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Najib ad-Dawlah

Najib ad-Dawlah (Pashto: نجيب الدوله), also known as Najib Khan Yousafzai (Pashto: نجيب خان), was a Rohilla Yousafzai Afghan who earlier served as a Mughal serviceman but later deserted the cause of the Mughals and joined Ahmed Shah Abdali in 1757 in his attack on Delhi. He was also a House chief of Rohilkhand, and in the 1740s founded the city of Najibabad in Bijnor district, India. He was instrumental in winning the Third Battle of Panipat.

Najib ad-Dawlah
Nawab
Mir Bakshi
Mukhtar Khas
"Excellence of the State"
"Noble one of the State"
Commander-in-Chief of The Mughal Empire
Office holding1756 – 1759
SuccessorMirza Najaf Khan
PadishahAlamgir II
Years active1740 – 1770
(30 years)
BornEarly-18th Century
Died30 October 1770
ChildrenZabita Khan
Military career
AllegianceMughal Empire
(Mir Bakshi of
Alamgir II)
Mughal Empire
(in service of
Shah Alam II)
Service/branchMughal Army
Kingdom of Rohilkhand
RankIspahsalar, Plenipotentiary
Battles/warsMughal-Maratha Wars
Third Battle of Panipat
Capture of Agra Fort
The Third battle of Panipat, 13 January 1761, Najib ad-Dawlah and Shuja-ud-Daula, standing left to Ahmad Shah Durrani, shown on a brown horse.

He began his career in 1743 as an immigrant from the village Manri, Kohistan, as a soldier. He was an employee of Imad-ul-Mulk but later deserted the cause of the Mughals and joined Ahmed Shah Abdali in 1757 in his attack on Delhi. He was then appointed as Mir Bakshi of the Mughal emperor by Abdali. Later in his career he was known as Najib ad-Dawlah, Amir al-Umra, Shuja ad-Dawlah.[1] From 1757 to 1770, he was governor of Saharanpur, ruling over Dehradun. Many architectural relics of the period of Rohilla, the remains in Najibabad, were overseen by him, which he founded at the height of his career as a Mughal minister.[2]

Biography

Najib Khan belonged to the Umar Khel section of the Mandanr Yousafzai. He migrated from Manri village, now in the lower Kohistan district of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan.[3][4] He migrated in 1739 to join his uncle Bisharat Khan, who had settled with his families of Pakhtuns at Bisharatnagar, near Rampur.[citation needed] In 1749, Ali Mohammed Khan, who had captured most of Rohilkhand by 1740, gave Najib Khan a northern portion,[5] where he established the present day town of Najibabad, a state of Najibabad independent from other Rohilla tribes, and received the title, ‘Najib ad-Dawlah’.

 
Patthargarh fort outside Najibabad, built by Najib ad-Dawlah in 1755. 1814-15 painting.
 
Najibabad, c. 1784–94, the triple domed Jami Mosque and the entrance gate to the Rohilla palace

Imad-ul-Mulk appointed Najib ad- Dawlah as the governor of Saharanpur.[6] In 1757, Najib ad-Dawlah, who was then the governor of Saharanpur under Mughal Empire, invaded the city of Dehradun, with his army of Rohillas, and ruled the area for the next decade. His rule was known for its administration, and development of land resources, leading to widespread development and prosperity in the area, with emphasis on agriculture and irrigation. Many mango groves created during the area still exist today. Though after his death in 1770, the Maratha forces expelled the Rohillas from the Dun.[7]

Conflict with Marathas

Battle of Delhi (1757)

Ahmad Shah Abdali's invasion of 1757 left Najib in effective control of Delhi who was appointed to the post of 'Mir Bakshi'.[6] He had become the de facto ruler of Delhi, while the Mughal emperor was left with no actual power. Najib's religious precept, Mian Qutb Shah, who was not a rohilla by caste and was the ruler of Saharanpur, was in charge of the defence of the Red Fort of Delhi from the Marathas, while Najib commanded the artillery to stop the entry of the Marathas into the city.[8][9][10] His forces had to clash with the advancing Marathas in Delhi in the Battle of Delhi (1757). Delhi was captured by Marathas and he was allowed safe exit from Delhi.[11]

