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 HISTORY OF INDIA.Turks and Afghans 
 
 XIII
           GUJARAT AND KHANDESH
           
           THE great empire of Muhammad Tughluq was dismembered partly by his own
          ferocious tyranny and partly by the weakness of his successors. Bengal revolted
          in 1338 and the Deccan in 1347, during Muhammad's lifetime. There were no
          further defections in the reign of his successor Firuz, who had some success in
          Bengal, but failed to recover the province, but the twenty-five years which
          followed the death of Firuz witnessed the accession of one weakling after
          another to the throne of Delhi, the destruction of such power as still remained
          in the hands of the central government by the invasion of Timur, and the
          establishment of independent principalities in Sind, Oudh, Khandesh, Gujarat,
          and Malwa.
           Malik Ahmad, the founder of the small principality of Khandesh was not,
          however, a rebel against the king of Delhi, but against the Bahmani dynasty of
          the Deccan. In 1365 he joined the rebellion of Bahrain Khan Mazandarani against
          Muhammad I, the second king of that line, and, when he was compelled to flee
          from the Deccan established himself at Thalner, on the Tapti. By 1382 he had
          conquered the surrounding country and ruled his small territory as an
          independent prince. He was known both as Malik Raja and Raja Ahmad, but he and his
          successors for some generations were content with the title of Khan, from which
          circumstance their small principality became known as Khandesh, 'the Country of
          the Khans'. His dynasty was distinguished by the epithet Faruqi, from the title
          of the second Caliph, Umar, al-Faruq, or 'The Discriminator', from whom Ahmad
          claimed descent.
           The kingdom of Gujarat was established in 1396. Farhat-ulMulk, who had
          been appointed governor of the province by Firuz Shah, had long ceased to pay
          any heed to orders received from Delhi and the inhabitants groaned under his
          yoke. In 1391 Muhammad Shah, the youngest son of Firuz, appointed Zafar Khan to
          the government of Gujarat, and sent him to establish his authority there. The
          new governor was the son of a Rajput convert to Islam, Wajih-ul-Mulk of
          Didwana, governor of Nagaur. On January 4, 1392, he defeated and mortally
          wounded Farhatul-Mulk at Gambhu, eighteen miles south of Patan, and gradually
          reduced to obedience all disorderly elements in the province. In 1396 the strife
          between two rival kings, Mahmud Shah and Nusrat Shah, and the impossibility of
          determining to whom allegiance was due, furnished him with a pretext for
          declaring himself independent, and he was joined in the following year by his
          son Tatar Khan, who, having espoused the cause of the pretender Nusrat Shah,
          had been compelled to flee from Delhi. Zafar Khan was preparing to march to
          Delhi when he was deterred by tokens of Timur's impending invasion, and devoted
          the whole of his attention to his campaign against the Rajput state of Idar,
          which he subdued in 1400.
           In 1399 Mahmud Shah of Delhi and large numbers of fugitives fleeing
          before Timur arrived in Gujarat. They were hospitably received, but Mahmud
          considered that Zafar Khan’s attitude to him was not sufficiently deferential,
          and retired to Malwa, where he took refuge with Dilavar Khan Ghuri, the
          governor.
           In 1403 Tatar Khan, learning that Iqbal Khan, or Mallu, who had driven
          him from Delhi, had so humiliated Mahmud Shah that the latter had fled from
          him, urged his father to march on Delhi and assume control of the situation,
          but Zafar Khan was well stricken in years and shrank from the enterprise. He so
          far yielded to his son’s importunity as to place a force at his disposal in
          order that he might wreak his vengeance on his former antagonist, but Tatar
          Khan, finding himself at the head of an army, rose against his father, seized
          him and imprisoned him at Asawal, and caused himself to be proclaimed king
          under the title of Nasiruddin Muhammad Shah. Having thus secured his father he
          appointed his uncle Shams Khan regent of the kingdom, with the title of Nusrat
          Khan, and set out for Delhi in order to carry out his original project, but as
          soon as he had left Asawal Zafar Khan persuaded the regent, his brother, to
          follow the rebel and privily compass his death. Shams (Nusrat) Khan set out for
          Tatar's camp and there poisoned him in a draught of wine, and on his return
          released his brother and restored him to his throne, which he now ascended
          under the title of Sultan Muzaffar.
