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Shah Alam II

Shah Alam II (Persian pronunciation: [ʃɑːh ɑːlam]; 25 June 1728 – 19 November 1806), also known by his birth name Ali Gohar (or Ali Gauhar), was the seventeenth Mughal Emperor and the son of Alamgir II.[16] Shah Alam II became the emperor of a crumbling Mughal empire. His power was so depleted during his reign that it led to a saying in the Persian language, Sultanat-e-Shah Alam, Az Dilli ta Palam, meaning, 'The empire of Shah Alam is from Delhi to Palam', Palam being a suburb of Delhi.[17][18]

Shah Alam II
Mughal Emperor
Shah Alam II, after he was blinded in 1788 by Ghulam Qadir
17th Emperor of the Mughal Empire
1st reign10 October 1760 – 31 July 1788
PredecessorShah Jahan III
SuccessorShah Jahan IV
2nd reign16 October 1788 – 19 November 1806
PredecessorShah Jahan IV
SuccessorAkbar II
BornMirza Ali Gauhar
(1728-06-25)25 June 1728
Shahjahanabad, Subah of Delhi, Mughal Empire
(present-day Old Delhi, Delhi, India)
Died19 November 1806(1806-11-19) (aged 78)
Shahjahanabad, Subah of Delhi, Mughal Empire
Burial
Spouses
  • Taj Mahal[1]
  • Jamil-un-Nissa Begum[2][3]
  • Mubarak Mahal[4]
  • Murad Bakht Begum[5]
  • Qudsia Begum[6]
  • Azizan, Malika-i-Alam[7]
  • Shahabadi Mahal[8]
  • Nawab Mahal[8]
  • Nazakat Mahal[9]
Issue
Names
'Abdu'llah Jalal ud-din Abu'l Muzaffar Ham ud-din Muhammad 'Mirza Ali Gauhar Shah-i-'Alam II
House Mughal Dynasty
Dynasty Timurid dynasty
FatherAlamgir II
MotherZinat Mahal
ReligionSunni Islam (Hanafi)
Military career
Battles/warsThird Battle of Panipat
Bengal War
Battle of Delhi (1764)
Battle of Buxar
Battle of Delhi (1771)
Battle of Delhi (1783)
Siege of Delhi (1804)

Shah Alam faced many invasions, mainly by the Emir of Afghanistan, Ahmed Shah Abdali, which led to the Third Battle of Panipat between the Maratha Empire, who maintained suzerainty over Mughal affairs in Delhi and the Afghans led by Abdali. In 1760, the invading forces of Abdali were driven away by the Marathas, led by Sadashivrao Bhau, who deposed Shah Jahan III, the puppet Mughal emperor of Imad-ul-Mulk, and installed Shah Alam II as the rightful emperor (1760 – 1772).[19][20]

Shah Alam II was considered the only and rightful emperor, but he was unable to return to Delhi until 1772, under the protection of the Maratha general Mahadaji Shinde. He also fought against the East India Company at the Battle of Buxar. In 1788, when he was a prisoner of Ghulam Qadir, he was blinded.

Shah Alam II authored his own Diwan of poems and was known by the pen-name Aftab. His poems were guided, compiled and collected by Mirza Fakhir Makin.[21]

Shah Alam also penned famous book Ajaib-ul-Qasas which is considered one of the earliest and prominent book of prose in Urdu.

Early life

Ali Gohar was born to Shahzada (Prince) Aziz-ud-Din, son of the deposed Mughal Emperor Jahandar Shah, on 25 June 1728. Alongside his father, he grew up in semi-captivity in the Salatin quarters of the Red Fort. However, unlike the majority of Mughal princes growing up in similar circumstances, he is not recorded to have become a decadent prince by the time his father became emperor, and therefore was naturally given high appointments in the course of his father's reign.

Upon his father's accession, he became the Wali al-Ahd (Crown Prince) of the empire, and became his father's principal agent, though almost all power lay in the Wazir Imad-ul-Mulk's hand. His quarrels with that amir, and fear for his own life, caused him to flee from Delhi in 1758.

Escape from Delhi

Prince Ali Gauhar, afterwards Emperor Shah Alam II, had been the heir apparent of his father Alamgir II. Prince Ali Gauhar's father had been appointed Mughal Emperor by Vizier Imad-ul-Mulk and Maratha Peshwa's cousin Sadashivrao Bhau.[22]

Prince Ali Gauhar organized a militia and made a daring escape from Delhi. He appeared in the Eastern Subah in 1759, hoping to strengthen his position by attempting to regaining control over Bengal, Bihar and Odisha.

Very soon however, Najib-ud-Daula forced the usurper Imad-ul-Mulk to flee from the capital by gathering a large Mughal Army outside Delhi. He used the army to depose the recreant Shah Jahan III. Najib-ud-Daula and Muslim nobles then planned to defeat the Marathas by maintaining correspondence with the powerful Ahmad Shah Durrani. After Durrani decisively defeated the Marathas, he nominated Ali Gauhar as the emperor under the name Shah Alam II.[23]

Bengal War

In 1760, after Shah Alam's militia gaining control over pockets in Bengal, Bihar and parts of Odisha, Prince Ali Gauhar and his Mughal Army of 30,000 intended to overthrow Mir Jafar and Imad-ul-Mulk after they tried to capture or kill him by advancing towards Awadh and Patna in 1759. But the conflict soon involved the intervention of the assertive East India Company.

The Mughals clearly intended to recapture their breakaway Eastern Subah led by Prince Ali Gauhar, who was accompanied by a Militia consisting of persons like Muhammad Quli Khan, Kadim Husein, Kamgar Khan, Hidayat Ali, Mir Afzal and Ghulam Husain Tabatabai. Their forces were reinforced by the forces of Shuja-ud-Daula, Najib-ud-Daula and Ahmad Khan Bangash. The Mughals were also joined by Jean Law and 200 Frenchmen and waged a campaign against the British during the Seven Years' War.[24]

Prince Ali Gauhar successfully advanced as far as Patna, which he later besieged with a combined army of over 40,000 in order to capture or kill Ramnarian a sworn enemy of the Mughals. Mir Jafar was in terror at the near demise of his cohort and sent his own son Miran to relieve Ramnarian and retake Patna. Mir Jafar also implored the aid of Robert Clive, but it was Major John Caillaud, who dispersed Prince Ali Gauhar's army in 1761 after four major battles including Battle of Patna, Battle of Sirpur, Battle of Birpur and Battle of Siwan.

