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Ghazi ud-Din Khan Feroze Jung III

Feroze Jung III or Nizam Shahabuddin Muhammad Feroz Khan Siddiqi Bayafandi also known by his sobriquet Imad-ul-Mulk, was the grand vizier of the Mughal Empire when it was under Maratha suzerainty, making them the de facto rulers.

Portrait of Imad-ul-Mulk

He was the son of Ghazi ud-Din Khan Feroze Jung II and a grandson of the founder of the Asaf Jahi dynasty, Nizam-ul-Mulk, Asaf Jah I.[1] After the death of his father in 1752, he was recommended by Nawab Safdar Jung to be appointed as Mir Bakhshi (Pay Master General) and received the titles of Amir ul-Umara (Noble of Nobles) and Imad ul-Mulk.[1]

A controversial figure, Imad is well known for deposing, imprisoning and blinding Mughal emperor Ahmad Shah Bahadur, assassinating emperor Alamgir II, and torturing their family members including future emperor Shah Alam II.

He was declared to be an apostate by various Islamic scholars, including Shah Waliullah Dehlawi, and Durrani emperor Ahmad Shah Abdali.[2]

Early life and rise to power edit

Feroz Jung was raised under the scrutiny and austerity of his father Ghazi ud-Din, spending his days under the care of tutors and mullahs, and allowed the company of only eunuchs on Fridays. He was never allowed to mix with children of his own age of attend performances by musicians or dancing girls. He was appointed to the Mughal court by his father Feroze Jung II in 1752. The historian William Dalrymple describes the result as a "precocious intellectual achievement...undermined by unbounded ambition and profound immortality that led to his turning on all who helped him, starting with his patron Safdar Jang."[3]: 154 

Safdar Jang, the Nawab of Awadh, and Wazir-ul-Malik-i-Hindustan (Prime Minister of Hindustan), had intervened to secure Feroz Jung's estates after the death of his father and had appointed him the imperial paymaster at the age of sixteen.[4] The French military commander Jean Law described that Safdar Jang regarded Feroz Jung "like his own son and could scarcely have imaged that he was actually nursing a serpent at his breast."[5]: 126 

Emperor Ahmad Shah Bahadur chose Feroz Jung to counter the powerful Safdar Jang. He formed a coalition with Hafiz Rahmat Khan Barech and Qudsia Begum, the emperor's mother to outmaneuver Safdar Jang out of the court.[6]

According to Dalrymple, in 1753, a "civil war between the old vizier and his teenage replacement raged across the suburbs of the city for six months, from March to November, with the old and new cities of Delhi held by rival factions."[3]: 154  Safdar Jang's Old Delhi stronghold was looted and destroyed, never to recover.[3]: 155  According to the Mughal historian Ghulam Hussain Khan, "Old Delhi, which used to be even wealthier and populous than the new city, Shahjahanabad, was plundered and sacked so thoroughly that an infinity of people lost their consorts and children, and were totally ruined, besides numbers that were massacred."[7] Safdar Jang would be forced to retreat to Awadh and would never recover, dying less a year later, due to the "shock and grief at his fall."[5]: 126 [8]

De facto emperor edit

 
Imad ul-Mulk holds a banquet

Imad-ul-Mulk emerged as the de facto ruler of Delhi by calling on the Marathas for help and instigating them to attack the Jats of Bharatpur. The Marathas laid siege over the Kumher fort on 1 January 1754 but were unable to overcome the resistance of Suraj Mal.[9] Imad-ul-Mulk had collected 1,500,000 dams but refused to pay salaries to the Mughal army and imperial officials, estranging him from the emperor.

Ahmad Shah Bahadur declared the reinstatement of Safdar Jang as his Grand Vizier and tried to remove Imad-ul-Mulk from the imperial court. This caused him to send Aqibat Mahmud to arrest the emperor and then seek an alliance with the Raghunath Rao, the brother of Maratha Peshwa Nanasabeb I.