           In 1407 Muzaffar invaded Malwa and besieged the king, Hushang Shah, in
          Dhar. The pretext for this attack was his resolve to avenge the death of his
          old friend and comrade, Dilavar Khan, who had been poisoned by his son Hushang.
          Dhar fell, and Hushang was captured and imprisoned, and Muzaffar established
          his own brother, Nusrat Khan (Shams Khan) in Dhar.
           After capturing Dhar Muzaffar learnt that Ibrahim Shah of Jaunpur,
          having annexed some districts to the east of the Ganges, intended to attack
          Delhi; he thereupon marched from Malwa to the support of Mahmud Shah Tughluq,
          carrying with him the captive Hushang. The menace deterred Ibrahim from
          prosecuting his enterprise and Muzaffar returned to Gujarat.
           Nusrat Khan had made himself so odious by his exactions in Malwa that
          the army expelled him, and elected Musa Khan, a cousin of Hushang, as their
          governor, and Muzaffar, who was not prepared to permit the army of Malwa to
          rule the destinies of that country, sent his grandson Ahmad, son of Tatar Khan,
          to restore Hushang, who was sent with him. Ahmad reinstated Hushang in Malwa
          and returned to Gujarat, where he was designated heir to the kingdom by his
          grandfather.
           Muzaffar died in June, 1411, and Ahmad was confronted on his succession,
          by a serious rebellion, headed by his four uncles, Firuz Khan, Haibat Khan,
          Saadat Khan, and Sher Khan, who resented their nephew's elevation to the
          throne. He succeeded, without bloodshed, in inducing them to acknowledge him as
          their sovereign, and was enabled to turn his arms against Hushang Shah of
          Malwa, whom he had summoned to his aid but who had determined, instead of
          assisting him, to profit by his difficulties. Hushang, who had hoped to find
          him fully occupied with the rebels, retreated precipitately when he learnt that
          the rebellion had been extinguished and that Ahmad was marching against him,
          but his retirement was followed by a fresh rising of the rebels, who were,
          however, defeated and dispersed. The rebellion of the raja of Jhalawar then called
          Ahmad into Kathiawar, and during his absence in that region Hushang, at the
          invitation of Ahmad's uncles, again invaded Gujarat, and Ahmad, returning from
          Jhalawar sent his brother Latif Khan against their uncles and Imadul Mulk
          Shaban, one of his nobles, against Hushang, who, finding that he was not
          supported, retired to Malwa, while Latif Khan dispersed the rebels and
          compelled them to seek refuge with the Chudasama chief of Girnar, in Sorath.
          Ahmad proceeded to chastise the raja for harboring them, defeated him in the
          field, and besieged him in his fort on the Girnar hill. He purchased peace by a
          promise to pay tribute, and Ahmad, who was suddenly called away by a report of
          the invasion of Nandurbar, left two of his officers to collect the tribute and
          returned to his new city of Ahmadabad, which he had built on the site of
          Asawal, to assemble troops for the expulsion of the invader.
           Raja Ahmad of Khandesh had died on April 29, 1399, leaving two sons,
          Nasir and Hasan, to inherit his dominions. Nasir had received the eastern and
          Hasan the western districts, and the former had founded, in 1400, the city of
          Burhanpur, and had captured from a Hindu chieftain the strong fortress of Asir,
          while the latter had established himself at Thalner. Such a division of the
          territories of the small state held no promise of permanence, and in 1417 the
          elder brother, Nasir, having obtained assistance from Hushang of Malwa, who had
          married his sister, captured Thalner and imprisoned Hasan before a reply could
          be received to the latter's appeal for aid to Ahmad of Gujarat. Nasir, with a
          view to forestalling Ahmad's intervention and to repairing the discomfiture of
          his father, who had made an unsuccessful attempt to annex the south-eastern
          districts of the kingdom of Gujarat, attacked Nandurbar. A relieving force sent
          by Ahmad compelled Nasir to retreat to Asir, and besieged him in that fortress.
          Peace was made on Nasir’s swearing fealty to Ahmad, and promising to abstain in
          future from aggression, and Ahmad in return recognised Nasir's title of Khan.
          Nasir’s brother Hasan retired to Gujarat, where he and his descendants for
          generations found a home and intermarried with the royal house.