After negotiations assuring peace Shah Alam II was escorted by the British to meet Mir Qasim the new Nawab of Bengal, who was nominated after the sudden death of Miran. Mir Qasim soon had the Mughal Emperor's investiture as Subedar of Bengal, Bihar and Odisha, and agreed to pay an annual revenue of 2.4 million dam. Shah Alam II then retreated to Allahabad was protected by the Shuja-ud-Daula, Nawab of Awadh from 1761 until 1764. Meanwhile, Mir Qasim's relations with the East India company began to worsen. He initiated reforms that withdrew the tax exemption enjoyed by the East India Company, he also ousted Ramnarian a sworn enemy of the Mughal Empire and created Firelock manufacturing factories at Patna with the sole purpose of giving advantage to the newly reformed Mughal Army.

Angered by these developments the East India Company sought his ouster. Court intrigues encouraged by the East India Company forced Mir Qasim to leave Bengal, Bihar and Odisha. Mir Qasim on his part encouraged Shuja-ud-Daula the Nawab of Awadh and Shah Alam II to engage the British.

Acknowledged emperor

 
Mughal era illustration of Pir Ghazi of Bengal, during the 18th century.

Shah Alam II was acknowledged emperor by the Durrani Empire. His declared reign extended to the 24 Parganas of the Sundarbans,[26] Mir Qasim, Nawabs of Bengal and Murshidabad (and Bihar),[26]Raja of Banares,[27] Nizam of Hyderabad, Nawab of Ghazipur, Sahib of Punjab, Hyder Ali's Mysore,[27] Nawab of Kadapa and Nawab of Kurnool, Nawab of the Carnatic of Arcot and Nellore,[28] Nawab of Junagarh, Rohilkhand of Lower Doab, Rohilkhand of Upper Doab, and Nawab of Bhawalpur.

Battle of Buxar

The Battle of Buxar was fought on 22 October 1764 between the combined armies of Mir Qasim, the Nawab of Bengal; Shuja-ud-Daula the Nawab of Awadh; the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II and the forces under the command of the East India Company led by Hector Munro.[29] The battle fought at Buxar, a town located on the bank of the Ganges river then within the territory of Bengal, was a decisive victory for the East India Company.

Diwani rights

Soon after the Battle of Buxar, Shah Alam II, a sovereign who had just been defeated by the British, sought their protection by signing the Treaty of Allahabad in the year 1765. Shah Alam II was forced to grant the Diwani (right to collect revenue) of Bengal (which included Bihar and Odisha) to the East India Company in return for an annual tribute of 2.6 million rupees to be paid by the company from the collected revenue. Tax exempt status was also restored to the company. The company further secured for the districts of Kora and Allahabad which allowed the East India Company to collect tax from more than 20 million people. East India Company thus became the Imperial tax collector in the former Mughal province of Bengal (which included Bihar and Northern Odisha). East India Company appointed a deputy Nawab Muhammad Reza Khan to collect revenue on behalf of the company.

Absence from Delhi

Shah Alam II's absence from Delhi was due to the terms of the treaty he had signed with the British. But his son and heir apparent Prince Mirza Jawan Bakht and Najib-ul-Daula, represented the emperor for the next 12 years in Delhi.

Bengal Famine

The Bengal Famine in 1770 was a massive catastrophe that signalled the end of the Mughal Empire and disorder in the Indian Subcontinent.

By the time the famine occurred it became very clear that the Mughal Empire was no longer a major political power, not only in the general world but also within South Asia.

Return to Delhi

Shah Alam II resided in the fort of Allahabad for six years. Warren Hastings, the head of East India Company got appointed as the first Governor of Bengal in 1774. This was the period of "Dual rule" where East India Company enacted laws to maximise collection of revenue and the Mughal Emperor appointed Nawab looked after other affairs of the province. East India Company later discontinued the tribute of 2.6 million Rupees and later also handed over the districts of Allahabad and Kora to the Nawab of Awadh. These measures amounted to a repudiation of the company's vassalage to the emperor as Diwan (tax collector). In 1793 East India Company was strong enough and abolished Nizamat (local rule) completely and annexed Bengal. Weakened Shah Alam II agreed to the consultation of the East India Company, who advised him never to trust the Marathas.

In the year 1771 the Marathas under Mahadaji Shinde returned to northern India and even captured Delhi. Shah Alam II, was escorted by Mahadaji Shinde and left Allahabad in May 1771 and in January 1772 reached Delhi. Along with the Marathas they undertook to win the crown lands of Rohilkhand and defeated Zabita Khan, capturing the fort of Pathargarh with its treasure.

The emperor returned to the throne in Delhi in 1772, under the protection of the Maratha general Mahadaji Shinde.[30] The emperor became a client of the Maratha whose Peshwa demanded tribute, which the Moguls are known to have paid so as to avoid any further conflict with the Confederacy.

In the year 1787, an embassy of Vijay Singh from Jodhpur presented itself to the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II, bringing homage and the golden key of the Fortress of Ajmer.[31]

After killing Ghulam Qadir and restoring Shah Alam II to the throne, a Maratha garrison permanently occupied Delhi in 1788 and ruled on north India for next two decades until they were usurped by the East India Company in the Second Anglo-Maratha War.[32]

Reformation of the Mughal Army

One of his first acts was to strengthen and raise a new Mughal Army, under the command of Mirza Najaf Khan. This new army consisted of infantrymen who successfully utilised both Flintlocks and Talwars in combat formations,[33] they used elephants for transportation and were less dependent on artillery and cavalry. Mirza Najaf Khan is also known to have introduced the more-effective Firelock muskets through his collaboration with Mir Qasim, the Nawab of Bengal.[34]

Foreign relations

 
Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II negotiates with the East India Company, after the arrival of Suffren.

Shah Alam II, was well supported by Jean Law de Lauriston and 200 Frenchmen during his campaign to regain the Eastern Subahs (during the Seven Years' War). The brainchild of the campaign was Ghulam Husain Tabatabai, who had gained much administrative and military experience from both the French and the Dutch.

After Shah Alam II's defeat in the Battle of Buxar, the French once again reached out to emperor under Pierre André de Suffren in the year 1781, who initiated a plan to capture Bombay and Surat from the Maratha Confederacy and the British, with the co-operation of Mirza Najaf Khan, this action would eventually lead to Asaf Jah II to join Shah Alam II and the French and assist Hyder Ali to capture Madras from the East India Company.[35] The internal conflicts within the Mughal imperial court would not allow the emperor to make such a bold move against the British.

