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 HISTORY OF INDIA.Turks and Afghans 
 X.THE KINGDOM OF JAUNPUR
 THE
        eunuch Malik Sarvar, Khvaja Jahan, having, as minister, placed on the throne of
        Delhi, in March, 1393, Nasir-ud-din Mahmud, son of
        Muhammad and grandson of Firuz Tughluq, and suppressed the Hindu rebellions in
        the Gangetic Doab and Oudh, threw off his allegiance
        to Delhi, and established himself at Jaunpur. He extended his authority not
        only over Oudh, but also over the Gangetic Doab as
        far west as Koil and, on the east, into Tirhut and Bihar. His advance in this
        direction alarmed the king of Bengal, who propitiated him with the tribute of
        elephants, due under the treaty with Firaz Tughluq,
        to the king of Delhi, who was no longer strong enough to assert his claim to
        the tribute or to resent its diversion to Jaunpur.
         Khvaja Jahan sent no aid to Delhi
        when it was attacked by Timur, and it is not recorded that he paid any
        attention to the invaders. He died in 1399, leaving his dominions intact to his
        adopted son, Malik Qaranful, who adopted the royal style of Mubarak Shah, and
        struck coin and caused the khutba to be
        recited in his name.
         An
        account of the abortive expedition undertaken by Mallu and Mahmud Shah of Delhi,
        who hoped, on Khvaja Jahan’s death, to recover Jaunpur, has already been given in Chapter VII. Jaunpur was
        again menaced in 1401, and Mubarak prepared to repel an invasion, but died
        suddenly in 1402, and was succeeded by his younger brother, who ascended the
        throne under the title of Shams-ud-din Ibrahim Shah.
         Ibrahim
        was a cultured prince and a liberal patron of learning, which was then in sore
        need of a peaceful retreat, and found it at his court, from which issued many
        works on theology and law. The second expedition of Mallu and Mahmud Shah of
        Delhi against Jaunpur ended, as has been already related, in Mahmud's flight
        from his overbearing minister. Ibrahim's pride forbade him to treat his guest
        as his sovereign, and Mahmud was so chagrined by his reception that he
        surprised Ibrahim's governor in Kanauj, expelled him from the town, and made it
        his residence. Ibrahim hesitated to take up arms against him, and returned to
        Jaunpur, while Mallu returned to Delhi. In 1405 he was slain in battle by Khizr Khan the Sayyid and Mahmud
        Shah returned to Delhi, leaving Malik Mahmud in command of Kanauj. Ibrahim
        attempted to expel him, but Mahmud Shah marched to his relief, and Ibrahim
        retired, but returned again in 1407 and, after a siege of four months, forced
        Malik Mahmud to surrender and marched on Delhi. He was deterred by a report
        that Muzaffar I of Gujarat had marched from Malwa to
        the assistance of Mahmal Shah from attacking the
        city, but annexed the district of Sambhal, east of the Ganges, and appointed
        his son governor there.
         Between
        1409 and 1414 Ibrahim was persuaded by the saint Qutbul Alam to invade Bengal with the object of punishing
        Raja Ganesh who, having acquired in that kingdom more power than its nominal
        ruler, was persecuting Islam. Ganesh, on discovering that his persecution of
        Muslims was raising up enemies against him on all sides, promised to desist
        from it, and permitted Qutbul Alam to convert his son Jaimal to Islam, and the saint,
        satisfied with this success, persuaded Ibrahim Shah to retire.
         Ibrahim’s
        abortive attempt, early in 1428, to restore Muhammad Khan Auhadi to Bayana has
        been described in Chapter VIII. It added nothing to his reputation.
         In 1433
        the idea of annexing the town and district of Kalpi occurred simultaneously to Ibrahim and to Hushang Shah of Malwa. Each had advanced his frontier in this direction, and the
        district lay between their dominions and was separated from Delhi, to which it
        nominally owed allegiance, by the turbulent district of Etawah. The two kings
        met in the neighborhood of Kalpi and hostilities were
        imminent when Ibrahim was obliged to retreat by the news that Mubarak Shah of
        Delhi was marching on Jaunpur. His anxiety was relieved by the assassination of
        Mubarak, but before he could return Hushang had
        profited by his absence to receive the surrender of Sadir Khan, the governor, and had added Kalpi to his
        dominions.
         
