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Samma dynasty

Coordinates: 24°44′46.02″N 67°55′27.61″E / 24.7461167°N 67.9243361°E / 24.7461167; 67.9243361

The Samma dynasty (Sindhi: سمن جو راڄ, lit.'Rule of the Sammas') was a medieval Sindhi[3][4][5] dynasty in the Indian subcontinent, that ruled Sindh, as well as parts of Kutch, Punjab and Balochistan from c. 1351 to c. 1524 CE, with their capital at Thatta known as Sammanagar[6] in modern day Sindh, Pakistan; before being replaced by the Arghun dynasty.

Samma dynasty
سما راڄ
1336–1524
Flag
Location of the Sammas, and main South Asian polities in 1400 CE[1]
CapitalThatta
Common languagesSindhiKutchiGujarati in HalarArabic (liturgical language)
Religion
IslamHinduism[2][3]
GovernmentMonarchy
Jam 
History 
• Samma dynasty begins
1336
• Samma dynasty ends
1524
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofPakistan
India[4]

The Samma dynasty has left its mark in Sindh with structures including the necropolis of and royalties in Thatta.[3][7]

Background

The Sindh is a fertile valley with a sub-tropical climate watered by the Indus river, the location of some of the oldest civilizations in the world, with settlements dating back to 7000 BCE. Always a prize possession, it has been controlled by many different empires, alternating with periods of independence. Before the Samma dynasty took control, the Sindh was ruled by the Soomra, first as nominal vassals of the Fatimid Caliphate of Cairo, later as vassals of the Turkic rulers of the Delhi Sultanate, which reached its greatest extent under Muhammad bin Tughluq (c. 1300–1351).

The Sammas, gained control of Thatta in the southern Sindh from the Sumras around 1335, and expanded their territory northward to Bhakkar and beyond. In 1361-62, Firuz Shah Tughlaq of Delhi Sultanate, invaded Sindh and again brought Sammas under his suzerainty. Throughout the period of the Samma dynasty, Turkic groups were pushing down from the northwest, including those led by Timur (Tamerlane) who sacked Delhi in 1398. Sindh remained under control of Khizr Khan, founder of Sayyid dynasty, who was an who was an appointed governor of Sindh and Multan provinces by Timur on his behalf. Sammas remained under Sayyid dynasty till 1451. Later Sammas were finally defeated by the Arghun dynasty, who had been displaced from Kandahar in Afghanistan by Babur, in 1519–1520.[citation needed]

Beginnings

 
Tomb of Bibi Jawindi, built during the 15th century at Uch Sharif

Information about the early years of the Samma dynasty is very sketchy. Tribes such as Samma were regarded as a sub-division of Jats or on a par with the Jats when Muslims first arrived in Sindh.[8] Later sources claim them to be a Rajput clan,[9] and we know from Ibn Battuta that in 1333 the Sammas were in rebellion, led by the founder of the dynasty, Jam Tamachi Unar. The Sammas overthrew the Soomras soon after 1335 and the last Soomra ruler took shelter with the governor of Gujarat, under the protection of Muhammad bin Tughluq, the sultan of Delhi. Mohammad bin Tughlaq made an expedition against Sindh in 1351 and died at Sondha, possibly in an attempt to restore the Soomras. With this, the Sammas became independent. The next sultan, Firuz Shah Tughlaq attacked Sindh in 1365 and 1367, unsuccessfully, but with reinforcements from Delhi he later obtained Banbhiniyo's surrender. The Samma dynasty overtook the Sumra dynasty and ruled Sindh during 1365–1521. Around that time, the Sindhi Swarankar community returned from Kutch to their home towns in Sindh, and some settled empty land on the banks of Sindhu River near Dadu, Sindh. By the end of year 1500, nearly the entire Sindhi Swarankar community had returned to Sindh. This period marks the beginning of Sufistic thought and teachings in Sindh.

For a period the Sammas were therefore subject to Delhi again. Later, as the Sultanate of Delhi collapsed they became fully independent.[10] During most of period of Samma rule, the Sindh was politically and economically tied to the Gujarat Sultanate, with occasional periods of friction. Coins struck by the Samma dynasty show the titles "Sultan" and "Shah" as well as "Jam", the Jadeja rulers of western Gujarat also part of Samma tribe and directly descended from Jam Unar, the first Samma sultan of Sindh.[11] Sandhai Muslims are Samma of Sindh. Even the Chudasama Rajputs of Gujarat are also part of Samma tribe, who are still Hindu, and distributed in Junagadh District and Bhal Region of Gujarat.[12][13]

History

Sultans of Sindh
Samma Dynasty
"History of Delhi Sultanate" by M. H. Syed
  1. Jam Unar (1336-1339)
  2. Jam Junan (1339-1352)
  3. Jam Banhabina (1352-1367)
  4. Jam Tamachi (1367-1379)
  5. Jam Salahuddin (1379-1389)
  6. Jam Nizamuddin I (1389-1391)
  7. Jam Ali Sher (1391-1398)
  8. Jam Karn (1398)
  9. Jam Fath Khan (1398-1414)
  10. Jam Tughluq (1414-1442)
  11. Jam Mubarak (1442)
  12. Jam Sikandar (1442-1444)
  13. Jam Raidhan (1444-1453)
  14. Jam Sanjar (1453-1461)
  15. Jam Nizamuddin II (1461-1508)
  16. Jam Feruzudin (1508-1527)

