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{{Short description|13th Emperor of the Mughal Empire (reigned 1719–1748)}}
{{Short description|Mughal emperor from 1719 to 1748}}
{{About||the ruler of Persia |Mohammad Shah Qajar|the Afghan warlord and later Nawab of Sardhana|Jan-Fishan Khan|other similarly named persons and places|Muhammad Shah (disambiguation)}}
{{About||the ruler of Persia |Mohammad Shah Qajar|the Afghan warlord and later Nawab of Sardhana|Jan-Fishan Khan|other similarly named persons and places|Muhammad Shah (disambiguation)}}
{{More citations needed|date=June 2009}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2016}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2016}}
{{Use Indian English|date=July 2016}}
{{Use Indian English|date=July 2016}}
{{Infobox royalty
{{Infobox royalty
| name = Muhammad Shah
| name = Muhammad Shah
| title = [[Padishah|Badshah]] of the [[Mughal Empire]]
| title = [[Padishah]]<br />[[Imperial and royal titles of the Mughal emperors|Al-Sultan Al-Azam]]
| image = Muhammad Shah Holding a Falcon, 1764, Muhammad Rizavi Hindi.jpg
| image = Nidha Mal Jharokha portrait of Muhammad Shah holding an emerald and the mouthpiece of a huqqa ca. 1730 The San Diego Museum of Art.jpg
| alt =
| alt =
| caption = Muhammad Shah holding a falcon, 1764. Portrait by Muhammad Rizavi
| caption = Emperor Muhammad Shah holding an emerald and a mouthpiece of a [[hookah|huqqa]], by Nidha Mal, {{circa|1730}}
| succession = 13th [[Mughal emperors|Mughal Emperor]]
| succession = [[Mughal Emperor|Emperor of Hindustan]]
| reign = 27 September 1719 – 26 April 1748
| reign = 27 September 1719 – 26 April 1748
| coronation = 29 September 1719 at [[Red Fort]]
| coronation = 29 September 1719
| predecessor = [[Shah Jahan II]]<br>[[Muhammad Ibrahim (Mughal emperor)|Jahangir II]] (Titular)
| predecessor = [[Shah Jahan II]]<br>[[Muhammad Ibrahim (Mughal emperor)|Jahangir II]] ([[Titular ruler|titular]])
| reg-type1 = Wazirs
| reg-type1 = Wazirs
| regent1 = {{ubl|[[Syed Brothers|Abdullah Khan II]] (1719-1720)|[[Muhammad Amin Khan Turani]] (1720-1721)|[[Nizam-ul-Mulk, Asaf Jah I]] (1721-1724)|[[Itimad-ad-Daula, Qamar-ud-Din Khan|Itimad-ud-Daulah, Qamar-ud-Din Khan]] (1724-1748)
| regent1 = {{ubl|[[Syed Brothers|Abdullah Khan II]] (1719–1720)|[[Muhammad Amin Khan Turani]] (1720–1721)|[[Nizam-ul-Mulk, Asaf Jah I]] (1721–1724)|[[Itimad-ad-Daula, Qamar-ud-Din Khan|Itimad-ud-Daulah, Qamar-ud-Din Khan]] (1724–1748)
}}
}}
| dynasty = [[Timurid dynasty]]
| dynasty = [[Timurid dynasty]]
| regent = [[Sayyid Brothers]] (1719–1720)
| successor = [[Ahmad Shah Bahadur]]
| successor = [[Ahmad Shah Bahadur]]
| birth_name = Roshan Akhtar<ref name="Encyclopedia Britannica" />
| birth_name = Roshan Akhtar<ref name="Encyclopedia Britannica" />
| birth_date = 7 August 1702
| birth_date = {{birth date|1702|08|07|df=yes}}
| birth_place = [[Ghazni]], [[Afghanistan]], [[Mughal Empire]]
| birth_place = [[Ghazni]], [[Kabul Subah]], [[Mughal Empire]]
| death_date = {{death date and age|1748|4|26|1702|8|7|df=yes}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|1748|04|26|1702|08|07|df=yes}}
| death_place = [[Old Delhi|Delhi]], [[Mughal Empire]]
| death_place = [[Old Delhi|Delhi]], Mughal Empire
| spouse = {{marriage|[[Badshah Begum]]<br/>|1721}}
| spouse = {{marriage|[[Badshah Begum]]<br/>|1721}}
| spouse-type = Consort
| spouse-type = Consort
| issue = {{unbulletedlist|[[Ahmad Shah Bahadur]]|Taj Mahmud Mirza<ref name="malik">{{cite book|last1=Malik|first1=Zahir Uddin|title=The reign of Muhammad Shah, 1719-1748|date=1977|publisher=Asia Pub. House|location=London|isbn=9780210405987|page=407}}</ref>|Shaharyar Mirza<ref name="malik"/>|[[Hazrat Begum]]|}}
| issue = {{unbulletedlist|[[Ahmad Shah Bahadur]]|Taj Mahmud Mirza<ref name="malik">{{cite book|last1=Malik|first1=Zahir Uddin|title=The reign of Muhammad Shah, 1719–1748|date=1977|publisher=Asia Pub. House|location=London|isbn=9780210405987|page=407}}</ref>|Shaharyar Mirza<ref name="malik"/>|[[Hazrat Begum]]|}}
| full name = Mirza Nasir-ud-Din Muḥammad Shah Bahadur Ghazi
| full name = Mirza Nasir-ud-Din Muḥammad Shah Bahadur Ghazi
| father = [[Jahan Shah (Mughal prince)|Jahan Shah]]
| father = [[Jahan Shah (Mughal prince)|Jahan Shah]]
| mother = Fakhr-un-Nissa Begum<ref name="malik"/>
| mother = Fakhr-un-Nissa Begum<ref name="malik"/>
| signature = Genealogical seal of Muhammad Shah, 1133 A.H. (circa September–October 1721 C.E.).png
| signature_type = Seal
| religion = [[Sunni Islam]] {{small|([[Hanafi]])}}
| religion = [[Sunni Islam]] {{small|([[Hanafi]])}}
| spouses = {{plainlist|
| spouses = {{plainlist|
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*Fatehpuri Mahal<ref name="malik"/>
*Fatehpuri Mahal<ref name="malik"/>
*Roshanabadi Mahal<ref name="malik"/>
*Roshanabadi Mahal<ref name="malik"/>
}}
*Rup Bai<ref name="malik"/>
*Nur Bai<ref>{{cite book | author = William Irvine | date = | title = Later Mughals: 1719-1739, Volume 2 | edition = | publisher = | pages =271}}</ref>}}
| spouses-type = Wives
| spouses-type = Wives
| regnal name = Muhammad Shah
| regnal name = Muhammad Shah
| house = [[Mughal Dynasty]]
| house = [[Mughal dynasty|House of Babur]]
| place of burial = Mausoleum of Muhammad Shah, [[Nizamuddin Dargah]], [[Delhi]]|
| place of burial = Mausoleum of Muhammad Shah, [[Nizamuddin Dargah]], [[Delhi]], India
}}
}}
{{Mughal}}
{{Mughal}}


'''Mirza Nasir-ud-Din Muḥammad Shah''' (born '''Roshan Akhtar''';<ref name="Encyclopedia Britannica">{{cite web |title=Muhammad Shah |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Muhammad-Shah |access-date=18 September 2017 |website=Encyclopedia Britannica |language=en}}</ref> 7 August 1702 – 26 April 1748)<ref name="Encyclopedia Britannica" /> was the 13th [[Mughal emperor]], who reigned from 1719 to 1748.<ref name="sen2">{{Cite book |last=Sen |first=Sailendra |title=A Textbook of Medieval Indian History |publisher=Primus Books |year=2013 |isbn=978-9-38060-734-4 |pages=193}}</ref> He was son of [[Jahan Shah I|Khujista Akhtar]], the fourth son of [[Bahadur Shah I]]. With the help of the [[Sayyid brothers]], he ascended the throne at the young age of 16. He later got rid of them with the help of [[Asaf Jah I]] – Syed Hussain Ali Khan was murdered at Fatehpur Sikri in 1720 and Syed Hassan Ali Khan Barha was fatally poisoned in 1722.<ref name="Shaharyar_Begums_2000">{{cite book|title=The Begums of Bhopal|author=Shaharyar M. Khan|edition=illustrated|publisher=I.B.Tauris|year=2000|isbn=978-1-86064-528-0|page=18}}</ref> Muhammad Shah was a great patron of the arts, including musical, cultural and administrative developments. His pen-name was '''Sadā Rangīla''' ''(Ever Joyous)'' and he is often referred to as "Muhammad Shah Rangila", also sometimes as "Bahadur Shah Rangila" after his grand father Bahadur Shah I.<ref name="google">{{cite web|url=http://www.google.com.pk/search?aq=f&sugexp=chrome,mod=15&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=Sitar#hl=en&q=muhammad+shah+music&um=1&ie=UTF-8&tbo=u&tbm=bks&source=og&sa=N&tab=wp&ei=9z_IT93OIcXh4QSmykw&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.r_qf.,cf.osb&fp=7d73d82afbf6b9e8&biw=1024&bih=667|title=Sitar - Google Search|access-date=17 January 2014}}</ref>
'''Mirza Nasir-ud-Din Muḥammad Shah''' (born '''Roshan Akhtar''';<ref name="Encyclopedia Britannica">{{cite web |title=Muhammad Shah |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Muhammad-Shah |access-date=18 September 2017 |website=Encyclopædia Britannica |language=en}}</ref> 7 August 1702 – 26 April 1748)<ref name="Encyclopedia Britannica" /> was the thirteenth [[Mughal emperors|Mughal emperor]] from 1719 to 1748.<ref name="sen2">{{Cite book |last=Sen |first=Sailendra |title=A Textbook of Medieval Indian History |publisher=Primus Books |year=2013 |isbn=978-9-38060-734-4 |pages=193}}</ref> He was son of [[Jahan Shah I|Khujista Akhtar]], the fourth son of [[Bahadur Shah I]]. After being chosen by the [[Sayyid brothers|Sayyid Brothers of Barha]], he ascended the throne at the young age of 16, under their strict supervision.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jVx6EAAAQBAJ&dq=rafi+ud+darajat+syed+brothers&pg=PA120 |title= The Wonder That Is Urdu| author= Krishna|page=121 |date= 2022 |publisher= Motilal Banarsidass|isbn= 9788120843011}}</ref>


He later got rid of them with the help of [[Nizam-ul-Mulk, Asaf Jah I]] – [[Sayyid Hussain Ali Khan Barha|Syed Hussain Ali Khan]] was murdered at [[Fatehpur Sikri]] in 1720 and [[Sayyid Hassan Ali Khan Barha]] was captured in battle in 1720 and fatally poisoned in 1722.<ref name="Shaharyar_Begums_2000">{{cite book|title=The Begums of Bhopal|author=Shaharyar M. Khan|edition=illustrated|publisher=I.B.Tauris|year=2000|isbn=978-1-86064-528-0|page=18}}</ref> Muhammad Shah was a great patron of the arts, including musical, cultural and administrative developments, he is thus often referred to as '''Muhammad Shah Rangila''' ({{lit|Muhammad Shah "the colourful"}}).<ref name="sn"/> His pen-name was "Sadrang" and he is also sometimes referred to as "Bahadur Shah Rangila" after his grand father [[Bahadur Shah I]].
Although he was a patron of the arts, Muhammad Shah's reign was marked by rapid and irreversible decline of the Mughal Empire. The Mughal Empire was already decaying, but the [[Nader Shah's invasion of India|invasion by Nader Shah]] of Persia and the subsequent [[sack of Delhi|sacking of Delhi]], the Mughal capital, greatly accelerated the pace. The course of events not only shocked and mortified the Mughals themselves, but also other foreigners, including the [[British Raj|British]].


Muhammad Shah's reign was marked by rapid and irreversible decline of the Mughal Empire that was exacerbated by [[Nader Shah's invasion of India]] and the [[sack of Delhi|sacking of Delhi]] in 1739. The course of events not only shocked and mortified the Mughals themselves, but also other foreigners, including the [[East India Company|British]].
==Reign==
On 29 September 1719, Muhammad Shah was given the title ''Abu Al-Fatah Nasir-ud-Din Roshan Akhtar Muhammad Shah'' and [[Peacock Throne|enthroned]] in the [[Red Fort]]. His mother was given an allowance of 15&nbsp;thousand rupees monthly for her needs, but the [[Sayyid Brothers]] kept the new emperor under strict supervision.


== Rebellious activities against Muhammad Shah ==
The [[Mughal Empire|Mughal]] [[Grand Vizier]] [[Syed Hassan Ali Khan Barha]] and his brother the Mughal commander and chief Syed Hussain Ali Khan Barha were well aware that [[Asaf Jah I]] and his companions [[Zain ud-din Ahmad Khan]] intended to dissolve their administration. The Sayyid Brothers quickly nominated an amateur, Prince [[Muhammad Ibrahim (Mughal emperor)|Muhammad Ibrahim]], who proclaimed himself Mughal Emperor, but he was quickly defeated by the new loyalists of the young Muhammad Shah on 13 November 1720.
In 1719, Kolis of [[Mahi River]] were most rebellious against Mughal rule and plundering the villages, Mihir Ali Khan who was acting as Viceroy of Gujarat at the place of [[Ajit Singh of Marwar]], marched against Koli rebels of [[Mahi Kantha Agency|Mahi]] who were committing piracy against Muslims and subdued them.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Ashburner |first=Bhagvánlál Indraji (1839-1888) John Whaley Watson (1838–1889) Jervoise Athelstane Baines (1847–1925) L. R. |title=History of Gujarát |url=https://www.gutenberg.org/files/54652/54652-h/54652-h.htm |access-date=2022-10-17 |website=www.gutenberg.org |language=en}}</ref>


In 1721, Kasim Ali Khan who was an officer in Mughal Empire under Muuhammad Shah employed against the Kolis of Kheda district to collect the fine but they refused to pay and there was a battle in Pethapur between Kolis and Mughal army under Kasim Ali Khan. Kasim Ali Khan was killed by Kolis and Mughal army was defeated and retreat to base.* <ref>{{cite book |last=Campbell |first=James Macnabb |editor=[[James Macnabb Campbell]] |title=History of Gujarát |url=http://www.gutenberg.org/files/54652/54652-h/54652-h.htm |series=Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency |volume=I(II) |year=1896 |publisher=The Government Central Press |chapter=Chapter I. Early Musalmán Governors.(A.D. 1297–1403.) and II. ÁHMEDÁBÁD KINGS. (A. D. 1403–1573.) |page=303}}</ref>
[[File:Chitarman II, Emperor Muhammad Shah with Falcon Viewing his Garden at Sunset from a Palanquin ca 1730 Metmuseum.jpg|thumb|left|The Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah with his [[Falcon]] visits the imperial garden at sunset on a palanquin.]]