Deposing Emperor Ahmad Shah Bahadur edit

The Marathas, aided by the defection of subahdar Malhar Rao Holkar, defeated Ahmad Shah Bahadur's army at Sikandrabad in May 1754 and captured members of the emperor's household, including 8,000 women.[10] Ahmad Shah Bahadur fled toward Delhi while the ailing Safdar Jang fled to Awadh. Imad-ul-Mulk, with the support of Raghunath Rao, proceeded to Delhi, and deposed Ahmad Shah Bahadur on 2 June 1754 and imprisoned at the Salimgarh Fort in December.[11]

Imad-ul-Mulk released Prince Aziz-ud-Din from prison and crowned him emperor with the regnal name Alamgir II. The 55-year-old prince had been in prison since 1714 when his father emperor Jahandar Shah was overthrown by Farrukhsiyar. He had no experience of administration or warfare, serving as another puppet Mughal emperor with all power vested with Imad-ul-Mulk. He supposedly intercepted the secret dispatches from Ahmad Shah Bahadur to Suraj Mal where the imprisoned emperor promised to aid to the Jats if they continued to hold out against the Mughal army besieging Bharatpur. Imad-ul-Mulk made peace with Suraj Mal, returned to Delhi and had Ahmad Shah Bahadur and his mother Qudsia Begum blinded with hot needles.[12][3]: 156 

Ahmad Shah Durrani's invasion edit

Afghan emperor Ahmad Shah Durrani invaded India for the fourth time in 1756, on the invitation of Mughlani Begum to defeat Sikh rebels in Punjab. They conquered the Lahore, Sirhind, Delhi, Vrindavan and plundered Mathura.[13]

Ahmad Shah occupied Delhi in January 1757 and imprisoned emperor Alamgir II. He attempted to impose an alliance on the Mughals by marrying Hadrat Begum, the daughter of Muhammad Shah, and having his son Timur Shah Durrani marry Zuhra Begum, daughter of Alamgir II. In April 1757, Ahmad Shah reinstalled Alamgir II as the titular emperor, and began his return to Afghanistan. However, actual control of Delhi was given to Najib-ud-Daula, the Rohilla Mir Bakhshi of the Mughal army who had defected to support Ahmad Shah's invasion, in return for an annual tribute of 20 lakh rupees. Ahmad Shah Durrani returned to Kabul, leaving his forces led by Timur Shah, consolidating themselves inside the garrisons of Lahore.

After the departure of the Afghans from Delhi, Imad-ul-Mulk, who had been paying the Marathas a tribute, invited them to remove the Rohillas from Delhi. In the ensuing Battle of Delhi, a 40,000-strong Maratha army led by Raghunath Rao expelled Najib ad-Dawlah from the city. The Marathas, now the de facto rulers of Delhi, appointed Antaji Mankeshwar as the governor and retained Alamgir II as the emperor.[14][15][16] Imad-ul-Mulk would be declared an 'apostate' by Islamic scholars and Ahmad Shah Durrani for inviting the Hindu Marathas to defeat the Muslim Rohilla Afghans.[2]

Maratha conquest of Lahore edit

In 1758, Peshwa Raghunath Rao drove out Timur Shah Durrani and Jahan Khan out of Lahore after extracting imperial wealth from Imad-ul-Mulk. The Afghans were forced to retreat to Peshawar under the force of Maratha and Sikh attacks. The combined Maratha-Sikh force massacred the Afghan garrison, wounding Jahan Khan and killing his son. The Afghans quickly vacated the forts of Peshawar and Attock and retreated west to Afghanistan. Buoyed by success, Peshwa Raghunath Rao grandiosely sacked Delhi and signalled his intention to place his brother Balaji Baji Rao's son Vishwasrao on the Mughal throne.[17]

Escape of Prince Ali Gauhar and assassination of Alamgir edit

"Some ill-designing people had turned his brain, and carried him to the eastern part of the Mughal Empire, which would be the cause of much trouble and ruin to our regimes."

Feroze Jung III's letter to Mir Jafar, after the escape of the Mughal crown prince Ali Gauhar.[18]

Imad-ul-Mulk feared that emperor Alamgir would invite the Ahmad Shah Durrani or use his son, Prince Ali Gauhar to dispossess him of his newfound power. He began to plot the assassination of the emperor and members of the royal family in the winter of 1759.[19] Fearing for his life, Wali al-Ahd (crown prince) Ali Gauhar organised a milita and escaped Delhi for the Bengal Subah to strengthen his position by attempting to regain control over Bengal, Bihar and Odisha. Imad-ud-Mulk ordered Mir Jafar, the Nawab of Bengal to advance as far as Patna to capture or kill Ali Gauhar.

