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Khan Dowran VII

Khan Dowran VII (Persian: خان دوران; d. 1739), was an Mughal statesman and general in the eighteenth century. Originally Khwaja Asim, he was made Samsam ud-Daula (Sword of the State) Khan-i Dauran and was the Mir Bakshi and Amir-ul-Umara. He was the head of all the imperial nobility and the commander-in-chief of the Mughal army during the reign of Muhammad Shah,[1][2] and served the Emperor until his death at the Battle of Karnal.

Samsam-ud-Daulah
Khan Dauran VII
خان دوران
Khan-i-Dauran
Mir Bakhshi of the Mughal Empire
In office
1720s–1739
MonarchMuhammad Shah
Preceded byIhtisham-ul-Mulk
Succeeded byNizam-ul-Mulk, Asaf Jah I
Subahdar of Agra
MonarchFarrukhsiyar
Preceded byChabela Ram
Succeeded bySadatullah Khan I
Personal details
Born
Khawaja Asim

Mughal Empire
Died1739
Karnal, Mughal Empire
RelationsMuzaffar Khan (brother)
ChildrenMirza Ashraf
OccupationGeneral, Subahdar
Military service
AllegianceMughal Empire
Branch/serviceMughal Army
Battles/wars
  • Campaign against the Sayyid brothers
    • Battle of Hasanpur

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His brother, Muzaffar Khan, was the Mir-i-Atish (commander of the artillery),[3] and the governor of Ajmer.[4]

Background edit

Khwaja Asim was an Indian Muslim,[5] who was born in 1672–73 in Agra, where his father Khwaja Qasim was living in retirement after giving up his job in the army.[6] He was a member of the Naqshbandi Khwajazadah family which was of the Naqshbandi sect,[7] and were natives of Agra.[8] He was an ethnic Hindustani.[9] When Khwaja Asim grew to manhood, he along with his brothers went to the Deccan in search of employment, and entered the service of Prince Kam Bakhsh who took him into service and raised him as a mansabdar.[10] One author asserts that Khwaja Asim had been a fellow play-fellow of prince Farrukhsiyar, but as he was at least eleven years older, this can hardly be correct. His intimacy with the Prince was founded, however, on joining him in wrestling, archery, riding, polo-playing and other war-like exercises, of which Farrukhsiyar was passionately fond.[11]

Ashub says that his ancestor, Khan Baha-ud-Din Naqshband, had been the Pir and Murshid of all Turan and Turkistan.[12]

Life edit

 
Khan-i Dauran Khan's House, Agra

When Farrukhsiyar rose as the heir to the throne, Khwaja Asim felt like a "falcon newly mounted". Farrukhsiyar attempted to raise Khan-i-Dauran as a favourite in order to establish independence from the rule of the Indian Muslim Sayyid Brothers.[13] He was made a mansabdar of 7000/7000 zat and sowar,[14] and was made the head of the Wala-Shahis, who were distinguished by their red turbans.[15] When Sayyid Hussain Ali Khan was made the Viceroy of the Deccan and left to take personal charge of the provinces, the Sayyids agreed on the insistence of the Emperor to give Khan-i-Dauran the roles of the Mir Bakhshi as the deputy.[16] In this period he was the governor of both Agra and Gujarat.[17]

After the overthrow of the Sayyid Brothers, during which Khan-i Dauran fought Abdullah Khan at the Battle of Hasanpur,[18] Khan-i-Dauran took Husain Ali Khan's place as Mir Bakhshi with the rank of 8000 zat and sowar, and was made the Amir-ul-Umara.[19][20] He had success in driving Asaf Jah I away from the court to the Deccan,[21] after which all power practically fell into the hands of the Mir Bakhshi, Khan-i-Dauran.[22] From this point until his death in 1739, Khan-i-Dauran retained his position at court, whoever was in power.[11] Khan-i-Dauran charged the next Wazir, Roshan-ud-Daulah, of corruption, which resulted in the dismissal of his post.[23][24] He only employed Indian Muslims as soldiers.[25] Ashub says that his patronage of Hindustanis resulted in the decline of the descendants of Irani and Turani servants of Azam Shah.[26]

Khan-i-Dauran was the head of the Mughal army at the Battle of Karnal.[27] During Nader Shah's invasion of the Mughal Empire, Muhammad Shah sent out a request for troops throughout his lands and gathered a large force to face the invaders. One of the Mughal nobles who answered the call of the Emperor was Khan Dowran, being appointed commander in chief of the Mughal army upon Muhammad Shah's request. After the arrival of a contingent of Mughal forces under the command of Sa'adat Khan, the rearguard of this reinforcing column came under attack from Persian skirmishes who looted the baggage. Sa'adat Khan set out in pursuit and was lured into battle.

