Iltutmish

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Shams-ud-din Iltutmish, or Altamash, (Urdu: شمس الدین التتمش) was the third Muslim Turkic sultan of the Sultanate of Delhi and the third ruler of the Mamluk dynasty (or Slave dynasty) (d. 1236)[1] .

Contents

[edit] Rise To Power

Delhi sultanate under Iltutmish.
Delhi sultanate under Iltutmish.

Shams-ud-din belonged to the tribe of Ilbari in Turkestan. He was remarkably handsome in appearance and showed signs of intelligence and sagacity from his early days, which excited the jealousy of his brothers, who managed to deprive him of his paternal home and care. But adversities did not mar his qualities, which soon opened a career for him. His accomplishments attracted the notice of Qutub-ud-din-Aybak then Viceroy of Delhi, who purchased him at a high price. By dint of his merits, Shams-ud-din raised his status step by step until he was made Governor of Badaun and was married to a daughter of Qutub-ud-din. In recognition of his services during the campaign of Muhammad of Ghur against the Khokhars, he was, by the Sultan's order, manumitted and elevated as Amir-ul-Umara.

[edit] Sultan of Delhi

Coin of Shams-Ud-Din Iltutmish , circa 1210 AD - 1235 AD . Obv: Crude figure of  Rider bearing lance on caparisoned horse facing right. Devnagari Legends : Sri /hamirah'. Star above horse.  Rev: Arabic Legends : ' shams al-dunya wa'l din iltutmish al-sultan'.
Coin of Shams-Ud-Din Iltutmish , circa 1210 AD - 1235 AD .
Obv: Crude figure of Rider bearing lance on caparisoned horse facing right. Devnagari Legends : Sri /hamirah'. Star above horse. Rev: Arabic Legends : ' shams al-dunya wa'l din iltutmish al-sultan'.
Coin of Shams-Ud-Din Iltutmish , circa 1210 AD - 1235 AD . Obv:Rider bearing lance on caparisoned horse facing right. Devnagari Legends: Sri/hamirah'.  Rev:Arabic Legends: 'Shams al-dunya wa'l din Abu'l Muzaffar Iltutmish al-Sultan'.
Coin of Shams-Ud-Din Iltutmish , circa 1210 AD - 1235 AD .
Obv:Rider bearing lance on caparisoned horse facing right. Devnagari Legends: Sri/hamirah'. Rev:Arabic Legends: 'Shams al-dunya wa'l din Abu'l Muzaffar Iltutmish al-Sultan'.

In A.D. 1210 Qutub-ud-din Aybak died. The Chihalgani decided on Aram Shah as the new Sultan. He however turned out to be an incapable ruler and was soon replaced within the time span of one year with Shams-ud-din. Shams-ud-din was given the title "Altmush or Iltmash" when he was throned. Altmush (altmış pronounced ahlt-MUSH) in the Turkish language translates into 60, which was the age of Shams-ud-din at the time he was made king. On his accession, Iltutmish was faced with an embarrassing situation. Narsir-ud-din Qabacha had asserted his independence in Sind and seemed desirous of extending his authority over the Punjab. Ali Mardan, a Khalji noble, who had been appointed Governor of Bengal by Qutub-ud-din in 1206, had thrown off his allegiance to Delhi after his death and styled himself Sultan Ala-ud-din. Further, the Hindu princes and chiefs were seething with discontent at their loss of independence; Gwalior and Ranthambore had been recovered by their rulers during the weak rule of Aram Shah. To add to Iltutmish's troubles, some of the Amirs of Delhi expressed resentment against his rule[2] .

The new Sultan faced the situation boldly. He first effectively suppressed a rebellion of the Amirs in the plain of Jud near Delhi, and then brought under his control the different parts of the kingdom of Delhi with its dependencies like Badaun, Benares and Siwalik. The ambitious designs of his rivals were also frustrated. Qabacha, who had meanwhile advanced to Lahore, was expelled from that city by Iltutmish in 1217. He was completely subdued in 1228 and was accidentally drowned in the Indus. Sindh was annexed to the Delhi Sultanate. The Khalji Maliks of Bengal were reduced to complete submission in the winter of circa 1231 and Ala-ud-din Jani was appointed Governor of Lakhnauti[2].

[edit] Mongol threat

It was during the reign of Iltutmish, in the year A.D. 1221, that the Mongols appeared for the first time on the banks of the Indus, under their celebrated leader Genghis Khan. He overran the countries of Central and Western Asia with lightning rapidity, and when he attacked Jalal-ud-din Mangabarni, the last Shah of Khwazarazm or Khiva, the latter fled to the Punjab and sought asylum in the dominions of Iltutmish. The Sultan of Delhi refused to comply with the request of his unwelcome guest. Mangabarni entered into an alliance with the Khokhars, and after defeating Qabacha of Multan, plundered Sind and northern Gujarat and went away to Persia. The Mongols also retired. India was thus saved from a terrible calamity, but the menace of the Mongol raids disturbed the Sultans of Delhi in subsequent times[2].

[edit] Qutub Minar

Iltutmish was gifted with brilliant qualities as a man and extended his patronage to arts and letters. The completion of the structure of the famous Qutub Minar which was built from the ruins and parts of destroyed Hindu temples at Delhi by the Sultan in A.D. 1231-1232. The column was named after Khwaja Qutub-ud-din, a native of Ush near Baghdad, who had come to live in Hindustan and was held in much esteem and veneration by Iltutmish and others. It was out of gratitude that Iltutmish caused the names of his patrons, Sultan Qutub-ud-din and Sultan Mu'iz-ud-din, to be inscribed on it. A magnificent mosque was also built on the Sultan's order. He was intensely religious and very practical about his prayers. "Never has a sovereign," writes Minhaj-us-Siraj, "so virtuous, kind-hearted and reverent towards the learned and the divine, sat upon the throne". He is described in some contemporary writing as "the protector of the lands of God", "the helper of the servants of God", etc.

[edit] Death

In A.D. 1236 Iltumish died. Iltutmish's eldest son, Nasir-ud-din Mahmud, had died in 1229 while governing Bengal as his father's deputy. The surviving sons of the Sultan were incapable of the task of administration. In A.D. 1236 Iltutmish, on his death-bed, nominated his daughter Raziya as his heiress. But the nobles of the court were too proud to bow their heads before a woman, and disregarding the deceased Sultan's wishes, raised to the throne his eldest surviving son, Rukn-ud-din Firuz. The death of Iltutmish was followed by years of political instability at Delhi. During this period, four descendents of Iltutmish were put on the throne and murdered. Order was re-established only after Balban became the Naib or Deputy Sultan and later on Sultan in A.D. 1265.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ >Sheikh Mohamad Ikram (1966). Muslim Rule in India & Pakistan, 711-1858 A.C.. Star Book Depot, p.52. 
  2. ^ a b c >John McLeod (2002). The History of India. Greenwood Press, p.35. 
Preceded by
Aram Shah
Mamluk Dynasty
12061290
Succeeded by
Rukn ud din Firuz
Preceded by
Aram Shah
Sultan of Delhi
12061290
Succeeded by
Rukn ud din Firuz