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Timur Shah Durrani

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Second Durrani Emperor (r. 1772–1793)

Timur Shah Durrani
تیمور شاہ درانی
Shah of the Durrani Empire
King, Pearl of the Pearls[a]
Khan of Khans[b]
Portrait of Timur Shah Durrani
Shah of the Durrani Empire
ReignNovember 1772 – 20 May 1793
CoronationNovember 1772
PredecessorAhmad Shah Durrani[c]
SuccessorZaman Shah Durrani
BornDecember 1746[2][3]
Mashhad,Afsharid Iran
Died18 May 1793 (aged 46)
Char Bagh,Durrani Empire
(present-dayAfghanistan)
Cause of deathIntestinal inflammation
Burial21 May 1793
Maqbara-i-Timur Shah,Kabul
SpouseGauhar-un-Nissa Begum
Maryam Begum[4]
Gauhar Shad Begum[5]
Ayesha Durrani[6]
IssueZaman Shah Durrani
Mahmud Shah Durrani
Shuja Shah Durrani
Ahmed Mirza Durrani
Sultan Mirza Durrani
Nurdah Mirza Durrani
Malik Gawhar Durrani
Akbar Mirza Durrani
Husein Mirza Durrani
Hasan Mirza Durrani
Abbas Mirza Durrani
Buland Mirza Durrani
Shahrukh Mirza Durrani
Shahpur Mirza Durrani
Jahan Wala Durrani
Humayun Mirza Durrani
Ibrahim Mirza Durrani
Faruk Mirza Durrani
Khawar Mirza Durrani
Ayub Mirza Durrani
Miran Mirza Durrani
Kohandil Mirza Durrani
Nader Mirza Durrani
Names
Timur Shah Abdali Dur-e-Durran
DynastyDurrani
FatherAhmad Shah Durrani
ReligionSunni Islam
Military career
Conflicts

Timur Shah Durrani[d] (bornTimur Khan Abdali; December 1746 – 20 May 1793) was the second ruler of the AfghanDurrani Empire, from November 1772 until his death in 1793.[7] An ethnicPashtun, he was the second eldest son ofAhmad Shah Durrani.

Early life (1746–1772)

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Timur Shah was born in December 1746,[3][2] inMashhad.[8]

He received the city ofSirhind as a wedding gift under his governorship, and was later given the title of Viceroy ofPunjab,Kashmir and the Sirhind district in 1757[8] (when he was only 11 years old), by his fatherAhmad Shah Durrani for one year, from May 1757 until April 1758. Ahmad Shah Durrani had immediately appointed Toryal Khan Afridi, the eldest son of his army's commander and his most trustworthy soldier, Awalmir Khan Afridi, to teach horseback riding and swordsmanship to Timur. Toryal Khan Afridi also had the responsibility for the safety and protection of Timur, so he continuously stayed with Timur in the royal palace.[9]

Reign (1772–1793)

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Coin of Timur Shah asNizam of the Punjab, minted inLahore, dated 1757–58

Timur Shah ascended to the throne of theDurrani Empire in November 1772[10] with Shah Humayun giving up his throne.[11][12]

Timur Shah went toPeshawar to spend the winter there.[13][14]

Timur Shah's campaign against the Sikhs (1774–1775)

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Battle of Attock

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Timur's army crossed the Indus atAttock on 15 January 1775. His forces, though smaller than those of the Sikhs, were supplemented by Faizullah Khan's contingent of some 25,000 men. At Attock, Sikh forces under Milkha Singh of Rawalpindi boldly advanced to intercept Timur Shah's army. In the ensuing skirmish, the Sikhs were defeated and withdrew towards the banks of the Chenab River. Despite this setback, their resistance delayed Timur's march and exposed the weakness of his position.[15][16]

The Insurrection of Fayz Allah Khan Khalil

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Main article:Revolt of Fayz Allah Khan Khalil

Fayz Allah Khan Khalil was a leading zamindar in thePeshawar region and a figure to whom rural communities frequently turned for leadership and counsel. He belonged to the Khalil tribe, a large Afghan tribal confederation residing aroundPeshawar and traditionally linked by lineage to the Durrani ruling elite. His influence among local tribes and landholders made him a significant regional power.[17]