           From this treaty dates the estrangement between Khandesh and Malwa,
          which had hitherto been allies. Nasir Khan resented Hushang's failure to
          support him adequately against Ahmad Shah and friendly relations were broken
          off. In 1429 Nasir, in spite of the old animosity of his house towards the
          Bahmanids, attempted to form an alliance with the Deccan by giving his daughter
          in marriage to Alauddin Ahmad, son of Ahmad Shah, the ninth king of that
          dynasty, but the union engendered strife, and Khandesh, after a disastrous war
          with her powerful neighbor, was at length driven into the arms of Gujarat.
           Ahmad himself had advanced as far as Nandurbar, sending Malik Mahmud,
          one of his officers, to besiege Asir, and while at Nandurbar he heard from his
          uncle Firuz, who had taken refuge in Nagaur, that Hushang Shah was about to
          invade Gujarat. This report was followed immediately by the news that Hushang,
          in response to invitations from the rajas of Idar, Champaner, Mandal, and
          Nandod, had crossed his frontier and reached Modasa. Ahmad, although the rainy
          season of 1418 had begun, at once marched northward, traversed the country of
          the disaffected rajas, and appeared before Modasa. Hushang beat a hasty
          retreat, but Ahmad had no rest. He was obliged to send expeditions to quell a
          rebellion in Sorath, and to expel Nasir Khan from the Nandurbar district, which
          he had invaded in violation of his promise. Both expeditions were successful,
          and Nasir was pardoned on its being discovered that the real culprit was
          Hushang's son, Ghazni Khan, who had not only instigated him to invade the
          district but had supplied him with troops.
           It was now evident that the real enemy was Hushang, and Ahmad, having
          pardoned the rebellious rajas on receiving from them double tribute and
          promises of better behavior, set out in March, 1419, to invade Malwa.
           Hushang came forth to meet him, but was defeated in a fiercely contested
          battle and compelled to take refuge in Mandu. Ahmad's troops devastated the
          country, but as the rainy season was at hand he returned to Ahmadabad,
          plundering on his way the districts of Champaner and Nandod.
           In 1420 Ahmad marched to Songarh, and thence, in a north, easterly
          direction, towards Mandu, 'punishing', on his way, the infidels of the
          Satpuras. Hushang, dreading another invasion, sent envoys to crave pardon for
          his past conduct, and Ahmad retired, and in 1422 reduced the raja of Champaner
          to vassalage. In 1422, during Hushang’s absence on his famous raid into Orissa,
          Ahmad invaded Malwa, capturing Maheshwar on the Narbada on March 27. He
          appeared before Mandu on April 5, and besieged it ineffectually until the
          beginning of the rainy season, when he retired into quarters at Ujjain. In the
          meantime Hushang returned to Mandu, and on September 17 Ahmad reopened the
          siege, but, finding that he could not reduce the fortress, retired by Ujjain to
          Sarangpur, with the object of continuing his depredations in that neighborhood,
          but Hushang, marching by a more direct route, met him near Sarangpur on
          December 26. Neither was anxious to risk a general action and after desultory
          and inconclusive hostilities of two and a half months' duration Ahmad began his
          retreat on March 17. He reached Ahmadabad on May 15, and in consideration of
          his army’s labors refrained for more than two years from embarking on any
          military enterprise and devoted himself to administrative reforms. From 1425
          until 1428 he was engaged in hostilities against Idar, which ended in the
          reduction of Hari Rai, the raja, to the condition of a vassal of Gujarat.
           War with the Deccan 
           In 1429 Kanha, raja of Jhalawar, fled from his state and took refuge
          with Nasir Khan of Khandesh, who, not being strong enough to protect him, sent him to the court of Ahmad Shah Bahmani at Bidar,
          who dispatched a force into the Nandurbar district to ravage the country. This
          force was expelled and driven back to Daulatabad, whereupon Ahmad of the Deccan
          sent an army under his son Alauddin Ahmad to invade Gujarat and re-establish
          Kanha in Jhalawar. This army, which assembled at Daulatabad, was there joined
          by Nasir Khan of Khandesh, and against the allied forces Ahmad of Gujarat sent
          an army under his eldest son, Muhammad Khan. This prince defeated the allies at
          Manikpunj, about thirty-eight miles north-west of Daulatabad, and Alauddin
          Ahmad fled to Daulatabad while Nasir and Kanha fled into Khandesh. Muhammad Khan
          of Gujarat, perceiving that it would be useless to besiege Daulatabad, laid
          waste part of Khandesh and retired to Nandurbar.