In November 1759, emperor Alamgir II was told that a pious man had come to meet him; ever so eager to meet holy men, set out immediately to meet him at Kotla Fateh Shah, he was stabbed repeatedly by Imad-ul-Mulk's assassins. The emperor's death would be mourned throughout the empire, but particularly among the Muslim populance. Maratha Peshwa Raghunath Rao, under the influence of Sadashivrao Bhau, considered abolishing the Mughal empire, and placing his son Vishwasrao on the Mughal throne by bribing or deposing Imad-ul-Mulk.[17]

Sadashivrao Bhau then personally chose Shah Jahan III as the new Mughal Emperor and began a campaign of plundering the jewels and ornaments of the Mughal imperial court; defacing Mughal mosques, tombs and shrines in Agra and Delhi, and desecrating the imperial Moti Masjid, and looting its exquisite jewelled decorations.[20][better source needed]

Fall from power edit

Ali Gauhar and his 30,000-strong Mughal army, were reinforced by the forces of Shuja-ud-Daula, Najib-ud-Daula and Ahmad Khan Bangash. The Mughals were also joined by Jean Law de Lauriston and 200 Frenchmen, who had been waging a campaign against the British as a part of the Seven Years' War. Ali Gauhar intended to overthrow Mir Jafar and Imad-ul-Mulk by advancing toward Awadh and Patna in 1759. Forced to flee Delhi, Imad-ul-Mulk was replaced as Grand Vizier by Najib-ud-Daula after Ahmad Shah issued a farman recognising Prince Ali Gauhar as the Mughal emperor Shah Alam II.[21][22]

The defeat of Alamgir II's son-in-law, Timur Shah Durrani by the Marathas in the year 1760, provoked the wrath of Ahmad Shah Durrani, who launched a massive campaign gathering more troops than ever before. At the Battle of Panipat in January 1761, a coalition of Afghan, Rohilla and Awadh troops defeated the Marathas, shattering their suzerainty over the Mughal throne and their control over northern India.

Later life and death edit

According to the biography of the poet Gulzar Ibrahim, Imad-ul-Mulk was living in strained circumstances in 1780. In 1784, he formed an arrangement with the Maratha Peshwa and received Baoni as jagir.

Subsequently, he proceeded to Surat where he passed a few years with the English and then went on the Hajj. He composed Persian and Rekhta poetry and left Arabic and Turkish Ghazals and a thick Persian Diwan and a Masnawi Fakhria-tun_Nizam and Nalaa-e-Ny relating the miracles of Maulana Fakhar-ud-Din under the pen name Nizam.

Under the influence of Sufism, Imad-ul-Mulk abandoned political career and moved to Maharshrif, Chishtian to live with Muhammad Maharvi. He poetically described Maharvi's death, حیف واویلا جہاں بے نور گشت (What a pity, where there is no light) in 1205 Hijri, indicating his residence in Maharshrif until at least 1791 CE. After Maharvi's death, Imad-ul-Mulk moved to Khairpur and died there in 1800, where his grave is located.[citation needed]

His wife was the celebrated Ganna or Gunna Begam, who died in 1775.

He was succeeded by his son Naser-ad-Daula as the Nawab of Baoni jagir.

Popular culture edit

In the 2019 Bollywood war epic Panipat, the character of Imad-ul-Mulk and his role in the events leading up to the Third Battle of Panipat is portrayed by Mir Sarwar.