         
         
 
 War between Jaunpur and
        Malwa 
                 Ibrahim
        died in 1436 and was succeeded by his son Mahmud Shah, who in 1443 opened with
        Mahmud Shah Khalji a friendly correspondence followed by measures which
        involved the two states in hostilities. Hushang Shah,
        Mahmud Khalji’s cousin, had left Qadir Khan at Kalpi as governor of the fortress and
        district and he profited by the disputes regarding the succession to the throne
        of Malwa to assume independence, and even styled himself Qadir Shah. Qadir was now dead and had been succeeded by
        his son, who styled himself Nasir Shah, and so conducted himself as to scandalise all good Muslims. He destroyed a flourishing and
        populous town and handed over many Muslim girls to Hindus in order that they
        might be taught to posture and dance, accomplishments held in the East to be
        disreputable. Mahmud of Jaunpur was among those to whom Nasir’s behaviour gave offence, and he sent a mission to
        Mahmud Khalji to complain of his lieutenant's misconduct. The king of Malwa
        admitted that he had heard the reports which were confirmed by the letter of
        Mahmud Sharqi, and gave him permission to punish
        Nasir. He marched to Kalpi, attacked Nasir, and
        expelled him from the town, and Nasir, assuming now the character of a vassal
        of Malwa, wrote to Mahmud Khalji and complained that the king of Jaunpur had
        expelled him from a fief which had been bestowed upon his father by the king of
        Malwa, and intended to annex not only Kalpi, but Chanderi. Mahmud Khalji sent a message to Mahmud Sharqi, suggesting that as Nasir had expressed contrition
        he should be left in possession of the sub-district of Rath in the Halpi district, but Mahmud Sharqi,
        impelled either by ambition or by a just appreciation of the offences of which
        Nasir had been guilty, refused to stay his hand, and on November 14, 1444,
        Mahmud Khalji marched against him. The armies met near Irij,
        and an indecisive battle was fought, but Mahmud Sharqi occupied a strong position from which he refused to be drawn, and desultory
        operations continued for some months, until Mahmud Khalji and his protégé Nasir
        withdrew to Chanderi for the rainy season. While they
        were in quarters at Chanderi peace was concluded,
        Mahmud Sharqi agreeing to place Nasir at once in
        possession of Rath and to restore the rest of the Kalpi district within four months, provided that Mahmud Khalji had retired, by that
        time, to Mindu. After some hesitation on the part of
        Mahmud Khalji these terms were accepted, and were observed, and by the end of
        the year each monarch had returned to his own capital and the district of Kalpi had been restored to Nasir, whose chastisement was
        deemed to have been sufficient.
         Mahmud Sharqi’s adventure against Buhlul Lodi of Delhi in 1452 and
        its unfortunate results for Jaunpur, have already been described in Chapter IX.
        His rash attack on Delhi served but to open Buhlul’s eyes to the danger with which the existence of an independent kingdom of
        Jaunpur menaced him, and to convince him of the necessity for its destruction.
         After
        this unfortunate enterprise Mahmud turned his attention to the Chunar district, the greater part of which he annexed. Nizam-ud-din Ahmad gives him
        credit for an expedition against the idolaters of Orissa, whom, he says, he
        plundered, destroying their idol-temples, but he may be acquitted of the folly
        of pursuing purposeless adventures in foreign lands when the defence of his own
        kingdom demanded all his energies.
         The death
        of Mahmud in 1457, just as he was about to meet Buhlul Lodi in the field, and
        the accession of his son Bhikan, who assumed the
        title of Muhammad Shah, have been described in the preceding chapter. Buhlul,
        having made peace with Muhammad and retreated as far as Dhankaur,
        near the Jumna, about twenty-eight miles south-east of Delhi, was reminded that
        he had left his kinsman, Qutb Khan Lodi, in captivity at Jaunpur, and suddenly
        returned to compel Muhammad Shah to release him. Muhammad turned with equal
        promptitude and marched to Shamsabad, from which fief he expelled Raja Karan, Buhlul’s vassal, and installed in his place Jaunan Khan, his own. His success attracted to his standard
        Raja Partab of Etawah who openly transferred his allegiance from Delhi to
        Jaunpur. The two opposing armies marched to the neighbourhood of Rapri, on the Junma, where, after some desultory and inconclusive
        fighting that of Jaunpur was demoralised by intestine
        strife. Muhammad Shah, who, after his elevation to the throne, had evinced a
        violent and bloodthirsty disposition, had sent an order directing the chief
        magistrate of Jaunpur to put to death Hasan Khan, a
        younger son of Mahmud Shah, and Qutb Khan Lodi. The magistrate replied that he
        could not carry out the order as the king's mother was protecting the condemned
        men, and Muhammad enticed his mother from the city by persuading her that he
        wished to consult her regarding the assignment of a share of the kingdom to his
        brother, Hasan Khan. She had no sooner left Jaunpur
        than Hasan Khan was murdered, and as she remained at
        Kanauj to mourn her son, Muhammad insulted her grief by the brutal taunt that
        she would save herself trouble by mourning at the same time for her other sons,
        who would presently follow Hasan to the grave. The
        threat put the princes on their guard, and by persuading the tyrant that Buhlul
        was about to make a night attack on his camp they induced him to place at their
        disposal 30,000 horse and thirty elephants, wherewith to meet it. With this
        force Husain Khan, the king's elder surviving brother, withdrew from the camp,
        followed by Buhlul, who perceived in the movement a menace to his lines of
        communication. He intercepted Husain Khan's younger brother, Jalal Khan, who
        was attempting to join him, and detained him as a hostage for Qutb Khan Lodi,
        who had by some means escaped assassination. Muhammad Shah, now aware of the
        defection of his brothers, retreated towards the Ganges, followed by Buhlul,
        but, on approaching Kanauj, discovered that his power was gone, and that his
        brother Husain had there been acclaimed as king. Muhammad was deserted by the
        few nobles who remained with him and was slain while attempting, with a few
        personal adherents, to defend himself against an attack from the army which had
        lately been his own.
         Husain
        Shah surrendered Qutb Khan Lodi to Buhul, receiving
        in return his brother, Jalal Khan, and the two monarchs concluded a four years’
        truce, which both observed, Husain because his ambition found another outlet,
        and Buhlul because he required a period of peace in which to consolidate his
        power and develop his resources.
         