In chachnama Raja Dahir's Wazír Siyákar address the Lákháhs and the Sammáhs as Lohana.[14] According to André Wink, both Lohana and Samma were originally sub-division of Jats.[8] The Samma dynasty took the title "Jam", the equivalent of "King" or "Sultan", because they claimed to be descended from Jamshid.[15]

The main sources of information on the Samma dynasty are Nizammud-din, Abu-'l-Fazl, Firishta and Mir Ma'sum, all lacking in detail, and with conflicting information. A plausible reconstruction of the chronology is given in the History of Delhi Sultanate by M. H. Syed, at right.[15]

Jam Unar

Jam Unar was the founder of Samma dynasty mentioned by Ibn Battuta, the famous traveller from North Africa (Ibn Battuta visited Sindh in 1333, and saw Samma's rebellion against Delhi government[10]). Jam Unar, the Samma chief, taking advantage of the strained relation between the Soomra and the Sultanate of Delhi, defeated the last Soomra ruler, son of Dodo, and established Samma rule.[citation needed]

Jam Salahuddin

Jám Saláhuddìn bin Jám Tamáchí was the successor of his father Jám Tamáchí. He put down revolts in some parts of the country, by sending forces in those directions and punished the ringleaders. Some of these unruly bands fled to Kachh, to which place Jám Saláhuddín pursued them, and in every engagement that took place he defeated them and ultimately subjugated them. He died after a reign of 11 years.[citation needed]

Jam Ali Sher

Jám Alí Sher bin Jám Tamáchí ruled the country very discreetly. Tamáchí's other sons Sikandar and Karn, and Fateh Khán son of Sikandar, who had brought ruin on the last Jám, were now conspiring against Jám Alísher. They were therefore looking for an opportunity to fall upon him while he was out enjoying the moonlight as usual. They spent their time in the forests in the vicinity of the town. One Friday night, on the 13th of the lunar month, they took a band of cut-throats with them, and with naked swords attacked Jám Alísher who had come out in a boat to enjoy the moonlight on the quiet surface of the river and was returning home. They killed him, and red-handed they ran to the city, where the people had no help for it but to place one of them, Karan, on the vacant throne. The reign of Jám Alí Sher lasted for seven years.[citation needed]

Jam Fateh Khan bin Jam Sikandar

Jám Karan was succeeded by his nephew Jám Fateh Khán bin Sikandar. He ruled quietly for some time and gave satisfaction to the people in general.[citation needed]

About this time, Mirza Pir Muhammad one of Amir Timur’s grandsons came to Multan and conquered that town and Uch. As he made a long stay there, most of the horses with him died of a disease and his horsemen were obliged to move about as foot-soldiers. When Amir Timur heard of this, he sent 30,000 horses from his own stables to his grandson to enable him to extend his conquests. Pir Muhammad, being thus equipped, attacked those of the zamindars who had threatened to do him harm and destroyed their household property. He then sent a messenger to Bakhar calling the chief men of the place to come and pay respects to him. But these men fearing his vengeance left the place in a body and went to Jesalmer. Only one solitary person, Sayyed Abulghais, one of the pious Sayyeds of the place, went to visit the Mirzá. He interceded for his town-people in the name of his great grandfather, the Prophet, and the Mirzá accepted his intercession.[citation needed]

Mirzá Pír Muhammad soon went to Delhi, which place he took and where he was crowned as king. Multan remained in the hands of Langáhs, and Sind in those of the Sammah rulers as before.

Jam Taghlak

 
Tomb Jam Mubarak Khan, a Samma Prince, at the Makli Necropolis

Jám Taghlak was fond of hunting and left his brothers to administer the affairs of state at Sehwán and Bakhar. In his reign some Balóch raised the standard of revolt in the outskirts of Bakhar, but Jám Taghlak marched in the direction and punished their ring-leaders and appointed an outpost in each parganah to prevent any future rebellion of the kind. He died after a reign of 28 years.

Jam Sikandar

Jám Sikandar bin Jám Taghlak was a minor when he succeeded his father to the throne. The governors of Sehwán and Bakhar shook off their yoke, and prepared to take offensive steps. Jám Sikandar was obliged to march out from Tattá to Bakhar. When he came as far as Nasarpúr, a man by name Mubárak, who during the last Jám's reign had made himself celebrated for acts of bravery, proclaimed himself king under the name of Jám Mubárak. But as the people were not in league with him, he was driven away within 3 days and information sent to Jám Sikandar, who made peace with his opponents and hastened to Tattá. After a year and a half, he died.

Jam Nizamuddin I

After Jam Salahuddin's death, the nobles of the state put his son Jám Nizámuddín I bin Jám Saláhuddín on the throne. Jam Nizamuddin ruled for only a few months. His first act of kindness was the release of his cousins Sikandar, Karn and Baháuddín and Ámar, who had been placed in captivity by the advice of the ministers. He appointed every one of them as an officer to discharge administrative duties in different places, while he himself remained in the capital, superintending the work done by them and other officials in different quarters of the country.

Before long, however, his cousins, very ungratefully made a conspiracy among themselves and stealthily coming to the capital attempted to seize him. But Jám Saláhuddín learning their intention in time, left the place at the dead of night with a handful of men and made his escape to Gujrat. In the morning, men were sent after him, but before any information could be brought about him, the people summoned Alísher, son of Jám Tamáchí, who was living in obscurity, and raised him to the throne. Meanwhile, Jám Nizámuddín also died in his flight and his cousins too being disappointed in every thing, lived roving lives.

