fbpx
Wikipedia

Baqi Tashqandi

Baqi Tashqandi, also known as Mir Baqi, was a Mughal commander (beg) originally from Tashkent (in modern Uzbekistan) during the reign of the first Mughal emperor Babur. He is widely believed to have been made the governor of the province of Awadh. He is believed to have founded Babri Mosque in Ayodhya in 1528, which later became the focal point of the Babri MasjidRam Janmabhoomi dispute.[1] However, the historical evidence for these beliefs is scant.[2]

Identity

Baburnama (Chronicle of Babur) mentions a commander called Baqi Tashkindi (Baqi of Tashkent). His name also appears with other suffixes: Baqi Shaghawal, Baqi Beg (commander) or Baqi Mingbashi (commander of a thousand troops). However, the chronicle does not describe him as a Mir (prince or noble). Police officer-turned-scholar Kishore Kunal believes that the appellation "Mir Baqi" was constructed in 1813–1814 in a forged inscription on Babri Masjid for the benefit of the British surveyor Francis Buchanan, and there was in fact no prince called "Mir Baqi" in Babur's regime.[3][a]

Career

Baqi Tashqandi served as a commander in the Mughal force of Emperor Babur.

In 932 AH (January or February 1526 AD), Baqi, described as "Shaghawal", was given Dibalpur in Punjab as a fief (near Lahore), and sent to help quell a rebellion in Balkh. After his return, Baqi appears to have been assigned as a commander in a force of six or seven thousand troops headed by Chin-Timur Sultan. In 934 AH (1528 AD) the force was sent on an expedition to Chanderi. The enemy fled and Chin-Timur Sultan was ordered to pursue them. The subordinate commanders were given instructions "not to go beyond this [Sultan's] word".[2]

In March 1528, the same force headed by Chin-Timur Sultan was sent in pursuit of Afghan nobles Bāyazīd and Biban (formerly in the employ of Ibrahim Lodi) near Awadh. The duo however took control of Lucknow by May 1529 (935 AH), signalling a loss for the Mughal force. The defeat was attributed to Baqi, who was possibly in charge of the Mughal fort in Lucknow. Babur sent reinforcements under the command of Kuki and others. Bāyazīd and Biban fled at the news of reinforcements. However, Baqi and his team could not catch hold of them. The temporary loss of Lucknow to the rebels as well as Baqi's inability to capture them annoyed Babur. The monsoon had set in and the horses needed rest. So Babur called a halt to the pursuit. On 13 June, Baqi called on Babur, who was apparently dissatisfied, and, on 20 June 1529, Babur dismissed Baqi (issued rukhsat) along with the army of Awadh that he was commanding.[b] No more is known of Baqi Tashqandi until his mysterious reappearance on a supposed inscription on the Babri Masjid as "Mir Baqi", as reported by the British East India Company's surveyor in 1813.[2]

Babri Masjid inscriptions

Francis Buchanan (also called Buchanan-Hamilton) did a survey of the Gorakhpur Division in 1813–14 on behalf of the British East India Company. Buchanan's report, never published but available in the British Library archives, states that the Hindus generally attributed destruction of temples "to the furious zeal of Aurangzabe [Aurangzeb]", but the large mosque at Ayodhya (now known as Babri Masjid) was ascertained to have been built by Babur by "an inscription on its walls". Buchanan had the said inscription in Persian copied by a scribe and translated by a Maulvi friend. The translation however showed two inscriptions. The first inscription said that the mosque was constructed by 'Mir Baqi' in the year 935 AH or 923 AH.[c] The second inscription narrated the genealogy of Aurangzeb.[d][e] The translator had a difficulty with the anagram for the date, because one of the words was missing, which would have resulted in a date of 923 AH rather than 935 AH. These incongruities and mismatches made no impression on Buchanan, who maintained that the mosque was built under the orders of Babur.[4]

The Babri Masjid stands at a location believed by Hindus to be the birthplace of Rama. There are no records of a mosque at the site till 1672 and no known association with Babur or Mir Baqi prior to Buchanan's discovery of these inscriptions in the 19th century. The Baburnama does not mention either the mosque or the destruction of a temple.[5] The Ramcharit Manas of Tulsidas (AD 1574) and Ain-i Akbari of Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak (AD 1598) made no mention of a mosque either.[6][7]