In 1722, Muhammad Bahadur, son of Salabat Khan Babi, was placed in charge of Sadra and Virpur, with the title of Sher Khan. Shortly after his arrival the viceroy marched against and subdued the rebellious Kolis of the Chunval but was wounded deeply. After that Kolis of Modhera opposed the Muhammad Shah but Modhera village was burnt down.{{sfn|Campbell|1896|pp=304}}
On 9 October 1720, Syed Hussain Ali Khan Barha, the commander and chief of the most elite [[Mughal Army]], was assassinated in his encampment in Toba Bhim. The Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah took direct command of his forces. Asaf Jah I was then dispatched to gain complete control of six Mughal provinces in the [[Deccan Plateau|Deccan]], and [[Muhammad Amin Khan Turani]] was assigned as the [[Mansabdar]] of 8,000. He was sent to pursue the Mughal Grand Vizier Syed Hassan Ali Khan Barha, who was defeated at the [[Battle of Hasanpur]] by Muhammad Amin Turani, [[Khan Dowran VII|Khan-i Dauran]], Sher Afkan Panipati, and Amin-ud-Din Sambhali. Hassan Khan Barha fought on the side opposing Khan-i-Dauran where the most danger was anticipated.<ref>{{cite book |url= https://www.google.ca/books/edition/Later_Mughal/ak5oFjTys8MC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=hasanpur+khan+dauran&pg=RA1-PA82&printsec=frontcover |title= Later Mughal |page= 82 |author= William Irvine |date= 1971 }}</ref> He was captured by Muhammad Shah on 15 November 1720 and executed two years later. Previously the emperor had to fight Muhammad Ibrahim, but young Muhammad Shah defeated him on 13 November 1720. The fall of the Sayyid Brothers marked the beginning of the end of the Mughal Empire's direct control over its dominions in the Deccan.


In 1729, Mughal Viceroy of Sultan Muhammad Shah faced the challenge of anti-muslim activities of Kolis of Sorath, viceroy marches against Kolis of sorath and destroying them taken to Ahmednagar.{{sfn|Campbell|1896|pp=310}} after this, Jawan Mard Khan Babi who was Governor of Petlad ordered against rebellious Kolis of Balor, probably Bhátod about fifteen miles east of Bharuch, but Jawan Marad Khan was killed by a man of Koli tribe, and in revenge for his death the town of Balor was plundered. On the death of Jawán Mard Khan, at the request of Salabat Muhammad Khan Babi, his eldest son Kamal-ud-din Khan Babi received the districts of Sami and Munjpur and the title of Jawan Mard Khan.{{sfn|Campbell|1896|pp=310 - 311}}
In the year 1721, young Muhammad Shah married the daughter of the previously deposed Mughal Emperor [[Farrukhsiyar]].


In 1738, Sher Khan Babi was of Junagadh was appointed as governor of sorath, Babi was obliged to march against a Koli chieftain Kanji Chunvalia of Chhaniar in Chunval because Kanji opposed and resisted the mughal authority but Sher Khan Babi was bravely resisted by Kolis so Momin Khan was called with large force and Chhaniar was burned down by mughal army.{{sfn|Campbell|1896|pp=322 - 323}}
On 21 February 1722, Muhammad Shah appointed the Asaf Jah I as Grand Vizier. He advised Muhammad Shah to be "as cautious as [[Akbar]] and as brave as [[Aurangzeb]]". Asaf Jah I resigned his post as the Grand Vizier when Muhammad Shah expressed negligence towards his administration. Muhammad Shah was young and foolish, and allowed his favorites to make remarks about him, when he wore his Deccan clothing to court,<ref>{{cite book |url= https://www.google.ca/books/edition/Notes_on_Punjab_and_Mughal_India/SHgtAAAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=mahratta&printsec=frontcover |title= Notes on Punjab and Mughal India: Selections from Journal of the Punjab Historical Society |publisher= Sang-e-Meel Publications |page= 381 |date= 1988 }}</ref> such as: "''See how the Deccan monkey dances!''". His efforts were misrepresented and thwarted by the nobles close to the Emperor.<ref>{{cite book |title= A New History of India |author= Ishwari Prasad |date= 1940 |publisher= Indian Press, Limited |page= 334}}</ref> When Asaf Jah I realized that he was not liked by the emperor, he decided to return to the Deccan.<ref>{{cite book |title= The Delhi that No-one Knows |date= 2005 |page= 60 |author= Ronald Vivian Smith |publisher= DC Publishers }}</ref> Asaf Jah I appointed commander Ewaz Khan as the master of the garrison at [[Aurangabad, Maharashtra|Aurangabad]], and much of his logistical duties were carried out by Inayatullah Kashmiri.<ref name="google2">{{cite book|title=Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707-1813|author=Mehta, J.L.|year=2005|publisher=New Dawn Press, Incorporated|isbn=9781932705546|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=d1wUgKKzawoC}}</ref> Asaf Jah I left the imperial court in disgust. In 1723 he set out on an expedition to the Deccan, where he fought [[Mubariz Khan]], the Mughal [[Subedar]] of the Deccan, who kept the ravaging [[Marathas]] at bay. Mubariz Khan was a former ally of the Barha Sayyids, who was appointed by Muhammad Shah to kill Asaf Jah I.<ref>{{cite book |url= https://www.google.ca/books/edition/A_New_Look_at_Modern_Indian_History_From/bkRxDwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=muhammad+shah+appointed+mubariz+khan&pg=PA6&printsec=frontcover |title= A New Look at Modern Indian History (From 1707 to The Modern Times), 32e |page= 6 |publisher= S Chand Limited |date= 2018 }}</ref> Taking advantage of Mubariz Khan's conventional weaknesses, Asaf Jah I defeated and eliminated his opponent during the [[Battle of Shakar Kheda]]. Asaf Jah I then established the [[Nizam of Hyderabad]] in 1725.


In 1739, Koli chieftain Jamaji of Thara, raised the Kolis of Kankrej against sultan and continually plundered the mughal territory. Jawan Marad Khan was ordered to march against the Koli chieftain but he was unable to maintain order so he requested the Fida-ud-din Khan to subdue the Kolis. After defeating the Koli chieftain, the Koli country was plundered by mughal troops.{{sfn|Campbell|1896|pp=323}}
[[File:Chitarman II, Emperor Muhammad Shah with four courtiers, smoking huqqah, ca. 1730, Bodleian Library, University of Oxford.jpg|thumb|300px|The imperial [[Divan|Diwan]] of the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah]]


In 1740, Kolis of Atarsumba, challenged the Mughal authority and refused to pay any form of tax to mughal sultan. Jawan marad khan along with his brother Zorawar Khan Babi Marched against Kolis of Atarsumba but they were strongly resisted and there was a battle but mughals defeated the Kolis and make them to pay tax. But it was not for long time, after some time, Kolis again refused to pay tax and mughal troops were sent under Abdul Hussain Khan and Vajeram burnt the three Koli villages.{{sfn|Campbell|1896|pp=323 - 324}}
Muhammad Shah appointed [[Itimad-ad-Daula, Qamar-ud-Din Khan|Qamar-ud-Din Khan]] as Wazir in succession to the Nizam. However he was shortly dismissed in favour of [[Roshan-ud-Daulah|Roshan-ud-Daulah Turrah Baz Khan]], a native of Panipat,<ref>{{cite book |url= https://www.google.ca/books/edition/Modern_Indian_History/vDscEAAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=raushan+daulah+panipati&pg=PA13&printsec=frontcover |title= Modern Indian History |page= 13 |date= 2020 |author= V D. MAHAJAN |publisher= Publisher:S CHAND & Company Limited }}</ref> who was appointed the Wazir, in order to reduce the influence of the Turani family.<ref>{{cite book|url= https://www.google.ca/books/edition/A_Study_of_Eighteenth_Century_India_Poli/dohDAAAAYAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=nizam+nephew+qamaruddin&dq=nizam+nephew+qamaruddin&printsec=frontcover |title= A Study of Eighteenth Century India: Political history, 1707-1761 |author= Jagadish Narayan Sarkar |date= 1976 |publisher= the University of Virginia |page= 31 }}</ref> The ears of the Emperor were possessed by the Amir-ul-Umara, Khan-i Dauran.<ref>{{cite book |url= https://www.google.ca/books/edition/Later_Mughal/ak5oFjTys8MC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=khan+dauran+ears+muhammad+shah&pg=RA1-PA336&printsec=frontcover |title= Later Mughal |date= 1971 |author= William Irvine |page= 336 }}</ref>


In 1747, Rangoji a Maratha military leader returned to Áhmedábád, and Jawán Mard Khán had an interview with him a few miles from the city. Shortly after this the Kolis of Mehmudabad and Mahudha rebelled, but the revolt was speedily crushed by Sháhbáz Rohilla.{{sfn|Campbell|1896|pp=331}}
During this time, the Mughal-Maratha Wars (1728–1763)<ref>{{cite book |title= Dictionary of Battles and Sieges: A-E |author= Tony Jaques |volume= 1 |series= Dictionary of Battles and Sieges: A Guide to 8,500 Battles from Antiquity Through the Twenty-first Century |publisher= Greenwood Publishing Group |page=xxxix |year= 2007 |isbn= 978-0313335372}}</ref> would cause irreparable devastation to the inhabitants of the ill-administered [[Mughal Empire]]. As the Mughal court of Northern India was hostile to Nizam-ul-Mulk and attempted to suppress his independence, the Nizam encouraged the Marathas to invade Malwa and the northern Indian territories of the empire in order to save himself from intentions of the Emperor.<ref>{{cite book |url= https://www.google.ca/books/edition/Annals_of_the_Bhandarkar_Oriental_Resear/p5VYH7FhoTsC?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=It+is+necessary+to+take+our+hands+off+Malwa.+God+willing,+I+will+enter+into+an+understanding+with+them&dq=It+is+necessary+to+take+our+hands+off+Malwa.+God+willing,+I+will+enter+into+an+understanding+with+them&printsec=frontcover |title= Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute, Poona: Volumes 51-53 |page= 94 |publisher= Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute |date= 1970 |quote= The Mughal court was hostile to Nizam-ul-Mulk. If it had the power, it would have crushed him. To save himself from the hostile intentions of the Emperor, the Nizam did not interfere with the Maratha activities in Malwa and Gujarat. As revealed in the anecdotes narrated b Lala Mansaram, the Nizam-ul-Mulk considered the Maratha army operating in Malwa and Gujarat as his own}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url= https://www.google.ca/books/edition/The_New_Cambridge_Modern_History/1BY9AAAAIAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Finally+,+in+the+following+year+,+the+nizam+entered+into+a+secret+agreement+with+the+peshwa+by+which+he+offered+to&pg=PA549&printsec=frontcover |title= The New Cambridge Modern History |page= 549 |date= 1957 |publisher= University Press }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url= https://www.google.ca/books/edition/Mughal_Empire_in_India_1526_1761/h6Y9AAAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=connived&printsec=frontcover |title= Mughal Empire in India, 1526-1761: Volume 3 |author= Shripid Rama Sharma |date= 1934 |publisher= Karnatak Printing Press }}</ref> The Nizam, who considered the Maratha army as his own, says that he used the Marathas to his own advantage in the Maasir-i Nizami:<ref>{{cite book |title= Expanding Frontiers in South Asian and World History Essays in Honour of John F. Richards |author= Richard M. Eaton |date= 2013 |publisher= Cambridge University Press |page= 21 }}</ref>
<blockquote>
"I consider all this army (Marathas) as my own and I will get my work done through them. It is necessary to take our hands off Malwa. God willing, I will enter into an understanding with them and entrust the Mulukgiri(raiding) on that side of the Narmada to them."
</blockquote>
Despite efforts to counter the rise of rebellions in 1724, by the [[Nawab of Awadh]] [[Saadat Ali Khan I|Saadat Ali Khan]] and the [[Mughal Empire|Mughal]] [[Subedar]] in [[Bangalore]], Dilawar Khan (r.1726–1756), who established a well-protected bastion in the [[Malabar Coast]]. [[Muhammad Ali Khan of Rampur|Muhammad Ali Khan]] the [[Mughal Empire|Mughal]] [[Faujdar]] of [[Rangpur, Gujarat|Rangpur]] and his stern ally Deena Narayan were ambushed out of [[Cooch Behar State|Koch Bihar]] by Upendra Narayan a [[Hindu]] [[Bihari people|Bihari]] and Mipham Wangpo (r.1729–1736) the ruler of [[Bhutan]]. [[Ali Mohammed Khan]] had established the barons of [[Rohilakhand]]. The [[Nawab of Bhopal]], Yar Muhammad Khan Bahadur, also ratified by the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah in 1728, countered ceaseless raids by the Marathas in Malwa and nearly began to lose half of his territories in the year 1742.