         Invasion
        of Orissa 
                 
 
 
 Husain’s
        military strength far exceeded that of Buhlul, for, if the historians are to be
        believed, he was able, after concluding peace, to assemble an army of 300,000,
        with 1,400 elephants, for a predatory incursion into Orissa, where Kapileshwar
        Deva, of the Solar line, had established his authority in 1434. The numbers may
        be exaggerated, but without a very numerous army Husain could not have risked
        an advance to distant Orissa through or along the frontier of the intervening
        kingdom of Bengal, still less a retreat, laden with spoil. His first step was
        to crush the now virtually independent landholders of Tirhut, which province
        was devastated and plundered. He then marched on to Orissa, where the
        depredations of his great army overawed the raja and induced him to purchase
        peace by the payment of an immense ransom in elephants, horses, money, and
        valuable goods, which is represented by Muslim vanity as the first instalment of an annual tribute.
         In 1466,
        after his return from Orissa, he sent an army to capture the fortress of
        Gwalior, where Raja Man Singh still maintained his independence of both Jaunpur
        and Delhi, but the expedition was only partly successful, and after a
        protracted siege the army retired on the payment of an indemnity by the raja.
         The four
        years’ truce with Delhi, concluded on the king's accession in 1458, was long
        expired, and in 1473 Husain, urged by his wife Jalila, a daughter of Shah, the
        last Sayyid king of Delhi, now living contentedly in
        inglorious retirement at Budaun, entered upon a series of campaigns, having for
        their object the conquest and annexation of Delhi.
         He
        marched with a large army to the eastern bank of the Jumna, a few miles to the
        south-east of Delhi, and Buhlul, who could put into the field no more than
        18,000 horse, was so dismayed by the imminence of his peril that he attempted
        to secure peace by offering to retain only the city of Delhi and the country
        for thirty-six miles round it, and to govern this district as Husain’s vassal.
        The offer was rejected, and Buhlul marched from the city to meet his powerful
        enemy. The armies were encamped on opposite banks of the Jumna, which, for some
        days, neither ventured to cross in force, but Husain Shah, in his contempt of
        his opponent, neglected all military precautions, and was accustomed to permit
        nearly the whole of his army to disperse for the purpose of plundering the rich
        villages of the Doab. Buhlul, observing this, crossed the river in force and
        suddenly attacked his camp. There was no force to oppose him, and Husain was compelled
        to flee, leaving not only his camp, but the ladies of his harem, in the
        victor's hands. The latter were generously sent by Buhlul unharmed to Jaunpur.
         A new
        treaty was now made, and a truce of three years was agreed upon, but was broken
        in the following year by Husain, who, at the instigation of his wife, marched
        with an army of 100,000 horse and 1000 elephants to Etawah, held by Qutb Khan
        Lodi. Etawah was captured at once, and Husain marched on Delhi. Buhlul again
        sued, in the humblest guise, for peace, but his entreaties were disregarded,
        and when he took the field he again defeated Husain, but was not strong enough
        to profit by his success and was fain to agree to peace. Shortly afterwards
        Husain marched on Delhi for the third time, but was defeated at Sikhera, about twenty-five miles east of the city, and
        retreated to Etawah. Qutb Khan Lodi had been permitted to retain his fief on
        swearing fealty to Husain, and now waited on him. On learning that Husain still
        entertained the design of conquering Delhi the wily Afghan went about to
        mislead him, and, after disparaging Buhlul, promised that he would never rest
        until he had conquered Delhi for Jaunpur. Husain was completely deceived and
        allowed Qutb Khan to leave his camp. He joined Buhlul at Delhi and put him on
        his guard against Husain, of whose determination he warned him.
         