In 1611, an English traveller William Finch visited Ayodhya and recorded the "ruins of the Ranichand [Ramachand] castle and houses". He made no mention of a mosque.[8] In 1634, Thomas Herbert described a "pretty old castle of Ranichand [Ramachand]" which he described as an antique monument that was "especially memorable".[9] However, by 1672, the appearance of a mosque at the site can be inferred because Lal Das's Awadh-Vilasa describes the location of birthplace without mentioning a temple.[10] In 1717, the Moghul Rajput noble Jai Singh II purchased the land surrounding the site and his documents show a mosque.[11]

Kishore Kunal states that all the claimed inscriptions on the Babri mosque were fake. They were affixed sometime around 1813 (almost 285 years after the supposed construction of the mosque in 1528 AD), and repeatedly replaced.[12] In a petition filed by Syed Mohammad Asghar, the Mutawalli (guardian) of the Babri Masjid, with the Commissioner of Faizabad in 1877, it was stated that the word "Allah" above the door was the only inscription. The inscription mentioned by Buchanan was apparently not in evidence.[4] In 1889, archaeologist Anton Führer recorded two inscriptions. One said that the mosque was erected by a noble 'Mir Khan' of Babur.[f] Another said that the mosque was founded in the year 930 AH by a grandee of Babur, who was (comparable to) "another King of Turkey and China".[g] The year 930 AH corresponds 1523 AD, three years before Babur's conquest of Hindustan. Moreover, the texts of these inscriptions were completely different from those documented by Buchanan.[4]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Kunal, Ayodhya Revisited (2016, p. 142): "However, during Buchanan's survey of Gorakhpur during 1813-14 he was caught in a well-knit trap of forged inscriptions which indicated that the mosque was built by Mir Baqi at the behest of Babur."
  2. ^ Kunal, Ayodhya Revisited (2016, Chapter 6): Beveridge's translation of the Baburnama states that Babur gave leave to Baqi. Thankston transalted it as "that afternoon Baqi Shigavul and the Oudh aramy were dismissed". Erskine translated it as, "I gave Baqi Sheghawel and his party leave to go home".
  3. ^ Kunal, Ayodhya Revisited (2016, Chapter 5): "By order of King Babur whose justice is a building reaching to the mansions of heaven, this alighting place of the angels was erected by Meer Baquee a nobleman impressed with the seal of happiness. This is lasting Charity in the year of its construction what declares in manifest "that good works are lasting." [The anagram "good works are lasting" represented the year 935.] "From the Tughra: There is no God but God, and Mohammad is the Prophet of God. Say, O'Mohammad, that God is one, that God is holy, unbegetting and unbegotten, and that he hath no equal."
  4. ^ Kunal, Ayodhya Revisited (2016, Chapter 5): "The victorious lord, Mooheyoo Din, Aulumgir, Badshah, the destroyer of infidels, the son of Shah Juhan, the son of Juhangeer Shah; the son of Ukbar Shah; the son of Humayoon Shah, the son of Babur Shah; the son Oomer Sheikh Shah; the son of Soolatan Uboo Saeed; the son of Soolatan Moohammad Shah; the son of Meeran Shah, the son of Shaib-i-Qiran Meer Tymoor." "From the Tughra: In the name of God, most merciful I testify that there is no God but God. He is one, and without equal. I also testify that Mohammad is his Servant and Prophet." "Upon the propitious date of this noble erection, by this weak slave Moohummud Funa Ullah."
  5. ^ Kunal, Ayodhya Revisited (2016, Chapter 5): In addition to the two inscriptions and their monograms (turghas), a fable concerning a dervish called Musha Ashiqan was also included. The translator doubted that the fable was part of the inscription but recorded that the scribe "positively says that the inscription was executed at the erection of this building".
  6. ^ Kunal, Ayodhya Revisited (2016, p. 168):
    1. By the order of Babur, the king of the world;
    2. This firmament-like, lofty;
    3. Strong building was erected;
    4. By the auspicious noble Mir Khan;
    5. May ever remain such a foundation;
    6. And such a king of the world.
  7. ^ Kunal, Ayodhya Revisited (2016, p. 169):
    1. In the name of God, the merciful, the clement.
    2. In the name of him who...; may God perpetually keep him in the world.
    3. ....
    4. Such a sovereign who is famous in the world and in person of delight for the world.
    5. In his presence one of the grandees who is another King of Turkey and China.
    6. Laid this religious foundation in the auspicious Hijra 930.
    7. O God! May always remain the crown, throne and life with the king.
    8. May Babar always pour the flowers of happiness; may remain successful.
    9. His counsellor and minister who is the founder of this fort masjid.
    10. This poetry, giving the date and eulogy, was written by the lazy writer and poor servant Fath-allah-Ghori, composer.