Third Battle of Panipat

In the Third battle of Panipat, during the Maratha conquests, he allied himself with the Durrani Empire led by Ahmad Shah Durrani (also known as Ahmad Shah Abdali,[12] against the Marathas. Najib Khan was clever enough to understand the changed realities after the Third battle of Panipat.[citation needed] His brilliant political acumen was used by Ahmed Shah Abdali to isolate Marathas & preventing them from getting even single ally during their conflict with Durrani's power.[citation needed] His refusal to sign treaty with Marathas, was the main cause of battle at Panipat. He provided, Ahmed Shah Abdali, with 40,000 Rohilla troops and 70 guns to the combined forces. He also convinced Shuja-ud-Daula, the Nawab of Oudh, to join Ahmad Shah Abdali's forces against the Marathas. In this battle, the Maratha's were defeated and as a consequence Rohilla Pakhtuns increased in power. However, the Marathas recovered in a short duration of 10 years and under Mahadji Schinde recaptured Delhi in 1771, reinstalling the weakened Mughal emperor Shah Alam II to the throne, under Maratha suzerainty.[citation needed]

After the war, he was made Mir Bakshi of Mughal emperor.[13] He had to become ruler of Delhi state with empty treasury & territory confining to boundaries of Delhi city.[citation needed]

Najib Khan was a Pashtun soldier of fortune; he attained the hand of the daughter of Dunde Khan, one of the chieftains of the Rohilkhand Pathans. Rewarded by this ruler with the charge of a district, now Bijnor, in the North-west corner of Rohilkhand, he had joined the cause of Safdarjung, when that minister occupied the country; but on the latter's disgrace had borne a part in the campaigns of Ghazi-ud-din. When the Vizier first conceived the project of attacking the government, he sent Najib in the command of a Mughal detachment to occupy the country, about Saharanpur, then known as the Bawani Mahal, which had formed the jagir of the Ex-Vazir Khan Khanan.[citation needed]

This territory thus became in its turn separated from the Empire and continued for two generations in the family of Najib. He ruled the dwindled Empire for nine years, and died a peaceful death, leaving his charge in an improved and strengthened condition, ready for its lawful monarch.[citation needed]

Administrator of Delhi

 
Najib had much to do with the return of Mughal power in India after Panipat; note: the territories of those loyal to the Great Mogul in (Green).

As the Administrator of Delhi and the imperial heartlands including Agra, Najib ad-Dawlah, was unsuccessful in halting the Jat uprisings led by Raja Suraj Mal. During one massive assault, the Jats and their leaders overran the Mughal garrison at Agra plundering the city and looting the two silver gates to the entrance of the famous Taj Mahal in 1764.[14]

Death

After protecting Rohilkhand, Delhi and Agra for nearly ten years as regent of the Mughal Empire he fell ill and died on 30 October 1770.[15]

Successor

After his death he was succeeded by his son Zabita Khan. Zabita Khan's step-brother, Kallu Khan was by the daughter of Dundi khan and Najib Khan.[16] His cemetery is still in present day, Najibabad, where the Patthargarh Fort still exists.

Destruction of his tomb by the Marathas

His son Zabita Khan was defeated by the Marathas,[17] led by Mahadji Sindhia (Shinde) in 1772 and the fort of Pathargarh was completely looted of horses, elephants, guns and other valuable things by the Marathas. This was done to avenge the deaths of Maratha warriors who fell in the battle of Delhi and Panipat, Marathas also destroyed the grave of Najib and scattered his bones.[18]

A few years later, in the subsequent Rohilla War, the Rohillas were attacked by Awadh with help from British East India Company forces. When Hafiz Rahmat Khan was killed, in April 1774, they were defeated, and Rohilkhand was plundered; and later, the Rohilla power east of the Ganges was ended, and the final treaty by which the territory was incorporated in Awadh was concluded at Lal Dhang. The District was ceded to the British by the Nawab of Awadh, Saadat Ali Khan II in 1801.[5]

In popular culture

See also

Further reading

  • Najib-ud-Daula at Dehli The Fall of the Moghul Empire of Hindustan, by H. G. Keene. 1887, Part II, Chapter II, 1764.
  • The Fall of the Mughal Empire by Jadunath Sarkar

☆ Azad Patan Qabayel by Allabakhash Yousafi. ☆ Yousafzai Sardar Awr Hukamraan, Prof.Bakhtiar, Arshad Publishers, Swabi, 2012.

