791:
755:
779:
767:
40:
803:
591:
649:. This honor was in addition to several promotions his father Abid Khan had received prior. The marriage took place in 1670; their first son was Chin Qilich Khan (born Mir Qamaruddin), who Aurangzeb personally named and mentored. He went on to become a major noble of the court, later becoming the first
577:
Aurangzeb's second son, prince
Muazzam, emerged victorious in the war of succession and was crowned as emperor Bahadur Shah. Ghaziuddin Khan and his family were pardoned and rewarded by the emperor despite their lack of support in the war, possibly due to their military value. Ghaziuddin Khan was
545:
In the early 1700s, as emperor
Aurangzeb's death loomed, Ghaziuddin Khan (along with Chin Qilich Khan and Muhammad Amin) decided to stay neutral in any potential war of succession among the princes. Ghaziuddin Khan and other members of the family also began to stockpile arms, in anticipation of
641:
Emperor
Aurangzeb took an active interest in cultivating Ghaziuddin Khan and his family, perhaps in an effort to gain an ultra-loyal group of nobles. Upon Ghaziuddin's arrival in India, Aurangzeb arranged him a prestigious marriage to Safiya Khanum, daughter of renowned Mughal
790:
403:, who had emigrated to Mughal India earlier than him and later became a favoured noble of emperor Aurangzeb. Ghaziuddin Khan's grandfather was a prominent intellectual of Bukhara named Alam Shaikh, who traced his descent to renowned saint
546:
aggression from the princes. Historian Munis
Faruqui describes their policy as one of 'armed neutrality', and notes that previously in Mughal history, nobles had never been allowed to stay neutral in succession conflicts.
754:
492:
asserts that he lost his eyesight in 1690, and attributes this to a plague during the Siege of
Bijapur. After he was blinded, he was allowed to continue his career in the Mughal military and administration.
586:
and
Marathas (who occupied the northern and southern frontiers of the province respectively). However, his efforts were cut short by his death in 1710, marking the close of his tenure at a mere two years.
420:
Mir Shihab-ud-Din arrived in Mughal India around 1670, during the reign of Mughal emperor
Aurangzeb. Accepted into the court, he was soon deployed as a commander in several military campaigns of the
745:), which in 1986, shifted to a new building outside Turkman Gate, the old structure in the Madrasa Ghaziuddin complex, still houses a hostel for the college and also has his Ghaziuddin's mausoleum.
1004:. The new Cambridge history of India / general ed. Gordon Johnson 1, The Mughals and their contemporaries (Transferred to digital print ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press. p. 236.
582:
by the emperor, replacing
Ibrahim Khan, who the same emperor had appointed previously. Ghaziuddin Khan began attempts to stabilise the province, by appointing fifty spies to report on rebel
447:, and was credited with the campaign's success. He was particularly recognised for leading a difficult expedition during this campaign, to relieve a trapped and starving army led by prince
523:, a province of the empire. He held this governorship for the rest of Aurangzeb's reign, and played an active role in defending the province from Maratha assaults. In 1704, Feroze Jung
472:
and capture of
Hyderabad, in which campaign his father Abid Khan died. During this campaign, he alerted the emperor Aurangzeb of collusion between his second son, prince
17:
436:' (victorious in battle) in 1685. He also distinguished himself in 1681 by performing a dangerous mission during the rebellion of Aurangzeb's fourth son, prince
1427:
1422:
778:
540:
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1270:
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404:
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subsequently crowned himself emperor there. Ghaziuddin Khan was repeatedly asked to join Azam Shah in the coming battle against prince
766:
1368:
1148:
1078:
905:
646:
496:
Beginning in the late 1680s, the nobles of
Aurangzeb's court were split into two rival factions: Ghaziuddin Khan and his son
437:
1407:
549:
The succession struggle was kicked off when the aged emperor died in 1707, at the imperial camp in Ahmadnagar; the prince
1417:
1173:
802:
834:
727:. Previously a madrasa functioned here. Over the decades different educational institutions have functioned from here.
1412:
480:). He also played a significant part in the arrest of the Sultanate's nominal heir and sons. According to historian
481:
633:), located near Delhi's Ajmeri Gate. Following his death, the Mughal state confiscated his assets, as per custom.
716:
673:(prime minister) of the empire. Ghaziuddin Khan also had two other sons: Hamid Khan Bahadur and Rahimuddin Khan.