 
Depiction of the Battle of Karnal

After reports came into the Mughal camp, Muhammad Shah strongly favoured aiding Sa'adat Khan's troops but Khan Dowran advised caution, stating any aid given to Sa'adat khan would only involve a greater number of Mughal troops in Sa'adat Khan's defeat. After Muhammad Shah questioned his courage, Khan Dowran donned his armour and set out to link up with Sa'adat Khan. Khan-i Dauran declared that it was not the Indian style to abandon a friend, even if he was imprudent.[28] However, Nader Shah sent out a number of troops to feign retreat and managed to separate Khan Dowran and Sa'adat Khan and defeat each in detail. Khan Dowran's soldiers were decimated and he himself was badly injured and died later that evening after being carried back to the Mughal camp by his retainers. Although Khan-i-Dauran had set out with his cavalry to engage the enemy, the rest of the army under the Nizam remained inert during battle, who, according to the Siyar-ul-Muhtakhrin, "probably hoped to take the places of these rivals at court if they perished". The Nizam had held a grudge on Khan-i Dauran, as the latter had likened his function to the dance of an old monkey from the Deccan, when the Nizam had come to court in his Deccan attire and made obeisance in the Mahratta fashion.[29] The Mughal emperor himself also remained "imbecile and stood like a wooden figure", far away from the battlefield, "but more as a distant spectator of the battle rather than a participator in it".[30] The wounded body of Khan-i-Dauran was brought back to the Mughal camp, where he regained consciousness and said in a weak voice, "I have myself finished my own business. Now you know and your work knows. Never take the Emperor to Nadir, nor conduct Nadir to Dihli, but send away that evil from this point by any means you can devise." He then relapsed into unconsciousness and died within two days.[31] His brother Muzaffar Khan and elder son Muharram Khan were among the dead.[32]

His younger son Mirza Ashraf Samsam-ud-Daula, who was made a captive by Nader Shah, was given the title of Khan-i Dauran and the post of Mir-i-Atish by Muhammad Shah, and became the Mir Bakhshi of Alamgir II with the title of Amir-ul-Umara.[33][34]

Personality edit

 
Scene from a Mushaira

Much of Khan-i-Dauran's prestige may have been derived from his commanding presence. A contemporary tells us that when he walked up the audience hall with a group of followers, his head would be seen towering far above the others.[11]