During the reign of Timur Shah Durrani, tensions persisted within the empire due to administrative centralization, tribal rivalries, and military pressures along the Indian frontier. Sikh forces were increasingly active in Punjab, creating widespread anxiety among Afghan officials and Muslim communities. Fayz Allah Khan exploited these concerns as a pretext to gather armed followers.[17][18]

Conspiracy

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Fayz Allah Khan Khalil, together with several sardars, plotted toassassinate Timur Shah in hopes of seizing power. Among his principal collaborators was Yaqut Khan, an eunuch who headed the royal harem guards and enjoyed the shah’s trust. Another associate was Asad Allah Khan Mohmand, a leading zamindar of Peshawar.[17][18]

The conspirators sent a message to Timur Shah claiming that Sikh forces were harassing Muslims in Punjab and requested permission to mobilize tribal levies to suppress them. Unaware of the conspirators intentions, Timur Shah approved the request. Fayz Allah Khan then assembled a large force drawn from Peshawar and Kashmir, numbering between 20,000 and 25,000 infantry and cavalry men.[19]

While Timur Shah was residing at the Bala Hissar inPeshawar, the conspirators chose an afternoon moment when the shah was resting. Claiming that the shah had summoned them for a troop review, Fayz Allah Khan and his followers attempted to enter the citadel. When palace guards refused entry, the rebels forced their way in, killing guards and wounding several officials in the royal kitchen. Timur Shah was alerted to the danger and fled to the top of a tower within the citadel. Loyal guards including ghulams,Qizilbash troops, and other palace units were ordered to suppress the uprising. Heavy fighting followed within and around the Bala Hissar.[17][20]

The imperial forces decisively defeated the rebels, driving them several kilometers from the city. Contemporary sources report extensive bloodshed, with approximately 6,000 people killed, including rebels and civilians who were mistaken for insurgents due to similar dress.[21] Fayz Allah Khan Khalil and his son were captured and executed. Yaqut Khan was also arrested and put to death for his role in facilitating the conspiracy. Several villages associated with suspected rebels were raided, though the violence was later curtailed through the intercession of local sardars. Asad Allah Khan Mohmand managed to escape into the mountainous regions ofBajaur.[17]

According to later accounts, Fayz Allah Khan initially evaded capture by fleeing into the hills of Hashtnagar. Timur Shah, unable to secure him by force, employed deception by publicly declaring that Fayz Allah Khan had been forgiven. A letter of pardon, written and sealed on a leaf of theQuran, was sent to him. Trusting the sanctity of the document, Fayz Allah Khan traveled to Kabul to express repentance. Upon arrival, he was arrested and beheaded on the same day.[22][21]

Following the suppression of the revolt, Timur Shah returned toKabul and formally established it as the imperial capital in place ofKandahar. This decision was influenced by Kabul’s central position within Afghan territory and the presence of theQizilbash administrators whom Timur Shah favored.[23]

Timur Shah's campaign against the Sikhs (1779–1780)

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Battle of Rohtas

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Main article:Battle of Rohtas (1779)

A year before the death ofAhmad Shah Durrani, the Sikhs conqueredMultan in 1772.[24] Timur Shah ascended to the throne of theDurrani Empire after his father's death.[25] Due to Sikhs having been in possession of the provinces ofLahore and Multan, these provinces served as a barrier for any attempt by Timur Shah to invade, many chiefs and nobility, dependencies of Durranis, paid no respect to the Durrani sovereignty, such asSindh which reduced the amount of tribute and hardly paid it, mostly due to its concurrent civil war between theTalpurs, and theKalhoras;Nasir Khan Baloch, the ruler of the Khanate of Kalat under Timur Shah did not acknowledge the authority of Afghan monarch, as a result, inducing other Durrani chiefdoms to do the same, including the chief ofBahawalpur, who treated the authority of Timur Shah with no respect.[26] Timur Shah thereupon tried to recover Multan by diplomacy and therefore sent Haji Ali Khan, as his agent, along with companions, to the Bhangi Sikh Chiefs to negotiate, with advice to behave and be polite, but instead, Haji Ali Khan threatened the Bhangi Chiefs to retire from Multan or face the royal wrath. The Bhangis tied Haji to the tree and shot him dead whereas his companions were left unharmed and sent back to report to Timur.[26][27]