Jat victories

Jats rose in retaliation of religious intolerance pursued by Aurangzeb.[36] The Jat kingdom of Bharatpur waged many wars against the Mughal Delhi and in the 17th and 18th century carried out numerous campaigns in Mughal territories including Agra.[37] Mughals were defeated by Marathas in 1757; and Mughal possessions and territories were under the annexation of the Jats led by Suraj Mal.

During one massive assault, Jats sieged Agra in 1761, after 20 days on 12 June 1761 the Mughal forces at Agra surrendered to Jats.[36] Jats plundered the city and carried the bounty, including the two great silver doors to the entrance of the famous Taj Mahal. which were carried off and melted down by Suraj Mal in 1764.[38]

Suraj Mal's son Jawahar Singh, further extended the Jat power in Northern India and captured the territory in Doab, Ballabgarh and Agra.[39] Jats kept Agra fort and other territories closer to Delhi under their control from 1761 till 1774 CE.[36]

Sikh Victories

Sikhs had been in perpetual war against Mughal intolerance specially after beheading of the Sikh Guru - Guru Teg Bahadur by the Mughals. Simmering Sikhs rose once again in the year 1764 and overran the Mughal Faujdar of Sirhind, Zain Khan Sirhindi, who fell in battle and ever since the Sikhs perpetually raided and took the bounties from the lands as far as Delhi practically every year.

The Marathas took Delhi in 1771 before Shah Alam II arrived. Mirza Najaf Khan had restored a sense of order to the Mughal finances and administration and particularly reformed the Mughal Army. In 1777 Mirza Najaf Khan decisively defeated Zabita Khan's forces and repelled the Sikhs after halting their raids.

In 1778, after a Sikh incursion into Delhi, Shah Alam ordered their defeat by appointing, the Mughal Grand Vizier, Majad-ud-Daula marched with 20,000 Mughal troops against the Sikh army into hostile territories, this action led to the defeat of the Mughal Army at Muzzaffargarh and later at Ghanaur, due to the mounted casualties Shah Alam II reappointed Mirza Najaf Khan, who soon died of natural circumstances leaving the Mughal Empire weaker than ever.

In the year 1779, Mirza Najaf Khan carefully advanced his forces who successfully routed the treasonous Zabita Khan and his Sikh allies who lost more than 5,000 men in a single battle and never returned to threaten the Mughal Empire during the commander Mirza Najaf Khan's lifetime. Najaf Khan as prime minister, granted sovereign rights to the Sikhs as agreement.[40]

In the year 1783, Farzana Zeb un-Nissa had saved Delhi from a possible invasion by a force of 30,000 Sikh troops, under Baghel Singh, Jassa Singh Ramgarhia and Jassa Singh Ahluwalia.

Mughal empire disintegrated to such an extent that Shah Alam II was only left with Delhi city to rule. In 1783, Jassa Singh Ahluwalia and Baghel Singh laid siege to the city. After entering Red fort, Jassa Singh Ahluwalia sat on the Mughal throne on behest of Baghel Singh and a title of Badshah Singh was given to him. Begum Samru requested Baghel Singh to show mercy on Shah Alam II. Baghel Singh accepted and stated his demands such as 30,000 of his troops to stay in Delhi and the Mughal Empire would pay for their maintenance. Other demands were the construction of at least 5 Gurdwaras and annual tax payment of 13.5%. The demands were agreed upon by Shah Alam II with a written agreement. Since Sikhs refused to accept authority of the Mughal court due to politics, Mahadji Shinde was given the regency with an agreement that Sikhs will not plunder the crown lands and they will be paid 1/3 of the Delhi revenue annually instead.[41]

Downfall

 
A silver Rupee struck in the name of Shah Alam

After the defeats at Muzaffargarh and later at Ghanaur, Majad-ud-Daula was arrested by the orders of Shah Alam II, who then recalled Mirza Najaf Khan. This led to the former Grand Vizier's arrest for causing miscalculations and collaborating with the enemies of the emperor. The traitor was imprisoned and a sum of two million dam in stolen revenue recovered from him. It was Shah Alam II's poor judgement and vacillation that led to his own downfall. Mirza Najaf Khan had given the Mughal Empire breathing space by having a powerful, well managed army in its own right. In 1779 the newly reformed Mughal Army decisively defeated Zabita Khan, the rebels lost 5,000 men including their leader and therefore did not return during the lifetime of Mirza Najaf Khan[citation needed]. Unfortunately upon the general's death, Shah Alam's bad judgement prevailed. The dead man's nephew, Mirza Shafi whose valour had been proven during various occasions, was not appointed commander in chief. Shah Alam II instead appointed worthless individuals whose loyalty and record were questionable at best[citation needed]. They were soon quarrelling over petty matters. Even the corrupt and treasonous former Grand Vizier, Majad-ud-Daula was restored to his former office, he later colluded with the Sikhs and reduced the size of the Mughal Army from over 20,000 to only 5,000 thus bringing the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II at the mercy of his enemies.[42][self-published source]

The respect toward the house of Timur is so strong that even though the whole subcontinent has been withdrawn from its authority, that no ordinary prince ever intends to take the title of sovereign...and Shah Alam II is still seated on the Mughal throne, and everything is still done in his name.

Benoît de Boigne, (1790).

 
Shah Alam II blinded by Ghulam Qadir

Prisoner of Ghulam Qadir

Nawab Majad-ud-Daula was followed by a known enemy of the Mughals, the grandson of Najib Khan, Ghulam Qadir, with his Sikh allies forced Shah Alam II to appoint him as the Grand Vizier of the Mughal Empire. Ghulam Qadir ravaged the palaces in search of the Mughal treasure believed to be worth Rs. 250 million. Unable to locate such a sum and angered by the Mughal Emperor's attempts to eliminate him and his Sikh allies, Ghulam Qadir himself blinded Shah Alam II with an Afghani knife on 10 August 1788.[42] Ghulam Qadir behaved with brutality to the emperor and his family. Three servants and two water-carriers who tried to help the bleeding emperor were beheaded and according to one account, Ghulam Qadir would pull the beard of the elderly Mughal Emperor. After ten weeks, during which Ghulam Qadir stripped the princesses of the royal family naked and forced them to dance naked before him (after which they jumped into Yamuna river to drown) and the honour of the royal family and prestige of the Mughal Empire reached its lowest ebb, Mahadaji Shinde intervened and killed Ghulam Qadir, taking possession of Delhi on 2 October 1788. He restored Shah Alam II to the throne and acted as his protector.[43] Mahadaji Shinde sent the ears and eyes of Ghulam Qadir to Shah Alam.[44]

Client of Mahadji Shinde

Thankful for his intervention, he honoured Mahadji Shinde with the titles of Vakil-ul-Mutlaq (Regent of the Empire) and Amir-ul-Amara (Head of the Amirs). He made a deal with the Peshwa granting tribute to Pune in return for the protection provided Mahadji Shinde of the Maratha Confederacy.