Nawab Sadr-ud-Din Muhammad Khan Fa'iz, the first poet in Northern India who wrote a Diwan in Rekhta or Urdu in 1715, participated in Musha'irahs and academic gatherings at the residence of Khan-i-Dauran, and these he describes vividly in the Risala-i Manazrat.[35] Khan-i Dauran was a man of smooth plausible speech, with little knowledge of Persian. Instead, Khan-i Dauran spoke an elegant Urdu, ornamented with Persian phrases.[36] Khan-i Dauran thought it pretentious to use Persian in everyday conversation or at home; it left one open to ridicule and criticism.[37] Khan-i Dauran also owned a big library. He fixed a daily allowance for the famous Urdu poet of the time, Mir Taqi Mir. Once he was pleased with a Kashmiri poet, Mullah Sata'i, and rewarded him with two thousand rupees. But the latter requested the Mir Bakhshi for a mansab, after which Khan-i Dauran brought him to recite a qasidah in court for the Emperor. The poet received a mansab, jagir, service in the province of Kashmir.[38]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Muḥammad Laṭīf (Saiyid, khān bahādur.) (1891). History of the Panjáb from the Remotest Antiquity to the Present Time. Calcutta Central Press Company, limited. p. 198.
  2. ^ Ippolito Desider (2010). Mission to Tibet: The Extraordinary Eighteenth-Century Account of Father Ippolito Desideri S. J. p. 497. ISBN 9780861716760.
  3. ^ Govind Sakharam Sardesai (1948). New History of the Marathas: The expansion of the Maratha power, 1707-1772. Phoenix Publications. p. 146.
  4. ^ Zahiruddin Malik (1973). A Mughal Statesman of the Eighteenth Century, Khan-i-Dauran, Mir Bakshi of Muhammad Shah, 1719-1739. Aligarh Muslim University. p. 60. ISBN 9780210405444.
  5. ^ Mohibbul Hasan (1982). Historians of Medieval India. Meenakshi Prakashan. p. 159. Khan-i-Dauran, an Indian born Muslim
  6. ^ Zahiruddin Malik (1973). A Mughal Statesman of the Eighteenth Century, Khan-i-Dauran, Mir Bakshi of Muhammad Shah, 1719-1739. Aligarh Muslim University. p. 4. ISBN 9780210405444.
  7. ^ Syed H. Askari (1983). Iqbalnama: by an anonymous contemporary writer. Janaki Prakashan. p. 236.
  8. ^ Medieval India QuarterlyVolume 5. Department of History, Aligarh Muslim University. 1963. p. 89.
  9. ^ Sunanda Bhattacharya (1993). Role of Jats and Rajputs in the Mughal Court, 1707-1740. the University of Michigan. p. 36.
  10. ^ Not given (1969). Medieval India: Volume 1. Aligarh Muslim University. Department of History. Centre of Advanced Study. p. 136.
  11. ^ a b c William Irvine (1971). Later Mughal. p. 265.
  12. ^ Satish Chandra (1959). Parties And Politics At The Mughal Court. p. 211.
  13. ^ V. D. Mahajan (2020). Modern Indian History. p. 9. ISBN 9789352836192.
  14. ^ Shama Mitra Chenoy (1998). Shahjahanabad, a city of Delhi, 1638-1857. Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers. p. 81. ISBN 9788121508025.
  15. ^ William Irvine (1971). Later Mughal. p. 260.
  16. ^ Satish Chandra (2005). Medieval India: From Sultanat to the Mughals Part - I. Har-Anand Publications. p. 478. ISBN 9788124110669.
  17. ^ Zahiruddin Malik (1973). A Mughal Statesman Of The Eighteenth Century. Aligarh Muslim University.
  18. ^ Zahiruddin Malik (1973). A Mughal Statesman of the Eighteenth Century, Khan-i-Dauran, Mir Bakshi of Muhammad Shah, 1719-1739. p. 106. ISBN 9780210405444.
  19. ^ Zahiruddin Malik (1973). A Mughal Statesman of the Eighteenth Century, Khan-i-Dauran, Mir Bakshi of Muhammad Shah, 1719-1739. Aligarh Muslim University. p. 7. ISBN 9780210405444.
  20. ^ Journal: Volumes 6-8. Uttar Pradesh Historical Society. 1993. p. 79.
  21. ^ Zulfiqar Ahmed (1982). Punjab. Sang-E-Meel Publications.
  22. ^ H. G. Keene (2001). the Turks in India. University Press of the Pacific. p. 210.
  23. ^ Maheshwar Dayal (1975). Rediscovering Delhi. p. 133.
  24. ^ Praveen Kumar. Complete Indian History for IAS Exam:Highly Recommended for IAS, PCS and other Competitive Exam. Educreation Publishing. p. 267.
  25. ^ Satish Chandra (1959). Parties And Politics At The Mughal Court. p. 211.
  26. ^ Satish Chandra (1959). Parties And Politics At The Mughal Court. p. 246.
  27. ^ Sunanda Bhattacharya (1993). Role of Jats and Rajputs in the Mughal Court, 1707-1740. p. 37.
  28. ^ G. S. Cheema (2002). The Forgotten Mughals: A History of the Later Emperors of the House of Babar, 1707-1857. p. 195. ISBN 9788173044168.
  29. ^ Zulfiqar Ahmad (1982). Punjab. the University of Michigan. p. 107.
  30. ^ Jaswant Lal Mehta (2005). Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707-1813. p. 148.
  31. ^ William Irvine (1971). Later Mughal. p. 355.
  32. ^ Zahiruddin Malik (1973). A Mughal Statesman Of The Eighteenth Century. p. 102.
  33. ^ Muhammad Umar (1998). Muslim Society in Northern India During the Eighteenth Century. the University of Michigan. p. 296. ISBN 9788121508308.
  34. ^ Zahiruddin Malik (1973). A Mughal Statesman Of The Eighteenth Century. p. 102.
  35. ^ Zahiruddin Malik (1977). The Reign Of Muhammad Shah 1919-1748.
  36. ^ Stephen P. Blake (2002). Shahjahanabad:The Sovereign City in Mughal India 1639-1739. Cambridge University Press. p. 139. ISBN 9780521522991.
  37. ^ Stephen P. Blake (2002). Shahjahanabad:The Sovereign City in Mughal India 1639-1739. Cambridge University Press. p. 134. ISBN 9780521522991.
  38. ^ Zahiruddin Malik (1973). A Mughal Statesman Of The Eighteenth Century. Aligarh Muslim University. p. 108.