Jam Sanjar

On Ráinah's death, Sanjar (Radhan) Sadr al-Din became the Jám of Sind. He is said to have been a very handsome person, and on that account was constantly attended by a large number of persons, who took pleasure in remaining in his company. It is believed that before his coming to the throne, a pious fakír had been very fond of him; that one day Sanjar informed him that he had a very strong desire to become the king of Tattá though it should be for not more than 8 days; and that the fakír had given him his blessings, telling him that he would be the king of the place for 8 years.

Jám Sanjar ruled the country very wisely. Under no ruler before this had the people of Sind enjoyed such ease of mind. He was very fond of the company of the learned and the pious. Every Friday he used to distribute charities and had fixed periodical allowances for those who deserved the same. He increased the pay of responsible officers. One Kází Maarúf, who had been appointed by the late rulers to be the Kází of Bakhar, was in the habit of receiving bribes from the plaintiffs as well as from the defendants. When this fact came to the notice of Jám Sanjar, he sent for the Kází and asked him about it. The Kází admitted the whole thing. "Yes", said he, "I do demand something from the plaintiffs as well as the defendants, and I am anxious to get something from the witnesses too, but before the case closes, they go away and I am disappointed in that". Jám Sanjar could not help laughing at this. The Kází continued: "I work in the court for the whole day and my wife and children die of hunger at home, because I get very little pay". Jám Sanjar increased his pay and issued general orders for the increase of every government post of importance.

Jam Nizamuddin II

 
Jam Nizamuddin II's tomb features a jharoka that displays Gujarati influences.[16]

Jám Nizámuddín II (866–914 AH, 1461–1508 AD) was the most famous Sultan of the Samma or Jamot dynasty,[17] which ruled in Sindh and parts of Punjab and Balochistan (region) from 1351–1551 CE. He was known by the nickname of Jám Nindó. His capital was at Thatta in modern Pakistan. The Samma Sultanate reached the height of its power during the reign of Jam Nizamuddin II, who is still recalled as a hero, and his rule as a golden age.

Shortly after his accession, he went with a large force to Bhakkar, where he spent about a year, during which time he extirpated the freebooters and robbers who annoyed the people in that part of the country. After that, for a period of forty-eight years he reigned at Tatta with absolute power.

In the last part of Jám Nindó's reign, after 1490 CE, a Mughul army under Shah Beg Arghun came from Kandahar and fell upon many villages of Chundooha and Sideejuh, invading the town of Ágrí, Ohándukah, Sibi Sindichah and Kót Máchián. Jám Nindó sent a large army under his Vazier Darya Khan,[18] which, arriving at the village known by the name of Duruh-i-Kureeb, also known as Joolow Geer or Halúkhar near Sibi, defeated the Mughuls in a pitched battle. Sháh Beg Arghun's brother Abú Muhammad Mirzá was killed in the battle, and the Mughuls fled back to Kandahár, never to return during the reign of Jám Nizámuddín.[19]

Jam Nizamuddin's death was followed by a war of succession between the cousins Jam Feroz and Jam Salahuddin.

Jam Feruzudin

 
Coin during the rule of Jam Feraz

Jam Feruz bin Jam Nizam was the last ruler of the Samma dynasty of Sindh. Jám Feróz succeeded his father Jám Nizámuddín at a minor age. Jám Feróz was a young man, and as from the commencement the management of the state affairs was in the hands of his guardian he spent his time in his harem and seldom went out. But he was fearful of his ministers.

As a precautionary measure he enlisted in his service Kíbak Arghún and a large number of men belonging to the tribes of Mughuls, who had during his reign, left Sháhbeg Arghún and came to Tattá. Jám Feróz gave them the quarter of the town, called Mughal-Wárah to live in. He secretly flattered himself for his policy in securing the services of intrepid men to check Daryá Khán, but he never for a minute imagined what ruin these very men were destined to bring on him. For, it was through some of these men that Sháhbeg Arghún was induced to invade and conquer Sind in 926 AH (1519 AD) at the Battle of Fatehpur (1519), which resulted in the displacement of the Sammah dynasty of rulers by that of Arghún.

Legacy

 
Makli Necropolis features several clusters of elaborate funerary monuments dating between the 14th and 18th centuries. The site rose to prominence as a major funerary site during under the rule of the Samma dynasty, who had made their capital near Thatta.[20]

The rise of Thatta as an important commercial and cultural centre was directly related to Jam Ninda's patronage and policies. At the time the Portuguese took control of the trading centre of Hormuz in 1514 CE,[21] trade from the Sindh accounted for nearly 10% of their customs revenue, and they described Thatta as one of the richest cities in the world. Thatta's prosperity was based partly on its own high-quality cotton and silk textile industry, partly on export of goods from further inland in the Punjab and northern India. However, the trade declined when the Mughals took over. Later, due to silting of the main Indus channel, Thatta no longer functioned as a port.[22]

The Samma civilization contributed significantly to the evolution of the Indo-Islamic architectural style. Thatta is famous for its necropolis, which covers 10 square km on the Makli Hill. It assumed its quasi-sacred character during Jam Ninda's rule. Every year thousands perform pilgrimage to this site to commemorate the saints buried here. The graves testify to a long period when Thatta was a thriving center of trade, religion and scholarly pursuits.[23]