After killing Ghulam Qadir and restoring Shah Alam II to the throne, a Maratha garrison permanently occupied Delhi in 1788 and ruled on north India for next two decades until they were usurped by the East India Company following the Second Anglo-Maratha War in 1803.[32]

Arrival of British troops

 
The tomb of Shah Alam II, in Mehrauli, Delhi.

The French threat in Europe and its possible repercussions in India caused the British to strive to regain the custody of Shah Alam II. The British feared that the French military officers might overthrow Maratha power and use the authority of the Mughal emperor to further French ambition in India.

Shah Alam II also corresponded with Hyder Ali and later with his son Tipu Sultan during their conflicts with the East India Company during the Anglo-Mysore Wars and was very well informed about the expansionist agenda of the British.

After the Battle of Delhi (1803), during the Second Anglo-Maratha War, on 14 September 1803 British troops entered Delhi ending the Maratha rule on the Mughals, bringing Shah Alam, then a blind old man, seated under a tattered canopy, under British protection. The Mughal Emperor no longer had the military power to enforce his will, but he commanded respect as a dignified member of the House of Timur in the length and breadth of the country.[citation needed] The Nawabs and Subedars still sought formal sanction of the Mughal Emperor on their accession and valued the titles he bestowed upon them. They struck coins and read the khutba (Friday sermons) in his name. The Marathas in 1804 under Yashwantrao Holkar tried to snatch Delhi from the British in Siege of Delhi (1804), but failed.

Death

Shah Alam II died of natural causes on 19 November 1806.

His grave lies in a marble enclosure adjoined to the Moti Masjid, next to the dargah of the 13th century Sufi saint Qutbuddin Bakhtiar Kaki, in Mehrauli, Delhi. Also in the enclosure are the tombs of Bahadur Shah I (also known as Shah Alam I), and Akbar Shah II.[45]

In popular culture

Gallery

See also

References

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  2. ^ a b c d e The Genealogist, Volumes 13-14. The Association. 1999. pp. 70, 81, 82.
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  • William Francklin (1798). The History of the reign of Shah-Aulum (Shah Alam), the present emperor of Hindostaun. Cooper & Graham, London.
  • Shah Alam II (1728–1806)
  • Marathas and the English Company 1707–1800

Further reading

  • Shah Alam Nama. Bibliotheca Indica. 1912.
Shah Alam II
Born: 1728 Died: 1806
Regnal titles
Preceded by Mughal Emperor
1759–1806
Succeeded by
Preceded by Succeeded by