Bibliography edit

  • Cust, Edward, Annals of the wars of the eighteenth century, Gilbert & Rivington Printers:London, 1862.
  • Dupuy, R. Ernest and Trevor N. Dupuy, The Harper Encyclopedia of Military History, 4th Ed., HarperCollinsPublishers, 1993.
  • Axworthy, Michael, "The Sword of Persia; Nader Shah, from Tribal Warrior to Conquering Tyrant", I B Tauris, 2009.

External links edit

khan, dowran, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, april, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, message, persian, خان, د. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message Khan Dowran VII Persian خان دوران d 1739 was an Mughal statesman and general in the eighteenth century Originally Khwaja Asim he was made Samsam ud Daula Sword of the State Khan i Dauran and was the Mir Bakshi and Amir ul Umara He was the head of all the imperial nobility and the commander in chief of the Mughal army during the reign of Muhammad Shah 1 2 and served the Emperor until his death at the Battle of Karnal Samsam ud DaulahKhan Dauran VIIخان دورانKhan i DauranMir Bakhshi of the Mughal EmpireIn office 1720s 1739MonarchMuhammad ShahPreceded byIhtisham ul MulkSucceeded byNizam ul Mulk Asaf Jah ISubahdar of AgraMonarchFarrukhsiyarPreceded byChabela RamSucceeded bySadatullah Khan IPersonal detailsBornKhawaja AsimMughal EmpireDied1739Karnal Mughal EmpireRelationsMuzaffar Khan brother ChildrenMirza AshrafOccupationGeneral SubahdarMilitary serviceAllegianceMughal EmpireBranch serviceMughal ArmyBattles warsCampaign against the Sayyid brothers Battle of Hasanpur Afsharid Mughal war Battle of Karnal 2 His brother Muzaffar Khan was the Mir i Atish commander of the artillery 3 and the governor of Ajmer 4 Contents 1 Background 2 Life 3 Personality 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksBackground editKhwaja Asim was an Indian Muslim 5 who was born in 1672 73 in Agra where his father Khwaja Qasim was living in retirement after giving up his job in the army 6 He was a member of the Naqshbandi Khwajazadah family which was of the Naqshbandi sect 7 and were natives of Agra 8 He was an ethnic Hindustani 9 When Khwaja Asim grew to manhood he along with his brothers went to the Deccan in search of employment and entered the service of Prince Kam Bakhsh who took him into service and raised him as a mansabdar 10 One author asserts that Khwaja Asim had been a fellow play fellow of prince Farrukhsiyar but as he was at least eleven years older this can hardly be correct His intimacy with the Prince was founded however on joining him in wrestling archery riding polo playing and other war like exercises of which Farrukhsiyar was passionately fond 11 Ashub says that his ancestor Khan Baha ud Din Naqshband had been the Pir and Murshid of all Turan and Turkistan 12 Life edit nbsp Khan i Dauran Khan s House Agra When Farrukhsiyar rose as the heir to the throne Khwaja Asim felt like a falcon newly mounted Farrukhsiyar attempted to raise Khan i Dauran as a favourite in order to establish independence from the rule of the Indian Muslim Sayyid Brothers 13 He was made a mansabdar of 7000 7000 zat and sowar 14 and was made the head of the Wala Shahis who were distinguished by their red turbans 15 When Sayyid Hussain Ali Khan was made the Viceroy of the Deccan and left to take personal charge of the provinces the Sayyids agreed on the insistence of the Emperor to give Khan i Dauran the roles of the Mir Bakhshi as the deputy 16 In this period he was the governor of both Agra and Gujarat 17 After the overthrow of the Sayyid Brothers during which Khan i Dauran fought Abdullah Khan at the Battle of Hasanpur 18 Khan i Dauran took Husain Ali Khan s place as Mir Bakhshi with the rank of 8000 zat and sowar and was made the Amir ul Umara 19 20 He had success in driving Asaf Jah I away from the court to the Deccan 21 after which all power practically fell into the hands of the Mir Bakhshi Khan i Dauran 22 From this point until his death in 1739 Khan i Dauran retained his position at court whoever was in power 11 Khan i Dauran charged the next Wazir Roshan ud Daulah of corruption which resulted in the dismissal of his post 23 24 He only employed Indian Muslims as soldiers 25 Ashub says that his patronage of Hindustanis resulted in the decline of the descendants