External links

Preceded by Monarchy
1336–1524
Succeeded by

See also

References

  1. ^ Schwartzberg, Joseph E. (1978). A Historical atlas of South Asia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 39, 147. ISBN 0226742210.
  2. ^ P. M. Holt; Ann K. S. Lambton; Bernard Lewis (21 April 1977). The Cambridge History of Islam: Volume 2A, The Indian Sub-Continent, South-East Asia, Africa and the Muslim West. Cambridge University Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-521-29137-8.
  3. ^ a b c Census Organization (Pakistan); Abdul Latif (1976). Population Census of Pakistan, 1972: Larkana. Manager of Publications.
  4. ^ a b U. M. Chokshi; M. R. Trivedi (1989). Gujarat State Gazetteer. Director, Government Print., Stationery and Publications, Gujarat State. p. 274. It was the conquest of Kutch by the Sindhi tribe of Sama Rajputs that marked the emergence of Kutch as a separate kingdom in the 14th century.
  5. ^ Rapson, Edward James; Haig, Sir Wolseley; Burn, Sir Richard; Dodwell, Henry (1965). The Cambridge History of India: Turks and Afghans, edited by W. Haig. Chand. p. 518.
  6. ^ Hughes, Albert William (1874). A Gazetteer of the Province of Sindh. G. Bell and Sons.
  7. ^ Population Census of Pakistan, 1972: Jacobabad
  8. ^ a b Wink, A. (2002). Al-Hind: The Making of the Indo-Islamic World. Early medieval India and the expansion of Islam 7th-11th centuries. Vol. 1. Brill Academic Publishers. p. 158-159. ISBN 978-0-391-04125-7. Retrieved 2022-08-02. The Lohana, Lakha, Samma, Sahtah, Chand(Channa)....which appear, at least in the Muslim sources, to be subdivisions of the Jats or to be put on a par with the Jats. Some of these tribes were dominating others, but they all, as a matter of course, suffered certain discriminatory measures (cf. infra) under both the Rai and Brahman dynasties and the Arabs. The territories of the Lohana, Lakha and Samma are also described as separate jurisdictions under the governor of Brahmanabad in the pre-Muslim era. Whatever may be the original distinction between Samma and Jat - the two tribes from which the majority of Sindhis descend - , in later times it became completely blurred and the same people may be classed as Samma and Jat. The Samma residential area however was probably restricted to Brahmanabad and its immediate neighbourhood.
  9. ^ Ansari, Sarah F. D. (1992-01-31). Sufi Saints and State Power: The Pirs of Sind, 1843-1947. Cambridge University Press. p. 30. ISBN 978-0-521-40530-0. One of the most well-known all-India examples of Suhrawardi intervention in political affairs concerned Sind. Between 1058 and 1520, control of the province was effectively delegated by the Delhi Sultanates first to the Soomros and later to the Sammas. Both were local Rajput tribes converted to Islam whose chiefs were disciples of Suhrawardi saints at Uch and Multan.
  10. ^ a b Directions in the History and Archaeology of Sindh by M. H. Panhwar
  11. ^ Anjali H. Desai (2007). India Guide Gujarat. India Guide Publications. pp. 311–. ISBN 978-0-9789517-0-2.
  12. ^ Kumar Suresh Singh; Rajendra Behari Lal; Anthropological Survey of India (2003). Gujarat, Part 1 Gujarat, Anthropological Survey of India. Popular Prakashan. pp. 1174–1175. ISBN 9788179911044.
  13. ^ People of India Gujarat Volume XXII Part One edited by R.B Lal, S.V Padmanabham & A Mohideen page 1174-75 Popular Prakashan
  14. ^ The Chachnamah An Ancient History Of Sindh by Kalichbeg. 1900. p. 170.
  15. ^ a b [History of Delhi Sultanate by M.H. Syed (p240), 2005 ISBN 978-8-12611-830-4]
  16. ^ Ephrat, Daphna; Wolper, Ethel Sara; Pinto, Paulo G. (7 December 2020). Saintly Spheres and Islamic Landscapes: Emplacements of Spiritual Power across Time and Place. BRILL. p. 276. ISBN 978-90-04-44427-0.
  17. ^
  18. ^ The environments that led to the rise and fall of the Kalhoras
  19. ^ A HISTORY OF SIND, EMBRACING THE PERIOD FROM A.D. 710 TO A.D. 1590 by MAHOMED MASOOM;
  20. ^ Qureshi, Urooj (8 August 2014). "In Pakistan, imposing tombs that few have seen". BBC Travel. Retrieved 17 July 2017.
  21. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Hormuz" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 694.
  22. ^ [The Global World of Indian Merchants, 1750-1947: Traders of Sind from Bukhara to Panama by Claude Markovits, 2000 ISBN 978-0-521-62285-1]
  23. ^ Archnet.org: Thattah 2012-06-06 at the Wayback Machine

Sources

  • This article incorporates text from the work A History of Sind by Mirza Kalichbeg Fredunbeg, a publication now in the public domain.
  • Islamic culture - Page 429, by Islamic Culture Board
  • The History and Culture of the Indian People - Page 224, by Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Bhāratīya Itihāsa Samiti
  • Searchlights on Baloches and Balochistan, by Mir Khuda Bakhsh Marri
  • The Delhi Sultanate, by Kanaiyalal Maneklal Munshi, Ramesh Chandra Majumdar, Asoke Kumar Majumdar, A. D. Pusalker
  • Babar, by Radhey Shyam
  • Indo-Arab relations: an English rendering of Arab oʾ Hind ke taʾllugat, by Syed Sulaiman Nadvi, Sayyid Sulaimān Nadvī, M. Salahuddin
  • Muslim Kingship in India, by Nagendra Kumar Singh
  • The Indus Delta country: a memoir, chiefly on its ancient geography and history, by Malcolm Robert Haig
  • The Samma kingdom of Sindh: historical studies, by G̲h̲ulāmu Muḥammadu Lākho, University of Sind. Institute of Sindology