In the TV series The Great Maratha 1994 the role was played by Jitendra Trehan.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b An oriental biographical dictionary: founded on materials collected by the late Thomas William Beale;2nd Edition; Publisher:W.H. Allen, 1894; page 143
  2. ^ a b Ghazi ud-Din Khan Feroze Jung III at Google Books
  3. ^ a b c d Dalrymple, William (2019). The Anarchy: The Relentless Rise of the East India Company. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781408864371.
  4. ^ Sarkar, Sir Jadunath (1991). Fall of the Mughal Empire, vol. 1. New Delhi. p. 222.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ a b Lauriston, Jean Law de (2014). A Memoir of the Mughal Empire 1757-61. Translated by Cheema, G.S. New Delhi.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. ^ . 1 September 2001. Archived from the original on 1 September 2001. Retrieved 8 July 2023.
  7. ^ Khan, Syed Ghulam Hussain Tabatabai (1790). Seir Mutaqherin or Review of Modern Times, vol. 3. Calcutta. p. 334.
  8. ^ Kai, Manna (2018). Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun (eds.). "The Encyclopedia of Islam — Three". www.worldcat.org. Brill. pp. 110–13. Retrieved 8 July 2023.
  9. ^ Pratik gupta (2014). Maratha Generals and Personalities: A gist of great personalities of Marathas. Pratik gupta. p. 190.
  10. ^ Singh, K. Natwar (3 December 2012). Maharaj Suraj Mal 1707-1763. Rupa Publications India Pvt. Ltd. ISBN 9788129126603.
  11. ^ Hari Ram Gupta, ed. (1961). Marathas and Panipat. Panjab University. p. 24.
  12. ^ François Xavier Wendel (1991). Jean Deloche (ed.). Wendel's Memoirs on the Origin, Growth and Present State of Jat Power in Hindustan (1768). Institut français de Pondichery. p. 124.
  13. ^ Mehta, Jaswant Lal (January 2005). Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707–1813. Sterling Publishers. p. 229. ISBN 9781932705546.
  14. ^ Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707-1813
  15. ^ The New Cambridge Modern History, Volume 4
  16. ^ History of Indian subcontinent
  17. ^ a b Elphinstone, Mountstuart (1841). History of India. John Murray, Albemarle Street. p. 276.
  18. ^ Ghazi ud-Din Khan Feroze Jung III at Google Books
  19. ^ "Alamgir II (Mughal emperor)". Encyclopædia Britannica. 21 November 2012. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  20. ^ Shaharyar M. Khan (20 October 2000). The Begums of Bhopal: A History of the Princely State of Bhopal. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  21. ^ Raghunath Rai. History. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  22. ^ Hermann Kulke, Dietmar Rothermund. A History of India. Retrieved 31 January 2014.