References

  1. ^ Noorani, A. G. (2003), The Babri Masjid Question, 1528-2003, Volume 1, Tulika Books, Introduction (p. xvii), ISBN 81-85229-78-3, It asserts that the Mughal Emperor Babar's Governor at Awadh, Mir Baqi Tashqandi, built the Babri Masjid (mosque) at Ayodhya ... The mosque was built in 1528 ...
  2. ^ a b c Kunal, Ayodhya Revisited (2016), Chapter 6.
  3. ^ Kunal, Ayodhya Revisited (2016), pp. 142, 199.
  4. ^ a b c Kunal, Ayodhya Revisited (2016), Chapter 5.
  5. ^ K. Elst (1995). "The Ayodhya Debate". In Gilbert Pollet (ed.). Indian Epic Values: Rāmāyaṇa and Its Impact. Peeters Publishers. pp. 28–29. ISBN 9789068317015.
  6. ^ Narain, The Ayodhya Temple Mosque Dispute (1993), p. 17.
  7. ^ Jain, Rama and Ayodhya (2013), pp. 165–166.
  8. ^ Jain, Rama and Ayodhya (2013), p. 9, 120, 164.
  9. ^ Kunal, Ayodhya Revisited (2016), p. xv.
  10. ^ Kunal, Ayodhya Revisited (2016), p. xxvii.
  11. ^ Jain, Rama and Ayodhya (2013), pp. 112–115.
  12. ^ Kunal, Ayodhya Revisited (2016), p. 143.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Agnihotri, Ranjana (2017), Sri Ram Janmbhoomi Ayodhya Unpunished Conspiracy: Brutal Killing, Mischief and Interpolation, Notion Press, pp. 99–, ISBN 978-1-946641-40-3