Upon the news of death of his agent, Timur Shah detached a force of 18,000 men that includedYusufzais,Durranis,Mughals andQizalbashes under general Zangi Khan,[28] with orders to march by less known routes and fall upon the Sikhs unaware and Zangi Khan gave strict orders to his army to keep the movement secret. Zangi Khan halted 25 km from the Sikh camps with orders to imprison anyone who goes in the direction of the Sikh camp to make the Sikhs aware of their presence. Timur Shah positioned himself in the centre, at the head of 5,000 Yousafzai men.[29] Little before daybreak, early morning, the Sikhs completely unaware of Afghan army's presence, were attacked, and though unorganized, the Sikhs gave tough resistance but were eventually overwhelmed. About 3000 Sikhs were killed, and 500 others drowned in riverJhelum in trying to cross it during the Sikh retreat, while 2000 escaped by successfully reaching the opposite bank of the river.[30]

Siege of Multan (1780)

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Main articles:Siege of Multan (1780) andBattle of Shujabad (1780)

Timur Shah also marched onMultan, besieging the city in January 1780.[31][32]

Kashmir Rebellion of Azad Khan (1783–1786)

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Main article:Rebellion of Azad Khan

Hajji Karimdad Khan, a seniorarz-begī and a trusted governor of Kashmir underAhmad Shah Durrani, died in 1783. His youngest son, Azad Khan, was confirmed byKabul as his successor. Once in office, Azad Khan consolidated his authority aggressively. He expelled his elder brothers, Murtaza Khan and Zaman Khan, diverted state revenues into his own coffers, distributed cash, cloth, and robes of honor to retain the army's loyalty, and enrolled roughly 3,000 Sikhs and other adventurers as nawkars. Azad Khan then stopped remitting revenue to Kabul altogether. His conduct alarmed Timur Shah, who initially hoped to resolve the matter without war.[33]

Timur Shah dispatched Mir Muhammad Ali Khan to counsel and restrain Azad Khan. Mir Muhammad Ali Khan confronted him directly inSrinagar, warned him of the consequences, and seized roughly three lakhs of rupees in cash and kind to cover arrears. Outwardly preparing to return toKabul, he secretly informed the court that Azad Khan showed clear signs of rebellion.[34]

Timur Shah responded by sending a 30,000-man force under the expelled brothers Murtaza and Zaman, accompanied by chiefs including Faiz Talab Khan Muhammadzai, Nawaz Jang Bangash Kohati, Zardar Khan, and Burhan Khan Popalzai. They advanced to the fort of Pakhli, while Azad Khan camped at nearby Muzaffarabad.[35]

The Rebellion

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A sharp engagement on theKishanganga ended in disaster for Azad Khan, his commander Mulla A‘zam Khan was killed and around 2,000 of his men drowned or were cut down. Azad attempted to flee by boat but was stopped by his cousin Pahlawan Khan, who forced him to rally the troops. Pahlawan reorganized the army, counterattacked, captured Burhan Khan Popalzai, and drove the Durrani force back.[16][35]

Azad Khan pressed the advantage. When the Durrani troops regrouped atPakhli, he marched out again and defeated them a second time near Baramulla, capturing Nawaz Jang Bangash, his son, and several officers. During these clashes, a notableYusufzai fighter, Sayyid ‘Ulul Shah, resisted fiercely before being taken alive at Azad Khan’s insistence. Impressed by his bravery, Azad placed him on a stipend and had his wounds treated. Azad also attempted to recruit capturedYusufzai prisoners, failed, and after giving them leave to depart secretly ordered boatmen to drown them in the Muzaffarabad River.[35][16]

News of the defeats pushed Timur Shah to act in person. He marched to Peshawar and sent a larger army under Madad Khan Durrani andPayandah Khan. These commanders induced defections among Azad Khan’s supporters by mixing bribes with threats, weakening the Kashmiri position.[36]

Azad attempted a night attack through his officer Shadi Khan, but Madad Khan learned of the plan and beat it off. Repeated encounters produced no decisive breakthrough for Azad, and morale eroded as rumours of collusion spread within his ranks. When evidence of negotiations between his commanders and the Durranis reached him, Azad abandoned the field and withdrew into the mountains of Bunish, seeking refuge with his father-in-law, Raja Rustam Khan.[37]