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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 Shah Alam II news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Shah Alam II Persian pronunciation ʃɑːh ɑːlam 25 June 1728 19 November 1806 also known by his birth name Ali Gohar or Ali Gauhar was the seventeenth Mughal Emperor and the son of Alamgir II 16 Shah Alam II became the emperor of a crumbling Mughal empire His power was so depleted during his reign that it led to a saying in the Persian language Sultanat e Shah Alam Az Dilli ta Palam meaning The empire of Shah Alam is from Delhi to Palam Palam being a suburb of Delhi 17 18 Shah Alam IIMughal EmperorShah Alam II after he was blinded in 1788 by Ghulam Qadir17th Emperor of the Mughal Empire1st reign10 October 1760 31 July 1788PredecessorShah Jahan IIISuccessorShah Jahan IV2nd reign16 October 1788 19 November 1806PredecessorShah Jahan IVSuccessorAkbar IIBornMirza Ali Gauhar 1728 06 25 25 June 1728Shahjahanabad Subah of Delhi Mughal Empire present day Old Delhi Delhi India Died19 November 1806 1806 11 19 aged 78 Shahjahanabad Subah of Delhi Mughal EmpireBurialMoti Masjid Mehrauli DelhiSpousesTaj Mahal 1 Jamil un Nissa Begum 2 3 Mubarak Mahal 4 Murad Bakht Begum 5 Qudsia Begum 6 Azizan Malika i Alam 7 Shahabadi Mahal 8 Nawab Mahal 8 Nazakat Mahal 9 IssueAkbar IIMirza Jahandar Shah 10 11 Mirza Jahan Shah Farkhunda Akhtar 12 Mirza Sulaiman Shikoh 10 Mirza Sikandar Shikoh 10 Mirza Izzat Baksh 13 Mirza Jamshed Bakht 14 Begum Jan Begum 15 Aziz un Nissa Begum 15 Rufa ul Nissa Begum 6 Aliat un Nissa Begum 2 Saadat un Nissa Begum 2 Akbarabadi Begum 2 Dil Afroz Banu Begum 2 Names Abdu llah Jalal ud din Abu l Muzaffar Ham ud din Muhammad Mirza Ali Gauhar Shah i Alam IIHouseMughal DynastyDynastyTimurid dynastyFatherAlamgir IIMotherZinat MahalReligionSunni Islam Hanafi Military careerBattles warsThird Battle of Panipat Bengal War Battle of Delhi 1764 Battle of Buxar Battle of Delhi 1771 Battle of Delhi 1783 Siege of Delhi 1804 Shah Alam faced many invasions mainly by the Emir of Afghanistan Ahmed Shah Abdali which led to the Third Battle of Panipat between the Maratha Empire who maintained suzerainty over Mughal affairs in Delhi and the Afghans led by Abdali In 1760 the invading forces of Abdali were driven away by the Marathas led by Sadashivrao Bhau who deposed Shah Jahan III the puppet Mughal emperor of Imad ul Mulk and installed Shah Alam II as the rightful emperor 1760 1772 19 20 Shah Alam II was considered the only and rightful emperor but he was unable to return to Delhi until 1772 under the protection of the Maratha general Mahadaji Shinde He also fought against the East India Company at the Battle of Buxar In 1788 when he was a prisoner of Ghulam Qadir he was blinded Shah Alam II authored his own Diwan of poems and was known by the pen name Aftab His poems were guided compiled and collected by Mirza Fakhir Makin 21 Shah Alam also penned famous book Ajaib ul Qasas which is considered one of the earliest and prominent book of prose in Urdu Contents 1 Early life 2 Escape from Delhi 3 Bengal War 3 1 Acknowledged emperor 3 2 Battle of Buxar 3 3 Diwani rights 3 4 Absence from Delhi 4 Bengal Famine 5 Return to Delhi 5 1 Reformation of the Mughal Army 6 Foreign relations 7 Jat victories 8 Sikh Victories 9 Downfall 9 1 Prisoner of Ghulam Qadir 9 2 Client of Mahadji Shinde 10 Arrival of British troops 11 Death 12 In popular culture 13 Gallery 14 See also 15 References 16 Further readingEarly life EditAli Gohar was born to Shahzada Prince Aziz ud Din son of the deposed Mughal Emperor Jahandar Shah on 25 June 1728 Alongside his father he grew up in semi captivity in the Salatin quarters of the Red Fort However unlike the majority of Mughal princes growing up in similar circumstances he is not recorded to have become a decadent prince by the time his father became emperor and therefore was naturally given high appointments in the course of his father s reign Upon his father s accession he became the Wali al Ahd Crown Prince of the empire and became his father s principal agent though almost all power lay in the Wazir Imad ul Mulk s hand His quarrels with that amir and fear for his own life caused him to flee from Delhi in 1758 Escape from Delhi EditPrince Ali Gauhar afterwards Emperor Shah Alam II had been the heir apparent of his father Alamgir II Prince Ali Gauhar s father had been appointed Mughal Emperor by Vizier Imad ul Mulk and Maratha Peshwa s cousin Sadashivrao Bhau 22 Prince Ali Gauhar organized a militia and made a daring escape from Delhi He appeared in the Eastern Subah in 1759 hoping to strengthen his position by attempting to regaining control over Bengal Bihar and Odisha Very soon however Najib ud Daula forced the usurper Imad ul Mulk to flee from the capital by gathering a large Mughal Army outside Delhi He used the army to depose the recreant Shah Jahan III Najib ud Daula and Muslim nobles then planned to defeat the Marathas by maintaining correspondence with the powerful Ahmad Shah Durrani After Durrani decisively defeated the Marathas he nominated Ali Gauhar as the emperor under the name Shah Alam II 23 Bengal War EditMain article Bengal War In 1760 after Shah Alam s militia gaining control over pockets in Bengal Bihar and parts of Odisha Prince Ali Gauhar and his Mughal Army of 30 000 intended to overthrow Mir Jafar and Imad ul Mulk after they tried to capture or kill him by advancing towards Awadh and Patna in 1759 But the conflict soon involved the intervention of the assertive East India Company The Mughals clearly intended to recapture their breakaway Eastern Subah led by Prince Ali Gauhar who was accompanied by a Militia consisting of persons like Muhammad Quli Khan Kadim Husein Kamgar Khan Hidayat Ali Mir Afzal and Ghulam Husain Tabatabai Their forces were reinforced by the forces of Shuja ud Daula Najib ud Daula and Ahmad Khan Bangash The Mughals were also joined by Jean Law and 200 Frenchmen and waged a campaign against the British during the Seven Years War 24 Prince Ali Gauhar successfully advanced as far as Patna which he later besieged with a combined army of over 40 000 in order to capture or kill Ramnarian a sworn enemy of the Mughals Mir Jafar was in terror at the near demise of his cohort and sent his own son Miran to relieve Ramnarian and retake Patna Mir Jafar also implored the aid of Robert Clive but it was Major John Caillaud who dispersed Prince Ali Gauhar s army in 1761 after four major battles including Battle of Patna Battle of Sirpur Battle of Birpur and Battle of Siwan After negotiations assuring peace Shah Alam II was escorted by the British to meet Mir Qasim the new Nawab of Bengal who was nominated after the sudden death of Miran Mir Qasim soon had the Mughal Emperor s investiture as Subedar of Bengal Bihar and Odisha and agreed to pay an annual revenue of 2 4 million dam Shah Alam II then retreated to Allahabad was protected by the Shuja ud Daula Nawab of Awadh from 1761 until 1764 Meanwhile Mir Qasim s relations with the East India company began to worsen He initiated reforms that withdrew the tax exemption enjoyed by the East India Company he also ousted Ramnarian a sworn enemy of the Mughal Empire and created Firelock manufacturing factories at Patna with the sole purpose of giving advantage to the newly reformed Mughal Army Angered by these developments the East India Company sought his ouster Court intrigues encouraged by the East India Company forced Mir Qasim to leave Bengal Bihar and Odisha Mir Qasim on his part encouraged Shuja ud Daula the Nawab of Awadh and Shah Alam II to engage the British Imad ul Mulk was the regent