==Early reign==
Muhammad Shah eventually learned the skills of statesmanship after removing his three incompetent advisors, namely Koki Jee (his foster sister), Roshan-ud-Daula (his mercantile friend) and Sufi Abdul Ghafur of [[Thatta]] (his spiritual teacher).
=== Removing the Sayyid Brothers ===
{{See also|Sayyid brothers|Battle of Balapur}}[[File:Chitarman II, Emperor Muhammad Shah with Falcon Viewing his Garden at Sunset from a Palanquin ca 1730 Metmuseum.jpg|thumb|left|The Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah with his [[Falcon]] visits the imperial garden at sunset on a palanquin.]]


On 9 October 1720, Syed Hussain Ali Khan Barha, the commander and chief of the [[Army of the Mughal Empire|Mughal army]], was assassinated in his encampment in [[Todabhim]] and Muhammad Shah took direct command of the army. Asaf Jah I was then dispatched to gain complete control of six Mughal provinces in the [[Deccan Plateau|Deccan]], and [[Muhammad Amin Khan Turani]] was assigned as the [[Mansabdar]] of 8000. He was sent to pursue the Mughal Grand vizier Syed Hassan Ali Khan Barha, who was defeated at the battle of [[Hasanpur]] by Muhammad Amin Turani, [[Khan Dowran VII|Khan-i Dauran]], Sher Afkan Panipati, and Amin-ud-Din Sambhali. Hassan Khan Barha fought on the side opposing Khan-i-Dauran where the most danger was anticipated,<ref>{{cite book |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=ak5oFjTys8MC&dq=hasanpur+khan+dauran&pg=RA1-PA82 |title= Later Mughal |page= 82 |author= William Irvine |date= 1971 |publisher= Atlantic Publishers & Distri }}</ref> was captured on 15 November 1720 and executed two years later. The fall of the Sayyid Brothers would mark the beginning of the end of the Mughal Empire's direct control over its dominions in the Deccan.
In the [[Punjab region]], the [[Sikhs]] were at war with Mughal [[Subedar]]s, and the hit-and-run tactics of the Sikh warriors caused devastation. In [[Ajmer]], Ajit Singh carved out a vast territory and allied himself with the renegade [[Maratha]]s. While in the Deccan the Marathas had ruined Mughal fortifications and were already on the warpath. All this greatly contributed to the decline of the Mughal Empire.


=== Loss of Deccan ''subahs'' ===
In 1737, the [[Maratha]]s under [[Baji Rao I]] annexed [[Gujarat]], [[Malwa]] and [[Bundelkhand]], and raided the Mughal capital [[Delhi]].
[[File:Emperor Muhammad Shah LACMA AC1997.127.1.jpg|thumb|The Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah and his family]]
On 21 February 1722, Muhammad Shah appointed the Asaf Jah I as Grand Vizier. He advised Muhammad Shah to be "as cautious as [[Akbar]] and as brave as [[Aurangzeb]]". Asaf Jah used his influence with the emperor to fulfil his territorial ambitions in the Deccan. He lost the emperor's confidence when he appointed Hamid Khan, a relative to [[Saadullah Khan (Mughal Empire)|Saadullah Khan]] and his maternal uncle, to administer Gujarat after having sending him on the pretext of restoring order to the province.<ref>{{cite book |author=Jaswant Lal Mehta |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=d1wUgKKzawoC |title=Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707–1813 |date=2005 |publisher=New Dawn Press, Incorporated |isbn=9781932705546 |page=145}}</ref> Realising his loss of influence and trust from the emperor, Asaf Jah resigned as Grand Vizier and returned to the Deccan.<ref>{{cite book |author=Ronald Vivian Smith |title=The Delhi that No-one Knows |date=2005 |publisher=DC Publishers |page=60}}</ref>


Asaf Jah I appointed commander Ewaz Khan as the master of the garrison at [[Aurangabad, Maharashtra|Aurangabad]], and much of his logistical duties were carried out by Inayatullah Kashmiri.<ref name="google2">{{cite book |author=Mehta, J.L. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=d1wUgKKzawoC |title=Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707–1813 |publisher=New Dawn Press, Incorporated |year=2005 |isbn=9781932705546}}</ref> In 1723 he set out on an expedition to the Deccan, where he fought [[Mubariz Khan]], the Mughal [[Subahdar]] of the Deccan, who had kept the ravaging [[Maratha Empire]] at bay. Mubariz Khan was a former ally of the Barha Sayyids, who was appointed by Muhammad Shah to kill Asaf Jah I.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bkRxDwAAQBAJ&dq=muhammad+shah+appointed+mubariz+khan&pg=PA6 |title=A New Look at Modern Indian History (From 1707 to The Modern Times), 32e |date=2018 |publisher=S Chand Limited |isbn=9789352534340 |page=6}}</ref> Taking advantage of Mubariz Khan's conventional weaknesses, Asaf Jah I defeated and eliminated his opponent during the [[Battle of Shakar Kheda]]. Asaf Jah I then established the [[Hyderabad State]] and appointed himself the [[Nizam of Hyderabad]] in 1725.
In 1739, [[Nader Shah]] of [[Persia]], lured by the wealth and weakness of the Mughals, took advantage of a rebellion on his eastern borders near [[Kandahar]] and initiated a campaign against the Mughal Empire capturing [[Ghazni]], [[Kabul]], [[Lahore]], and [[Sindh]]. He then advanced against Muhammad Shah and defeated him at the [[Battle of Karnal]]. The Persians, having crushed the Mughal armies in less than three hours,<ref name="Later Mughal">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ak5oFjTys8MC&q=battle+of+karnal+less+than+three+hours&pg=RA1-PA349|title=Later Mughal|access-date=26 May 2014|last1=Irvine|first1=William|year=1971}}</ref> marched upon and [[Sack of Delhi|sacked Delhi]], hoarding priceless treasures that were taken back to Persia. This event weakened the Mughals significantly, paving the path for more invaders and eventually the [[East India Company]].


The Mughal-Maratha Wars (1728–1763)<ref>{{cite book |author=Tony Jaques |title=Dictionary of Battles and Sieges: A–E |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |year=2007 |isbn=978-0313335372 |series=Dictionary of Battles and Sieges: A Guide to 8,500 Battles from Antiquity Through the Twenty-first Century |volume=1 |page=xxxix}}</ref> would cause irreparable devastation to six Deccan ''[[Subah|subahs]]''–[[Khandesh]], [[Bijapur]], [[Berar Subah|Berar]], [[Aurangabad]], [[Hyderabad Subah|Hyderabad]] and [[Bidar]]. Asaf Jah would the Marathas to invade [[Malwa Subah|Malwa]] and the northern territories of the Mughal empire to protect his newfound independence.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=p5VYH7FhoTsC&q=It+is+necessary+to+take+our+hands+off+Malwa.+God+willing,+I+will+enter+into+an+understanding+with+them |title=Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute, Poona: Volumes 51–53 |date=1970 |publisher=Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute |page=94 |quote=The Mughal court was hostile to Nizam-ul-Mulk. If it had the power, it would have crushed him. To save himself from the hostile intentions of the Emperor, the Nizam did not interfere with the Maratha activities in Malwa and Gujarat. As revealed in the anecdotes narrated b Lala Mansaram, the Nizam-ul-Mulk considered the Maratha army operating in Malwa and Gujarat as his own}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1BY9AAAAIAAJ&dq=Finally+,+in+the+following+year+,+the+nizam+entered+into+a+secret+agreement+with+the+peshwa+by+which+he+offered+to&pg=PA549 |title=The New Cambridge Modern History |date=1957 |publisher=University Press |page=549}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author=Shripid Rama Sharma |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h6Y9AAAAMAAJ&q=connived |title=Mughal Empire in India, 1526–1761: Volume 3 |date=1934 |publisher=Karnatak Printing Press}}</ref> The Nizam described the [[Maratha Army|Maratha army]] to be an instrument to be wielded to his own advantage in the ''Maasir-i Nizami'':<ref>{{cite book |author=Richard M. Eaton |title=Expanding Frontiers in South Asian and World History Essays in Honour of John F. Richards |date=2013 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=21}}</ref><blockquote>
In 1748, [[Ahmad Shah Durrani]] of [[Afghanistan]] invaded the Mughal Empire. Heir apparent [[Ahmad Shah Bahadur]], [[Grand Vizier]] [[Qamaruddin Khan]] and his son [[Moin-ul-Mulk]] better known as Mir Mannu, [[Ghazi ud-Din Khan Feroze Jung II|Intizam-ud-Daula]] and [[Safdarjung]] were sent with 75,000 men after the defeat of Shahnawaz Khan in Lahore. At the [[Battle of Manupur (1748)]], Durrani's 12,000 men were defeated, and he was forced to retreat. There was a great rejoicing for this event throughout the Mughal Empire.
"I consider all this army (Marathas) as my own and I will get my work done through them. It is necessary to take our hands off Malwa. God willing, I will enter into an understanding with them and entrust the ''Mulukgiri'' (raiding) on that side of the [[Narmada River|Narmada]] to them."
</blockquote>The ears of the Muhammed Shah were possessed by the Amir-ul-Umara, Khan-i Dauran.<ref>{{cite book |author=William Irvine |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ak5oFjTys8MC&dq=khan+dauran+ears+muhammad+shah&pg=RA1-PA336 |title=Later Mughals |date=1971 |publisher=Atlantic Publishers & Distri |page=336}}</ref> Muhammad Shah appointed [[Itimad-ad-Daula, Qamar-ud-Din Khan|Qamar-ud-Din Khan]] as Grand Wazir to succeed Asaf Jah. However, he was quickly dismissed in favour of [[Roshan-ud-Daulah|Roshan-ud-Daulah Turrah Baz Khan]], a native of Panipat,<ref>{{cite book |author=V D. Mahajan |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vDscEAAAQBAJ&dq=raushan+daulah+panipati&pg=PA13 |title=Modern Indian History |date=2020 |publisher=Publisher: S Chand & Company Limited |isbn=9789352836192 |page=13}}</ref> who was appointed the Grand Wazir, in order to reduce the influence of the Turani family.<ref>{{cite book |author=Jagadish Narayan Sarkar |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dohDAAAAYAAJ&q=nizam+nephew+qamaruddin |title=A Study of Eighteenth Century India: Political history, 1707–1761 |date=1976 |publisher=the University of Virginia |page=31}}</ref>

Despite the loss of the Deccan ''subahs'' in 1724, the [[Nawab of Awadh]] [[Saadat Ali Khan I|Saadat Ali Khan]] and the Mughal ''subahdar'' Dilawar Khan (r. 1726–1756) remained loyal to the emperor and established a well-protected bastion on the [[Malabar Coast]].


===Cultural developments===
===Cultural developments===
[[File:Zaban urdu mualla.png|thumb|The phrase {{transl|ur|''Zuban-i Urdū-yi Muʿallá''}} (literally "Language of the exalted [[Golden Horde|Horde]]", contextually the exalted Urdu Language) written in [[Nastaʿlīq script]]]]
[[File:Zaban urdu mualla.png|thumb|The phrase {{transliteration|ur|''Zuban-i Urdū-yi Muʿallá''}} (literally "Language of the exalted [[Golden Horde|Horde]]", contextually the exalted Urdu Language) written in [[Nastaʿlīq script]]]]
[[File:Lashkari Zaban in Nastaliq script.png|thumb|''Lashkari Zabān'' ("military camp language" or "[[Battalion|Battalionese language]]") title in Nastaʿlīq script]]
[[File:Lashkari Zaban calligraphy prepared.png|thumb|250px|''Lashkari Zabān'' ("military camp language" or "[[Battalion|Battalionese language]]") title in Nastaʿlīq script]]
[[File:Sketch from the book Aasar us Sanadeed, depicting Bagh e Naazir as it appeared in mid-19th century.jpg|thumb|[[Baagh e Naazir]] was built by Muhammad Shah the year 1748.]]
[[File:Sketch from the book Aasar us Sanadeed, depicting Bagh e Naazir as it appeared in mid-19th century.jpg|thumb|[[Baagh e Naazir]] was built by Muhammad Shah the year 1748.]]


While [[Urdu]] (derived from ''Zuban-i Urdū-yi Muʿallá'' or in local translation ''[[Lashkari language|Lashkari Zaban]]'', shortened to ''Lashkari'') was already in use before Muhammad Shah's reign, it was during his reign that it became more popular among the people and he declared it as the court language, replacing Persian. During Muhammad Shah's reign, [[Qawwali]] was reintroduced into the Mughal imperial court and it quickly spread throughout [[South Asia]]. Muhammad Shah is also known to have introduced religious institutions for education such as [[Maktab (education)|Maktab]]s. During his reign, the [[Quran]] was translated for the first time in simple [[Persian language|Persian]] and [[Urdu]]. Also, during his reign, the formal Turkic dress, normally worn by the high Mughal nobility since Mughals originally hailed from [[Samarqand]], was replaced by the [[Sherwani]].
While [[Urdu]] (derived from ''Zuban-i Urdū-yi Muʿallá'' or in local translation ''[[Lashkari language|Lashkari Zaban]]'', shortened to ''Lashkari'') was already in use before Muhammad Shah's reign, it was during his reign that it became more popular among the people and he declared it as the court language, replacing Persian. During Muhammad Shah's reign, [[Qawwali]] was reintroduced into the Mughal imperial court and it quickly spread throughout [[South Asia]]. Muhammad Shah is also known to have introduced religious institutions for education such as [[Maktab (education)|Maktab]]s. During his reign, the [[Quran]] was translated for the first time into simple [[Persian language|Persian]] and [[Urdu]]. Also, during his reign, the formal Turkic dress, normally worn by the high Mughal nobility since Mughals originally hailed from [[Samarqand]], was replaced by the [[Sherwani]]. However, Muhammad Shah's adoption of the Deccan-influenced dress to court would lead to derisive comments, such as "''See how the Deccan monkey dances!''"<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SHgtAAAAMAAJ&q=mahratta |title=Notes on Punjab and Mughal India: Selections from Journal of the Punjab Historical Society |date=1988 |publisher=Sang-e-Meel Publications |page=381}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author=Ishwari Prasad |title=A New History of India |date=1940 |publisher=Indian Press, Limited |page=334}}</ref>