         
 
         
         Discomfiture
        of Husain Shah
                 The
        fugitive Alam Shah, Husain’s father-in-law, now died,
        and his death supplied Husain with a pretext for visiting Budaun, of which
        district he dispossessed his brother-in-law, Alam Shah’s son. From Budaun he marched to Sambhal, captured Tatar Khan Lodi, who
        held the district for Buhlul, and sent him a prisoner to Saran, in Tirhut. He
        then again assembled his army for an attack on Delhi, and in March, 1479,
        encamped on the eastern bank of the Jumna. This appeared, of all Husain's
        campaigns, to offer the fairest prospect of success. He had been victorious on
        the east of the Ganges, his numbers were overwhelming, and Buhlul Lodi and his
        officers were even more depressed than on former occasions. Qutb Khan was,
        however, enabled to serve his kinsman by appealing to Husain's filial
        affection. He invoked the memory of Bibi Raji, Husain’s mother, who had befriended him when he was a
        prisoner at Jaunpur, and conjured the invader to leave Delhi unmolested. Husain
        was so affected that he agreed to retire on obtaining Buhlul recognition of his
        tenure of his new conquests to the east of the Ganges, corresponding to the
        modern province of Rohilkhand. The recognition was readily accorded and Husain
        began a leisurely retreat towards Jaunpur. He had so frequently violated
        treaties that Buhlul considered himself justified in following his example, and
        perfidiously attacked the retreating army and captured a large number of
        elephants and horses laden with spoil and treasure, and the persons of Husain's
        minister and about forty of his principal nobles.
         This
        success marks the turn of the tide in favour of
        Delhi, and Buhlul pursued the demoralised army of
        Jaunpur and occupied and annexed the sub-districts of Kampil, Patiali, Shamsabad, Suket, Koil, Marahra, and Jalesar. Husain,
        when hard pressed by Buhlul's pursuit, turned and
        faced him, but was defeated, and when peace was made was obliged to acquiesce
        in Buhlul’s retention of the considerable tract which
        he had recovered, and to withdraw the frontier of his kingdom to Chhibramau, sixteen miles south of the modern town of
        Farrukhabad.
         Buhlul
        returned to Delhi and Husain retired to Rapri, but was soon in arms again to
        recover his lost territory, and met Buhlul at Suhnuh.
        On this occasion he suffered the heaviest defeat which he had yet experienced,
        and the plunder which fell into Buhlul’s hands, and
        the military renown which he acquired with his victory turned the scale in favour of Delhi. Bhulul encamped
        at Chhibramau and shortly afterwards resumed the
        offensive against Husain and defeated him at Rapri. Husain fled towards
        Gwalior, and, after losing some of his wives and children in his passage of the
        Jumna, was attacked near Athgath on the Chambal by
        the Bhadauriyas, a predatory tribe, who plundered his
        camp. Kirat Singh of Gwalior, who still retained
        confidence in his cause, supplied him with a large sum of money, a contingent
        of troops, tents, horses, elephants, and camels, and personally escorted him as
        far as Kalpi on his way back to Jaunpur.
         Buhlul
        marched, after his victory, on Etawah, which was still tributary to Jaunpur,
        captured the fort after a siege of three days, and then turned to attack
        Husain, who awaited him opposite Raigaon Khaga, on the Ganges, and was still strong enough to deter
        him for some months from attempting to force the passage of the river, until
        Raja Tilok Chand, whose estate lay on the north of the