           In 1430 Khalaf Hasan of Basrah, an officer of the army of the Deccan,
          attacked Mahim, the southernmost port of the kingdom of Gujarat, and Ahmad of
          Gujarat sent his younger son, Zafar Khan, to the relief of the town, while
          Alauddin Ahmad marched to the support of Khalaf Hasan. Mahim was taken, but
          Zafar Khan not only besieged the army there, but also took Thana, a port
          belonging to the kingdom of the Deccan. The campaign was decided, however, by a
          battle in which the army of the Deccan was completely defeated and was forced
          to evacuate Mahim and retreat.
           Ahmad of the Deccan was much chagrined by the news of this defeat, and
          led an army in person to invade Baglana, the small Rajput state between Gujarat
          and the Deccan which was protected by the former, but, on hearing that Ahmad of
          Gujarat was marching against him, retired to Bidar. Ahmad of Gujarat returned
          to Ahmadabad and Ahmad of the Deccan again advanced and besieged the fortress
          of Batnol, which was gallantly defended by Malik
          Saadat, an officer of Gujarat. Ahmad of Gujarat marched to the relief of the
          fortress, and Ahmad of the Deccan, raising the siege, turned to meet him. A battle
          was fought in which each army held its ground but Ahmad of the Deccan, dismayed
          by the extent of his losses, retreated in the night.
           In 1433 Ahmad led a raid into the Dangarpur state, compelled the Rawal
          to pay a ransom, and left an officer at Kherwara to collect tribute. He
          continued his depredations in Marwar, compelled his kinsman Firuz Khan, now
          governor of Nagaur, to pay an indemnity, and returned to Ahmadabad.
           In 1436 Masud Khan of Malwa arrived at Ahmadabad as a suppliant seeking
          redress. His father, Ghazni Khan, had ascended the throne of Malwa in 1435 and
          had been poisoned in the following year by his cousin, Mahmud Khalji, who had
          ascended the throne and deprived him of his inheritance. Ahmad welcomed the
          opportunity of intervening, and in 1438 invaded Malwa with a view to seating
          Masud on the throne of that kingdom. After many months of fruitless campaigning
          he was obliged to retire owing to an outbreak of pestilence in his army, and
          died on August 16, 1442, before he could fulfill his promise to restore Masud.
          He was succeeded in Gujarat by his eldest son, who ascended the throne under
          the title of Muizzuddin Muhammad Shah. Soon after
          his accession to the throne Ahmad had begun to build the town of Ahmadabad on
          the site of the old city of Asawal, and in spite of the constant military
          activities of his reign he was able to devote much of his time to the
          establishment of this city, which even today bears witness to the taste and
          munificence of its founder.
           While Ahmad had been engaged in espousing the cause of Masud Khan in
          Malwa Nasir Khan of Khandesh had involved himself in hostilities with the
          Deccan. His daughter had complained that her husband Alauddin Ahmad, who had
          succeeded his father in 1435, was neglecting her for a beautiful Hindu girl,
          and Nasir, to avenge his daughter's wrongs, invaded Berar, the northernmost
          province of the Bahmani kingdom. His son-in-law sent against him a large army
          under Khalaf Hasan, who defeated him at Rohaukhed and drove him into his
          frontier fortress, Laling, where he besieged him. Nasir Khan, joined by a large
          force under his nobles, made a sortie, but suffered a severe defeat, died on
          September 20, and was succeeded by his son, Adil Khan I. Khalaf Hasan, hearing
          that a force was advancing from Nandurbar to the relief of Laling, retired to
          the Deccan with his plunder, which included seventy elephants and many guns.
           Adil Khan I reigned in Khandesh without incident until 1441, when he
          died and was succeeded by his son Mubarak Khan, who reigned, likewise without
          incident, until his death on June 5, 1457, when he was succeeded by his son
          Adil Khan II.
           In 1446 Muhammad Shah of Gujarat, who was surnamed Karim, or 'the Generous', marched
          against Idar, to reduce its ruler, Raja Bir, son of Punja,
          to obedience. Bir appeared before him and made submission, giving him his
          daughter in marriage and at her intercession Idar was restored to him. Muhammad
          next attacked, at Bagor, Rana Kumbha, of Mewar, who fled and took refuge with
          the Rawal of Dungarpur, the chief of his house, but afterwards appeared before
          the invader and purchased peace with a heavy indemnity
           War with Malwa 
           In 1449 Muhammad attacked Champaner, with the object of expelling the
          raja, Gangadas, and annexing his state. Gangadas was defeated in the field with
          great slaughter, and driven into the hill fortress of Pavagarh, above the city.