imposed by the Maratha Confederacy in 1757 who assassinated Alamgir II and prominent members of the imperial family within the Maratha controlled city of Delhi Shah Alam II managed to escape to safety with the Nawab of Awadh 25 Mir Jafar his son Miran and Ramnarian refused to submit to Shah Alam II who initiated the Bengal War causing the eventual intervention of the East India Company Acknowledged emperor Edit Mughal era illustration of Pir Ghazi of Bengal during the 18th century Shah Alam II was acknowledged emperor by the Durrani Empire His declared reign extended to the 24 Parganas of the Sundarbans 26 Mir Qasim Nawabs of Bengal and Murshidabad and Bihar 26 Raja of Banares 27 Nizam of Hyderabad Nawab of Ghazipur Sahib of Punjab Hyder Ali s Mysore 27 Nawab of Kadapa and Nawab of Kurnool Nawab of the Carnatic of Arcot and Nellore 28 Nawab of Junagarh Rohilkhand of Lower Doab Rohilkhand of Upper Doab and Nawab of Bhawalpur Battle of Buxar Edit Main article Battle of Buxar The Battle of Buxar was fought on 22 October 1764 between the combined armies of Mir Qasim the Nawab of Bengal Shuja ud Daula the Nawab of Awadh the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II and the forces under the command of the East India Company led by Hector Munro 29 The battle fought at Buxar a town located on the bank of the Ganges river then within the territory of Bengal was a decisive victory for the East India Company Shuja ud Daula served as the leading Nawab Vizier of the Mughal Empire during the Third Battle of Panipat and the Battle of Buxar Nawab of Bengal Mir Qasim defected to Shah Alam II Mirza Najaf Khan the commander in chief of the Mughal Army Diwani rights Edit Soon after the Battle of Buxar Shah Alam II a sovereign who had just been defeated by the British sought their protection by signing the Treaty of Allahabad in the year 1765 Shah Alam II was forced to grant the Diwani right to collect revenue of Bengal which included Bihar and Odisha to the East India Company in return for an annual tribute of 2 6 million rupees to be paid by the company from the collected revenue Tax exempt status was also restored to the company The company further secured for the districts of Kora and Allahabad which allowed the East India Company to collect tax from more than 20 million people East India Company thus became the Imperial tax collector in the former Mughal province of Bengal which included Bihar and Northern Odisha East India Company appointed a deputy Nawab Muhammad Reza Khan to collect revenue on behalf of the company Shah Alam II granting Robert Clive the Diwani rights of Bengal Behar and Odisha in return for the annexed territories of the Nawab of Awadh after the Battle of Buxar on 12 August 1765 at the Benares A member of the East India Company enjoying a Durbar Absence from Delhi Edit Shah Alam II s absence from Delhi was due to the terms of the treaty he had signed with the British But his son and heir apparent Prince Mirza Jawan Bakht and Najib ul Daula represented the emperor for the next 12 years in Delhi Bengal Famine EditThe Bengal Famine in 1770 was a massive catastrophe that signalled the end of the Mughal Empire and disorder in the Indian Subcontinent By the time the famine occurred it became very clear that the Mughal Empire was no longer a major political power not only in the general world but also within South Asia Return to Delhi EditShah Alam II resided in the fort of Allahabad for six years Warren Hastings the head of East India Company got appointed as the first Governor of Bengal in 1774 This was the period of Dual rule where East India Company enacted laws to maximise collection of revenue and the Mughal Emperor appointed Nawab looked after other affairs of the province East India Company later discontinued the tribute of 2 6 million Rupees and later also handed over the districts of Allahabad and Kora to the Nawab of Awadh These measures amounted to a repudiation of the company s vassalage to the emperor as Diwan tax collector In 1793 East India Company was strong enough and abolished Nizamat local rule completely and annexed Bengal Weakened Shah Alam II agreed to the consultation of the East India Company who advised him never to trust the Marathas In the year 1771 the Marathas under Mahadaji Shinde returned to northern India and even captured Delhi Shah Alam II was escorted by Mahadaji Shinde and left Allahabad in May 1771 and in January 1772 reached Delhi Along with the Marathas they undertook to win the crown lands of Rohilkhand and defeated Zabita Khan capturing the fort of Pathargarh with its treasure The emperor returned to the throne in Delhi in 1772 under the protection of the Maratha general Mahadaji Shinde 30 The emperor became a client of the Maratha whose Peshwa demanded tribute which the Moguls are known to have paid so as to avoid any further conflict with the Confederacy In the year 1787 an embassy of Vijay Singh from Jodhpur presented itself to the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II bringing homage and the golden key of the Fortress of Ajmer 31 After killing Ghulam Qadir and restoring Shah Alam II to the throne a Maratha garrison permanently occupied Delhi in 1788 and ruled on north India for next two decades until they were usurped by the East India Company in the Second Anglo Maratha War 32 The Royal Chamber in the Public Audience Hall in the Middle of Yazdah Darreh with the Ruler Alam Bahador Badshah and the Great Commanders a page from the Lady Coote Album A Firman issued by the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II dated 1776 Reformation of the Mughal Army Edit One of his first acts was to strengthen and raise a new Mughal Army under the command of Mirza Najaf Khan This new army consisted of infantrymen who successfully utilised both Flintlocks and Talwars in combat formations 33 they used elephants for transportation and were less dependent on artillery and cavalry Mirza Najaf Khan is also known to have introduced the more effective Firelock muskets through his collaboration with Mir Qasim the Nawab of Bengal 34 The newly reestablished Mughal Army during the reign of Shah Alam II A Mughal infantryman Large Mughal Army encampments during the reign of the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II Foreign relations Edit Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II negotiates with the East India Company after the arrival of Suffren Shah Alam II was well supported by Jean Law de Lauriston and 200 Frenchmen during his campaign to regain the Eastern Subahs during the Seven Years War The brainchild of the campaign was Ghulam Husain Tabatabai who had gained much administrative and military experience from both the French and the Dutch After Shah Alam II s defeat in the Battle of Buxar the French once again reached out to emperor under Pierre Andre de Suffren in the year 1781 who initiated a plan to capture Bombay and Surat from the Maratha Confederacy and the British with the co operation of Mirza Najaf Khan this action would eventually lead to Asaf Jah II to join Shah Alam II and the French and assist Hyder Ali to capture Madras from the East India Company 35 The internal conflicts within the Mughal imperial court would not allow the emperor to make such a bold move against the British Pierre Andre de Suffren ally of Hyder Ali and also Shah Alam II Hyder Ali was bestowed the title Shams ul Mulk and Amir ud Daula by Shah Alam II his pro French policies were a continuation of the Mughal Empire s policies during the Seven Years War Jat victories EditJats rose in retaliation of religious intolerance pursued by Aurangzeb 36 The Jat