Mohammad Shah was a patron of the performing arts, almost at the cost of administrative priorities, paving the way for the disintegration of governance. While Mughal political power did decline in his reign, the Emperor encouraged the arts, employing master artists such as Nidha Mal (active 1735–75) and Chitarman, whose vivacious paintings depict scenes of court life, such as [[Holi]] celebrations, hunting and hawking.<ref>[http://sites.asiasociety.org/princesandpainters/decline-of-power-pursuit-of-pleasure-muhammad-shah-1719-1748/ Princes and Painters in Mughal Delhi, 1707–1857], Asia Society exhibition</ref> The Mughal court of the time had musicians such as Naimat Khan, also known as [[Sadarang]], and his nephew Firoz Khan (Adarang), whose compositions popularised the musical form of [[khyal]]. Naimat Khan composed khyal for his disciples and he never performed khyal.<ref name="Misra1991">{{cite book |author=Susheela Misra |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=utw9AAAAMAAJ&q=sadarang+never+performed+khyal |title=Musical Heritage of Lucknow |publisher=Harman Publishing House |year=1991}}</ref> This key component of [[Indian classical music]] evolved, ascended and received princely patronage at the court of Muhammad Shah.<ref>[[iarchive:lifeofmusicinnor00neum|<!-- quote=inauthor:"Daniel M. Neuman". --> The life of music in north India: the organization of an artistic tradition]], Daniel M. Neuman</ref>


He himself was a poet under the penname "Sadrang" and was also a composer of [[Indian classical music|Indian classical]] [[raga]] songs in the [[Bhairav (raga)|bhairav]], [[Kafi (raga)|kafi]], [[Dhamar (music)|dhamar]] and [[malkauns]] genres. These included songs on the themes of love and the festival of [[Holi]].<ref name="sn">[https://sufinama.org/poets/muhammad-shah-rangila/profile Muhammad Shah Rangila]. ''[[Sufinama]]''.</ref>
Mohammad Shah was a patron of the performing arts, almost at the cost of administrative priorities, paving the way for the disintegration of governance. While Mughal political power did decline in his reign, the Emperor encouraged the arts, employing master artists such as Nidha Mal (active 1735–75) and Chitarman, whose vivacious paintings depict scenes of court life, such as [[Holi]] celebrations, hunting and hawking.<ref>[http://sites.asiasociety.org/princesandpainters/decline-of-power-pursuit-of-pleasure-muhammad-shah-1719-1748/ Princes and Painters in Mughal Delhi, 1707–1857], Asia Society exhibition</ref> The Mughal court of the time had musicians such as Naimat Khan, also known as [[Sadarang]], and his nephew Firoz Khan (Adarang), whose compositions popularised the musical form of [[Khyal]].Naimat Khan composed Khyal for his disciples and he never performed Khyal.<ref name="Misra1991">{{cite book|author=Susheela Misra|title=Musical Heritage of Lucknow|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=utw9AAAAMAAJ&q=sadarang+never+performed+khyal|year=1991|publisher=Harman Publishing House}}</ref> This key component of [[Indian classical music]] evolved, ascended and received princely patronage at the court of Muhammad Shah.<ref>[https://archive.org/details/lifeofmusicinnor00neum <!-- quote=inauthor:"Daniel M. Neuman". --> The life of music in north India: the organization of an artistic tradition], Daniel M. Neuman</ref>


===Scientific developments===
===Scientific developments===
During the reign of Muhammad Shah, a significant scientific work known as the [[Zij-i Muhammad Shahi]] was completed by [[Jai Singh II of Amber]] between the year 1727 and 1735; it consisted of 400 pages.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=740AqMUW8WQC&q=zij-i-muhammad+shahi&pg=PA278|title=Forms of Knowledge in Early Modern Asia: Explorations in the Intellectual History of India and Tibet, 1500–1800|first=Sheldon|last=Pollock|date=14 March 2011|publisher=Duke University Press|isbn=978-0822349044|via=Google Books}}</ref>
During the reign of Muhammad Shah, a significant scientific work known as the [[Zij-i Muhammad Shahi]] was completed by [[Jai Singh II of Amber]] between the year 1727 and 1735; it consisted of 400 pages.<ref>{{cite book |last=Pollock |first=Sheldon |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=740AqMUW8WQC&q=zij-i-muhammad+shahi&pg=PA278 |title=Forms of Knowledge in Early Modern Asia: Explorations in the Intellectual History of India and Tibet, 1500–1800 |date= 2011 |publisher=Duke University Press |isbn=978-0822349044 |via=Google Books}}</ref>


=== Bengal and Sikhs raids ===
==Later Mughal-Maratha wars==
Muhammad Ali Khan the [[Mughal Empire|Mughal]] [[Faujdar]] of [[Rangpur, Bangladesh|Rangpur]] and his stern ally Deena Narayan were ambushed out of [[Cooch Behar State|Koch Bihar]] by Upendra Narayan a [[Hindu]] [[Bihari people|Bihari]] and Mipham Wangpo (r. 1729–1736) the [[Druk Desi|ruler]] of [[Bhutan]]. [[Ali Mohammed Khan]] had established the barons of [[Rohilkhand|Rohilakhand]]. In the [[Subah of Lahore|Punjab region]], the [[Misl|Sikhs]] were at war with local [[Mughals|Mughal]] [[Subahdar|''subahdars'']], devastating them with their hit-and-run tactics.
{{See also|Later Mughal-Maratha Wars}}


=== Loss of Gujarat and Malwa ''subahs'' ===
[[File:Elephants pushing cannons drawn by bullocks.jpg|thumb|[[Elephant]]s pushing [[Mughal artillery]] [[cannon]]s drawn also by bullocks.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://warfare.uphero.com/Moghul/18thC/Elephants_pushing_cannons_drawn_by_bullocks_Kota-mid-18thC.htm |title=Elephants pushing cannons drawn by bullocks, Kota |access-date=24 September 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141223222411/http://warfare.uphero.com/Moghul/18thC/Elephants_pushing_cannons_drawn_by_bullocks_Kota-mid-18thC.htm |archive-date=23 December 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref>]]
{{See also|Mughal-Maratha Wars}}


After decisively defeating Asaf Jah in February 1728 at the [[Battle of Palkhed]], Bajirao I and his brother [[Chimaji Appa]] re-invaded Malwa. The Mughal ''subahdar'' Giridhar Bahadur was defeated and killed at the battle of Amjhera in November 1729.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Singh |first=Raghubir |date=1947 |title=Fresh Light on the Battle of Amjhera: November 29, 1729 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/44137163 |journal=Proceedings of the Indian History Congress |volume=10 |pages=375–386 |jstor=44137163 |issn=2249-1937}}</ref> Chimnaji Appa then unsuccessfully attempted to besiege the remnants of the Mughal army at Ujjain.<ref name="books.google.com.pk">{{cite book |author=Jaques, T. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3amnMPTPP5MC |title=Dictionary of Battles and Sieges: A–E |publisher=Greenwood Press |year=2007 |isbn=9780313335372}}</ref> [[File:Elephants pushing cannons drawn by bullocks.jpg|thumb|[[Elephant]]s pushing [[Mughal artillery]] [[cannon]]s drawn also by bullocks.<ref>{{cite web |title=Elephants pushing cannons drawn by bullocks, Kota |url=http://warfare.uphero.com/Moghul/18thC/Elephants_pushing_cannons_drawn_by_bullocks_Kota-mid-18thC.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141223222411/http://warfare.uphero.com/Moghul/18thC/Elephants_pushing_cannons_drawn_by_bullocks_Kota-mid-18thC.htm |archive-date=23 December 2014 |access-date=24 September 2014}}</ref>]]In 1731, Asaf Jah managed to secure the defections of influential Maratha leaders, such as [[Trimbak Rao Dabhade]] and Sanbhoji who threatened to abandon the Marathas and join the forces with the emperor Muhammad Shah. However, the defectors were overrun and killed by a large Maratha force led by Bajirao I and Chimnaji Appa during [[Battle of Dabhoi]].<ref name="books.google.com.pk" /> Bajirao I then attacked [[Gujarat Subah|Gujarat]] with his full force and drove out Sarbuland Khan by 1735.[[File:Mahout on an elephant; gouache on paper.jpg|thumb|left|An elephant and its mahout in service of the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah.]]
After [[Asaf Jah I]] left Delhi, the Marathas, who had already expanded up to the river [[Narmada River|Narmada]], invaded the rich province of Malwa in the beginning of 1723. The Mughal Emperor entrusted its defence to its governor, who failed him. By winter of the same year, they reached [[Ujjain]], the capital of Malwa.
In 1725, the governorship of Gujarat was transferred to [[Sarbuland Khan]]. Enraged by the authority of the Mughal Emperor, the Marathas invaded Gujarat but were routed by Sarbuland Khan and his forces. This was mainly because most of the Maratha forces, including their leader [[Baji Rao I]], were at the time fighting the Asaf Jah I in Hyderabad. The war with Hyderabad, however, proceeded favourably for the Marathas.


Bajirao I defeated a well-trained Mughal army led by Amir Khan Bahadur, but was forced to withdraw when well-armed Mughal reinforcements fought major skirmishes with the Marathas on the outskirts of Delhi. Bajirao and his Marathas fled southeast to [[Badshahpur]], where he corresponded with the emperor Muhammad Shah, who ratified peace by agreeing the handover of Malwa to the [[Maratha Empire|Marathas]].<ref name="books.google.com.pk" />
In 1728, during February, the Asaf Jah I was decisively defeated at the [[Battle of Palkhed]].
In the year 1728, the Marathas led by Baji Rao I and his brother [[Chimnaji Appa]] invaded the [[Mughal Empire|Mughal]] province of [[Malwa]] and challenged the Mughal [[Subedar]] [[Girdihar Bahadur]], who led a fairly large [[Mughal Army]] during the [[Battle of Amjhera]]. Both Girdihar Bahadur and his trusted cousin [[Daya Bahadur]] were defeated and killed. On 29 November, Chimnaji Appa went on to besiege the remnants of the [[Mughal Army]] of [[Malwa]] during a failed [[Siege of Ujjain]].<ref name="books.google.com.pk">{{cite book|title=Dictionary of Battles and Sieges: A-E|author=Jaques, T.|year=2007|publisher=Greenwood Press|isbn=9780313335372|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3amnMPTPP5MC}}</ref>


== Invasion of Nader Shah ==
In the year 1731, Asaf Jah I the [[Nizam of Hyderabad]] had managed to secure the defections of influential Maratha leaders, such as [[Trimbak Rao Dabhade]] and [[Sanbhoji]] who threatened to abandon the Marathas and join the forces with the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah instead. This move was considered unacceptable by Baji Rao I and his brother Chimnaji Appa who led a large well armed Forces of [[Maratha]]s to intercept Trimbak Rao Dabhade and Sanbhoji during the [[Battle of Dabhoi]], where the defecting factions were all defeated, overrun and killed.<ref name="books.google.com.pk"/> Baji Rao I then attacked [[Gujarat]] with full force and finally drove out Sarbuland Khan by 1735.
{{See main|Nader Shah's invasion of India}}
=== Invasion of Mughal empire ===
In May 1738, Nader Shah attacked northern Afghanistan and captured [[Ghazni]]. He captured Kabul in June and [[Jalalabad]] in September. By November, he had [[Battle of Khyber Pass (1738)|crossed]] the [[Khyber Pass]] and besieged and razed the [[Bala Hissar, Peshawar|fortress]] of [[Peshawar]]. In January 1739, he captured [[Lahore]], after completely subduing the forces of the Mughal viceroy, [[Zakariya Khan Bahadur]] and his 25,000 [[Sowar|''sowars'']],<ref name="google5">{{cite book |author=Chhabra, G.S. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UkDi6rVbckoC |title=Advance Study in the History of Modern India (Volume 1: 1707–1803) |publisher=Lotus Press |year=2005 |isbn=9788189093068}}</ref> by the [[Chenab]] river. The Afsharid forces soon encountered bands of [[Misl|Sikh rebels]] whom Nader Shah predicted would clearly benefit after his invasion.<ref name="google5" /> The Afsharids would capture [[Subah of Lahore|territory]] all the way up to [[Attock]], forcing Muhammad Shah and his court to realise that the Persian emperor would not be satisfied with the loot of a province. The cities of [[Wazirabad]], [[Eminabad]] and [[Gujrat city|Gujrat]] were not only sacked but razed to the ground. Near [[Larkana]], the Afsharids completely routed the Mughal army of the [[Kalhora dynasty|Nawab of Sindh]], [[Main Noor Mohammad Kalhoro]], and later captured him and his two sons. [[Sirhind-Fategarh|Sirhind]] was then captured by the Persians in February 1739, opening the route towards the Mughal capital of Delhi.


=== Battle of Karnal ===
[[File:Mahout on an elephant; gouache on paper.jpg|thumb|left|An elephant and its mahout in service of the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah.]]
{{See main|Battle of Karnal}}[[File:Jahangusha-ye Naderi 12.jpg|thumb|300px|left|Muhammad Shah with the Persian invader [[Nader Shah]], art from Nader's court historian [[Mirza Mehdi Khan Astarabadi]], who was a firsthand witness of the encounter]]
[[File:Jahangusha-ye Naderi 11.jpg|thumb|300px|left|Muhammad Shah with an Afsharid prince, art from Nader's court historian [[Mirza Mehdi Khan Astarabadi]], who was a firsthand witness of the encounter]]


Rao Bal Kishan of [[Rewari]], with his army of 5,000 infantry and 2,000 cavalry and with the forces of Delhi, attempted a desperate defence of the city but was killed in battle and has been immortalized the name "''Vijay'' or "''Veergati''". Nadir Shah remarked to emperor Muhammad Shah that "if your combined forces helped Rao Balkrishna of [[Rewari]], then I might not able to enter in Delhi. I had never seen any warrior like him brave, Fierce and strong. Muhammed Shah commissioned a royal ''[[chhatri]]'' to pay tribute to Rao Bal Kishan.{{Citation needed|date=October 2024}}<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CAXULggU0QMC |title=Realm and Region in Traditional India |publisher=Duke University, Program in Comparative Studies on Southern Asia |year=1977 |isbn=9780916994129}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yNBSEAAAQBAJ&dq=rao+balkishan&pg=PA30 |title=Haryana Digdarshan |date=21 February 2021 |publisher=Arihant Publications India limited |isbn=9789325294486}}</ref>
In the year 1736, [[Siddi]]'s of [[Murud-Janjira]] set out to recapture [[Raigarh]] from the forces of Baji Rao, on 19 April 1736, Chimnaji attacked the gathering forces in the encampments of the Siddi's during a battle near Riwas, when the confrontation ended, 1500 Siddi's including their leader Siddi Sat were killed. Peace was concluded in September 1736, but the Siddi's were confined to [[Janjira State|Janjira]], [[Gowalkot]] and [[Anjanvel]].