          Muhammad indicated his intention of permanently occupying the city by
          constructing a fine cistern, which was named the Shakar Talao, and by founding a palace and some public
          buildings. Gangadas appealed for help to Mahmud Khalji of Malwa, who marched to
          his relief, but on reaching Dahod learnt that Muhammad, in spite of a severe
          illness contracted at Champaner, had advanced as far as Godhra to meet him. He
          retreated at once to Mandu, and Muhammad, oppressed by his sickness, was
          obliged to return to Ahmadabad, where he died on February 10, 1451.
           Three days after his death the courtiers enthroned his eldest soil,
          Qutbuddin Ahmad, and the young king was at once called upon to cope with a
          serious invasion of his kingdom. Mahmud Khalji, on learning the seriousness of
          Muhammad’s malady, resolved to seize the opportunity of conquering Gujarat, and
          after his return to Mandu assembled an army of 100,000 horses and 500
          elephants, and invaded the Nandurbar district. Alauddin Suhrab, who commanded
          the fortress of Nandurbar, made no attempt to hold it against such a force, but
          surrendered it at once, and consulted his own safety by swearing allegiance to
          the invader and entering his service. After capturing Nandurbar, Mahmud learnt
          of the death of Muhammad and marched on Broach, where he summoned Marjan, the
          governor, to surrender. Marjan refused, and Mahmud was about to besiege the
          town when, by the advice of Alauddin Suhrab, he decided, instead, to attack the
          capital at once, and marched to Baroda, where he was joined by Gangadas of
          Champaner and other chiefs. Crossing the Mahi River he advanced to Kapadvanj,
          where Alauddin deserted him and joined his old master, who received him with
          great favor and conferred on him the title of Alaul Mulk, Ulugh Khan. Qutbuddin advanced from Ahmadabad with 40,000 horses and
          encamped six miles from Kapadvanj. On the night of April 1, 1451, Mahmud Khalji
          left his camp with the object of making a night attack on Qutbuddin, but lost
          his way, and, after wandering about all night, found himself by daylight before
          his own camp. Disappointed of surprising the enemy, he drew up his army, and
          Qutbuddin, who had intelligence of what had passed, advanced to the attack. At
          a critical moment of the battle which ensued Qutbuddin threw in his reserves,
          the great army of Malwa was utterly defeated, and Mahmud fled, leaving
          eighty-one elephants and all his baggage in the hands of the victors. He halted
          at a short distance from the field until five or six thousand men of his
          scattered host had assembled round him, and at midnight began his retreat on
          Mandu, during which he was much harassed by the Kolis, who inflicted heavy
          losses on the remnant of his army.
           In 1453 Mahmud Khalji opened an abortive campaign against Nagaur, which
          was held by Firuz Khan, the kinsman of Qutbuddin, but was compelled to retire
          to Malwa without having effected anything. In the same
          year Firuz Khan died, and his brother Mujahid Khan took possession of Nagaur,
          expelling Shams Khan, the son of Firuz Khan, who sought aid of Rana Kumbha of
          Chitor. The Rana promised to restore him to his inheritance on condition that
          he destroyed three of the bastions of Nagaur, as a symbol that the disgrace of
          the defeat of Mukal, the Rana’s father, by Firuz Khan was wiped out. Shams Khan
          agreed to the condition and was restored, but when he had recovered his
          patrimony his nobles refused to allow him to destroy any part of the
          fortifications, and Kumbha returned to Mewar to assemble an army for the
          reduction of Nagaur. Shams Khan fled to Ahmadabad and, by giving a daughter in
          marriage to Qutbuddin, induced him to send an army to the defence of Nagaur,
          but the Rana defeated and almost destroyed the army, and overran the whole of
          the Nagaur territory, though he failed to take the fortress.
           In 1456 Qutbuddin marched to Kumbhalgarh to punish Kumbha, and on his
          way thither captured and destroyed the town of Sirohi and expelled the raja, Sains Mal. He laid waste all the
          lowlands of the Rana’s territory, defeated him in the field, and besieged him
          in Kumbhalgarh. The fortress was not taken, but Kumbha was obliged to purchase
          peace by the payment of ample compensation to Shams Khan for all the injuries
          which he had inflicted on him, and a heavy indemnity to Qutbuddin.