External links

  •   Media related to Samma dynasty at Wikimedia Commons

samma, dynasty, other, uses, samma, coordinates, 7461167, 9243361, 7461167, 9243361, sindhi, سمن, جو, راڄ, rule, sammas, medieval, sindhi, dynasty, indian, subcontinent, that, ruled, sindh, well, parts, kutch, punjab, balochistan, from, 1351, 1524, with, their. For other uses see Samma Coordinates 24 44 46 02 N 67 55 27 61 E 24 7461167 N 67 9243361 E 24 7461167 67 9243361 The Samma dynasty Sindhi سمن جو راڄ lit Rule of the Sammas was a medieval Sindhi 3 4 5 dynasty in the Indian subcontinent that ruled Sindh as well as parts of Kutch Punjab and Balochistan from c 1351 to c 1524 CE with their capital at Thatta known as Sammanagar 6 in modern day Sindh Pakistan before being replaced by the Arghun dynasty Samma dynastyسما راڄ1336 1524FlagSouth Asia1400 CEDELHISULTANATE TUGHLAQS TIMURIDEMPIRESHAH MIRSULTANATEPHAGMODRUPASSAMMASMARYULGUGEKUMAONKALMATGUJARATGOVERNORATEBAHMANISULTANATEKHANDESHSULTANATETOMARASTRIPWAEASTERNGANGASCHEROSNAGVANSISAHOMKAMATASCHUTIABENGALSULTANATEVIJAYANAGARAEMPIREREDDIMALWASULTANATEJAISALMERMEWARMARWARKARAULIAMBERSIROHIMEWATJAUNPURSULTANATEGONDWANA Location of the Sammas and main South Asian polities in 1400 CE 1 CapitalThattaCommon languagesSindhi Kutchi Gujarati in Halar Arabic liturgical language ReligionIslam Hinduism 2 3 GovernmentMonarchyJam History Samma dynasty begins1336 Samma dynasty ends1524Preceded by Succeeded bySoomra dynasty Arghun dynastyToday part ofPakistanIndia 4 The Samma dynasty has left its mark in Sindh with structures including the necropolis of and royalties in Thatta 3 7 Contents 1 Background 2 Beginnings 3 History 3 1 Jam Unar 3 2 Jam Salahuddin 3 3 Jam Ali Sher 3 4 Jam Fateh Khan bin Jam Sikandar 3 5 Jam Taghlak 3 6 Jam Sikandar 3 7 Jam Nizamuddin I 3 8 Jam Sanjar 3 9 Jam Nizamuddin II 3 10 Jam Feruzudin 4 Legacy 5 External links 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksBackgroundThe Sindh is a fertile valley with a sub tropical climate watered by the Indus river the location of some of the oldest civilizations in the world with settlements dating back to 7000 BCE Always a prize possession it has been controlled by many different empires alternating with periods of independence Before the Samma dynasty took control the Sindh was ruled by the Soomra first as nominal vassals of the Fatimid Caliphate of Cairo later as vassals of the Turkic rulers of the Delhi Sultanate which reached its greatest extent under Muhammad bin Tughluq c 1300 1351 The Sammas gained control of Thatta in the southern Sindh from the Sumras around 1335 and expanded their territory northward to Bhakkar and beyond In 1361 62 Firuz Shah Tughlaq of Delhi Sultanate invaded Sindh and again brought Sammas under his suzerainty Throughout the period of the Samma dynasty Turkic groups were pushing down from the northwest including those led by Timur Tamerlane who sacked Delhi in 1398 Sindh remained under control of Khizr Khan founder of Sayyid dynasty who was an who was an appointed governor of Sindh and Multan provinces by Timur on his behalf Sammas remained under Sayyid dynasty till 1451 Later Sammas were finally defeated by the Arghun dynasty who had been displaced from Kandahar in Afghanistan by Babur in 1519 1520 citation needed Beginnings Tomb of Bibi Jawindi built during the 15th century at Uch Sharif Information about the early years of the Samma dynasty is very sketchy Tribes such as Samma were regarded as a sub division of Jats or on a par with the Jats when Muslims first arrived in Sindh 8 Later sources claim them to be a Rajput clan 9 and we know from Ibn Battuta that in 1333 the Sammas were in rebellion led by the founder of the dynasty Jam Tamachi Unar The Sammas overthrew the Soomras soon after 1335 and the last Soomra ruler took shelter with the governor of Gujarat under the protection of Muhammad bin Tughluq the sultan of Delhi Mohammad bin Tughlaq made an expedition against Sindh in 1351 and died at Sondha possibly in an attempt to restore the Soomras With this the Sammas became independent The next sultan Firuz Shah Tughlaq attacked Sindh in 1365 and 1367 unsuccessfully but with reinforcements from Delhi he later obtained Banbhiniyo s surrender The Samma dynasty overtook the Sumra dynasty and ruled Sindh during 1365 1521 Around that time the Sindhi Swarankar community returned from Kutch to their home towns in Sindh and some settled empty land on the banks of Sindhu River near Dadu Sindh By the end of year 1500 nearly the entire Sindhi Swarankar community had returned to Sindh This period marks the beginning of Sufistic thought and teachings in Sindh For a period the Sammas were therefore subject to Delhi again Later as the Sultanate of Delhi collapsed they became fully independent 10 During most of period of Samma rule the Sindh was politically and economically tied to the Gujarat Sultanate with occasional periods of friction Coins struck by the Samma dynasty show the titles Sultan and Shah as well as Jam the Jadeja rulers of western Gujarat also part of Samma tribe and directly descended from Jam Unar the first Samma sultan of Sindh 11 Sandhai Muslims are Samma of Sindh Even the Chudasama Rajputs of Gujarat are also part of Samma tribe who are still Hindu and distributed in Junagadh District and Bhal Region of Gujarat 12 13 HistorySultans of SindhSamma Dynasty History of Delhi Sultanate by M H SyedJam Unar 1336 1339 Jam Junan 1339 1352 Jam Banhabina 1352 1367 Jam Tamachi 1367 1379 Jam Salahuddin 1379 1389 Jam Nizamuddin I 1389 1391 Jam Ali Sher 1391 1398 Jam Karn 1398 Jam Fath Khan 1398 1414 Jam Tughluq 1414 1442 Jam Mubarak 1442 Jam Sikandar 1442 1444 Jam Raidhan 