kingdom of Bharatpur waged many wars against the Mughal Delhi and in the 17th and 18th century carried out numerous campaigns in Mughal territories including Agra 37 Mughals were defeated by Marathas in 1757 and Mughal possessions and territories were under the annexation of the Jats led by Suraj Mal During one massive assault Jats sieged Agra in 1761 after 20 days on 12 June 1761 the Mughal forces at Agra surrendered to Jats 36 Jats plundered the city and carried the bounty including the two great silver doors to the entrance of the famous Taj Mahal which were carried off and melted down by Suraj Mal in 1764 38 Suraj Mal s son Jawahar Singh further extended the Jat power in Northern India and captured the territory in Doab Ballabgarh and Agra 39 Jats kept Agra fort and other territories closer to Delhi under their control from 1761 till 1774 CE 36 Sikh Victories EditSikhs had been in perpetual war against Mughal intolerance specially after beheading of the Sikh Guru Guru Teg Bahadur by the Mughals Simmering Sikhs rose once again in the year 1764 and overran the Mughal Faujdar of Sirhind Zain Khan Sirhindi who fell in battle and ever since the Sikhs perpetually raided and took the bounties from the lands as far as Delhi practically every year The Marathas took Delhi in 1771 before Shah Alam II arrived Mirza Najaf Khan had restored a sense of order to the Mughal finances and administration and particularly reformed the Mughal Army In 1777 Mirza Najaf Khan decisively defeated Zabita Khan s forces and repelled the Sikhs after halting their raids In 1778 after a Sikh incursion into Delhi Shah Alam ordered their defeat by appointing the Mughal Grand Vizier Majad ud Daula marched with 20 000 Mughal troops against the Sikh army into hostile territories this action led to the defeat of the Mughal Army at Muzzaffargarh and later at Ghanaur due to the mounted casualties Shah Alam II reappointed Mirza Najaf Khan who soon died of natural circumstances leaving the Mughal Empire weaker than ever In the year 1779 Mirza Najaf Khan carefully advanced his forces who successfully routed the treasonous Zabita Khan and his Sikh allies who lost more than 5 000 men in a single battle and never returned to threaten the Mughal Empire during the commander Mirza Najaf Khan s lifetime Najaf Khan as prime minister granted sovereign rights to the Sikhs as agreement 40 In the year 1783 Farzana Zeb un Nissa had saved Delhi from a possible invasion by a force of 30 000 Sikh troops under Baghel Singh Jassa Singh Ramgarhia and Jassa Singh Ahluwalia Mughal empire disintegrated to such an extent that Shah Alam II was only left with Delhi city to rule In 1783 Jassa Singh Ahluwalia and Baghel Singh laid siege to the city After entering Red fort Jassa Singh Ahluwalia sat on the Mughal throne on behest of Baghel Singh and a title of Badshah Singh was given to him Begum Samru requested Baghel Singh to show mercy on Shah Alam II Baghel Singh accepted and stated his demands such as 30 000 of his troops to stay in Delhi and the Mughal Empire would pay for their maintenance Other demands were the construction of at least 5 Gurdwaras and annual tax payment of 13 5 The demands were agreed upon by Shah Alam II with a written agreement Since Sikhs refused to accept authority of the Mughal court due to politics Mahadji Shinde was given the regency with an agreement that Sikhs will not plunder the crown lands and they will be paid 1 3 of the Delhi revenue annually instead 41 Downfall Edit A silver Rupee struck in the name of Shah Alam After the defeats at Muzaffargarh and later at Ghanaur Majad ud Daula was arrested by the orders of Shah Alam II who then recalled Mirza Najaf Khan This led to the former Grand Vizier s arrest for causing miscalculations and collaborating with the enemies of the emperor The traitor was imprisoned and a sum of two million dam in stolen revenue recovered from him It was Shah Alam II s poor judgement and vacillation that led to his own downfall Mirza Najaf Khan had given the Mughal Empire breathing space by having a powerful well managed army in its own right In 1779 the newly reformed Mughal Army decisively defeated Zabita Khan the rebels lost 5 000 men including their leader and therefore did not return during the lifetime of Mirza Najaf Khan citation needed Unfortunately upon the general s death Shah Alam s bad judgement prevailed The dead man s nephew Mirza Shafi whose valour had been proven during various occasions was not appointed commander in chief Shah Alam II instead appointed worthless individuals whose loyalty and record were questionable at best citation needed They were soon quarrelling over petty matters Even the corrupt and treasonous former Grand Vizier Majad ud Daula was restored to his former office he later colluded with the Sikhs and reduced the size of the Mughal Army from over 20 000 to only 5 000 thus bringing the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II at the mercy of his enemies 42 self published source The respect toward the house of Timur is so strong that even though the whole subcontinent has been withdrawn from its authority that no ordinary prince ever intends to take the title of sovereign and Shah Alam II is still seated on the Mughal throne and everything is still done in his name Benoit de Boigne 1790 Shah Alam II blinded by Ghulam Qadir Prisoner of Ghulam Qadir Edit Nawab Majad ud Daula was followed by a known enemy of the Mughals the grandson of Najib Khan Ghulam Qadir with his Sikh allies forced Shah Alam II to appoint him as the Grand Vizier of the Mughal Empire Ghulam Qadir ravaged the palaces in search of the Mughal treasure believed to be worth Rs 250 million Unable to locate such a sum and angered by the Mughal Emperor s attempts to eliminate him and his Sikh allies Ghulam Qadir himself blinded Shah Alam II with an Afghani knife on 10 August 1788 42 Ghulam Qadir behaved with brutality to the emperor and his family Three servants and two water carriers who tried to help the bleeding emperor were beheaded and according to one account Ghulam Qadir would pull the beard of the elderly Mughal Emperor After ten weeks during which Ghulam Qadir stripped the princesses of the royal family naked and forced them to dance naked before him after which they jumped into Yamuna river to drown and the honour of the royal family and prestige of the Mughal Empire reached its lowest ebb Mahadaji Shinde intervened and killed Ghulam Qadir taking possession of Delhi on 2 October 1788 He restored Shah Alam II to the throne and acted as his protector 43 Mahadaji Shinde sent the ears and eyes of Ghulam Qadir to Shah Alam 44 Client of Mahadji Shinde Edit Thankful for his intervention he honoured Mahadji Shinde with the titles of Vakil ul Mutlaq Regent of the Empire and Amir ul Amara Head of the Amirs He made a deal with the Peshwa granting tribute to Pune in return for the protection provided Mahadji Shinde of the Maratha Confederacy After killing Ghulam Qadir and restoring Shah Alam II to the throne a Maratha garrison permanently occupied Delhi in 1788 and ruled on north India for next two decades until they were usurped by the East India Company following the Second Anglo Maratha War in 1803 32 Arrival of British troops Edit The tomb of Shah Alam II in Mehrauli Delhi The French threat in Europe and its possible repercussions in India caused the British to strive to regain the custody of Shah Alam II The British feared that the French military officers might overthrow Maratha power and use the authority of the Mughal emperor to further French ambition in India Shah Alam II also corresponded with Hyder Ali and later with