After entering Delhi, [[Nader Shah]] claimed to invasion and occupation of the [[Mughal Empire]] was borne out of religious devotion and that if ''"the wretched Marathas of the Deccan"'' moved towards Delhi, he might ''"send an army of victorious [[Qizilbash]] to drive them to the abyss of Hell."''<ref name="columbia">{{cite web |author=Frances Pritchett |title=part2_19 |url=http://www.columbia.edu/itc/mealac/pritchett/00islamlinks/ikram/part2_19.html#n02 |access-date=17 January 2014 |publisher=columbia.edu}}</ref><ref>Muhammad Latif, The History of the Panjab (Calcutta, 1891), p. 200.</ref>
In the year 1737, [[Asaf Jah I]] the [[Nizam of Hyderabad]] led a large [[Mughal Army]] to assist the [[Nawab of Bhopal]] Yar Muhammad Khan Bahadur but was instead besieged inside the city of [[Bhopal]] by 80,000 Marathas led by Baji Rao I. The [[Battle of Bhopal]] continued until [[Safdarjung]] and his relief forces were driven away by [[Malhar Rao Holkar]]. With the following peace negotiations, Asaf Jah I agreed to the peace treaty ratified by the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah that granted [[Malwa]] to the [[Maratha]]s.<ref name="books.google.com.pk"/>
[[File:Rao Balkishan Chattri.jpg|thumb|Rao Bal Kishan Chhatri at Karnal]]
In the year 1737 the Maratha chieftain Baji Rao I attacked the Mughal imperial capital at [[Delhi]], and defeated a well trained [[Mughal Army]] led by [[Amir Khan Bahadur]], but was forced to withdraw when the Mughal sent substantially well armed reinforcements fought major skirmishes with the Marathas on the outskirts of Delhi. [[Baji Rao I]] and his Marathas fled southeast to Badshshpur, where he corresponded with the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah, who ratified peace by agreeing the handover of Malwa to the [[Maratha]]s.<ref name="books.google.com.pk"/>


=== Sack of Delhi ===
Among the loyal tributaries of the [[Mughal Empire]] was [[Meenakshi (Nayak queen)|Meenakshi]], the queen of the [[Madurai Nayaks]] in [[Dindigul Fort]], she had assisted Mughal forces in the [[Carnatic region|Carnatic]] several times against the Marathas.

{{Campaignbox
| title = [[Later Mughal-Maratha Wars (1728-1763)|Later Mughal-Maratha Wars]]
| name = Campaignbox Later Mughal-Maratha Wars
| listclass = hlist
| battles =
* [[Battle of Amjhera (1728)]]
* [[Battle of Palkhed]]
* [[Battle of Jaitpur (1729)]]
* [[Battle of Delhi (1737)]]
* [[Battle of Bhopal]]
* [[Battle of Damalcherry Pass (1740)]]
* [[Siege of Trichinopoly (1741)]]
* [[First Battle of Katwa (1742)]]
* [[Siege of Trichinopoly (1743)]]
* [[Second Battle of Katwa (1745)]]
* [[Battle of Burdwan (1747)]]
* [[Battle of Malthan (1751)]]
* [[First Battle of Sikandarabad (1754)]]
* [[Battle of Sindkhed (1757)]]
* [[Battle of Mangrol (1761)]]
* [[Battle of Rakshasbhuvan]]
}}

In the year 1740, [[Dost Ali Khan]] to [[Nawab of the Carnatic]] and [[Chanda Sahib]] faced the task of expelling the Marathas under [[Raghoji I Bhonsle]], authorised by [[Chattrapati Shahu|Shahu]]. Dost Ali Khan lost his life on 20 May 1740 at the [[Battle of Damalcherry]] in defence of [[Arcot]] and its populace, which was eventually looted and plundered. Chanda Sahib along with his garrison was captured and imprisoned in [[Satara (city)|Satara]]. [[Chanda Sahib]] and his forces ferociously defended their rightful reams during the [[Siege of Trichinopoly (1741)|Siege of Trichinopoly]] and almost all the territories of the Nawab of the Carnatic despite being outnumbered substantially by the Marathas, their daunting efforts soon attracted the attention of the curious [[French East India Company]] official named [[Joseph François Dupleix]].<ref name="google4">{{cite book|title=Dictionary of Battles and Sieges: P-Z|author=Jaques, T.|year=2007|publisher=Greenwood Press|isbn=9780313335396|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tW_eEVbVxpEC}}</ref> dissatisfied by the Maratha occupation of the territories of the [[Nawab of the Carnatic]], [[Asaf Jah I]] led an expedition to liberate the Carnatic he was joined by [[Muhammed Saadatullah Khan II|Sadatullah Khan II]] and [[Anwaruddin Muhammed Khan]] together they recaptured [[Arcot]] and initiated the [[Siege of Trichinopoly (1743)]], which lasted five months and forced the [[Maratha]]s led by [[Murari Rao Ghorpade]] to evacuate the Carnatic.<ref name="google4"/>

In the year 1747, the Marathas led by [[Raghoji I Bhonsle]], began to raid, pillage and annex the territories of the [[Nawab of Bengal]] Alivardi Khan. During the Maratha invasion of [[Orissa, India|Orissa]], its [[Subedar]] Mir Jafar completely withdrew all forces until the arrival of [[Alivardi Khan]] and the [[Mughal Army]] at the [[Battle of Burdwan]] where Raghoji I Bhonsle and his Maratha forces were completely routed. The enraged Nawab of Bengal Alivardi Khan then dismissed the shamed [[Mir Jafar]]. However, four years later [[Orissa, India|Orissa]] was ceded over to the Marathas by the Mughal Emperor.<ref name="books.google.com.pk"/>

==Invasion of Nadir Shah==
[[File:THE FIRST SIGHT THAT MET HIS GAZE WAS THE BODIES OF HIS MURDERED COUNTRYMEN..gif|thumb|[[Nader Shah]] finds his troops had been killed in rioting. From {{cite book |last=Surridge|first=Victor |date=1909 |title=Romance of Empire: India}}]]
[[File:THE FIRST SIGHT THAT MET HIS GAZE WAS THE BODIES OF HIS MURDERED COUNTRYMEN..gif|thumb|[[Nader Shah]] finds his troops had been killed in rioting. From {{cite book |last=Surridge|first=Victor |date=1909 |title=Romance of Empire: India}}]]


[[File:1740 Seutter Map of India, Pakistan, Tibet and Afghanistan - Geographicus - IndiaMogolis-seutter-1740.jpg|thumb|Provinces of the Mughal Empire in the year 1740]]
On 13 February 1739 the Persians under the military genius [[Nader Shah]], the commander of the [[Afsharid]]s, had deposed the former [[Safavid dynasty]], then defeated Persia's arch rival, the [[Ottoman Empire]] several times, and had therefore secured the western front. Now his eyes turned upon the wealthy but weakened Mughal Empire. In the year 1739, Nader Shah [[Nader Shah's invasion of India|invaded the Mughal Empire]], and defeated Muhammad Shah during the [[Battle of Karnal]] in less than three hours,<ref name="Later Mughal"/> and then marched upon the Mughal capital [[Delhi]], and after a chain of events, he completely [[Sack of Delhi|sacked and looted it]], and occupied much of the northern regions of the Mughal Empire.


The occupation of Delhi was initially cordial, however, rumours spread throughout the city that Nader Shah was assassinated. The masses attacked the Persian force and killed some soldiers. Nader Shah became furious, ordered to massacre the populace, and leaving at least 30,000 dead. Muhammad Shah and [[Asaf Jah I]] had to beg Nader Shah for mercy and thus he stopped the massacre and turned to looting the Mughal treasury.<ref>{{cite book |author1=Jagmohan |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QsDSGn8jLPAC&q=begged+nadir+shah+for+mercy&pg=PA298 |title=Soul and Structure of Governance in India |year=2005 | publisher=Allied Publishers |isbn=9788177648317 |access-date=26 May 2014}}</ref> The famous [[Peacock Throne]], the [[Daria-i-Noor]] and [[Koh-i-Noor]] diamonds and unimaginable wealth was looted. In addition, elephants, horses and everything that was liked was taken. Muhammad Shah also had to hand over his daughter Jahan Afruz Banu Begum as a bride for Nader Shah's youngest son. [[Asaf Jah I]] retired to Deccan after installing his eldest son [[Ghazi ud-Din Khan Feroze Jung II|Intizam-ud-Daula]] as a major commander in the [[Mughal Army]].<ref>{{cite book |author=H. G. Keene |title=Moghul Empire |publisher=Allen &co Waterloo Place Pall Mall |year=1866 |author-link=Henry George Keene (1826–1915)}} [http://www.new1.dli.ernet.in/scripts/FullindexDefault.htm?path1=/data2/upload/0055/654&first=1&last=302&barcode=4990010201502 Digital Library of India] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130721192051/http://www.new1.dli.ernet.in/scripts/FullindexDefault.htm?path1=%2Fdata2%2Fupload%2F0055%2F654&first=1&last=302&barcode=4990010201502|date=21 July 2013}} Accessed 7 January 2012</ref>
===Tensions with Persia===
Nader Shah wanted to subdue Afghan rebels led by the [[Ghilzai]] tribe particularly in the region around [[Kandahar]].<ref name="Mughal-Ottoman relations Muhammed Shah">{{cite book | last = Farooqi | first = Naimur Rahman | title = Mughal-Ottoman relations: a study of political & diplomatic relations between Mughal Empire and the Ottoman Empire, 1556–1748 | publisher = Idarah-i Adabiyat-i Delli | year = 1989
}} ASIN: B0006ETWB8. See [https://books.google.com/books?id=uB1uAAAAMAAJ&q=Muhammad+Shah&source=gbs_word_butt_r&cad=6 Google Books search].</ref>{{verify source|date=November 2011}} He therefore requested the assistance of the Muhammad Shah to close the frontiers around [[Kabul]] and the Indus Valley so that the rebels may not flee or seek refuge. Muhammad Shah gave a confirming reply to Nader Shah but didn't do any thing practically, because the local [[Subedar]]s and [[Faujdar]]s sympathised with the [[Afghanistan|Afghan]] and rejected Persian rule. The Afghan rebels eventually did flee to the Mughals.

Outraged by this, Nader Shah sent an ambassador to Muhammad Shah, demanding deliverance of the fugitives. The Mughal Emperor did not provide a positive response and kept the Persians marginalised from Delhi for an entire year. Nader Shah became furious with Muhammad Shah. He had now found himself two reasons of why to invade the Mughal Empire; one, that the Mughals didn't deliver the Afghan rebels to him, and two, he knew that the Mughals were weak, but still extremely wealthy.

===Invasion of the Mughal Empire===
On the basis of the above reasons, Nader Shah decided to invade the [[Mughal Empire]], by starting to attack from Afghanistan. In May 1738 he attacked Northern Afghanistan. In the same month, he captured [[Ghazni]], in June he captured Kabul and in September [[Jalalabad]] also fell to him. In November he surrounded the fortress of [[Peshawar]] and razed it to the ground after the [[Battle of Khyber pass]].

Finally in January 1739, he captured [[Lahore]], after completely subduing the forces of the Mughal [[viceroy]], [[Zakariya Khan Bahadur]] and his 25,000 elite [[Sowar]]s,<ref name="google5">{{cite book|title=Advance Study in the History of Modern India (Volume-1: 1707-1803)|author=Chhabra, G.S.|year=2005|publisher=Lotus Press|isbn=9788189093068|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UkDi6rVbckoC}}</ref> by the river [[Chenab]] the [[Afsharid]] forces soon encountered bands of [[Sikh]] rebels whom [[Nader Shah]] predicted would clearly benefit after his invasion.<ref name="google5"/>

[[File:7 Muhammad Shah and Nadir Shah. 1740, Musee Guimet, Paris.jpg|thumb|300px|left|Muhammad Shah with the Persian invader [[Nader Shah]]]]

Now Nader Shah had captured territory all the way up to [[Attock]], and Muhammad Shah and his courtiers could not close their eyes from further danger. They finally understood that the Persian emperor was not the sort of enemy that could be bought off with the loot of a province. Furthermore, he had devastated the area he just conquered. The cities of [[Wazirabad]], Emanabad and [[Gujrat city|Gujrat]] were not only sacked but razed to the ground. Near [[Larkana]] the [[Afsharid]] forces completely routed the [[Mughal Army]] of the [[Nawab]] of [[Sindh]], [[Main Noor Mohammad Kalhoro]], and later captured him and his two sons.

In February 1739, Nader Shah captured [[Sirhind]] and moved towards the field of [[Karnal]], a battle destined to be fateful to the Mughal rulers. On 13 February, the battle of Karnal was fought. Emperor Muhammad Shah had over a hundred thousand force against Nader Shah's 55,000 men but was still decisively defeated in less than three hours. In the event, the ''Khan Douran'' died and wrote a will that the Mughal and [[Afsharid]] emperors should not meet, but Nader Shah should be turned back from there at all costs. But the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah believed that he had no other choice but to surrender to Nader Shah on 26 February in the Afsharid encampments, thirteen days after the [[Battle of Karnal]]. The Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah handed over the keys of the Delhi gate and marched as a captive with Nader Shah to Delhi, which was then completely plundered.