1444 1453 Jam Sanjar 1453 1461 Jam Nizamuddin II 1461 1508 Jam Feruzudin 1508 1527 In chachnama Raja Dahir s Wazir Siyakar address the Lakhahs and the Sammahs as Lohana 14 According to Andre Wink both Lohana and Samma were originally sub division of Jats 8 The Samma dynasty took the title Jam the equivalent of King or Sultan because they claimed to be descended from Jamshid 15 The main sources of information on the Samma dynasty are Nizammud din Abu l Fazl Firishta and Mir Ma sum all lacking in detail and with conflicting information A plausible reconstruction of the chronology is given in the History of Delhi Sultanate by M H Syed at right 15 Jam Unar Main article Jam Unar Jam Unar was the founder of Samma dynasty mentioned by Ibn Battuta the famous traveller from North Africa Ibn Battuta visited Sindh in 1333 and saw Samma s rebellion against Delhi government 10 Jam Unar the Samma chief taking advantage of the strained relation between the Soomra and the Sultanate of Delhi defeated the last Soomra ruler son of Dodo and established Samma rule citation needed Jam Salahuddin Jam Salahuddin bin Jam Tamachi was the successor of his father Jam Tamachi He put down revolts in some parts of the country by sending forces in those directions and punished the ringleaders Some of these unruly bands fled to Kachh to which place Jam Salahuddin pursued them and in every engagement that took place he defeated them and ultimately subjugated them He died after a reign of 11 years citation needed Jam Ali Sher Jam Ali Sher bin Jam Tamachi ruled the country very discreetly Tamachi s other sons Sikandar and Karn and Fateh Khan son of Sikandar who had brought ruin on the last Jam were now conspiring against Jam Alisher They were therefore looking for an opportunity to fall upon him while he was out enjoying the moonlight as usual They spent their time in the forests in the vicinity of the town One Friday night on the 13th of the lunar month they took a band of cut throats with them and with naked swords attacked Jam Alisher who had come out in a boat to enjoy the moonlight on the quiet surface of the river and was returning home They killed him and red handed they ran to the city where the people had no help for it but to place one of them Karan on the vacant throne The reign of Jam Ali Sher lasted for seven years citation needed Jam Fateh Khan bin Jam Sikandar Jam Karan was succeeded by his nephew Jam Fateh Khan bin Sikandar He ruled quietly for some time and gave satisfaction to the people in general citation needed About this time Mirza Pir Muhammad one of Amir Timur s grandsons came to Multan and conquered that town and Uch As he made a long stay there most of the horses with him died of a disease and his horsemen were obliged to move about as foot soldiers When Amir Timur heard of this he sent 30 000 horses from his own stables to his grandson to enable him to extend his conquests Pir Muhammad being thus equipped attacked those of the zamindars who had threatened to do him harm and destroyed their household property He then sent a messenger to Bakhar calling the chief men of the place to come and pay respects to him But these men fearing his vengeance left the place in a body and went to Jesalmer Only one solitary person Sayyed Abulghais one of the pious Sayyeds of the place went to visit the Mirza He interceded for his town people in the name of his great grandfather the Prophet and the Mirza accepted his intercession citation needed Mirza Pir Muhammad soon went to Delhi which place he took and where he was crowned as king Multan remained in the hands of Langahs and Sind in those of the Sammah rulers as before Jam Taghlak Tomb Jam Mubarak Khan a Samma Prince at the Makli Necropolis Jam Taghlak was fond of hunting and left his brothers to administer the affairs of state at Sehwan and Bakhar In his reign some Baloch raised the standard of revolt in the outskirts of Bakhar but Jam Taghlak marched in the direction and punished their ring leaders and appointed an outpost in each parganah to prevent any future rebellion of the kind He died after a reign of 28 years Jam Sikandar Jam Sikandar bin Jam Taghlak was a minor when he succeeded his father to the throne The governors of Sehwan and Bakhar shook off their yoke and prepared to take offensive steps Jam Sikandar was obliged to march out from Tatta to Bakhar When he came as far as Nasarpur a man by name Mubarak who during the last Jam s reign had made himself celebrated for acts of bravery proclaimed himself king under the name of Jam Mubarak But as the people were not in league with him he was driven away within 3 days and information sent to Jam Sikandar who made peace with his opponents and hastened to Tatta After a year and a half he died Jam Nizamuddin I After Jam Salahuddin s death the nobles of the state put his son Jam Nizamuddin I bin Jam Salahuddin on the throne Jam Nizamuddin ruled for only a few months His first act of kindness was the release of his cousins Sikandar Karn and Bahauddin and Amar who had been placed in captivity by the advice of the ministers He appointed every one of them as an officer to discharge administrative duties in different places while he himself remained in the capital superintending the work done by them and other officials in different quarters of the country Before long however his cousins very ungratefully made a conspiracy among themselves and stealthily coming to the capital attempted to seize him But Jam Salahuddin learning their intention in time left the place at the dead of night with a handful of men and made his escape to Gujrat In the morning men were sent after him but before any information could be