of Irani and Turani servants of Azam Shah 26 Khan i Dauran was the head of the Mughal army at the Battle of Karnal 27 During Nader Shah s invasion of the Mughal Empire Muhammad Shah sent out a request for troops throughout his lands and gathered a large force to face the invaders One of the Mughal nobles who answered the call of the Emperor was Khan Dowran being appointed commander in chief of the Mughal army upon Muhammad Shah s request After the arrival of a contingent of Mughal forces under the command of Sa adat Khan the rearguard of this reinforcing column came under attack from Persian skirmishes who looted the baggage Sa adat Khan set out in pursuit and was lured into battle nbsp Depiction of the Battle of Karnal After reports came into the Mughal camp Muhammad Shah strongly favoured aiding Sa adat Khan s troops but Khan Dowran advised caution stating any aid given to Sa adat khan would only involve a greater number of Mughal troops in Sa adat Khan s defeat After Muhammad Shah questioned his courage Khan Dowran donned his armour and set out to link up with Sa adat Khan Khan i Dauran declared that it was not the Indian style to abandon a friend even if he was imprudent 28 However Nader Shah sent out a number of troops to feign retreat and managed to separate Khan Dowran and Sa adat Khan and defeat each in detail Khan Dowran s soldiers were decimated and he himself was badly injured and died later that evening after being carried back to the Mughal camp by his retainers Although Khan i Dauran had set out with his cavalry to engage the enemy the rest of the army under the Nizam remained inert during battle who according to the Siyar ul Muhtakhrin probably hoped to take the places of these rivals at court if they perished The Nizam had held a grudge on Khan i Dauran as the latter had likened his function to the dance of an old monkey from the Deccan when the Nizam had come to court in his Deccan attire and made obeisance in the Mahratta fashion 29 The Mughal emperor himself also remained imbecile and stood like a wooden figure far away from the battlefield but more as a distant spectator of the battle rather than a participator in it 30 The wounded body of Khan i Dauran was brought back to the Mughal camp where he regained consciousness and said in a weak voice I have myself finished my own business Now you know and your work knows Never take the Emperor to Nadir nor conduct Nadir to Dihli but send away that evil from this point by any means you can devise He then relapsed into unconsciousness and died within two days 31 His brother Muzaffar Khan and elder son Muharram Khan were among the dead 32 His younger son Mirza Ashraf Samsam ud Daula who was made a captive by Nader Shah was given the title of Khan i Dauran and the post of Mir i Atish by Muhammad Shah and became the Mir Bakhshi of Alamgir II with the title of Amir ul Umara 33 34 Personality edit nbsp Scene from a Mushaira Much of Khan i Dauran s prestige may have been derived from his commanding presence A contemporary tells us that when he walked up the audience hall with a group of followers his head would be seen towering far above the others 11 Nawab Sadr ud Din Muhammad Khan Fa iz the first poet in Northern India who wrote a Diwan in Rekhta or Urdu in 1715 participated in Musha irahs and academic gatherings at the residence of Khan i Dauran and these he describes vividly in the Risala i Manazrat 35 Khan i Dauran was a man of smooth plausible speech with little knowledge of Persian Instead Khan i Dauran spoke an elegant Urdu ornamented with Persian phrases 36 Khan i Dauran thought it pretentious to use Persian in everyday conversation or at home it left one open to ridicule and criticism 37 Khan i Dauran also owned a big library He fixed a daily allowance for the famous Urdu poet of the time Mir Taqi Mir Once he was pleased with a Kashmiri poet Mullah Sata i and rewarded him with two thousand rupees But the latter requested the Mir Bakhshi for a mansab after which Khan i Dauran brought him to recite a qasidah in court for the Emperor The poet received a mansab jagir service in the province of Kashmir 38 See also editNader Shah Mughal Empire Muhammad ShahReferences edit Muḥammad Laṭif Saiyid khan bahadur 1891 History of the Panjab from the Remotest Antiquity to