           On returning to Ahmadabad Qutbuddin learned that Ghiyasuddin, the son of
          Mahmud Khalji, had led a raid into his dominions as far as Surat, but had
          hurriedly retreated on hearing of his return, and later in the year Mahmud sent
          a mission to propose a treaty of peace between the two kingdoms, in order that
          both might be free to wage holy war against the Hindus of Rajputana. These
          overtures were favorably received, and Mahmud marched to Dhar and Muhammad to
          the frontier of Malwa in the neighborhood of Champaner, where they halted while
          plenipotentiaries concluded a treaty binding each to abstain from aggression on
          the other, and allotting to Gujarat the western and to Malwa the eastern
          districts of the Rana's dominions as the theatre in which each was to be free
          to attack the misbelievers.
           Mahmud Begarha 
           In 1457 Qutbuddin again invaded the dominions of Rana Kumbha. He had in
          his camp the chief of Abu, who had been expelled from his mountain fortress by
          the Rana, and his first care was to restore him. Having accomplished this he
          attacked and burnt Kumbhalgarh, and slaughtered both men and cattle throughout
          the neighborhood, but though he burnt the fortress he was unable to take it,
          and, having devastated the country round about Chitor, he returned to
          Ahmadabad, where he died, after a short illness, on May 18, 1458.
           Qutbuddin was a young man, and as he had hitherto enjoyed good health
          his sudden illness and death aroused suspicions of poison. He had been addicted
          to strong drink, and when under its influence had been violent and quick to
          shed blood. Suspicion fell upon his wife, the daughter of Shams Khan of Nagaur,
          who was supposed to have instigated his daughter to administer poison to her
          husband in the hope of succeeding to the throne of Gujarat. Qutbuddin’s
          officers at Nagaur put Shams Khan to death, and the king's mother subjected his
          widow to torture and ultimately handed her over to her jealous co-wives, who
          avenged the preference formerly shown for her by cutting her to pieces.
           On Qutbuddin’s death the great officers of state raised to the throne
          his uncle Daud, but this prince immediately displayed such depravity and
          proceeded to fill the places of those who had enthroned him with favorites so
          unworthy that he was deposed after a reign of no more than twenty-seven days,
          and his younger brother Abul Fath Mahmud was raised to the throne on May 25.
          Sultan Mahmud, a mere youth, was at once involved in the meshes of a conspiracy
          to raise his brother Hasan Khan to the throne. The courtiers who entertained
          this design approached him and informed him that the minister, Imadul Mulk Shaban, was conspiring to depose him and to place on the
          throne Mahmud's son, Shihabuddin, an infant in whose name he would be able to
          govern the whole country as regent. Mahmud, new to political intrigue, believed
          them, and permitted them to arrest the minister and imprison him over one of
          the gates of the palace. During the night Malik Abdullah, the superintendent of
          the elephant stables, who had access to the young king, informed him privately
          of the real state of affairs, and warned him that his throne was in danger.
          Mahmud consulted his mother and a few of his immediate attendants, and at once
          decided on a course of action. Going in person to the Tarpuliya gate, where the
          minister was confined, he easily gained admission, for the outer precincts of
          the gate were held by 500 of his own guards, whom he had lent for the purpose,
          but he found more difficulty in removing the scruples of the minister’s gaolers, who were the creatures of the conspirators. By
          stamping his foot and demanding in a loud and angry tone the immediate
          surrender of the traitor that he might suffer instant death he succeeded both
          in overawing the gaolers by a display of the
          divinity that doth hedge a king, and in beguiling them into the belief that
          compliance with his commands would accomplish their master's design, but as
          soon as their prisoner was in the king's power they perceived their error. He
          begged his minister to excuse the mistake which he had made, and to resume his
          post. The conspirators, supported by their troops, assembled in the morning at
          the Tarpuliya gate in the expectation of removing their enemy by a summary
          execution, but to their dismay found the king holding an audience with his
          minister, who was standing in his accustomed position behind the throne.