brought about him the people summoned Alisher son of Jam Tamachi who was living in obscurity and raised him to the throne Meanwhile Jam Nizamuddin also died in his flight and his cousins too being disappointed in every thing lived roving lives Jam Sanjar Main article Jam Sanjar On Rainah s death Sanjar Radhan Sadr al Din became the Jam of Sind He is said to have been a very handsome person and on that account was constantly attended by a large number of persons who took pleasure in remaining in his company It is believed that before his coming to the throne a pious fakir had been very fond of him that one day Sanjar informed him that he had a very strong desire to become the king of Tatta though it should be for not more than 8 days and that the fakir had given him his blessings telling him that he would be the king of the place for 8 years Jam Sanjar ruled the country very wisely Under no ruler before this had the people of Sind enjoyed such ease of mind He was very fond of the company of the learned and the pious Every Friday he used to distribute charities and had fixed periodical allowances for those who deserved the same He increased the pay of responsible officers One Kazi Maaruf who had been appointed by the late rulers to be the Kazi of Bakhar was in the habit of receiving bribes from the plaintiffs as well as from the defendants When this fact came to the notice of Jam Sanjar he sent for the Kazi and asked him about it The Kazi admitted the whole thing Yes said he I do demand something from the plaintiffs as well as the defendants and I am anxious to get something from the witnesses too but before the case closes they go away and I am disappointed in that Jam Sanjar could not help laughing at this The Kazi continued I work in the court for the whole day and my wife and children die of hunger at home because I get very little pay Jam Sanjar increased his pay and issued general orders for the increase of every government post of importance Jam Nizamuddin II Main article Jam Nizamuddin II Jam Nizamuddin II s tomb features a jharoka that displays Gujarati influences 16 Jam Nizamuddin II 866 914 AH 1461 1508 AD was the most famous Sultan of the Samma or Jamot dynasty 17 which ruled in Sindh and parts of Punjab and Balochistan region from 1351 1551 CE He was known by the nickname of Jam Nindo His capital was at Thatta in modern Pakistan The Samma Sultanate reached the height of its power during the reign of Jam Nizamuddin II who is still recalled as a hero and his rule as a golden age Shortly after his accession he went with a large force to Bhakkar where he spent about a year during which time he extirpated the freebooters and robbers who annoyed the people in that part of the country After that for a period of forty eight years he reigned at Tatta with absolute power In the last part of Jam Nindo s reign after 1490 CE a Mughul army under Shah Beg Arghun came from Kandahar and fell upon many villages of Chundooha and Sideejuh invading the town of Agri Ohandukah Sibi Sindichah and Kot Machian Jam Nindo sent a large army under his Vazier Darya Khan 18 which arriving at the village known by the name of Duruh i Kureeb also known as Joolow Geer or Halukhar near Sibi defeated the Mughuls in a pitched battle Shah Beg Arghun s brother Abu Muhammad Mirza was killed in the battle and the Mughuls fled back to Kandahar never to return during the reign of Jam Nizamuddin 19 Jam Nizamuddin s death was followed by a war of succession between the cousins Jam Feroz and Jam Salahuddin Jam Feruzudin Main article Jam Feroz Coin during the rule of Jam Feraz Jam Feruz bin Jam Nizam was the last ruler of the Samma dynasty of Sindh Jam Feroz succeeded his father Jam Nizamuddin at a minor age Jam Feroz was a young man and as from the commencement the management of the state affairs was in the hands of his guardian he spent his time in his harem and seldom went out But he was fearful of his ministers As a precautionary measure he enlisted in his service Kibak Arghun and a large number of men belonging to the tribes of Mughuls who had during his reign left Shahbeg Arghun and came to Tatta Jam Feroz gave them the quarter of the town called Mughal Warah to live in He secretly flattered himself for his policy in securing the services of intrepid men to check Darya Khan but he never for a minute imagined what ruin these very men were destined to bring on him For it was through some of these men that Shahbeg Arghun was induced to invade and conquer Sind in 926 AH 1519 AD at the Battle of Fatehpur 1519 which resulted in the displacement of the Sammah dynasty of rulers by that of Arghun Legacy Makli Necropolis features several clusters of elaborate funerary monuments dating between the 14th and 18th centuries The site rose to prominence as a major funerary site during under the rule of the Samma dynasty who had made their capital near Thatta 20 The rise of Thatta as an important commercial and cultural centre was directly related to Jam Ninda s patronage and policies At the time the Portuguese took control of the trading centre of Hormuz in 1514 CE 21 trade from the Sindh accounted for nearly 10 of their customs revenue and they described Thatta as one of the richest cities in the world Thatta s prosperity was based partly on its own high quality cotton and silk textile industry partly on export of goods from further inland in the Punjab and northern India However the trade declined when the Mughals took over Later due to silting of the main Indus channel Thatta no longer functioned as a port 22 The Samma civilization contributed significantly to the evolution of the Indo Islamic architectural style Thatta is