After entering Delhi, [[Nader Shah]] claimed to occupy the [[Mughal Empire]] out of religious devotion and that if ''"the wretched Marathas of the Deccan"'' moved towards Delhi, he might ''"send an army of victorious [[Qizilbash]] to drive them to the abyss of Hell"''. In fact Nader Shah had delivered catastrophe from which the Mughal Empire itself never recovered and the subjects of the emperor were outraged by the ascendancy of the [[Afsharid]]s.<ref name="columbia">{{cite web|url=http://www.columbia.edu/itc/mealac/pritchett/00islamlinks/ikram/part2_19.html#n02|title=part2_19|author=Frances Pritchett|publisher=columbia.edu|access-date=17 January 2014}}</ref><ref>Muhammad Latif, The History of the Panjab (Calcutta, 1891), p. 200.</ref>

[[File:1740 Seutter Map of India, Pakistan, Tibet and Afghanistan - Geographicus - IndiaMogolis-seutter-1740.jpg|thumb|Provinces of the Mughal Empire in the year 1740]]


== Later Maratha wars ==
At first, things were cordial among the two emperors. However rumours spread throughout Delhi that Nader Shah was assassinated. The masses attacked the Persian force and killed some soldiers. Nader Shah, furious, ordered to massacre the populace, and at least 30,000 people died. The Emperor and [[Asaf Jah I]] had to beg Nader Shah for mercy and thus he stopped the massacre and turned to looting the Mughal treasury.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QsDSGn8jLPAC&q=begged+nadir+shah+for+mercy&pg=PA298|title=Soul and Structure of Governance in India|isbn=9788177648317|access-date=26 May 2014|author1=Jagmohan|year=2005}}</ref> The famous Peacock Throne, the [[Daria-i-Noor]] diamond and unimaginable wealth was looted. In addition, elephants, horses and everything that was liked was taken. Muhammad Shah also had to hand over his daughter Jahan Afruz Banu Begum as a bride for Nader Shah's youngest son. [[Asaf Jah I]] retired to Deccan after installing his eldest son [[Ghazi ud-Din Khan Feroze Jung II|Intizam-ud-Daula]] as a major commander in the [[Mughal Army]].<ref>{{cite book|title=Moghul Empire|author=H. G. Keene|author-link=Henry George Keene (1826–1915)| publisher=Allen &co Waterloo Place Pall Mall | year= 1866}} [http://www.new1.dli.ernet.in/scripts/FullindexDefault.htm?path1=/data2/upload/0055/654&first=1&last=302&barcode=4990010201502 Digital Library of India] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130721192051/http://www.new1.dli.ernet.in/scripts/FullindexDefault.htm?path1=%2Fdata2%2Fupload%2F0055%2F654&first=1&last=302&barcode=4990010201502 |date=21 July 2013 }} Accessed 7 January 2012</ref>
In the year 1740, [[Dost Ali Khan]] to [[Carnatic Sultanate|Nawab of the Carnatic]] and [[Chanda Sahib]] faced the task of expelling the Marathas under [[Raghoji I of Nagpur|Raghoji I Bhonsle]], authorised by Chhatrapati [[Shahu I]]. Dost Ali Khan was killed on 20 May 1740 at the [[Raghoji I of Nagpur|Battle of Damalcherry]] in defence of [[Arcot, Tamil Nadu|Arcot]], which was eventually looted and plundered. Chanda Sahib along with his garrison was captured and imprisoned in [[Satara (city)|Satara]]. [[Chanda Sahib]] and his forces ferociously defended their rightful reams during the [[Siege of Trichinopoly (1741)|Siege of Trichinopoly]] and almost all the territories of the Nawab of the Carnatic despite being outnumbered substantially by the Marathas, their daunting efforts soon attracted the attention of the [[French East India Company]] official [[Joseph François Dupleix]].<ref name="google4">{{cite book |author=Jaques, T. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tW_eEVbVxpEC |title=Dictionary of Battles and Sieges: P–Z |publisher=Greenwood Press |year=2007 |isbn=9780313335396}}</ref>


Dissatisfied by the Maratha occupation of the territories of the [[Carnatic Sultanate|Nawab of the Carnatic]], [[Asaf Jah I]] led an expedition to liberate the region. He was joined by [[Muhammed Saadatullah Khan II|Sadatullah Khan II]] and [[Anwaruddin Muhammed Khan]] together they recaptured [[Arcot]] and initiated the [[Siege of Trichinopoly (1743)]], which lasted five months and forced the Marathas led by [[Murari Rao Ghorpade]] to evacuate the Carnatic.<ref name="google4" />
After the whole event, Muhammad Shah was crowned as emperor by Nader Shah himself on 12 May, and he ceded the area west of river [[Indus]] to Nader Shah, although the [[Kalhora]] [[Nawab]]s of [[Sindh]] continued to fight the invading Afsharids. Nader Shah then took the [[Koh-i-Noor]] diamond and the other aforementioned famous treasures, and he and his Persian forces started to return to [[Afsharid dynasty|Persia]].


In the year 1747, the Marathas led by Raghoji I Bhonsle, began to raid, pillage and annex the territories of the [[Nawabs of Bengal|Nawab of Bengal]] Alivardi Khan. During the Maratha invasion of [[Orissa, India|Orissa]], its ''[[subahdar]]'' [[Mir Jafar]] completely withdrew all forces until the arrival of [[Alivardi Khan]] and the [[Mughal Army]] at the [[Battle of Burdwan]] where Raghoji I Bhonsle and his Maratha forces were completely routed. The enraged Nawab of Bengal Alivardi Khan then dismissed the shamed Mir Jafar. However, due to four years of continuous wars, emperor Muhammad Shah was forced to cede [[Orissa, India|Orissa]] to the Marathas.<ref name="books.google.com.pk" />
===Aftermath===
Nader Shah's invasion destroyed what was left of the [[Mughal Empire]] and neared it to its end. After the invasion, the Mughals rapidly disintegrated. The weakness of the [[Mughal Army]] was clearly elaborated after this invasion. The [[Nawab]]s clearly could not even relieve their captured city of [[Delhi]], which was the seat of their authority. The Mughals were completely looted of their wealth, and rebellions and disloyalty became commonplace.


==Foreign relations==
==Foreign relations==
Following Nader Shah's invasion, Persia's arch rival the Ottoman Empire, quickly exploited the void that was created at their Eastern borders as almost all Persian units were deployed in the [[Mughal Empire]]. During that period Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah closely observed the actions of the Ottomans, and also cooperated with the Ottoman ambassador Haji Yusuf Agha until the emperor's death in 1748 after the victory of the [[Mughal Army]] at the [[Battle of Manupur (1748)]] against yet another foe ([[Ahmad Shah Durrani]]).<ref name="Mughal-Ottoman relations Muhammed Shah" />
Following Nader Shah's invasion, the Ottoman Empire exploited the void that was created at their eastern borders as almost all Persian forces were deployed to India. During that period, emperor Muhammad Shah tried to recover all territory until being attacked by the [[Durrani Empire]] at [[Battle of Manupur (1748)|Battle of Manupur]].<ref name="Mughal-Ottoman relations Muhammed Shah">{{cite book |last=Farooqi |first=Naimur Rahman |title=Mughal-Ottoman relations: a study of political & diplomatic relations between Mughal Empire and the Ottoman Empire, 1556–1748 |publisher=Idarah-i Adabiyat-i Delli |year=1989 |asin=B0006ETWB8}}. See [https://books.google.com/books?id=uB1uAAAAMAAJ&q=Muhammad+Shah Google Books search].</ref>


==Marriages==
==Marriages==
Emperor Muhammad Shah had four wives. His first wife and chief consort was his first-cousin, Princess [[Badshah Begum]], the daughter of Emperor [[Farrukhsiyar]] and his first wife, Gauhar-un-Nissa Begum.<ref name="Sarkar97">{{cite book|last1=Sarkar|first1=Jadunath|title=Fall of the Mughal Empire.|date=1997|publisher=Orient Longman|location=Hyderabad|isbn=9788125011491|page=169|edition=4th}}</ref> They married after his accession, on 8 December 1721, at Delhi,<ref>{{cite book|last1=Awrangābādī|first1=Shāhnavāz Khān|last2=Prashad|first2=Baini|last3=Shāhnavāz|first3=ʻAbd al-Ḥayy ibn|title=The Maāthir-ul-umarā: being biographies of the Muḥammadan and Hindu officers of the Timurid sovereigns of India from 1500 to about 1780 A.D.|date=1979|publisher=Janaki Prakashan|page=652|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xfG1AAAAIAAJ&q=muhmmad+shah+8+december+1721|language=en}}</ref> and he gave her the title ''Malika-uz-Zamani'' (Queen of the Age)<ref name="malik"/> by which she was popularly known. They had a son, Shahriyar Shah Bahadur, who died young in 1726.<ref name="malik"/> She died on 14 December 1789.
[[File:Emperor Muhammad Shah LACMA AC1997.127.1.jpg|thumb|The Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah and his family]]


Muhammad Shah took a second wife, [[Sahiba Mahal]], and had a daughter [[Hazrat Begum]], who was married to [[Ahmad Shah Durrani]] in 1757.<ref name="google6">{{cite book |author1=Hoiberg, D. |url=https://archive.org/details/studentsbritanni03hoib |title=Students' Britannica India |author2=Ramchandani, I. |publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica (India) |year=2000 |isbn=9780852297605 |url-access=registration |issue=v. 1-5}}</ref>
Emperor Muhammad Shah had four wives. His first wife and chief consort was his first-cousin, Princess [[Badshah Begum]], the daughter of Emperor [[Farrukhsiyar]] and his first wife, Gauhar-un-Nissa Begum.<ref name="Sarkar97">{{cite book|last1=Sarkar|first1=Jadunath|title=Fall of the Mughal Empire.|date=1997|publisher=Orient Longman|location=Hyderabad|isbn=9788125011491|page=169|edition=4th}}</ref> He married her after his accession on 8 December 1721 at Delhi,<ref>{{cite book|last1=Awrangābādī|first1=Shāhnavāz Khān|last2=Prashad|first2=Baini|last3=Shāhnavāz|first3=ʻAbd al-Ḥayy ibn|title=The Maāthir-ul-umarā: being biographies of the Muḥammadan and Hindu officers of the Timurid sovereigns of India from 1500 to about 1780 A.D.|date=1979|publisher=Janaki Prakashan|page=652|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xfG1AAAAIAAJ&q=muhmmad+shah+8+december+1721|language=en}}</ref> and gave her the title ''Malika-uz-Zamani'' (Queen of the Age)<ref name="malik"/> by which she was popularly known. On this occasion there was a great ceremony lasting for weeks. She bore him his first son, Shahriyar Shah Bahadur, who died young in 1726.<ref name="malik"/> She was his most influential wife and exercised her opinions on him. She died on 14 December 1789. Later, Muhammad Shah took a second wife, [[Sahiba Mahal]]. With her, he had a daughter, [[Hazrat Begum]], who married [[Ahmad Shah Durrani]] in the year 1757.<ref name="google6">{{cite book|title=Students' Britannica India|author1=Hoiberg, D.|author2=Ramchandani, I.|year=2000|issue=v. 1-5|publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica (India)|isbn=9780852297605|url=https://archive.org/details/studentsbritanni03hoib|url-access=registration}}</ref>


His third wife was a dancing girl, [[Udham Bai]], who bore him his future successor, [[Ahmad Shah Bahadur]] on 23 December 1725. Upon his birth, he was taken from her and was lovingly brought up by Badshah Begum, who considered him her own son. It was through Badshah Begum's efforts that Ahmad Shah was able to ascend the throne upon Muhammad Shah's death in 1748.<ref name=Latif>{{cite book|last=Latif|first=Bilkees I.|title=Forgotten|year=2010|publisher=Penguin Books|isbn=9780143064541|page=49}}</ref>
His third wife was a dancing girl, [[Qudsia Begum, Begum of Bhopal]], who bore him his successor, [[Ahmad Shah Bahadur]] on 23 December 1725. Upon his birth, he was taken from her and was lovingly brought up by Badshah Begum, who considered him her own son. It was through Badshah Begum's efforts that Ahmad Shah was able to ascend the throne upon Muhammad Shah's death in 1748.<ref name="Latif">{{cite book|last=Latif|first=Bilkees I.|title=Forgotten|year=2010|publisher=Penguin Books|isbn=9780143064541|page=49}}</ref>