External links edit

ghazi, khan, feroze, jung, other, people, with, similar, names, ghazi, khan, feroze, jung, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, materia. For other people with similar names see Ghazi ud Din Khan Feroze Jung disambiguation 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 Ghazi ud Din Khan Feroze Jung III news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Feroze Jung III or Nizam Shahabuddin Muhammad Feroz Khan Siddiqi Bayafandi also known by his sobriquet Imad ul Mulk was the grand vizier of the Mughal Empire when it was under Maratha suzerainty making them the de facto rulers Portrait of Imad ul MulkHe was the son of Ghazi ud Din Khan Feroze Jung II and a grandson of the founder of the Asaf Jahi dynasty Nizam ul Mulk Asaf Jah I 1 After the death of his father in 1752 he was recommended by Nawab Safdar Jung to be appointed as Mir Bakhshi Pay Master General and received the titles of Amir ul Umara Noble of Nobles and Imad ul Mulk 1 A controversial figure Imad is well known for deposing imprisoning and blinding Mughal emperor Ahmad Shah Bahadur assassinating emperor Alamgir II and torturing their family members including future emperor Shah Alam II He was declared to be an apostate by various Islamic scholars including Shah Waliullah Dehlawi and Durrani emperor Ahmad Shah Abdali 2 Contents 1 Early life and rise to power 2 De facto emperor 2 1 Deposing Emperor Ahmad Shah Bahadur 2 2 Ahmad Shah Durrani s invasion 2 3 Maratha conquest of Lahore 2 4 Escape of Prince Ali Gauhar and assassination of Alamgir 2 5 Fall from power 3 Later life and death 4 Popular culture 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarly life and rise to power editFeroz Jung was raised under the scrutiny and austerity of his father Ghazi ud Din spending his days under the care of tutors and mullahs and allowed the company of only eunuchs on Fridays He was never allowed to mix with children of his own age of attend performances by musicians or dancing girls He was appointed to the Mughal court by his father Feroze Jung II in 1752 The historian William Dalrymple describes the result as a precocious intellectual achievement undermined by unbounded ambition and profound immortality that led to his turning on all who helped him starting with his patron Safdar Jang 3 154 Safdar Jang the Nawab of Awadh and Wazir ul Malik i Hindustan Prime Minister of Hindustan had intervened to secure Feroz Jung s estates after the death of his father and had appointed him the imperial paymaster at the age of sixteen 4 The French military commander Jean Law described that Safdar Jang regarded Feroz Jung like his own son and could scarcely have imaged that he was actually nursing a serpent at his breast 5 126 Emperor Ahmad Shah Bahadur chose Feroz Jung to counter the powerful Safdar Jang He formed a coalition with Hafiz Rahmat Khan Barech and Qudsia Begum the emperor s mother to outmaneuver Safdar Jang out of the court 6 According to Dalrymple in 1753 a civil war between the old vizier and his teenage replacement raged across the suburbs of the city for six months from March to November with the old and new cities of Delhi held by rival factions 3 154 Safdar Jang s Old Delhi stronghold was looted and destroyed never to recover 3 155 According to the Mughal historian Ghulam Hussain Khan Old Delhi which used to be even wealthier and populous than the new city Shahjahanabad was plundered and sacked so thoroughly that an infinity of people lost their consorts and children and were totally ruined besides numbers that were massacred 7 Safdar Jang would be forced to retreat to Awadh and would never recover dying less a year later due to the shock and grief at his fall 5 126 8 De facto emperor edit nbsp Imad ul Mulk holds a banquetImad ul Mulk emerged as the de facto ruler of Delhi by calling on the Marathas for help and instigating them to attack the Jats of Bharatpur The Marathas laid siege over the Kumher fort on 1 January 1754 but were unable to overcome the resistance of Suraj Mal 9 Imad ul Mulk had collected 1 500 000 dams but refused to pay salaries to the Mughal army and imperial officials estranging him from the emperor Ahmad Shah Bahadur declared the reinstatement of Safdar Jang as his Grand Vizier and tried to remove Imad ul Mulk from the imperial court This caused him to send Aqibat Mahmud to arrest the emperor and then seek an alliance with the Raghunath Rao the brother of Maratha Peshwa Nanasabeb I Deposing Emperor Ahmad Shah Bahadur edit The Marathas aided by the defection of subahdar Malhar Rao Holkar defeated Ahmad Shah Bahadur s army at Sikandrabad in May 1754 and captured members of the emperor s household including 8 000 women 10 Ahmad Shah Bahadur fled toward Delhi while the ailing Safdar Jang fled to Awadh Imad ul Mulk with the support of Raghunath Rao proceeded to Delhi and deposed