the Present Time Calcutta Central Press Company limited p 198 Ippolito Desider 2010 Mission to Tibet The Extraordinary Eighteenth Century Account of Father Ippolito Desideri S J p 497 ISBN 9780861716760 Govind Sakharam Sardesai 1948 New History of the Marathas The expansion of the Maratha power 1707 1772 Phoenix Publications p 146 Zahiruddin Malik 1973 A Mughal Statesman of the Eighteenth Century Khan i Dauran Mir Bakshi of Muhammad Shah 1719 1739 Aligarh Muslim University p 60 ISBN 9780210405444 Mohibbul Hasan 1982 Historians of Medieval India Meenakshi Prakashan p 159 Khan i Dauran an Indian born Muslim Zahiruddin Malik 1973 A Mughal Statesman of the Eighteenth Century Khan i Dauran Mir Bakshi of Muhammad Shah 1719 1739 Aligarh Muslim University p 4 ISBN 9780210405444 Syed H Askari 1983 Iqbalnama by an anonymous contemporary writer Janaki Prakashan p 236 Medieval India QuarterlyVolume 5 Department of History Aligarh Muslim University 1963 p 89 Sunanda Bhattacharya 1993 Role of Jats and Rajputs in the Mughal Court 1707 1740 the University of Michigan p 36 Not given 1969 Medieval India Volume 1 Aligarh Muslim University Department of History Centre of Advanced Study p 136 a b c William Irvine 1971 Later Mughal p 265 Satish Chandra 1959 Parties And Politics At The Mughal Court p 211 V D Mahajan 2020 Modern Indian History p 9 ISBN 9789352836192 Shama Mitra Chenoy 1998 Shahjahanabad a city of Delhi 1638 1857 Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers p 81 ISBN 9788121508025 William Irvine 1971 Later Mughal p 260 Satish Chandra 2005 Medieval India From Sultanat to the Mughals Part I Har Anand Publications p 478 ISBN 9788124110669 Zahiruddin Malik 1973 A Mughal Statesman Of The Eighteenth Century Aligarh Muslim University Zahiruddin Malik 1973 A Mughal Statesman of the Eighteenth Century Khan i Dauran Mir Bakshi of Muhammad Shah 1719 1739 p 106 ISBN 9780210405444 Zahiruddin Malik 1973 A Mughal Statesman of the Eighteenth Century Khan i Dauran Mir Bakshi of Muhammad Shah 1719 1739 Aligarh Muslim University p 7 ISBN 9780210405444 Journal Volumes 6 8 Uttar Pradesh Historical Society 1993 p 79 Zulfiqar Ahmed 1982 Punjab Sang E Meel Publications H G Keene 2001 the Turks in India University Press of the Pacific p 210 Maheshwar Dayal 1975 Rediscovering Delhi p 133 Praveen Kumar Complete Indian History for IAS Exam Highly Recommended for IAS PCS and other Competitive Exam Educreation Publishing p 267 Satish Chandra 1959 Parties And Politics At The Mughal Court p 211 Satish Chandra 1959 Parties And Politics At The Mughal Court p 246 Sunanda Bhattacharya 1993 Role of Jats and Rajputs in the Mughal Court 1707 1740 p 37 G S Cheema 2002 The Forgotten Mughals A History of the Later Emperors of the House of Babar 1707 1857 p 195 ISBN 9788173044168 Zulfiqar Ahmad 1982 Punjab the University of Michigan p 107 Jaswant Lal Mehta 2005 Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707 1813 p 148 William Irvine 1971 Later Mughal p 355 Zahiruddin Malik 1973 A Mughal Statesman Of The Eighteenth Century p 102 Muhammad Umar 1998 Muslim Society in Northern India During the Eighteenth Century the University of Michigan p 296 ISBN 9788121508308 Zahiruddin Malik 1973 A Mughal Statesman Of The Eighteenth Century p 102 Zahiruddin Malik 1977 The Reign Of Muhammad Shah 1919 1748 Stephen P Blake 2002 Shahjahanabad The Sovereign City in Mughal India 1639 1739 Cambridge University Press p 139 ISBN 9780521522991 Stephen P Blake 2002 Shahjahanabad The Sovereign City in Mughal India 1639 1739 Cambridge University Press p 134 ISBN 9780521522991 Zahiruddin Malik 1973 A Mughal Statesman Of The Eighteenth Century Aligarh Muslim University p 108 Bibliography editCust Edward Annals of the wars of the eighteenth century Gilbert amp Rivington Printers London 1862 Dupuy R Ernest and Trevor N Dupuy The Harper Encyclopedia of Military History 4th Ed HarperCollinsPublishers 1993 Axworthy Michael The Sword of Persia Nader Shah from Tribal Warrior to Conquering Tyrant I B Tauris 2009 External links editNadir Shah s invasion in India Battle of Karnal 1739 History of Haryana Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khan Dowran VII amp oldid 1215304272, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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