658:
513:
509:
244:
1387:
501:
561:, making no move to join Azam. Seeking to stay on good terms with the noble, Azam Shah styled him governor of
1358:
1103:
698:
630:
595:
376:
219:
1025:
1392:
1102:
Sheth, Sudev (30 November 2023). "Interlude: Cultivating Financial Crisis under Aurangzeb, 1660sā1719".
738:
566:
1397:
734:
554:
742:
663:
39:
1320:
1312:
835:"General Ghazi al-Din Bahadur Khan Firuz Jang I (recto), Calligraphy (verso) | LACMA Collections"
650:
550:
477:
448:
1287:
Faruqui, Munis D (2009), "At Empire's End: The Nizam, Hyderabad and Eighteenth-Century India",
601:
During Bahadur Shah's reign, Ghaziuddin Khan was also dispatched to combat recalcitrant Rajput
1364:
1346:
1336:
1304:
1266:
1154:
1144:
1117:
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512:. Key members of the first faction were Ghaziuddin Khan, his son Chin Qilich Khan, his cousin
469:
294:
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444:
348:
300:
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939:
The Delhi College : traditional elites, the colonial state, and education before 1857
654:
558:
500:(later Nizam of Hyderabad) were leaders of one group, while the other group was headed by
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368:
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121:
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1324:
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364:
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209:
100:
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273:
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1105:
Bankrolling Empire: Family Fortunes and Political Transformation in Mughal India
723:
side consists of the mosque and tomb of Ghazi ud-Din Khan Feroze Jung I and the
720:
606:
520:
400:
360:
263:
142:
68:
1300:
1113:
609:
on 12 April 1708 (he was dismissed shortly after and reappointed on 15 June).
396:
1350:
1308:
796:
The tomb and surrounding marble enclosure of Ghazi al-Din Khan, Sita Ram 1814
1158:
1088:
957:
915:
842:
712:
618:
489:
380:
344:
223:
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89:
399:) as Mir Shihab ud-Din Siddiqi, in the year 1649. He was the eldest son of
1138:
1068:
937:
895:
429:
138:
96:
64:
1316:
621:, capital of Gujarat Subah, on 8 December 1710. His body was brought to
682:
626:
583:
392:
372:
186:
942:. Margrit Pernau. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. pp. 36ā37.
669:
528:
516:, and two other sons of his, Hamid Khan Bahadur and Rahimuddin Khan.
421:
356:
1073:(4th ed.). New Delhi: Oxford University Press. pp. 51ā52.
900:(4th ed.). New Delhi: Oxford University Press. pp. 46ā49.
355:. Under Aurangzeb, he distinguished himself in key battles over the
622:
589:
462:
52:
936:
Koch, Ebba (2006). "The Madrasa of Ghaziu' d-Din Khan at Delhi".
451:, Aurangzeb's third son. For his action he was rewarded with the
1143:(4th ed.). New Delhi: Oxford University Press. p. 76.
1108:(1 ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 159ā160.
760:
Courtyard of Ghazi al-Din Khan's Madrassah at Delhi 1814-15
461:(distinguished son). A year later, he captured the city of
1038:
1036:
1034:
605:, for which purpose he was made the absentee governor of
971:
969:
967:
29:
Ghaziuddin Khan Bahadur, Firuz Jang, Farzand-i Arjomand
862:
860:
428:' in 1684 due to his successes fighting against the
1140:
Parties and politics at the Mughal Court, 1707-1740
1070:
Parties and politics at the Mughal Court, 1707-1740
897:
Parties and politics at the Mughal Court, 1707-1740
681:In 1690s, through religious endowment he founded a
661:, who was promoted to the high-ranking position of
519:In 1698, Ghaziuddin Khan was appointed governor of
484:, Ghaziuddin Khan lost his eyesight in 1686 due to
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180:
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95:
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63:
27:
44:Portrait of Ghaziuddin Bahadur Khan Firuz Jang I,
375:complex he founded during his lifetime, known as
657:. Ghaziuddin Khan was first cousins with noble
335:, was a leading military general and noble of
18:Ghazi ud-Din Khan Feroze Jung (disambiguation)
508:or chief minister of the empire) and his son
8:
629:complex he had founded during his lifetime (
1174:"The Later Mughals (1707-1803), Chapter IV"
737:which eventually paved way for the present
667:during Aurangzeb's reign, and later became
367:during the reign of Aurangzeb's successor
38:
24:
1335:, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
457:(fish standard), and received the title '
16:For other people with similar names, see
1242:
1178:Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal
557:, to no success. Ghaziuddin remained in
371:, and died in office. He is buried in a
1333:Princes of the Mughal Empire, 1504-1719
1230:
1218:
1206:
1194:
1054:
1042:
987:
975:
866:
819:
747:
363:. He briefly served as the governor of
432:. He additionally received the title '
343:. He was a favoured member of emperor
331:8 December 1710), known by his title
7:
931:
929:
927:
925:
889:
887:
885:
883:
881:
879:
877:
875:
829:
827:
825:
823:
733:became the historic and influential
725:Anglo Arabic Senior Secondary School
541:Mughal war of succession (1707ā1709)
527:a Maratha army that was besieging
14:
1428:18th-century Mughal Empire people
1423:17th-century Mughal Empire people
801:
789:
777:
765:
753:
749:Structures at Ghaziuddin complex
594:Tomb of Ghaziuddin Khan, in the
443:In 1685, he participated in the
359:, and held the governorship of
1363:. Asian Educational Services.