Ahmad Shah Bahadur on 2 June 1754 and imprisoned at the Salimgarh Fort in December 11 Imad ul Mulk released Prince Aziz ud Din from prison and crowned him emperor with the regnal name Alamgir II The 55 year old prince had been in prison since 1714 when his father emperor Jahandar Shah was overthrown by Farrukhsiyar He had no experience of administration or warfare serving as another puppet Mughal emperor with all power vested with Imad ul Mulk He supposedly intercepted the secret dispatches from Ahmad Shah Bahadur to Suraj Mal where the imprisoned emperor promised to aid to the Jats if they continued to hold out against the Mughal army besieging Bharatpur Imad ul Mulk made peace with Suraj Mal returned to Delhi and had Ahmad Shah Bahadur and his mother Qudsia Begum blinded with hot needles 12 3 156 Ahmad Shah Durrani s invasion edit See also Battle of Delhi 1757 Afghan emperor Ahmad Shah Durrani invaded India for the fourth time in 1756 on the invitation of Mughlani Begum to defeat Sikh rebels in Punjab They conquered the Lahore Sirhind Delhi Vrindavan and plundered Mathura 13 Ahmad Shah occupied Delhi in January 1757 and imprisoned emperor Alamgir II He attempted to impose an alliance on the Mughals by marrying Hadrat Begum the daughter of Muhammad Shah and having his son Timur Shah Durrani marry Zuhra Begum daughter of Alamgir II In April 1757 Ahmad Shah reinstalled Alamgir II as the titular emperor and began his return to Afghanistan However actual control of Delhi was given to Najib ud Daula the Rohilla Mir Bakhshi of the Mughal army who had defected to support Ahmad Shah s invasion in return for an annual tribute of 20 lakh rupees Ahmad Shah Durrani returned to Kabul leaving his forces led by Timur Shah consolidating themselves inside the garrisons of Lahore After the departure of the Afghans from Delhi Imad ul Mulk who had been paying the Marathas a tribute invited them to remove the Rohillas from Delhi In the ensuing Battle of Delhi a 40 000 strong Maratha army led by Raghunath Rao expelled Najib ad Dawlah from the city The Marathas now the de facto rulers of Delhi appointed Antaji Mankeshwar as the governor and retained Alamgir II as the emperor 14 15 16 Imad ul Mulk would be declared an apostate by Islamic scholars and Ahmad Shah Durrani for inviting the Hindu Marathas to defeat the Muslim Rohilla Afghans 2 Maratha conquest of Lahore edit See also Battle of Lahore 1759 In 1758 Peshwa Raghunath Rao drove out Timur Shah Durrani and Jahan Khan out of Lahore after extracting imperial wealth from Imad ul Mulk The Afghans were forced to retreat to Peshawar under the force of Maratha and Sikh attacks The combined Maratha Sikh force massacred the Afghan garrison wounding Jahan Khan and killing his son The Afghans quickly vacated the forts of Peshawar and Attock and retreated west to Afghanistan Buoyed by success Peshwa Raghunath Rao grandiosely sacked Delhi and signalled his intention to place his brother Balaji Baji Rao s son Vishwasrao on the Mughal throne 17 Escape of Prince Ali Gauhar and assassination of Alamgir edit Some ill designing people had turned his brain and carried him to the eastern part of the Mughal Empire which would be the cause of much trouble and ruin to our regimes Feroze Jung III s letter to Mir Jafar after the escape of the Mughal crown prince Ali Gauhar 18 Imad ul Mulk feared that emperor Alamgir would invite the Ahmad Shah Durrani or use his son Prince Ali Gauhar to dispossess him of his newfound power He began to plot the assassination of the emperor and members of the royal family in the winter of 1759 19 Fearing for his life Wali al Ahd crown prince Ali Gauhar organised a milita and escaped Delhi for the Bengal Subah to strengthen his position by attempting to regain control over Bengal Bihar and Odisha Imad ud Mulk ordered Mir Jafar the Nawab of Bengal to advance as far as Patna to capture or kill Ali Gauhar In November 1759 emperor Alamgir II was told that a pious man had come to meet him ever so eager to meet holy men set out immediately to meet him at Kotla Fateh Shah he was stabbed repeatedly by Imad ul Mulk s assassins The emperor s death would be mourned throughout the empire but particularly among the Muslim populance Maratha Peshwa Raghunath Rao under the influence of Sadashivrao Bhau considered abolishing the Mughal empire and placing his son Vishwasrao on the Mughal throne by bribing or deposing Imad ul Mulk 17 Sadashivrao Bhau then personally chose Shah Jahan III as the new Mughal Emperor and began a campaign of plundering the jewels and ornaments of the Mughal imperial court defacing Mughal mosques tombs and shrines in Agra and Delhi and desecrating the imperial Moti Masjid and looting its exquisite jewelled decorations 20 better source needed Fall from power edit See also Shah Alam II and Battle of Panipat 1761 Ali Gauhar and his 30 000 strong Mughal