Raja Rustam Khan initially sheltered Azad, but after receiving a blunt threat from Madad Khan promising to “roll the two of them in one kilim” and fearing Azad might seize his own territory, he disarmed Azad's party by subterfuge. One morning he locked Azad in his room and informed the Durrani commanders.[21] A detachment of 2,000 horse under Islam Khan arrived to arrest him. Realizing he was trapped and expecting torture, Azad shot himself with a pistol. Islam Khan forced the door, found him dying, and after receiving a final curse from Azad decapitated him and sent the head to Timur Shah. Azad Khan died at twenty-seven and ending the rebellion on the 11th of December 1786.[21]

Timur Shah, despite the rebellion, admired Azad's courage and ordered his burial with respect. Azad's mother was summoned from Qandahar, granted two lakhs of rupees from her son's property, and given further royal favors. She initially refused the Shah's proposal of marriage, but later entered the royal harem, her grandson Fath Jang accompanied her back toKandahar after the pacification.Kashmir was reabsorbed under firm imperial control.[38][21]


Protecting Shah Alam II (1788)

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Portrait of Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II, brother-in-law to Timur Shah.

By 1788, Timur Shah Durrani, attempted again to ford the plains of Punjab to rescue his brother-in-law, the Mughal emperorShah Alam II. The emperor had been blinded by the Rohilla leaderGhulam Qadir, who occupied and plundered Delhi for two and a half months in 1788. Timur Shah prepared an invasion and wrote letters to the English authorities, includingEarl Cornwallis, and pleaded for a quick restoration of Shah Alam II to the throne, but was informed that he already had been restored as emperor by the Marathas. Therefore, he retreated back again. Timur Shah ascertained this information by sending an ambassador to the Mughal court and later requested that the British protect and obey the Mughal dynasty.[39][40]

March against Shah Murad, ruler of Bukhara (1788–1789)

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Main article:Battle of the Amu Darya

Shah Murad demanded that Timur Shah's governor ofAqcha andBalkh be recalled. When Timur Shah failed to comply, Shah Murad crossed the Amu Darya in the summer of 1788.[41]

Nonetheless, Timur Shah, with his army marched north, at a slow pace to make sure Shah Murad would not be notified of this attack. Timur Shah with his armies arrived atAqcha on the month ofDhu al-Hijjah, Shah Murad was however prepared, and drew up his men for battle.[42][41]

Death and legacy (1793)

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Bala Hissar, Peshawar, in 1910

In late 1792, Timur Shah Durrani resolved to undertake another campaign into theIndian subcontinent. Before setting out, he reorganized the administration of his empire to prevent unrest during his absence. Herat was entrusted toPrince Mahmud,Kandahar to Prince Humayun, andKabul toPrince Zaman. Advancing eastward, Timur Shah reachedPeshawar, where he suppressed resistance among several tribal chiefs in the Khyber Pass and surrounding hill regions. During this period, Fatah Khan Yousafzai, the governor ofMuzaffarabad, was summoned to the royal camp and executed for insubordination.[43]

Shortly afterward, Timur Shah fell seriously ill, suffering from severe intestinal inflammation accompanied by persistent vomiting. Despite the efforts of court physicians, his condition continued to deteriorate. Medical advisers recommended an immediate return toKabul, believing a change of climate might aid his recovery. Aware of the gravity of his illness, Timur Shah insisted on returning toKabul, the city he regarded as his preferred capital and final resting place.[43][44]

He arrived inKabul in early May 1793 but survived only a few days after his return. Timur Shah Durrani died on 18 May 1793, bringing an end to a reign of over twenty years marked by internal consolidation rather than major territorial expansion.[43][44]

Timur Shah was buried in Kabul, where a mausoleum was later constructed over his grave. By the mid-nineteenth century, the tomb had become one of the city’s most notable landmarks. British officer Sir Vincent Eyre, who visited Kabul in 1842, described Timur Shah’s mausoleum as one of the few structures of significance in the city at the time, alongside the covered bazaar.[43][44]