1265:. Asian Educational Services.
1:
1026:History of Aurangzib Volume V
569:, sending him several gifts.
317:
45:
391:Ghaziuddin Khan was born in
1403:18th-century Indian Muslims
625:, where it was buried at a
1444:
1000:Richards, John F. (2010).
696:
596:Ghaziuddin Madrasa complex
538:
468:In 1687, he fought in the
15:
1331:Faruqui, Munis D (2012),
1301:10.1017/S0026749X07003290
1114:10.1017/9781009330213.005
717:New Delhi railway station
424:. He received the title '
347:court, and the father of
314:Mir Shihab-ud-Din Siddiqi
307:
171:
148:
106:
74:
59:
37:
32:Mir Shihab-ud-Din Siddiqi
1172:Irvine, William (1898).
1137:Chandra, Satish (2002).
1067:Chandra, Satish (2002).
894:Chandra, Satish (2002).
617:Ghaziuddin Khan died in
1360:Delhi, past and present
1262:Delhi: Past and Present
1259:Fanshawe, H.C. (1998).
731:Madrasa Ghaziuddin Khan
705:Ghaziuddin Khan complex
699:Madrasa Ghaziuddin Khan
687:Madrasa Ghaziuddin Khan
631:Madrasa Ghaziuddin Khan
488:in Hyderabad; however,
426:Ghaziuddin Khan Bahadur
377:Madrasa Ghaziuddin Khan
220:Madrasa Ghaziuddin Khan
1357:H.C. Fanshawe (1998).
772:A grave at the complex
598:
405:Shihabuddin Suhrawardi
379:, which is located in
839:collections.lacma.org
784:Graves in the complex
739:Zakir Hussain College
593:
573:Reign of Bahadur Shah
567:Viceroy of the Deccan
539:Further information:
476:, and the enemy (the
1408:Subahdars of Gujarat
1289:Modern Asian Studies
808:Mosque of Ghaziuddin
715:located adjacent to
1418:People from Bukhara
1197:, pp. 297ā298.
1057:, pp. 309ā310.
845:on 23 February 2023
743:University of Delhi
459:farzand-i arjomand'
1413:Subahdars of Berar
709:Madrasa Ghaziuddin
693:Ghaziuddin complex
659:Muhammad Amin Khan
599:
514:Muhammad Amin Khan
478:Golconda Sultanate
416:Reign of Aurangzeb
249:Hamid Khan Bahadur
1342:978-1-139-52619-7
1272:978-81-206-1318-8
1123:978-1-009-33021-3
1045:, pp. 13ā14.
1024:Jadunath Sarkar,
1011:978-0-521-56603-2
1002:The Mughal empire
949:978-0-19-567723-2
578:made governor of
535:War of Succession
470:Siege of Golconda
311:
310:
295:Siege of Golconda
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1374:
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841:. Archived from
831:
805:
793:
781:
769:
757:
498:Chin Qilich Khan
445:Siege of Bijapur
395:(in present-day
349:Chin Qilich Khan
330:
328:
322:
319:
301:Battle of Sironj
289:Siege of Bijapur
280:Military service
245:Chin Qilich Khan
202:
200:
176:Personal details
155:12 April 1708-?
153:
130:
111:
79:
50:
47:
42:
25:
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1442:
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1388:Mughal generals
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655:Hyderabad State
653:and founder of
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418:
413:
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353:Hyderabad State
333:Ghaziuddin Khan
326:
324:
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298:
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255:
252:Rahimuddin Khan
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203:8 December 1710
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1284:
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1209:, p. 264.