          Trusting to numbers, they attempted to assume control of the situation, but
          were deserted by many of their troops and by the city mob, who hesitated openly
          to take up arms against the king. They fled, and some gained secure places of
          refuge, but others were captured and publicly executed. Among the latter was
          one who had attempted to flee, but was too corpulent to use the necessary
          expedition, and was discovered lurking in his hiding place. Before him lay the
          obvious fate of being trampled to death by an elephant, and the populace was
          regaled with the unctuous spectacle.
           The conspiracy having been thus frustrated the minister resumed office,
          but shortly afterwards retired. Haji Sultani, one of Mahmud’s confidants, was appointed in his
          place, with the title of Imadul Mulk, and Mahmud assumed charge of the
          administration of his kingdom. Imadul Mulk Shaban did not long survive his retirement.
           In 1462 Mahmud, while on a hunting expedition, received an appeal for
          help from the guardians of the infant Nizam Shah of the Deccan, whose dominions
          had been invaded by Mahmud Khalji of Malwa. Mahmud of Gujarat marched to
          Nandurbar, where a second messenger informed him that Mahmud Khalji had
          defeated the army of the Deccan near Kandhar. Mahmud
          of Gujarat therefore marched eastward into Khandesh and cut off his retreat by
          that road, so that he was compelled to retire through the Mahadeo hills in northern Berar, where the army of Malwa suffered severely both from
          want of water and from the attacks of the Korkus.
           Invasion of Sorath 
           In the following year Mahmud Khalji again invaded the Deccan, but had
          penetrated no further than the northern confines of Telingana when the news
          that the sultan of Gujarat was again marching to the help of Nizam Shah caused
          him to retreat. Nizam Shah sent an envoy to thank his deliverer for the
          assistance which he had given him, and Mahmud of Gujarat wrote to Mahmud Khalji
          saying that it was unfair to molest a child who had not reached maturity, and
          warning him that if he invaded the Deccan again he would find his own country
          overrun by the army of Gujarat. The threat was effectual, and Mahmud Khalji
          refrained from further acts of aggression.
           In 1464 Mahmud of Gujarat attacked the Hindu chief of Pardi, near Daman, who had been guilty of piracy. As he
          was ascending the hill to capture the fort the chief met him with the keys, and
          the stronghold was restored to him on his undertaking to pay tribute and
          promising amendment.
           In 1466 Mahmud invaded the territory of Mandalak Chudasama, raja of
          Girnar, his object being to compel the raja to pay tribute. The state was
          pillaged, and a number of Hindus perished in the defence of a famous temple,
          which was sacked. On the receipt of this news Mandalak agreed to pay tribute
          and Mahmud retired; but in the following year, learning that Mandalak was in
          the habit of using the insignia of royalty, wrote and commanded him to
          discontinue their use, and the raja, dreading another invasion, obeyed.
           On May 31, 1469, Mahmud Khalji of Malwa died and was succeeded by his
          eldest son, Ghiyasuddin. The question of the invasion of Malwa was at this time
          discussed at the court of Gujarat, but Mahmud showed that the warning which he
          had addressed to Mahmud Khalji when the latter was attacking Nizam Shah of the
          Deccan had its origin in principle, and declined to invade a state which had
          just suffered the misfortune of losing its ruler. Later in the year, however,
          he committed an act as wanton by leading into Sorath a large army against
          Mandalak of Girnar. It was in vain that the raja pleaded that he had remitted
          tribute regularly and had been an obedient vassal. Mahmud replied that he was
          come neither for tribute nor for plunder, but to establish the true faith in
          Sorath; and offered Mandalak the choice between Islam and death. The answer
          admitted of no argument, and Mandalak could only prepare to defend himself. He
          retired to his citadel, Uparkot, and was there closely besieged. When reduced
          to straits he attempted to purchase peace by offering an enormous indemnity,
          but to no purpose, and, finding that he could no longer defend Uparkot, he fled
          with his Rajputs to his hill fort on the Girnar mountains, but was followed by
          Mahmud, who again closely besieged him until at last, on December 4, 1470, he
          was compelled to surrender. He accepted Islam and received the title of Khan Jahan, and the long line of Chudasama chiefs of Girnar
          came to an end. Mahmud incorporated Girnar in his dominions, and at the foot of
          the hill founded the city of Mustafa-abad, which
          became one of his capitals.