After the death of Timur Shah,Zaman Shah Durrani ascended the throne, inheriting theDurrani Empire,[45] five of his sons would eventually become rulers in their own right or contendents for power. According toFayz Muhammad those sons were: Humayun Mirza (rebelled after Timur Shah's death in Kandahar and would attempt to take the throne on 3 separate occasions),[46]Mahmud Shah (ruled Afghanistan 1801–1803 and 1809–1818, ruled from 1818 to 1829 in Herat),[35]Zaman Shah (ruled Afghanistan 1793–1801), Firuz al-Din Mirza (ruledHerat virtually independent from 1801 to 1818),[35]Shuja ul-Mulk (ruled Afghanistan 1803–1809), controlled Peshawar briefly in 1810, fled intoSikh and laterBritish protection, made an unsuccessful attempt to conquer Kandahar in 1834, was installed as ruler of Afghanistan by the British from 7 August 1839 until his assassination on 5 April 1842) andAli Shah (ruled Afghanistan 1818-1819).

Tomb of Timur Shah Durrani in Kabul


Notes

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  1. ^Persian:شاه در دران,romanizedŠāh Durr-i-Durrān
  2. ^Persian:خاقان,romanizedXāqān
  3. ^Disputed with Sulaiman Mirza Durrani in 1772[1]
  4. ^