famous for its necropolis which covers 10 square km on the Makli Hill It assumed its quasi sacred character during Jam Ninda s rule Every year thousands perform pilgrimage to this site to commemorate the saints buried here The graves testify to a long period when Thatta was a thriving center of trade religion and scholarly pursuits 23 External links Imperial house Samma DynastyPreceded bySoomra dynasty Monarchy1336 1524 Succeeded byArghun dynastySee alsoList of Sunni Muslim dynasties Sandhai Muslims List of Monarchs of SindhReferences Schwartzberg Joseph E 1978 A Historical atlas of South Asia Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 39 147 ISBN 0226742210 P M Holt Ann K S Lambton Bernard Lewis 21 April 1977 The Cambridge History of Islam Volume 2A The Indian Sub Continent South East Asia Africa and the Muslim West Cambridge University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 521 29137 8 a b c Census Organization Pakistan Abdul Latif 1976 Population Census of Pakistan 1972 Larkana Manager of Publications a b U M Chokshi M R Trivedi 1989 Gujarat State Gazetteer Director Government Print Stationery and Publications Gujarat State p 274 It was the conquest of Kutch by the Sindhi tribe of Sama Rajputs that marked the emergence of Kutch as a separate kingdom in the 14th century Rapson Edward James Haig Sir Wolseley Burn Sir Richard Dodwell Henry 1965 The Cambridge History of India Turks and Afghans edited by W Haig Chand p 518 Hughes Albert William 1874 A Gazetteer of the Province of Sindh G Bell and Sons Population Census of Pakistan 1972 Jacobabad a b Wink A 2002 Al Hind The Making of the Indo Islamic World Early medieval India and the expansion of Islam 7th 11th centuries Vol 1 Brill Academic Publishers p 158 159 ISBN 978 0 391 04125 7 Retrieved 2022 08 02 The Lohana Lakha Samma Sahtah Chand Channa which appear at least in the Muslim sources to be subdivisions of the Jats or to be put on a par with the Jats Some of these tribes were dominating others but they all as a matter of course suffered certain discriminatory measures cf infra under both the Rai and Brahman dynasties and the Arabs The territories of the Lohana Lakha and Samma are also described as separate jurisdictions under the governor of Brahmanabad in the pre Muslim era Whatever may be the original distinction between Samma and Jat the two tribes from which the majority of Sindhis descend in later times it became completely blurred and the same people may be classed as Samma and Jat The Samma residential area however was probably restricted to Brahmanabad and its immediate neighbourhood Ansari Sarah F D 1992 01 31 Sufi Saints and State Power The Pirs of Sind 1843 1947 Cambridge University Press p 30 ISBN 978 0 521 40530 0 One of the most well known all India examples of Suhrawardi intervention in political affairs concerned Sind Between 1058 and 1520 control of the province was effectively delegated by the Delhi Sultanates first to the Soomros and later to the Sammas Both were local Rajput tribes converted to Islam whose chiefs were disciples of Suhrawardi saints at Uch and Multan a b Directions in the History and Archaeology of Sindh by M H Panhwar Anjali H Desai 2007 India Guide Gujarat India Guide Publications pp 311 ISBN 978 0 9789517 0 2 Kumar Suresh Singh Rajendra Behari Lal Anthropological Survey of India 2003 Gujarat Part 1 Gujarat Anthropological Survey of India Popular Prakashan pp 1174 1175 ISBN 9788179911044 People of India Gujarat Volume XXII Part One edited by R B Lal S V Padmanabham amp A Mohideen page 1174 75 Popular Prakashan The Chachnamah An Ancient History Of Sindh by Kalichbeg 1900 p 170 a b History of Delhi Sultanate by M H Syed p240 2005 ISBN 978 8 12611 830 4 Ephrat Daphna Wolper Ethel Sara Pinto Paulo G 7 December 2020 Saintly Spheres and Islamic Landscapes Emplacements of Spiritual Power across Time and Place BRILL p 276 ISBN 978 90 04 44427 0 The Hindu The world s largest necropolis The environments that led to the rise and fall of the Kalhoras A HISTORY OF SIND EMBRACING THE PERIOD FROM A D 710 TO A D 1590 by MAHOMED MASOOM Qureshi Urooj 8 August 2014 In Pakistan imposing tombs that few have seen BBC Travel Retrieved 17 July 2017 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Hormuz Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 694 The Global World of Indian Merchants 1750 1947 Traders of Sind from Bukhara to Panama by Claude Markovits 2000 ISBN 978 0 521 62285 1 Archnet org Thattah Archived 2012 06 06 at the Wayback MachineSourcesThis article incorporates text from the workA History of Sindby Mirza Kalichbeg Fredunbeg a publication now in the public domain Islamic culture Page 429 by Islamic Culture Board The History and Culture of the Indian People Page 224 by Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan Bharatiya Itihasa Samiti Searchlights on Baloches and Balochistan by Mir Khuda Bakhsh Marri The Delhi Sultanate by Kanaiyalal Maneklal Munshi Ramesh Chandra Majumdar Asoke Kumar Majumdar A D Pusalker Babar by Radhey Shyam Indo Arab relations an English rendering of Arab oʾ Hind ke taʾllugat by Syed Sulaiman Nadvi Sayyid Sulaiman Nadvi M Salahuddin Muslim Kingship in India by Nagendra Kumar Singh The Indus Delta country a memoir chiefly on its ancient geography and history by Malcolm Robert Haig The Samma kingdom of Sindh historical studies by G h ulamu Muḥammadu Lakho University of Sind Institute of SindologyExternal links Media related to Samma dynasty at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Samma dynasty amp oldid 1150145156, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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