        Ganges, joined him, and led his army across by a ford. Husain then retreated to Phaphamau, six miles north of Allahabad, the raja of
        which place escorted him in safety to Jaunpur. Buhlul marched directly on
        Jaunpur, and Husain fled by a circuitous route towards Kanauj, but Buhlul
        pursued him, attacked him before he could reach that city, and defeated him,
        capturing one of his wives. He then returned to Jaunpur, took the city, placed
        Mubarak Khan Lohani there as governor, established a
        garrison under the command of Qutb Khan Lodi at Majhauli,
        beyond the Gogra, and marched to recover Budaun, which was still nominally
        subject to Husain. Husain took advantage of his absence from the neighborhood
        of Jaunpur to reassemble his army and march on that city, and Mubarak Khan, who
        was not strong enough to withstand him, withdrew to Majhauli and joined Qutb Khan. Husain followed him thither, and the Afghan officers, who
        hesitated to risk a battle, feigned to negotiate, and thus gave Buhlul time to
        return from Budaun and reoccupy Jaunpur. A force under his son Barbak had already relieved the garrison of Majhauli, and Husain, at length despairing of recovering
        his kingdom, fled into Bihar, followed by Buhlul as far as Haldi,
        on the Ganges near Ballia.
         With
        Husain’s flight the line of the Sharqi kings of
        Jaunpur came to an end. Buhlul established his son Barbak as governor of Jaunpur, and gave him permission to use the royal title and to
        coin money, specimens of which, issued by him before his father's death, are
        extant.
         The End of the Kingdom  
               Husain
        lived in Bengal under the protection of Shams-ud-din
        Yusuf Shah and his successors on the throne of that kingdom until 1500, but
        made no attempt to recover his throne beyond fomenting the strife between Barbak and his younger brother, Sikandar, who succeeded
        their father on the throne of Delhi in 1489. His hope that the quarrel might
        open a way for his return to his former kingdom was frustrated, for Sikandar
        overcame Barbak and Jaunpur was absorbed in the
        kingdom of Delhi, and Husain died in exile in circumstances not widely
        different from those in which his father-in-law, the former king of Delhi, died
        at Budaun.
         The Sharqi dynasty reigned in Jaunpur for rather more than
        eighty years, and in that period produced one king of happy memory, Ibrahim,
        the patron of learning and of architecture. For a dynasty whose rule was so
        brief the Sharqis have left very creditable memorials
        in their public buildings, and the enlightenment which earned for Jaunpur, in
        Ibrahim's reign, the title of “the Shiraz of India” is surprising in one of
        negro blood. Malik Sarvar, who founded the dynasty,
        was a eunuch, and could therefore have no heirs of his body. His two successors
        were his adopted sons, the brothers Mubarak Shah and Ibrahim Shah, probably
        slaves. Mubarak’s name, before he assumed the royal title, was Qaranful, “the
        Clove”, a contemptuous term of endearment appropriated to African slaves. No
        portraits of the period are known to exist, but there appears to be no reason
        to doubt that the kings of Jaunpur were of negro descent. The character of
        Husain, the last of the line, is perplexing and disappointing. He was a man of
        ideas, with wide opportunities, and resources commensurate with both, ever on
        the point of realising some great scheme of aggrandizement
        and ever missing his opportunity through carelessness, folly, and perhaps
        physical cowardice.
         
 
 
 
 
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