References

  1. ^ History of Etawah Etawah Official website.
  2. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Najibabad" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 19 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 156..
  3. ^ Hamid Afaq Qureshi · (2003). The Mughals, the English & the Rulers of Awadh, from 1722 A.D. to 1856 A.D.: A Kaleidoscopic Study. p. 51. He belonged to the Umar Khail Yusufzai tribe of the Afghans and was a resident of Manri.
  4. ^ Nuruddin Husain (1952). An Account of Najibuddaulah. p. LIII. in the year 1708 in the village of Manri about 25 kos from Peshawar.
  5. ^ a b History of Bijnor District The Imperial Gazetteer of India, 1909, v. 8, p. 194-195.
  6. ^ a b Third Battle of Panipat by Abhas Verma ISBN 9788180903397 Bharatiya Kala Prakashan
  7. ^ [1] p. 57
  8. ^ Jaswant Lal Mehta (2005). Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707-1813. p. 230.
  9. ^ Hari Ram Gupta (1999). History of the Sikhs. p. 339.
  10. ^ Hari Ram Gupta (1961). Marathas and Panipat. Panjab University. Qutb Shah Rohilla, Najib's religious precept
  11. ^ Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707-1813
  12. ^ Najibabad Tehsil & Town The Imperial Gazetteer of India, 1909, v. 18, p. 334.
  13. ^ History of Modern India, 1707 A. D. to 2000 A. D
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 October 1999.
  15. ^ Rule of Shah Alam, 1759-1806 The Imperial Gazetteer of India, 1909, v. 2, p. 411.
  16. ^ Altaf Ali Brelvi (1966). Life of Hafiz Rahmat Khan. p. 174.
  17. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bijnor" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 928.
  18. ^ Rathod, N. G. (1994). The Great Maratha Mahadaji Scindia. ISBN 9788185431529.