his son Tipu Sultan during their conflicts with the East India Company during the Anglo Mysore Wars and was very well informed about the expansionist agenda of the British After the Battle of Delhi 1803 during the Second Anglo Maratha War on 14 September 1803 British troops entered Delhi ending the Maratha rule on the Mughals bringing Shah Alam then a blind old man seated under a tattered canopy under British protection The Mughal Emperor no longer had the military power to enforce his will but he commanded respect as a dignified member of the House of Timur in the length and breadth of the country citation needed The Nawabs and Subedars still sought formal sanction of the Mughal Emperor on their accession and valued the titles he bestowed upon them They struck coins and read the khutba Friday sermons in his name The Marathas in 1804 under Yashwantrao Holkar tried to snatch Delhi from the British in Siege of Delhi 1804 but failed Death EditShah Alam II died of natural causes on 19 November 1806 His grave lies in a marble enclosure adjoined to the Moti Masjid next to the dargah of the 13th century Sufi saint Qutbuddin Bakhtiar Kaki in Mehrauli Delhi Also in the enclosure are the tombs of Bahadur Shah I also known as Shah Alam I and Akbar Shah II 45 In popular culture EditIn the 1994 Hindi TV series The Great Maratha Shah Alam s character was portrayed by Rishabh Shukla Gallery Edit Map of India in 1765 before the fall of Nawabs and Princely states nominally allied to the emperor mainly in Green Map of India in 1795 11 years before the death of Shah Alam II Blind Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II sits at throne of DelhiSee also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shah Alam II Wikiquote has quotations related to Shah Alam II Mirza Najaf Khan Shuja ud Daula Hyder Ali Muhammed Ali Khan WallajahReferences Edit Muhammad Umar 1998 Muslim Society in Northern India During the Eighteenth Century Available with the author p 411 ISBN 9788121508308 a b c d e The Genealogist Volumes 13 14 The Association 1999 pp 70 81 82 Antoine Louis Henri de Polier Polier colonel de Antoine Louis Henri 1947 Pratul Chandra Gupta ed Shah Alam II and His Court A Narrative of the Transactions at the Court of Delhy from the Year 1771 to the Present Time S C Sarkar and sons p 71 Sir Jadunath Sarkar 1971 1754 1771 Panipat 3d ed 1966 1971 printing Orient Longman p 381 J P Guha 1962 Delhi a Handbook for Travellers R amp K Publishing House p 34 a b Journal of Indian History Volume 60 Department of Modern Indian History 1982 p 62 Muhammad Umar 2001 Urban Culture in Northern India During the Eighteenth Century Munshiram Manoharlal p 185 a b تاريخ هند عهد وسظى غير مطبوعه مآخز جنوبى ايشيائ علاقائ سمينار منعقده ٢٢ ٢٦ مارچ ٨٨٩١ كے مقالات خدا بخش اورينٹل پبلک لائبريرى 1999 p 91 Bhagwati Sharan Verma 1997 Art Archaeology And Culture of Eastern India Dr B S Verma Felicitation Volume Bihar Puravid Parishad p 264 a b c India Legislature Legislative Assembly 1936 The Legislative Assembly Debates Official Report Volume 1 Government of India Press p 108 Muzaffar Alam Sanjay Subrahmanyam 2012 Writing the Mughal World Studies on Culture and Politics Columbia University Press p 462 ISBN 978 0 231 15811 4 Hari Ram Gupta 1944 A History of the Sikhs from Nadir Shah s Invasion to the Rise of Ranjit Singh 1739 1799 Cis Sutlej Sikhs 1769 1799 2 ed Minerva Book Shop p 79 S M Burke Salim al Din Quraishi 1995 Bahadur Shah The Last Moghul Emperor of India Sang e Meel p 36 Shama Mitra Chenoy 1998 Shahjahanabad a City of Delhi 1638 1857 Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers p 82 ISBN 9788121508025 a b The Dacca University Studies Volumes 6 7 University of Dacca 1943 p 30 Dalrymple W 2019 The Anarchy p89 London Bloombsbury Delhi Past and Present p 4 at Google Books History of Islam p 512 at Google Books Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707 1813 p 140 at Google Books S M Ikram 1964 XIX A Century of Political Decline 1707 1803 In Ainslie T Embree ed Muslim Civilization in India New York Columbia University Press Retrieved 5 November 2011 Dictionary of Indo Persian Literature p 40 at Google Books Mughal Empire in India A Systematic Study Including Source Material Volume 3 p 767 at Google Books S R Sharma 1 January 1999 Mughal empire in India a systematic study including source material Atlantic Publishers amp Dist pp 769 ISBN 978 81 7156 819 2 Retrieved 30 March 2012 L S S O malley 1924 Bihar and Orissa District Gazetteers Patna Concept Publishing Company pp 32 ISBN 978 81 7268 121 0 Retrieved 30 March 2012 ʿAlamgir II Mughal emperor Retrieved 27 July 2018 a b Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1908 p 9harvnb error no target CITEREFImperial Gazetteer of India vol IV1908 help a b Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1908 p 10harvnb error no target CITEREFImperial Gazetteer of India vol IV1908 help Imperial Gazetteer of India vol IV 1908 p 11harvnb error no target CITEREFImperial Gazetteer of India vol IV1908 help A Dictionary of Modern Indian History 1707 1947 Parshotam Mehra ISBN 0 19 561552 2 1985 ed Oxford University Press Rathod N G 1994 The Great Maratha Mahadaji Shinde N G Rathod Google Books ISBN 9788185431529 Retrieved 9 February 2017 The Fall of the Moghul Empire of Hindustan p 6 at Google Books a b Capper John 27 July 1997 Delhi the Capital of India Asian Educational Services ISBN 9788120612822 Retrieved 27 July 2018 via Google Books Kaushik Roy 30 March 2011 War Culture Society in Early Modern South Asia 1740 1849 Taylor amp Francis pp 29 ISBN 978 1 136 79087 4 Retrieved 30 March 2012 Kaushik Roy 30 March 2011 War Culture Society in Early Modern South Asia 1740 1849 Taylor amp Francis pp 30 ISBN 978 1 136 79087 4 Retrieved 30 March 2012 suffren letter shah alam Google Search www google ae Retrieved 27 July 2018 a b c The province of Agra Author Dharma Bhanu Srivastava page 8 10 The Gazetteer of India History and culture Publications Division Ministry of Information and Broadcasting India 1973 p 348 OCLC 186583361 Manas Culture Architecture of India Taj Mahal www sscnet ucla edu Retrieved 27 July 2018 The Province of Agra Its History and Administration p 9 at Google Books Gupta Hari Ram 2010 History of the Sikhs Vol III Sikh Domination of the Mughal Empire New Delhi Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers ISBN 9788121502139 Jawandha Nahar 2010 Glimpses of Sikhism New Delhi Sanbun Publishers p 207 ISBN 9789380213255 a b Misbah Islam 30 June 2008 Decline of Muslim States and Societies Xlibris Corporation pp 392 ISBN 978 1 4363 1012 3 Retrieved 30 March 2012 Marathas and the Marathas Country The Marathas p 159 at Google Books Dalrymple William 2019 The Anarchy United Kingdom Bloomsbury publishing ISBN 978 1 5266 1850 4 Dadlani Chanchal B 2018 From stone to paper architecture as history in the late Mughal Empire New Haven CT p 63 ISBN 978 0 300 23317 9 OCLC 1024165136 William Francklin 1798 The History of the reign of Shah Aulum Shah Alam the present emperor of Hindostaun Cooper amp Graham London Shah Alam II 1728 1806 The Fall of the Moghul Empire of Hindustan World Wide School Marathas and the English Company 1707 1800Further reading EditShah Alam Nama Bibliotheca Indica 1912 Shah Alam IITimurid dynastyBorn 1728 Died 1806Regnal titlesPreceded byShah Jahan III Mughal Emperor1759 1806 Succeeded byMahmud Shah Bahadurin 1788Preceded byMahmud Shah Bahadurin 1788 Succeeded byAkbar Shah II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shah Alam II amp oldid 1127289655, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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