the America 570 1799 McFarland amp Company Inc p 275 ISBN 9780786447138 Jutta Jain Neubauer 1981 The Stepwells of Gujarat In Art Historical perspective p 62 Saran Kishori Lal 1992 The legacy of Muslim Rule in India Aditya Prakashan p 233 ISBN 9788185689036 Lane Pool Stanley 2014 Mohammadan Dyn Orientalism V 2 volume 2 page 312 writer p 312 ISBN 9781317853947 Wink Andre 2003 11 15 Al Hind Volume 3 Indo Islamic Society 14th 15th Centuries Brill p 143 ISBN 978 90 474 0274 9 Khan ʻAli Muḥammad 1965 Mirat i Ahmadi A Persian History of Gujarat Oriental Institute p 34 Nayak 1982 pp 66 72 Taylor 1902 pp 6 7 Nayak 1982 pp 73 74 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q James Macnabb Campbell ed 1896 II AHMEDABAD KINGS A D 1403 1573 History of Gujarat Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency Vol I II The Government Central Press pp 236 241 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Nayak 1982 pp 74 75 a b Lonely planet Lonely Planet Pandya Yatin 14 November 2010 In Ahmedabad history is still alive as tradition dna Retrieved 26 February 2016 History Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation Archived from the original on 23 February 2016 Retrieved 27 February 2016 Jilkad is anglicized name of the month Dhu al Qi dah Hijri year not mentioned but derived from date converter Google Books 2015 p 249 a b Nayak 1982 p 76 Nayak 1982 pp 75 81 Nayak 1982 pp 81 82 Watson James W ed 1884 Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency Kathiawar Vol VIII Bombay Government Central Press pp 497 498 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Harold Wilberforce Bell 1916 The History of Kathiawad from the Earliest Times London William Heinemann pp 75 76 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Burgess Murray 1874 The Rudra Mala at Siddhpur Photographs of Architecture and Scenery in Gujarat and Rajputana Bourne and Shepherd p 19 Retrieved 23 July 2016 Sidhpur Official website of Gujarat Tourism Archived from the original on 8 April 2016 Retrieved 8 April 2016 Patel Alka 2004 Architectural Histories Entwined The Rudra Mahalaya Congregational Mosque of Siddhpur Gujarat Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 63 2 144 163 doi 10 2307 4127950 JSTOR 4127950 Nayak 1982 pp 82 83 Nayak 1982 pp 83 85 Nayak 1982 pp 85 89 Nayak 1982 pp 89 95 Nayak 1982 pp 95 98 Sen Sailendra 2013 A Textbook of Medieval Indian History Primus Books pp 114 115 ISBN 978 9 38060 734 4 More Anuj October 18 2010 Baba Maneknath s kin keep alive 600 yr old tradition The Indian Express Archived from the original on April 11 2013 Retrieved February 21 2013 Nair Gupta Nisha 2017 01 19 Was Ahmedabad s founder Ahmed Shah a wise ruler or an ambitious tyrant Scroll in Retrieved 2017 02 10 Cite error A list defined reference with group name is not used in the content see the help page Bibliography Edit Taylor Georg P 1902 The Coins Of The Gujarat Saltanat Vol XXI Mumbai Royal Asiatic Society of Bombay hdl 2015 104269 Archived from the original on 2017 03 01 Retrieved 2017 03 03 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Nayak Chhotubhai Ranchhodji 1982 ગ જર તમ ન ઇસ લ મ સલ તનતન ઈત હ સ ઇ સ ૧૩૦૦થ ઇ સ ૧૫૭૩ સ ધ History of the Islamic Sultanate in Gujarat 1300 AD to 1573 AD in Gujarati Ahmedabad Gujarat University Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency Ahmedabad Google Books 2015 7 January 2015 pp 248 262 Retrieved 1 February 2015 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Wikiquote has quotations related to Ahmad Shah I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ahmad Shah I amp oldid 1129298352, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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