References

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Citations

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  1. ^Lee, Jonathan (2019).Afghanistan: A History from 1260 to the Present. Reaktion Books. pp. 143–145.ISBN 9781789140101.
  2. ^abRam Gupta 1944, p. 231.
  3. ^abDrahm 2020, p. 700.
  4. ^McChesney, Robert; Mehdi Khorrami, Mohammad (December 19, 2012).The History of Afghanistan (6 vol. set): Fayż Muḥammad Kātib Hazārah's Sirāj al-tawārīkh. BRILL. p. 89.ISBN 978-9-004-23498-7.
  5. ^Dani, Ahmad Hasan; Mikhaĭlovich Masson, Vadim (January 1, 2003).History of Civilizations of Central Asia: Development in contrast : from the sixteenth to the mid-nineteenth century. UNESCO. p. 289.ISBN 978-9-231-03876-1.
  6. ^Wdl
  7. ^Timur Shah,Ruler of Afghanistan.
  8. ^ab"Taimur Shah". December 19, 2000.
  9. ^Christine Noelle-Karimi 2014, p. 128.
  10. ^Khan Malik, Ajmal (1993).UNIVERSITY OF PESHAWAR, PAKISTAN (Thesis). Vol. 01. UNIVERSITY OF PESHAWAR, PAKISTAN. p. 158. RetrievedDecember 4, 2021.
  11. ^Muhammad Katib Hazarah 2012, p. 56-58.
  12. ^Drahm 2020, p. 150.
  13. ^Muhammad Katib Hazarah 2012, p. 59-61.
  14. ^Drahm 2020, p. 146-7.
  15. ^www.DiscoverSikhism.com.History Of The Sikhs Vol. IV The Sikh Commonwealth Or Rise And Fall Of Sikh Misls. pp. 430–431.
  16. ^abcHari Ram Gupta (1944).Studies In Later Mughal History Of The Punjab 1707 To 1793. pp. 235–236.Cite error: The named reference ":1" was defined multiple times with different content (see thehelp page).
  17. ^abcdeFayz Muhammad Kitab Hazarah (2012).The History Of Afghanistan Fayż Muḥammad Kātib Hazārah’s Sirāj Al Tawārīkh By R. D. Mcchesney, M. M. Khorrami (trans.,ann.). pp. 59–60.
  18. ^abGupta Hariram (1944).Studies In Later Mughal History Of The Panjab 1707--1793. p. 236.
  19. ^Fayz Muhammad Kitab Hazarah (2012).The History Of Afghanistan Fayż Muḥammad Kātib Hazārah’s Sirāj Al Tawārīkh By R. D. Mcchesney, M. M. Khorrami (trans.,ann.). p. 59.
  20. ^Gupta Hariram (1944).Studies In Later Mughal History Of The Panjab 1707--1793. pp. 236–237.
  21. ^abcdeGupta Hariram (1944).Studies In Later Mughal History Of The Panjab 1707--1793. p. 237.Cite error: The named reference ":2" was defined multiple times with different content (see thehelp page).
  22. ^Fayz Muhammad Kitab Hazarah (2012).The History Of Afghanistan Fayż Muḥammad Kātib Hazārah’s Sirāj Al Tawārīkh By R. D. Mcchesney, M. M. Khorrami (trans.,ann.). pp. 60–61.
  23. ^Fayz Muhammad Kitab Hazarah (2012).The History Of Afghanistan Fayż Muḥammad Kātib Hazārah’s Sirāj Al Tawārīkh By R. D. Mcchesney, M. M. Khorrami (trans.,ann.). p. 61.
  24. ^Drahm 2020, p. 148.
  25. ^Khan Malik 1993, p. 158.
  26. ^abGupta, Hari Ram (2000).Studies In Later Mughal History Of The Punjab 1707-1793. Sang-e-Meel Publications. pp. 237–240.ISBN 9789693507560.
  27. ^Muhammad Khan 1998, p. 157.
  28. ^Muhammad Khan, Ashiq (1998).THE LAST PHASE OF MUSLIM RULE IN MULTAN (1752 - 1818) (Thesis). University of Multan, MULTAN. p. 157. RetrievedDecember 4, 2021.
  29. ^Hari Ram Gupta (2001).History of the Sikhs: The Sikh Commonwealth. Munshirm Manoharlal Pub Pvt Ltd. pp. 432–435.ISBN 9788121501651.
  30. ^Gupta 2000, p. 240.
  31. ^Muhammad Katib Hazarah 2012, p. 63-64.
  32. ^Muhammad Khan 1998, p. 158-159.
  33. ^Fayz Muhammad Kitab Hazarah (2012).The History Of Afghanistan Fayż Muḥammad Kātib Hazārah’s Sirāj Al Tawārīkh By R. D. Mcchesney, M. M. Khorrami (trans.,ann.). p. 66.
  34. ^Gupta Hariram (1944).Studies In Later Mughal History Of The Panjab 1707--1793. p. 245.
  35. ^abcdeGupta Hariram (1944).Studies In Later Mughal History Of The Panjab 1707--1793. p. 246.Cite error: The named reference ":0" was defined multiple times with different content (see thehelp page).
  36. ^Fayz Muhammad Kitab Hazarah (2012).The History Of Afghanistan Fayż Muḥammad Kātib Hazārah’s Sirāj Al Tawārīkh By R. D. Mcchesney, M. M. Khorrami (trans.,ann.). pp. 67–68.
  37. ^Fayz Muhammad Kitab Hazarah (2012).The History Of Afghanistan Fayż Muḥammad Kātib Hazārah’s Sirāj Al Tawārīkh By R. D. Mcchesney, M. M. Khorrami (trans.,ann.). p. 68.
  38. ^Fayz Muhammad Kitab Hazarah (2012).The History Of Afghanistan Fayż Muḥammad Kātib Hazārah’s Sirāj Al Tawārīkh By R. D. Mcchesney, M. M. Khorrami (trans.,ann.). p. 69.
  39. ^Varma, Birendra (1969). "Afghan Ambassadors in India (1773–1800)".Proceedings of the Indian History Congress.31:335–343.ISSN 2249-1937.JSTOR 44138392.
  40. ^Gandhi, Rajmohan (September 14, 2013).Punjab: A History from Aurangzeb to Mountbatten. Aleph Book Company.ISBN 9789383064410.
  41. ^abLee, Jonathan L. (January 1, 1996).The "Ancient Supremacy": Bukhara, Afghanistan and the Battle for Balkh, 1731-1901. BRILL.ISBN 978-90-04-10399-3.
  42. ^Muhammad Katib Hazarah 2012, p. 65.
  43. ^abcdwww.DiscoverSikhism.com.History Of The Sikhs Vol. IV The Sikh Commonwealth Or Rise And Fall Of Sikh Misls. p. 453.
  44. ^abcFayz Muhammad Kitab Hazarah (2012).The History Of Afghanistan Fayż Muḥammad Kātib Hazārah’s Sirāj Al Tawārīkh By R. D. Mcchesney, M. M. Khorrami (trans.,ann.). pp. 70–71.
  45. ^Hari Ram Gupta (October 2001).Later Mughal History Of The Panjab. Munshilal Manoharlal Pvt.Ltd.ISBN 81-215-0165-2.
  46. ^Drahmad_Abdelfattah.Afghanistan A History From 1260 To The Present.

Sources

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External links

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Preceded byEmir of Afghanistan
4 June 1772 – 18 May 1793
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