army were reinforced by the forces of Shuja ud Daula Najib ud Daula and Ahmad Khan Bangash The Mughals were also joined by Jean Law de Lauriston and 200 Frenchmen who had been waging a campaign against the British as a part of the Seven Years War Ali Gauhar intended to overthrow Mir Jafar and Imad ul Mulk by advancing toward Awadh and Patna in 1759 Forced to flee Delhi Imad ul Mulk was replaced as Grand Vizier by Najib ud Daula after Ahmad Shah issued a farman recognising Prince Ali Gauhar as the Mughal emperor Shah Alam II 21 22 The defeat of Alamgir II s son in law Timur Shah Durrani by the Marathas in the year 1760 provoked the wrath of Ahmad Shah Durrani who launched a massive campaign gathering more troops than ever before At the Battle of Panipat in January 1761 a coalition of Afghan Rohilla and Awadh troops defeated the Marathas shattering their suzerainty over the Mughal throne and their control over northern India Later life and death editAccording to the biography of the poet Gulzar Ibrahim Imad ul Mulk was living in strained circumstances in 1780 In 1784 he formed an arrangement with the Maratha Peshwa and received Baoni as jagir Subsequently he proceeded to Surat where he passed a few years with the English and then went on the Hajj He composed Persian and Rekhta poetry and left Arabic and Turkish Ghazals and a thick Persian Diwan and a Masnawi Fakhria tun Nizam and Nalaa e Ny relating the miracles of Maulana Fakhar ud Din under the pen name Nizam Under the influence of Sufism Imad ul Mulk abandoned political career and moved to Maharshrif Chishtian to live with Muhammad Maharvi He poetically described Maharvi s death حیف واویلا جہاں بے نور گشت What a pity where there is no light in 1205 Hijri indicating his residence in Maharshrif until at least 1791 CE After Maharvi s death Imad ul Mulk moved to Khairpur and died there in 1800 where his grave is located citation needed His wife was the celebrated Ganna or Gunna Begam who died in 1775 He was succeeded by his son Naser ad Daula as the Nawab of Baoni jagir Popular culture editIn the 2019 Bollywood war epic Panipat the character of Imad ul Mulk and his role in the events leading up to the Third Battle of Panipat is portrayed by Mir Sarwar In the TV series The Great Maratha 1994 the role was played by Jitendra Trehan See also editHyderabad State NizamReferences edit a b An oriental biographical dictionary founded on materials collected by the late Thomas William Beale 2nd Edition Publisher W H Allen 1894 page 143 a b Ghazi ud Din Khan Feroze Jung III at Google Books a b c d Dalrymple William 2019 The Anarchy The Relentless Rise of the East India Company Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781408864371 Sarkar Sir Jadunath 1991 Fall of the Mughal Empire vol 1 New Delhi p 222 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Lauriston Jean Law de 2014 A Memoir of the Mughal Empire 1757 61 Translated by Cheema G S New Delhi a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link HISTORY OF AWADH 1 September 2001 Archived from the original on 1 September 2001 Retrieved 8 July 2023 Khan Syed Ghulam Hussain Tabatabai 1790 Seir Mutaqherin or Review of Modern Times vol 3 Calcutta p 334 Kai Manna 2018 Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun eds The Encyclopedia of Islam Three www worldcat org Brill pp 110 13 Retrieved 8 July 2023 Pratik gupta 2014 Maratha Generals and Personalities A gist of great personalities of Marathas Pratik gupta p 190 Singh K Natwar 3 December 2012 Maharaj Suraj Mal 1707 1763 Rupa Publications India Pvt Ltd ISBN 9788129126603 Hari Ram Gupta ed 1961 Marathas and Panipat Panjab University p 24 Francois Xavier Wendel 1991 Jean Deloche ed Wendel s Memoirs on the Origin Growth and Present State of Jat Power in Hindustan 1768 Institut francais de Pondichery p 124 Mehta Jaswant Lal January 2005 Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707 1813 Sterling Publishers p 229 ISBN 9781932705546 Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707 1813 The New Cambridge Modern History Volume 4 History of Indian subcontinent a b Elphinstone Mountstuart 1841 History of India John Murray Albemarle Street p 276 Ghazi ud Din Khan Feroze Jung III at Google Books Alamgir II Mughal emperor Encyclopaedia Britannica 21 November 2012 Retrieved 31 January 2014 Shaharyar M Khan 20 October 2000 The Begums of Bhopal A History of the Princely State of Bhopal Retrieved 31 January 2014 Raghunath Rai History Retrieved 31 January 2014 Hermann Kulke Dietmar Rothermund A History of India Retrieved 31 January 2014 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Ghazi ud Din Khan Feroze Jung III Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ghazi ud Din Khan Feroze Jung III amp oldid 1193527441, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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