najib, dawlah, pashto, نجيب, الدوله, also, known, najib, khan, yousafzai, pashto, نجيب, خان, rohilla, yousafzai, afghan, earlier, served, mughal, serviceman, later, deserted, cause, mughals, joined, ahmed, shah, abdali, 1757, attack, delhi, also, house, chief,. Najib ad Dawlah Pashto نجيب الدوله also known as Najib Khan Yousafzai Pashto نجيب خان was a Rohilla Yousafzai Afghan who earlier served as a Mughal serviceman but later deserted the cause of the Mughals and joined Ahmed Shah Abdali in 1757 in his attack on Delhi He was also a House chief of Rohilkhand and in the 1740s founded the city of Najibabad in Bijnor district India He was instrumental in winning the Third Battle of Panipat Najib ad DawlahNawab Mir Bakshi Mukhtar Khas Excellence of the State Noble one of the State Commander in Chief of The Mughal EmpireOffice holding1756 1759SuccessorMirza Najaf KhanPadishahAlamgir IIYears active1740 1770 30 years BornEarly 18th CenturyDied30 October 1770ChildrenZabita KhanMilitary careerAllegianceMughal Empire Mir Bakshi of Alamgir II Mughal Empire in service ofShah Alam II Service wbr branchMughal Army Kingdom of RohilkhandRankIspahsalar PlenipotentiaryBattles warsMughal Maratha Wars Third Battle of Panipat Capture of Agra FortThe Third battle of Panipat 13 January 1761 Najib ad Dawlah and Shuja ud Daula standing left to Ahmad Shah Durrani shown on a brown horse He began his career in 1743 as an immigrant from the village Manri Kohistan as a soldier He was an employee of Imad ul Mulk but later deserted the cause of the Mughals and joined Ahmed Shah Abdali in 1757 in his attack on Delhi He was then appointed as Mir Bakshi of the Mughal emperor by Abdali Later in his career he was known as Najib ad Dawlah Amir al Umra Shuja ad Dawlah 1 From 1757 to 1770 he was governor of Saharanpur ruling over Dehradun Many architectural relics of the period of Rohilla the remains in Najibabad were overseen by him which he founded at the height of his career as a Mughal minister 2 Contents 1 Biography 2 Conflict with Marathas 2 1 Battle of Delhi 1757 2 2 Third Battle of Panipat 2 3 Administrator of Delhi 3 Death 4 Successor 5 Destruction of his tomb by the Marathas 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 Further reading 9 ReferencesBiography EditNajib Khan belonged to the Umar Khel section of the Mandanr Yousafzai He migrated from Manri village now in the lower Kohistan district of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan 3 4 He migrated in 1739 to join his uncle Bisharat Khan who had settled with his families of Pakhtuns at Bisharatnagar near Rampur citation needed In 1749 Ali Mohammed Khan who had captured most of Rohilkhand by 1740 gave Najib Khan a northern portion 5 where he established the present day town of Najibabad a state of Najibabad independent from other Rohilla tribes and received the title Najib ad Dawlah Patthargarh fort outside Najibabad built by Najib ad Dawlah in 1755 1814 15 painting Najibabad c 1784 94 the triple domed Jami Mosque and the entrance gate to the Rohilla palace Imad ul Mulk appointed Najib ad Dawlah as the governor of Saharanpur 6 In 1757 Najib ad Dawlah who was then the governor of Saharanpur under Mughal Empire invaded the city of Dehradun with his army of Rohillas and ruled the area for the next decade His rule was known for its administration and development of land resources leading to widespread development and prosperity in the area with emphasis on agriculture and irrigation Many mango groves created during the area still exist today Though after his death in 1770 the Maratha forces expelled the Rohillas from the Dun 7 Conflict with Marathas EditBattle of Delhi 1757 Edit Ahmad Shah Abdali s invasion of 1757 left Najib in effective control of Delhi who was appointed to the post of Mir Bakshi 6 He had become the de facto ruler of Delhi while the Mughal emperor was left with no actual power Najib s religious precept Mian Qutb Shah who was not a rohilla by caste and was the ruler of Saharanpur was in charge of the defence of the Red Fort of Delhi from the Marathas while Najib commanded the artillery to stop the entry of the Marathas into the city 8 9 10 His forces had to clash with the advancing Marathas in Delhi in the Battle of Delhi 1757 Delhi was captured by Marathas and he was allowed safe exit from Delhi 11 Third Battle of Panipat Edit In the Third battle of Panipat during the Maratha conquests he allied himself with the Durrani Empire led by Ahmad Shah Durrani also known as Ahmad Shah Abdali 12 against the Marathas Najib Khan was clever enough to understand the changed realities after the Third battle of Panipat citation needed His brilliant political acumen was used by Ahmed Shah Abdali to isolate Marathas amp preventing them from getting even single ally during their conflict with Durrani s power citation needed His refusal to sign treaty with Marathas was the main cause of battle at Panipat He provided Ahmed Shah Abdali with 40 000 Rohilla troops and 70 guns to the combined forces He also convinced Shuja ud Daula the Nawab of Oudh to join Ahmad Shah Abdali s forces against the Marathas In this battle the Maratha s were defeated and as a consequence Rohilla Pakhtuns increased in power However the Marathas recovered in a short duration of 10 years and under Mahadji Schinde recaptured Delhi in 1771 reinstalling the weakened Mughal emperor