Mahabat Khan
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Mahabat Khan (Urdu: محبت خان) (full title Mahabat Khan Khan-e-Khanan Sipah-Salar Zamana Beg Kabuli, born Zamana Beg) (died 1634), was a prominent Mughal general and statesman, perhaps best known for his coup against the Mughal Emperor Jahangir in 1626.
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[edit] Family background
Mahabat Khan was born in Kabul, Afganistan to a distinguished and wealthy Rizvi Sayyid family.[1] His father, Ghayur Beg Kabuli, was a native of Shiraz, Iran, who migrated to Kabul and settled among the local tribes. Ghayur Beg began his career in the army of Mirza Muhammad Hakim, the Mughal ruler of Afghanistan, and upon the death of Mirza Hakim in July, 1585, he migrated to India with his family, and entered into the service of the Mughal Emperor Akbar.
[edit] Career in the Mughal Army
Upon his arrival in India, Zamana Beg enjoyed a rapid ascent though the ranks of the Mughal army. He began his military career in the personal forces of Crown Prince Salim (who later went on to become Emperor Jahangir). Having endeared himself to the crown prince, he was soon made an officer in charge of 500 men. Upon Jahangir rise to the throne in 1605, he was granted the honorific title 'Mahabat Khan,' and was promoted to the rank of commander of 1,500 men, and bakhshi (treasurer) of the emperor's private privy purse. Mahabat Khan rose to prominence in in 1623, when he was made commander of the Mughal forces sent to defeat the unsuccessful rebellion of Prince Khurram (who later went on to become Emperor Shah Jahan) in the Deccan. For his loyal service, he was recognized as a 'pillar of the state'[2], and was ultimately promoted to chief commander of the Mughal army, with a personal force of 7,000 men.
[edit] Rebellion
Mahabat Khan's success in quelling Prince Khurram's rebellion was not met with pleasure by many members of the Mughal court, who began to fear and resent the general's growing prestige and influence. Empress Nur Jahan was especially concerned, and in an effort to curb Mahabat Khan's rising power, she arranged to have him made governor of Bengal, a province far removed from the Mughal capital at Lahore. Furthermore, in an effort to humiliate him in the imperial court, Nur Jahan had him charged with disloyal conduct and ordered him to return to Lahore to face trial[3]. As a result of Nur Jahan's machinations against him, Mahabat Khan decided to take action, and so in 1626, he lead an army of loyal Rajput soldiers to the Punjab. Meanwhile, Jahangir and his retinue were preparing to head to Kabul, and were encamped on the banks of the River Jhelum. Mahabat Khan and his forces attacked the royal encampment, and successfully took the emperor hostage; Nur Jahan, however, managed to escape. Mahabat Khan declared himself emperor of India at Kabul, however his success was short-lived.
Nur Jahan, with the help of nobles who were still loyal to Jahangir, came up with a plan to free her husband. She surrendered herself to Mahabat Khan, and once reunited with her husband, put her plan into action. She had Jahangir convince Mahabat Khan that he was satisfied with the current arrangement, as it had freed him from her clutches. Mahabat Khan believed that he had won over the former emperor, failing to realize that Jahangir was in fact siding with Nur Jahan. Consequently, he decreased the Rajput guards that he had placed around Jahangir, and prepared to return to Lahore with the captive emperor. Meanwhile, Nur Jahan arranged for an army to meet them enroute to Lahore; in the ensuing battle, Nur Jahan's forces were victorious, and Jahangir was freed from captivity. Mahabat Khan's brief reign lasted approximately 100 days.[2]
[edit] Later life and death
Following his unsuccessful coup, Mahabat Khan fled to the Deccan. There, Prince Khurram convinced him to surrender himself to Jahangir. However, with the death of Jahangir shortly thereafter in the October of 1627, Mahabat Khan was able to go unpunished. Upon Prince Khurram's rise to the throne as Emperor Shah Jahan, Mahabat Khan was appointed governor of Ajmer. He was later transferred to a post in the Deccan, where he died in 1634[4]. His body was carried back to Delhi, where he was buried on the ground of the shrine of Qadam Sharif[5]. Upon his death, his eldest son, Mirza Amanullah, was awarded the title 'Khan Zaman', while his second son, Luhrasp, was granted his late father's title, 'Mahabat Khan.'[6]
[edit] References
- ^ Elliot, Henry Miers. The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians: The Muhammadan Period. Retrieved on 2008-02-05.
- ^ a b Findly, Ellison Banks. Nur Jahan: Empress of Mughal India. Retrieved on 2008-02-05.
- ^ Mukherjee, Soma. Royal Mughal Ladies and Their Contributions. Retrieved on 2008-02-05.
- ^ Amardesh Enyclopedia. Retrieved on 2008-02-05.
- ^ Smith, RV. "Of Majlis, Karbala, and Tazia", "The Hindu", 2007-01-29. Retrieved on 2008-02-05.
- ^ Beale, Thomas William. An Oriental Biographical Dictionary. Retrieved on 2008-02-05.