==Death==
==Death==
[[File:Muhammad Shah Rangeela Grave Delhi 3.jpg|left|thumb|Tomb of Muhammad Shah, in the courtyard of the Nizamuddin Dargah.]]
[[File:Muhammad Shah Rangeela Grave Delhi 3.jpg|left|thumb|Tomb of Muhammad Shah, in the courtyard of the Nizamuddin Dargah.]]
The victory of the [[Mughal Army]] during the [[Battle of Manupur (1748)]] came with a heavy price as many fell in battle. Initially this was kept a secret. However, when the news reached the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah, he could not speak, suddenly became sick, and did not come out of his apartments for three days. During this period he fasted. His guards could hear him crying out loud and saying: ''"How could I bring about anyone as faithful as he? ([[Itimad-ad-Daula, Qamar-ud-Din Khan|Qamaruddin Khan]])"''. He died due to grief on 26 April 1748, his funeral was attended by visiting [[Imam]]s from [[Mecca]].<ref>name="Mughal-Ottoman relations Sharif of Mecca"</ref><ref name="google7">{{cite book|title=Mughal-Ottoman relations: a study of political & diplomatic relations between Mughal India and the Ottoman Empire, 1556-1748|author=Farooqi, N.R.|year=1989|publisher=Idarah-i Adabiyat-i Delli|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uB1uAAAAMAAJ}}</ref> Muhammad Shah's tomb is located in an enclosure within the [[Nizamuddin Dargah]] complex.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |last=Dadlani |first=Chanchal B. |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1024165136 |title=From stone to paper : architecture as history in the late Mughal Empire |date= |year=2018 |isbn=978-0-300-23317-9 |location=New Haven [CT] |pages=67-68 |oclc=1024165136}}</ref>
The victory of the [[Mughal Army]] during the [[Battle of Manupur (1748)]] came with a heavy price as many fell in battle. Initially this was kept a secret. However, when the news reached the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah, he could not speak, suddenly became sick, and did not come out of his apartments for three days. During this period he fasted. His guards could hear him crying out loud and saying: ''"How could I bring about anyone as faithful as he? ([[Itimad-ad-Daula, Qamar-ud-Din Khan|Qamaruddin Khan]])"''. He died due to grief on 26 April 1748, his funeral was attended by visiting [[Imam]]s from [[Mecca]].<ref>name="Mughal-Ottoman relations Sharif of Mecca"</ref><ref name="google7">{{cite book|title=Mughal-Ottoman relations: a study of political & diplomatic relations between Mughal India and the Ottoman Empire, 1556-1748|author=Farooqi, N.R.|year=1989|publisher=Idarah-i Adabiyat-i Delli|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uB1uAAAAMAAJ}}</ref> Muhammad Shah's tomb is located in an enclosure within the [[Nizamuddin Dargah]] complex.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |last=Dadlani |first=Chanchal B. |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1024165136 |title=From stone to paper : architecture as history in the late Mughal Empire |year=2018 |isbn=978-0-300-23317-9 |location=New Haven [CT] |pages=67–68 |oclc=1024165136}}</ref>


==In popular culture==
==In popular culture==
Line 198: Line 159:
File:Silver rupee of Muhammad Shah.jpg|A silver coin minted during the reign of the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah.
File:Silver rupee of Muhammad Shah.jpg|A silver coin minted during the reign of the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah.
File:Bombay Presidency rupee.jpg|A silver coin minted during the reign of the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah from [[Bombay]].
File:Bombay Presidency rupee.jpg|A silver coin minted during the reign of the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah from [[Bombay]].
File:French issued rupee in the name of Mohammed Sha 1719 1758 for Northern India trade cast in Pondicherry.jpg|French-issued [[rupee]] in the name of Muhammad Shah (1719-1748) for Northern India trade, cast in Pondichéry.
File:Jaipur. temp. Isvari Singh AR Rupee (21mm, 11.32 g, 10h) In the name of the Mughal emperor Muhammad Shah. Sawau Jaipur mint. Dually dated AH 1157 and RY 27 of Muhammad Shah (AD 1744-5).jpg|Coinage of Jaipur from the time of [[Ishvari Singh]], in the name of Muhammad Shah. Sawau Jaipur mint, dated 1744–45 CE.
File:French issued rupee in the name of Mohammed Sha 1719 1758 for Northern India trade cast in Pondicherry.jpg|French-issued [[rupee]] in the name of Muhammad Shah (1719–1748) for Northern India trade, cast in Pondichéry.
File:Koh-i-Noor new version copy.jpg|[[Koh-i-Noor]]
File:Koh-i-Noor new version copy.jpg|[[Koh-i-Noor]]
File:Darya-e Noor Diamond of Iran.png|Darya-e-Noor
File:Darya-e Noor Diamond of Iran.png|Darya-e-Noor
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*[[Peacock Throne]]
*[[Peacock Throne]]
*[[Battles involving the Mughal Empire]]
*[[Battles involving the Mughal Empire]]
*[[Ahirwal]]
*[[Rewari]]


== References ==
== References ==
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== External links ==
== External links ==
{{Commons category-inline|Muhammad Shah}}
*{{Commons category-inline|Muhammad Shah}}
*{{Wikiquote-inline}}

*[https://sufinama.org/poets/muhammad-shah-rangila/ Poetry of Muhammad Shah Rangila] at ''[[Sufinama.org]]''
{{Wikiquote-inline}}
*{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yNBSEAAAQBAJ&dq=rao+balkishan&pg=PA30| isbn=9789325294486 | title=Haryana Digdarshan | year= 2021 | publisher=Arihant Publications India limited }}


{{s-start}}
{{s-start}}
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[[Category:1702 births]]
[[Category:1702 births]]
[[Category:1748 deaths]]
[[Category:1748 deaths]]
[[Category:Mughal emperors]]
[[Category:Emperors of the Mughal Empire]]
[[Category:People from Fatehpur, Uttar Pradesh]]
[[Category:People from Fatehpur, Uttar Pradesh]]
[[Category:18th-century Indian writers]]
[[Category:18th-century Indian writers]]
[[Category:Timurid monarchs]]
[[Category:Timurid monarchs]]
[[Category:Indian monarchs]]
[[Category:Indian monarchs]]
[[Category:Hindustani-language writers]]
[[Category:Urdu-language poets from India]]
[[Category:Urdu-language writers from the Mughal Empire]]
[[Category:Indian classical musicians]]
[[Category:Indian classical composers]]
[[Category:18th-century Mughal Empire people]]

Latest revision as of 14:40, 1 January 2025

Muhammad Shah
Padishah
Al-Sultan Al-Azam
Emperor Muhammad Shah holding an emerald and a mouthpiece of a huqqa, by Nidha Mal, c. 1730
Emperor of Hindustan
Reign27 September 1719 – 26 April 1748
Coronation29 September 1719
PredecessorShah Jahan II
Jahangir II (titular)
SuccessorAhmad Shah Bahadur
Wazirs
BornRoshan Akhtar[1]
(1702-08-07)7 August 1702
Ghazni, Kabul Subah, Mughal Empire
Died26 April 1748(1748-04-26) (aged 45)
Delhi, Mughal Empire
Burial
Mausoleum of Muhammad Shah, Nizamuddin Dargah, Delhi, India
Consort
(m. 1721)
Wives
Issue
Names
Mirza Nasir-ud-Din Muḥammad Shah Bahadur Ghazi
Regnal name
Muhammad Shah
HouseHouse of Babur
DynastyTimurid dynasty
FatherJahan Shah
MotherFakhr-un-Nissa Begum[2]
ReligionSunni Islam (Hanafi)
SealMuhammad Shah's signature

Mirza Nasir-ud-Din Muḥammad Shah (born Roshan Akhtar;[1] 7 August 1702 – 26 April 1748)[1] was the thirteenth Mughal emperor from 1719 to 1748.[3] He was son of Khujista Akhtar, the fourth son of Bahadur Shah I. After being chosen by the Sayyid Brothers of Barha, he ascended the throne at the young age of 16, under their strict supervision.[4]

He later got rid of them with the help of Nizam-ul-Mulk, Asaf Jah ISyed Hussain Ali Khan was murdered at Fatehpur Sikri in 1720 and Sayyid Hassan Ali Khan Barha was captured in battle in 1720 and fatally poisoned in 1722.[5] Muhammad Shah was a great patron of the arts, including musical, cultural and administrative developments, he is thus often referred to as Muhammad Shah Rangila (lit.'Muhammad Shah "the colourful"').[6] His pen-name was "Sadrang" and he is also sometimes referred to as "Bahadur Shah Rangila" after his grand father Bahadur Shah I.

Muhammad Shah's reign was marked by rapid and irreversible decline of the Mughal Empire that was exacerbated by Nader Shah's invasion of India and the sacking of Delhi in 1739. The course of events not only shocked and mortified the Mughals themselves, but also other foreigners, including the British.

Rebellious activities against Muhammad Shah

[edit]

In 1719, Kolis of Mahi River were most rebellious against Mughal rule and plundering the villages, Mihir Ali Khan who was acting as Viceroy of Gujarat at the place of Ajit Singh of Marwar, marched against Koli rebels of Mahi who were committing piracy against Muslims and subdued them.[7]

In 1721, Kasim Ali Khan who was an officer in Mughal Empire under Muuhammad Shah employed against the Kolis of Kheda district to collect the fine but they refused to pay and there was a battle in Pethapur between Kolis and Mughal army under Kasim Ali Khan. Kasim Ali Khan was killed by Kolis and Mughal army was defeated and retreat to base.* [8]

In 1722, Muhammad Bahadur, son of Salabat Khan Babi, was placed in charge of Sadra and Virpur, with the title of Sher Khan. Shortly after his arrival the viceroy marched against and subdued the rebellious Kolis of the Chunval but was wounded deeply. After that Kolis of Modhera opposed the Muhammad Shah but Modhera village was burnt down.[9]

In 1729, Mughal Viceroy of Sultan Muhammad Shah faced the challenge of anti-muslim activities of Kolis of Sorath, viceroy marches against Kolis of sorath and destroying them taken to Ahmednagar.[10] after this, Jawan Mard Khan Babi who was Governor of Petlad ordered against rebellious Kolis of Balor, probably Bhátod about fifteen miles east of Bharuch, but Jawan Marad Khan was killed by a man of Koli tribe, and in revenge for his death the town of Balor was plundered. On the death of Jawán Mard Khan, at the request of Salabat Muhammad Khan Babi, his eldest son Kamal-ud-din Khan Babi received the districts of Sami and Munjpur and the title of Jawan Mard Khan.[11]

In 1738, Sher Khan Babi was of Junagadh was appointed as governor of sorath, Babi was obliged to march against a Koli chieftain Kanji Chunvalia of Chhaniar in Chunval because Kanji opposed and resisted the mughal authority but Sher Khan Babi was bravely resisted by Kolis so Momin Khan was called with large force and Chhaniar was burned down by mughal army.[12]

In 1739, Koli chieftain Jamaji of Thara, raised the Kolis of Kankrej against sultan and continually plundered the mughal territory. Jawan Marad Khan was ordered to march against the Koli chieftain but he was unable to maintain order so he requested the Fida-ud-din Khan to subdue the Kolis. After defeating the Koli chieftain, the Koli country was plundered by mughal troops.[13]

In 1740, Kolis of Atarsumba, challenged the Mughal authority and refused to pay any form of tax to mughal sultan. Jawan marad khan along with his brother Zorawar Khan Babi Marched against Kolis of Atarsumba but they were strongly resisted and there was a battle but mughals defeated the Kolis and make them to pay tax. But it was not for long time, after some time, Kolis again refused to pay tax and mughal troops were sent under Abdul Hussain Khan and Vajeram burnt the three Koli villages.[14]

In 1747, Rangoji a Maratha military leader returned to Áhmedábád, and Jawán Mard Khán had an interview with him a few miles from the city. Shortly after this the Kolis of Mehmudabad and Mahudha rebelled, but the revolt was speedily crushed by Sháhbáz Rohilla.[15]

Early reign

[edit]

Removing the Sayyid Brothers

[edit]
The Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah with his Falcon visits the imperial garden at sunset on a palanquin.

On 9 October 1720, Syed Hussain Ali Khan Barha, the commander and chief of the Mughal army, was assassinated in his encampment in Todabhim and Muhammad Shah took direct command of the army. Asaf Jah I was then dispatched to gain complete control of six Mughal provinces in the Deccan, and Muhammad Amin Khan Turani was assigned as the Mansabdar of 8000. He was sent to pursue the Mughal Grand vizier Syed Hassan Ali Khan Barha, who was defeated at the battle of Hasanpur by Muhammad Amin Turani, Khan-i Dauran, Sher Afkan Panipati, and Amin-ud-Din Sambhali. Hassan Khan Barha fought on the side opposing Khan-i-Dauran where the most danger was anticipated,[16] was captured on 15 November 1720 and executed two years later. The fall of the Sayyid Brothers would mark the beginning of the end of the Mughal Empire's direct control over its dominions in the Deccan.

Loss of Deccan subahs

[edit]
The Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah and his family

On 21 February 1722, Muhammad Shah appointed the Asaf Jah I as Grand Vizier. He advised Muhammad Shah to be "as cautious as Akbar and as brave as Aurangzeb". Asaf Jah used his influence with the emperor to fulfil his territorial ambitions in the Deccan. He lost the emperor's confidence when he appointed Hamid Khan, a relative to Saadullah Khan and his maternal uncle, to administer Gujarat after having sending him on the pretext of restoring order to the province.[17] Realising his loss of influence and trust from the emperor, Asaf Jah resigned as Grand Vizier and returned to the Deccan.[18]

Asaf Jah I appointed commander Ewaz Khan as the master of the garrison at Aurangabad, and much of his logistical duties were carried out by Inayatullah Kashmiri.[19] In 1723 he set out on an expedition to the Deccan, where he fought Mubariz Khan, the Mughal Subahdar of the Deccan, who had kept the ravaging Maratha Empire at bay. Mubariz Khan was a former ally of the Barha Sayyids, who was appointed by Muhammad Shah to kill Asaf Jah I.[20] Taking advantage of Mubariz Khan's conventional weaknesses, Asaf Jah I defeated and eliminated his opponent during the Battle of Shakar Kheda. Asaf Jah I then established the Hyderabad State and appointed himself the Nizam of Hyderabad in 1725.

The Mughal-Maratha Wars (1728–1763)[21] would cause irreparable devastation to six Deccan subahsKhandesh, Bijapur, Berar, Aurangabad, Hyderabad and Bidar. Asaf Jah would the Marathas to invade Malwa and the northern territories of the Mughal empire to protect his newfound independence.[22][23][24] The Nizam described the Maratha army to be an instrument to be wielded to his own advantage in the Maasir-i Nizami:[25]

"I consider all this army (Marathas) as my own and I will get my work done through them. It is necessary to take our hands off Malwa. God willing, I will enter into an understanding with them and entrust the Mulukgiri (raiding) on that side of the Narmada to them."