baqi, tashqandi, also, known, baqi, mughal, commander, originally, from, tashkent, modern, uzbekistan, during, reign, first, mughal, emperor, babur, widely, believed, have, been, made, governor, province, awadh, believed, have, founded, babri, mosque, ayodhya,. Baqi Tashqandi also known as Mir Baqi was a Mughal commander beg originally from Tashkent in modern Uzbekistan during the reign of the first Mughal emperor Babur He is widely believed to have been made the governor of the province of Awadh He is believed to have founded Babri Mosque in Ayodhya in 1528 which later became the focal point of the Babri Masjid Ram Janmabhoomi dispute 1 However the historical evidence for these beliefs is scant 2 Contents 1 Identity 2 Career 3 Babri Masjid inscriptions 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further readingIdentity EditBaburnama Chronicle of Babur mentions a commander called Baqi Tashkindi Baqi of Tashkent His name also appears with other suffixes Baqi Shaghawal Baqi Beg commander or Baqi Mingbashi commander of a thousand troops However the chronicle does not describe him as a Mir prince or noble Police officer turned scholar Kishore Kunal believes that the appellation Mir Baqi was constructed in 1813 1814 in a forged inscription on Babri Masjid for the benefit of the British surveyor Francis Buchanan and there was in fact no prince called Mir Baqi in Babur s regime 3 a Career EditBaqi Tashqandi served as a commander in the Mughal force of Emperor Babur In 932 AH January or February 1526 AD Baqi described as Shaghawal was given Dibalpur in Punjab as a fief near Lahore and sent to help quell a rebellion in Balkh After his return Baqi appears to have been assigned as a commander in a force of six or seven thousand troops headed by Chin Timur Sultan In 934 AH 1528 AD the force was sent on an expedition to Chanderi The enemy fled and Chin Timur Sultan was ordered to pursue them The subordinate commanders were given instructions not to go beyond this Sultan s word 2 In March 1528 the same force headed by Chin Timur Sultan was sent in pursuit of Afghan nobles Bayazid and Biban formerly in the employ of Ibrahim Lodi near Awadh The duo however took control of Lucknow by May 1529 935 AH signalling a loss for the Mughal force The defeat was attributed to Baqi who was possibly in charge of the Mughal fort in Lucknow Babur sent reinforcements under the command of Kuki and others Bayazid and Biban fled at the news of reinforcements However Baqi and his team could not catch hold of them The temporary loss of Lucknow to the rebels as well as Baqi s inability to capture them annoyed Babur The monsoon had set in and the horses needed rest So Babur called a halt to the pursuit On 13 June Baqi called on Babur who was apparently dissatisfied and on 20 June 1529 Babur dismissed Baqi issued rukhsat along with the army of Awadh that he was commanding b No more is known of Baqi Tashqandi until his mysterious reappearance on a supposed inscription on the Babri Masjid as Mir Baqi as reported by the British East India Company s surveyor in 1813 2 Babri Masjid inscriptions EditFrancis Buchanan also called Buchanan Hamilton did a survey of the Gorakhpur Division in 1813 14 on behalf of the British East India Company Buchanan s report never published but available in the British Library archives states that the Hindus generally attributed destruction of temples to the furious zeal of Aurangzabe Aurangzeb but the large mosque at Ayodhya now known as Babri Masjid was ascertained to have been built by Babur by an inscription on its walls Buchanan had the said inscription in Persian copied by a scribe and translated by a Maulvi friend The translation however showed two inscriptions The first inscription said that the mosque was constructed by Mir Baqi in the year 935 AH or 923 AH c The second inscription narrated the genealogy of Aurangzeb d e The translator had a difficulty with the anagram for the date because one of the words was missing which would have resulted in a date of 923 AH rather than 935 AH These incongruities and mismatches made no impression on Buchanan who maintained that the mosque was built under the orders of Babur 4 The Babri Masjid stands at a location believed by Hindus to be the birthplace of Rama There are no records of a mosque at the site till 1672 and no known association with Babur or Mir Baqi prior to Buchanan s discovery of these inscriptions in the 19th century The Baburnama does not mention either the mosque or the destruction of a temple 5 The Ramcharit Manas of Tulsidas AD 1574 and Ain i Akbari of Abu l Fazl ibn Mubarak AD 1598 made no mention of a mosque either 6 7 In 1611 an English traveller William Finch visited Ayodhya and recorded the ruins of the Ranichand Ramachand castle and houses He made no mention of a mosque 8 In 1634 Thomas Herbert described a pretty old castle of Ranichand Ramachand which he described as an antique monument that was especially memorable 9 However by 1672 the appearance of a mosque at the site can be inferred because Lal Das s Awadh Vilasa describes the location of birthplace without mentioning a temple 10 In 1717 the Moghul Rajput noble Jai Singh II purchased the land surrounding the site and his documents show a mosque 11 Kishore Kunal states that all the claimed inscriptions on the Babri mosque were fake They were affixed sometime around 1813 almost 285 years after the supposed construction of the mosque in 1528 AD and repeatedly replaced 12 In a