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697:Main article:
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647:Saadullah Khan
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536:
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486:bubonic plague
482:Satish Chandra
438:Muhammad Akbar
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339:origin in the
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1252:
1245:, p. 64.
1244:
1243:Fanshawe 1998
1239:
1236:
1233:, p. 16.
1232:
1227:
1224:
1221:, p. 12.
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735:Delhi College
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664:sadr-us-sudur
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580:Gujarat Subah
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365:Gujarat Subah
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351:, founder of
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341:Mughal Empire
338:
337:Central Asian
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233:Safiya Khanum
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216:Resting place
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210:Gujarat Subah
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36:
26:
23:
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1393:1640s births
1359:
1332:
1292:
1288:
1278:27 September
1276:. Retrieved
1261:
1253:Bibliography
1238:
1231:Faruqui 2012
1226:
1219:Faruqui 2009
1214:
1207:Faruqui 2012
1202:
1195:Faruqui 2012
1190:
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1167:
1139:
1132:
1104:
1097:
1069:
1062:
1055:Faruqui 2012
1050:
1043:Faruqui 2009
1020:
1001:
995:
988:Faruqui 2012
983:
976:Faruqui 2012
938:
896:
869:, p. 7.
867:Faruqui 2009
847:. Retrieved
843:the original
838:
730:
729:
708:
704:
702:
686:
680:
677:Philanthropy
668:
662:
643:
640:
616:
602:
600:
576:
548:
544:
518:
505:
495:
467:
458:
454:Mahi Maratib
452:
442:
433:
425:
419:
390:
369:Bahadur Shah
332:
313:
312:
293:
291:(1685-1686)
285:Battles/wars
274:Mahi Maratib
166:Bahadur Shah
150:
133:Ibrahim Khan
122:Bahadur Shah
108:
76:
22:
1398:1710 deaths
1295:(1): 5ā43,
849:23 February
721:Ajmeri Gate
689:after him.
521:Berar Subah
407:(d. 1234).
361:Berar Subah
345:Aurangzeb's
321: 1649
129:Preceded by
49: 1675
1382:Categories
814:References
563:Aurangabad
559:Daulatabad
434:Firuz Jang
397:Uzbekistan
387:Early life
327:1710-12-08
199:1710-12-08
1351:808366461
1325:146592706
1309:0026-749X
1184:(2): 163.
713:Old Delhi
619:Ahmadabad
551:Azam Shah
502:Asad Khan
490:Ebba Koch
401:Abid Khan
381:Old Delhi
264:Abid Khan
224:Old Delhi
206:Ahmedabad
151:In office
109:In office
90:Aurangzeb
77:In office
1317:20488070
1159:50004530
1089:50004530
1028:, p .384
958:75615171
916:50004530
430:Marathas
238:Children
139:Subahdar
97:Subahdar
65:Subahdar
719:on the
707:or the
683:madarsa
627:madrasa
584:Rajputs
555:Muazzam
474:Muazzam
393:Bukhara
373:madrasa
297:(1687)
187:Bukhara
162:Monarch
118:Monarch
101:Gujarat
86:Monarch
51:, from
1367:
1349:
1339:
1323:
1315:
1307:
1269:
1157:
1147:
1120:
1087:
1077:
1008:
956:
946:
914:
904:
637:Family
529:Sironj
525:routed
422:Deccan
411:Career
357:Deccan
303:(1704)
270:Awards
260:Parent
230:Spouse
113:?ā1710
81:1698ā?
1321:S2CID
1313:JSTOR
670:wazir
651:Nizam
644:wazir
623:Delhi
613:Death
607:Ajmer
603:rajas
506:wazir
463:Adoni
143:Ajmer
69:Berar
53:LACMA
1365:ISBN
1347:OCLC
1337:ISBN
1305:ISSN
1280:2013
1267:ISBN
1155:OCLC
1145:ISBN
1118:ISBN
1085:OCLC
1075:ISBN
1006:ISBN
954:OCLC
944:ISBN
912:OCLC
902:ISBN
851:2023
703:The
565:and
449:Azam
193:Died
184:1649
181:Born
1297:doi
1110:doi
711:in
141:of
99:of
67:of
1384::
1345:,
1319:,
1311:,
1303:,
1293:43
1291:,
1182:67
1180:.
1176:.
1153:.
1116:.
1083:.
1033:^
966:^
952:.
924:^
910:.
874:^
859:^
837:.
822:^
685:,
531:.
465:.
440:.
383:.
318:c.
222:,
208:,
46:c.
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960:.
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741:(
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197:(
20:.
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