Shah Alam II to the throne under Maratha suzerainty citation needed After the war he was made Mir Bakshi of Mughal emperor 13 He had to become ruler of Delhi state with empty treasury amp territory confining to boundaries of Delhi city citation needed Najib Khan was a Pashtun soldier of fortune he attained the hand of the daughter of Dunde Khan one of the chieftains of the Rohilkhand Pathans Rewarded by this ruler with the charge of a district now Bijnor in the North west corner of Rohilkhand he had joined the cause of Safdarjung when that minister occupied the country but on the latter s disgrace had borne a part in the campaigns of Ghazi ud din When the Vizier first conceived the project of attacking the government he sent Najib in the command of a Mughal detachment to occupy the country about Saharanpur then known as the Bawani Mahal which had formed the jagir of the Ex Vazir Khan Khanan citation needed This territory thus became in its turn separated from the Empire and continued for two generations in the family of Najib He ruled the dwindled Empire for nine years and died a peaceful death leaving his charge in an improved and strengthened condition ready for its lawful monarch citation needed Administrator of Delhi Edit Main article Capture of Agra Fort Najib had much to do with the return of Mughal power in India after Panipat note the territories of those loyal to the Great Mogul in Green As the Administrator of Delhi and the imperial heartlands including Agra Najib ad Dawlah was unsuccessful in halting the Jat uprisings led by Raja Suraj Mal During one massive assault the Jats and their leaders overran the Mughal garrison at Agra plundering the city and looting the two silver gates to the entrance of the famous Taj Mahal in 1764 14 Death EditAfter protecting Rohilkhand Delhi and Agra for nearly ten years as regent of the Mughal Empire he fell ill and died on 30 October 1770 15 Successor EditAfter his death he was succeeded by his son Zabita Khan Zabita Khan s step brother Kallu Khan was by the daughter of Dundi khan and Najib Khan 16 His cemetery is still in present day Najibabad where the Patthargarh Fort still exists Destruction of his tomb by the Marathas EditHis son Zabita Khan was defeated by the Marathas 17 led by Mahadji Sindhia Shinde in 1772 and the fort of Pathargarh was completely looted of horses elephants guns and other valuable things by the Marathas This was done to avenge the deaths of Maratha warriors who fell in the battle of Delhi and Panipat Marathas also destroyed the grave of Najib and scattered his bones 18 A few years later in the subsequent Rohilla War the Rohillas were attacked by Awadh with help from British East India Company forces When Hafiz Rahmat Khan was killed in April 1774 they were defeated and Rohilkhand was plundered and later the Rohilla power east of the Ganges was ended and the final treaty by which the territory was incorporated in Awadh was concluded at Lal Dhang The District was ceded to the British by the Nawab of Awadh Saadat Ali Khan II in 1801 5 In popular culture EditIn the 1994 Hindi TV series The Great Maratha Najib s character was portrayed by Irrfan Khan In the 2019 Bollywood film Panipat Najib portrayed by Mantra appears as one of the primary antagonists See also EditMughal Empire Shah Alam II Ahmad Shah DurraniFurther reading EditNajib ud Daula at Dehli The Fall of the Moghul Empire of Hindustan by H G Keene 1887 Part II Chapter II 1764 The Fall of the Mughal Empire by Jadunath Sarkar Azad Patan Qabayel by Allabakhash Yousafi Yousafzai Sardar Awr Hukamraan Prof Bakhtiar Arshad Publishers Swabi 2012 References Edit History of Etawah Etawah Official website Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Najibabad Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 19 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 156 Hamid Afaq Qureshi 2003 The Mughals the English amp the Rulers of Awadh from 1722 A D to 1856 A D A Kaleidoscopic Study p 51 He belonged to the Umar Khail Yusufzai tribe of the Afghans and was a resident of Manri Nuruddin Husain 1952 An Account of Najibuddaulah p LIII in the year 1708 in the village of Manri about 25 kos from Peshawar a b History of Bijnor District The Imperial Gazetteer of India 1909 v 8 p 194 195 a b Third Battle of Panipat by Abhas Verma ISBN 9788180903397 Bharatiya Kala Prakashan 1 p 57 Jaswant Lal Mehta 2005 Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707 1813 p 230 Hari Ram Gupta 1999 History of the Sikhs p 339 Hari Ram Gupta 1961 Marathas and Panipat Panjab University Qutb Shah Rohilla Najib s religious precept Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707 1813 Najibabad Tehsil amp Town The Imperial Gazetteer of India 1909 v 18 p 334 History of Modern India 1707 A D to 2000 A D MANAS UCLA Social Sciences Computing Archived from the original on 6 October 1999 Rule of Shah Alam 1759 1806 The Imperial Gazetteer of India 1909 v 2 p 411 Altaf Ali Brelvi 1966 Life of Hafiz Rahmat Khan p 174 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Bijnor Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 928 Rathod N G 1994 The Great Maratha Mahadaji Scindia ISBN 9788185431529 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Najib ad Dawlah amp oldid 1150210989, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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