petition filed by Syed Mohammad Asghar the Mutawalli guardian of the Babri Masjid with the Commissioner of Faizabad in 1877 it was stated that the word Allah above the door was the only inscription The inscription mentioned by Buchanan was apparently not in evidence 4 In 1889 archaeologist Anton Fuhrer recorded two inscriptions One said that the mosque was erected by a noble Mir Khan of Babur f Another said that the mosque was founded in the year 930 AH by a grandee of Babur who was comparable to another King of Turkey and China g The year 930 AH corresponds 1523 AD three years before Babur s conquest of Hindustan Moreover the texts of these inscriptions were completely different from those documented by Buchanan 4 See also EditBabur Babri Mosque Ram JanmabhoomiNotes Edit Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 p 142 However during Buchanan s survey of Gorakhpur during 1813 14 he was caught in a well knit trap of forged inscriptions which indicated that the mosque was built by Mir Baqi at the behest of Babur Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 Chapter 6 Beveridge s translation of the Baburnama states that Babur gave leave to Baqi Thankston transalted it as that afternoon Baqi Shigavul and the Oudh aramy were dismissed Erskine translated it as I gave Baqi Sheghawel and his party leave to go home Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 Chapter 5 By order of King Babur whose justice is a building reaching to the mansions of heaven this alighting place of the angels was erected by Meer Baquee a nobleman impressed with the seal of happiness This is lasting Charity in the year of its construction what declares in manifest that good works are lasting The anagram good works are lasting represented the year 935 From the Tughra There is no God but God and Mohammad is the Prophet of God Say O Mohammad that God is one that God is holy unbegetting and unbegotten and that he hath no equal Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 Chapter 5 The victorious lord Mooheyoo Din Aulumgir Badshah the destroyer of infidels the son of Shah Juhan the son of Juhangeer Shah the son of Ukbar Shah the son of Humayoon Shah the son of Babur Shah the son Oomer Sheikh Shah the son of Soolatan Uboo Saeed the son of Soolatan Moohammad Shah the son of Meeran Shah the son of Shaib i Qiran Meer Tymoor From the Tughra In the name of God most merciful I testify that there is no God but God He is one and without equal I also testify that Mohammad is his Servant and Prophet Upon the propitious date of this noble erection by this weak slave Moohummud Funa Ullah Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 Chapter 5 In addition to the two inscriptions and their monograms turghas a fable concerning a dervish called Musha Ashiqan was also included The translator doubted that the fable was part of the inscription but recorded that the scribe positively says that the inscription was executed at the erection of this building Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 p 168 By the order of Babur the king of the world This firmament like lofty Strong building was erected By the auspicious noble Mir Khan May ever remain such a foundation And such a king of the world Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 p 169 In the name of God the merciful the clement In the name of him who may God perpetually keep him in the world Such a sovereign who is famous in the world and in person of delight for the world In his presence one of the grandees who is another King of Turkey and China Laid this religious foundation in the auspicious Hijra 930 O God May always remain the crown throne and life with the king May Babar always pour the flowers of happiness may remain successful His counsellor and minister who is the founder of this fort masjid This poetry giving the date and eulogy was written by the lazy writer and poor servant Fath allah Ghori composer References Edit Noorani A G 2003 The Babri Masjid Question 1528 2003 Volume 1 Tulika Books Introduction p xvii ISBN 81 85229 78 3 It asserts that the Mughal Emperor Babar s Governor at Awadh Mir Baqi Tashqandi built the Babri Masjid mosque at Ayodhya The mosque was built in 1528 a b c Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 Chapter 6 Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 pp 142 199 a b c Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 Chapter 5 K Elst 1995 The Ayodhya Debate In Gilbert Pollet ed Indian Epic Values Ramayaṇa and Its Impact Peeters Publishers pp 28 29 ISBN 9789068317015 Narain The Ayodhya Temple Mosque Dispute 1993 p 17 Jain Rama and Ayodhya 2013 pp 165 166 Jain Rama and Ayodhya 2013 p 9 120 164 Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 p xv Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 p xxvii Jain Rama and Ayodhya 2013 pp 112 115 Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 p 143 Bibliography EditJain Meenakshi 2013 Rama and Ayodhya New Delhi Aryan Books ISBN 978 8173054518 Kunal Kishore 2016 Ayodhya Revisited Prabhat Prakashan ISBN 978 81 8430 357 5 Narain Harsh 1993 The Ayodhya Temple Mosque Dispute Focus on Muslim Sources Delhi Penman Publishers Further reading EditAgnihotri Ranjana 2017 Sri Ram Janmbhoomi Ayodhya Unpunished Conspiracy Brutal Killing Mischief and Interpolation Notion Press pp 99 ISBN 978 1 946641 40 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Baqi Tashqandi amp oldid 1146224076, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.