The ears of the Muhammed Shah were possessed by the Amir-ul-Umara, Khan-i Dauran.[26] Muhammad Shah appointed Qamar-ud-Din Khan as Grand Wazir to succeed Asaf Jah. However, he was quickly dismissed in favour of Roshan-ud-Daulah Turrah Baz Khan, a native of Panipat,[27] who was appointed the Grand Wazir, in order to reduce the influence of the Turani family.[28]

Despite the loss of the Deccan subahs in 1724, the Nawab of Awadh Saadat Ali Khan and the Mughal subahdar Dilawar Khan (r. 1726–1756) remained loyal to the emperor and established a well-protected bastion on the Malabar Coast.

Cultural developments

[edit]
The phrase Zuban-i Urdū-yi Muʿallá (literally "Language of the exalted Horde", contextually the exalted Urdu Language) written in Nastaʿlīq script
Lashkari Zabān ("military camp language" or "Battalionese language") title in Nastaʿlīq script
Baagh e Naazir was built by Muhammad Shah the year 1748.

While Urdu (derived from Zuban-i Urdū-yi Muʿallá or in local translation Lashkari Zaban, shortened to Lashkari) was already in use before Muhammad Shah's reign, it was during his reign that it became more popular among the people and he declared it as the court language, replacing Persian. During Muhammad Shah's reign, Qawwali was reintroduced into the Mughal imperial court and it quickly spread throughout South Asia. Muhammad Shah is also known to have introduced religious institutions for education such as Maktabs. During his reign, the Quran was translated for the first time into simple Persian and Urdu. Also, during his reign, the formal Turkic dress, normally worn by the high Mughal nobility since Mughals originally hailed from Samarqand, was replaced by the Sherwani. However, Muhammad Shah's adoption of the Deccan-influenced dress to court would lead to derisive comments, such as "See how the Deccan monkey dances!"[29][30]

Mohammad Shah was a patron of the performing arts, almost at the cost of administrative priorities, paving the way for the disintegration of governance. While Mughal political power did decline in his reign, the Emperor encouraged the arts, employing master artists such as Nidha Mal (active 1735–75) and Chitarman, whose vivacious paintings depict scenes of court life, such as Holi celebrations, hunting and hawking.[31] The Mughal court of the time had musicians such as Naimat Khan, also known as Sadarang, and his nephew Firoz Khan (Adarang), whose compositions popularised the musical form of khyal. Naimat Khan composed khyal for his disciples and he never performed khyal.[32] This key component of Indian classical music evolved, ascended and received princely patronage at the court of Muhammad Shah.[33]

He himself was a poet under the penname "Sadrang" and was also a composer of Indian classical raga songs in the bhairav, kafi, dhamar and malkauns genres. These included songs on the themes of love and the festival of Holi.[6]

Scientific developments

[edit]

During the reign of Muhammad Shah, a significant scientific work known as the Zij-i Muhammad Shahi was completed by Jai Singh II of Amber between the year 1727 and 1735; it consisted of 400 pages.[34]

Bengal and Sikhs raids

[edit]

Muhammad Ali Khan the Mughal Faujdar of Rangpur and his stern ally Deena Narayan were ambushed out of Koch Bihar by Upendra Narayan a Hindu Bihari and Mipham Wangpo (r. 1729–1736) the ruler of Bhutan. Ali Mohammed Khan had established the barons of Rohilakhand. In the Punjab region, the Sikhs were at war with local Mughal subahdars, devastating them with their hit-and-run tactics.

Loss of Gujarat and Malwa subahs

[edit]

After decisively defeating Asaf Jah in February 1728 at the Battle of Palkhed, Bajirao I and his brother Chimaji Appa re-invaded Malwa. The Mughal subahdar Giridhar Bahadur was defeated and killed at the battle of Amjhera in November 1729.[35] Chimnaji Appa then unsuccessfully attempted to besiege the remnants of the Mughal army at Ujjain.[36]

Elephants pushing Mughal artillery cannons drawn also by bullocks.[37]

In 1731, Asaf Jah managed to secure the defections of influential Maratha leaders, such as Trimbak Rao Dabhade and Sanbhoji who threatened to abandon the Marathas and join the forces with the emperor Muhammad Shah. However, the defectors were overrun and killed by a large Maratha force led by Bajirao I and Chimnaji Appa during Battle of Dabhoi.[36] Bajirao I then attacked Gujarat with his full force and drove out Sarbuland Khan by 1735.

An elephant and its mahout in service of the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah.

Bajirao I defeated a well-trained Mughal army led by Amir Khan Bahadur, but was forced to withdraw when well-armed Mughal reinforcements fought major skirmishes with the Marathas on the outskirts of Delhi. Bajirao and his Marathas fled southeast to Badshahpur, where he corresponded with the emperor Muhammad Shah, who ratified peace by agreeing the handover of Malwa to the Marathas.[36]

Invasion of Nader Shah

[edit]

Invasion of Mughal empire

[edit]

In May 1738, Nader Shah attacked northern Afghanistan and captured Ghazni. He captured Kabul in June and Jalalabad in September. By November, he had crossed the Khyber Pass and besieged and razed the fortress of Peshawar. In January 1739, he captured Lahore, after completely subduing the forces of the Mughal viceroy, Zakariya Khan Bahadur and his 25,000 sowars,[38] by the Chenab river. The Afsharid forces soon encountered bands of Sikh rebels whom Nader Shah predicted would clearly benefit after his invasion.[38] The Afsharids would capture territory all the way up to Attock, forcing Muhammad Shah and his court to realise that the Persian emperor would not be satisfied with the loot of a province. The cities of Wazirabad, Eminabad and Gujrat were not only sacked but razed to the ground. Near Larkana, the Afsharids completely routed the Mughal army of the Nawab of Sindh, Main Noor Mohammad Kalhoro, and later captured him and his two sons. Sirhind was then captured by the Persians in February 1739, opening the route towards the Mughal capital of Delhi.

Battle of Karnal

[edit]
Muhammad Shah with the Persian invader Nader Shah, art from Nader's court historian Mirza Mehdi Khan Astarabadi, who was a firsthand witness of the encounter
Muhammad Shah with an Afsharid prince, art from Nader's court historian Mirza Mehdi Khan Astarabadi, who was a firsthand witness of the encounter

Rao Bal Kishan of Rewari, with his army of 5,000 infantry and 2,000 cavalry and with the forces of Delhi, attempted a desperate defence of the city but was killed in battle and has been immortalized the name "Vijay or "Veergati". Nadir Shah remarked to emperor Muhammad Shah that "if your combined forces helped Rao Balkrishna of Rewari, then I might not able to enter in Delhi. I had never seen any warrior like him brave, Fierce and strong. Muhammed Shah commissioned a royal chhatri to pay tribute to Rao Bal Kishan.[citation needed][39][40]

After entering Delhi, Nader Shah claimed to invasion and occupation of the Mughal Empire was borne out of religious devotion and that if "the wretched Marathas of the Deccan" moved towards Delhi, he might "send an army of victorious Qizilbash to drive them to the abyss of Hell."[41][42]

Rao Bal Kishan Chhatri at Karnal

Sack of Delhi

[edit]
Nader Shah finds his troops had been killed in rioting. From Surridge, Victor (1909). Romance of Empire: India.
Provinces of the Mughal Empire in the year 1740

The occupation of Delhi was initially cordial, however, rumours spread throughout the city that Nader Shah was assassinated. The masses attacked the Persian force and killed some soldiers. Nader Shah became furious, ordered to massacre the populace, and leaving at least 30,000 dead. Muhammad Shah and Asaf Jah I had to beg Nader Shah for mercy and thus he stopped the massacre and turned to looting the Mughal treasury.[43] The famous Peacock Throne, the Daria-i-Noor and Koh-i-Noor diamonds and unimaginable wealth was looted. In addition, elephants, horses and everything that was liked was taken. Muhammad Shah also had to hand over his daughter Jahan Afruz Banu Begum as a bride for Nader Shah's youngest son. Asaf Jah I retired to Deccan after installing his eldest son Intizam-ud-Daula as a major commander in the Mughal Army.[44]

Later Maratha wars

[edit]

In the year 1740, Dost Ali Khan to Nawab of the Carnatic and Chanda Sahib faced the task of expelling the Marathas under Raghoji I Bhonsle, authorised by Chhatrapati Shahu I. Dost Ali Khan was killed on 20 May 1740 at the Battle of Damalcherry in defence of Arcot, which was eventually looted and plundered. Chanda Sahib along with his garrison was captured and imprisoned in Satara. Chanda Sahib and his forces ferociously defended their rightful reams during the Siege of Trichinopoly and almost all the territories of the Nawab of the Carnatic despite being outnumbered substantially by the Marathas, their daunting efforts soon attracted the attention of the French East India Company official Joseph François Dupleix.[45]

Dissatisfied by the Maratha occupation of the territories of the Nawab of the Carnatic, Asaf Jah I led an expedition to liberate the region. He was joined by Sadatullah Khan II and Anwaruddin Muhammed Khan together they recaptured Arcot and initiated the Siege of Trichinopoly (1743), which lasted five months and forced the Marathas led by Murari Rao Ghorpade to evacuate the Carnatic.[45]

In the year 1747, the Marathas led by Raghoji I Bhonsle, began to raid, pillage and annex the territories of the Nawab of Bengal Alivardi Khan. During the Maratha invasion of Orissa, its subahdar Mir Jafar completely withdrew all forces until the arrival of Alivardi Khan and the Mughal Army at the Battle of Burdwan where Raghoji I Bhonsle and his Maratha forces were completely routed. The enraged Nawab of Bengal Alivardi Khan then dismissed the shamed Mir Jafar. However, due to four years of continuous wars, emperor Muhammad Shah was forced to cede Orissa to the Marathas.[36]

Foreign relations

[edit]

Following Nader Shah's invasion, the Ottoman Empire exploited the void that was created at their eastern borders as almost all Persian forces were deployed to India. During that period, emperor Muhammad Shah tried to recover all territory until being attacked by the Durrani Empire at Battle of Manupur.[46]

Marriages

[edit]

Emperor Muhammad Shah had four wives. His first wife and chief consort was his first-cousin, Princess Badshah Begum, the daughter of Emperor Farrukhsiyar and his first wife, Gauhar-un-Nissa Begum.[47] They married after his accession, on 8 December 1721, at Delhi,[48] and he gave her the title Malika-uz-Zamani (Queen of the Age)[2] by which she was popularly known. They had a son, Shahriyar Shah Bahadur, who died young in 1726.[2] She died on 14 December 1789.

Muhammad Shah took a second wife, Sahiba Mahal, and had a daughter Hazrat Begum, who was married to Ahmad Shah Durrani in 1757.[49]

His third wife was a dancing girl, Qudsia Begum, Begum of Bhopal, who bore him his successor, Ahmad Shah Bahadur on 23 December 1725. Upon his birth, he was taken from her and was lovingly brought up by Badshah Begum, who considered him her own son. It was through Badshah Begum's efforts that Ahmad Shah was able to ascend the throne upon Muhammad Shah's death in 1748.[50]

Death

[edit]
Tomb of Muhammad Shah, in the courtyard of the Nizamuddin Dargah.

The victory of the Mughal Army during the Battle of Manupur (1748) came with a heavy price as many fell in battle. Initially this was kept a secret. However, when the news reached the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah, he could not speak, suddenly became sick, and did not come out of his apartments for three days. During this period he fasted. His guards could hear him crying out loud and saying: "How could I bring about anyone as faithful as he? (Qamaruddin Khan)". He died due to grief on 26 April 1748, his funeral was attended by visiting Imams from Mecca.[51][52] Muhammad Shah's tomb is located in an enclosure within the Nizamuddin Dargah complex.[53]

[edit]
[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Muhammad Shah". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 18 September 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Malik, Zahir Uddin (1977). The reign of Muhammad Shah, 1719–1748. London: Asia Pub. House. p. 407. ISBN 9780210405987.
  3. ^ Sen, Sailendra (2013). A Textbook of Medieval Indian History. Primus Books. p. 193. ISBN 978-9-38060-734-4.
  4. ^ Krishna (2022). The Wonder That Is Urdu. Motilal Banarsidass. p. 121. ISBN 9788120843011.
  5. ^ Shaharyar M. Khan (2000). The Begums of Bhopal (illustrated ed.). I.B.Tauris. p. 18. ISBN 978-1-86064-528-0.
  6. ^ a b Muhammad Shah Rangila. Sufinama.
  7. ^ Ashburner, Bhagvánlál Indraji (1839-1888) John Whaley Watson (1838–1889) Jervoise Athelstane Baines (1847–1925) L. R. "History of Gujarát". www.gutenberg.org. Retrieved 17 October 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ Campbell, James Macnabb (1896). "Chapter I. Early Musalmán Governors.(A.D. 1297–1403.) and II. ÁHMEDÁBÁD KINGS. (A. D. 1403–1573.)". In James Macnabb Campbell (ed.). History of Gujarát. Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency. Vol. I(II). The Government Central Press. p. 303.
  9. ^ Campbell 1896, pp. 304.
  10. ^ Campbell 1896, pp. 310.
  11. ^ Campbell 1896, pp. 310–311.
  12. ^ Campbell 1896, pp. 322–323.
  13. ^ Campbell 1896, pp. 323.
  14. ^ Campbell 1896, pp. 323–324.
  15. ^ Campbell 1896, pp. 331.
  16. ^ William Irvine (1971). Later Mughal. Atlantic Publishers & Distri. p. 82.
  17. ^ Jaswant Lal Mehta (2005). Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707–1813. New Dawn Press, Incorporated. p. 145. ISBN 9781932705546.
  18. ^ Ronald Vivian Smith (2005). The Delhi that No-one Knows. DC Publishers. p. 60.
  19. ^ Mehta, J.L. (2005). Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707–1813. New Dawn Press, Incorporated. ISBN 9781932705546.
  20. ^ A New Look at Modern Indian History (From 1707 to The Modern Times), 32e. S Chand Limited. 2018. p. 6. ISBN 9789352534340.
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  51. ^ name="Mughal-Ottoman relations Sharif of Mecca"
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[edit]
Preceded by Mughal Emperor
1719–1748
Succeeded by