           Mahmud now learned that while he had been besieging Girnar Jai Singh,
          the son of Gangadas of Champaner, had been committing systematic brigandage and
          highway robbery in the country between his stronghold and Ahmadabad. He
          therefore sent Jamaluddin Muhammad to govern this
          tract, conferring on him the title of Muhafiz Khan, and he put down thieving
          and highway robbery with such a firm hand that the inhabitants, we are told,
          slept with open doors.
           He had intended at this time to reduce the fortress of Champaner, but he
          was interrupted by complaints from southern Sind, where Muslims were said to be
          persecuted by Hindus. He crossed the Rann of Cutch by forced marches, and
          arrived in what is now the Thar and Parkar district with no more than 600 horse.
          An army of 24,000 horses which he found before him appears, if it were not that
          of those who had appealed, at least to have had no hostile intentions, for its
          leaders readily entered into negotiations with him. It proved to be composed of Sumras, Sodas, and Kalhoras,
          and its leaders told him that they were professing Muslims but knew little of
          their faith or its rules, and were wont to intermarry with and to live as
          Hindus. He invited those who would to enter his service, and to return with him
          to Gujarat, and many accepted his invitation and received grants of land in
          Sorath, where teachers were appointed to instruct them in the faith of Islam.
           In 1472 it was reported to Mahmud that 40,000 rebels had risen against
          Jam Nizamuddin, the ruler of Sind, whose daughter was the mother of Mahmud.
          According to Firishta these rebels were Baluchis of
          the Shiah persuasion, and according to the author of
          the Zafar-ul-Walih they were pirates who dwelt on the sea coast,
          owning allegiance to none, and skilled in archery. Mahmud again crossed the
          Rann by forced marches, and appeared in Sind with his army. The rebels
          dispersed on hearing of his approach, and Mahmud halted, and before he returned
          received gifts and a letter of thanks from the Jam, who also sent his daughter,
          who was married to Qaisar Khan, grandson of Hasan Khan Iftikharul Mulk of Khandesh, who had taken refuge in Gujarat.
           On his return from Sind Mahmud marched, on May 14, 1473, to Jagat (Dwarka), the holy town on the coast in the
          north-western corner of Kathiawar, which was sacked by Mahmud of Ghazni. Mahmud
          Samarqandi, a learned poet and merchant sailing from a port of the Deccan, had
          been driven ashore at Dwarka, where the Hindus had robbed him of all that he
          had. He appeared at Sultan Mahmud's court to demand redress, and the king
          resolved to chastise the idolaters. He marched to Dwarka, from which the Hindus,
          with their king, Bhim, fled on his approach, plundered and destroyed the
          temple, and built a mosque in its place. He then marched to Aramura, at the extreme north-western point of the
          peninsula, where the army was much troubled by lions, and by venomous reptiles
          and insects, to attack the island fortress of Bet Shankhodhar,
          where Bhim and his people had taken refuge. The Hindus were defeated in a
          sea-fight and were compelled to surrender, as their fortress, though well
          stored with merchandise, had not been provisioned. The plunder was carried to
          the mainland and transported to Mustafa-abad. Mahmud
          Samarqandi was summoned and called upon to identify his goods; all that he
          identified was delivered to him, and over and above this rich presents were
          bestowed on him. Finally the king delivered to him his enemy, Raja Bhim, that he might do with him what he would. Mahmud
          Samarqandi thanked the king, but returned the raja, who was sent to Ahmadabad and impaled.
           In October, 1473, Mahmud, who had held his court at Mustafa-abad since his capture of Girnar, returned after an
          absence of nearly five years to Ahmadabad. A fleet of Malabar pirates made a
          descent on his coasts, but they were driven off and some of their ships were
          captured. In January, 1474, he ravaged part of the Champaner country and
          shortly afterwards returned to Mustafaabad (or
          Junagarh) where he made a practice of spending part of each year, leaving his
          minister, Khudavand Khan b. Yusuf, who had married his sister, at Ahmadabad in
          charge of his son Ahmad.
           Mahmud's tireless energy and ceaseless activity were most wearisome to
          his courtiers and officers, and during his absence from his capital his
          minister, Khudavand Khan, having on December 4, 1480, assembled at Ahmadabad,
          on the pretext of celebrating the festival Id-ul-Fitr at the end of the
          month's fast, the principal nobles, formed a conspiracy with the object of
          deposing Mahmud and raising to the throne his son, Ahmad Khan. The minister
          desired to put to death Imadul Mulk Haji Sultani, whose fidelity to Mahmud was believed to be
          unalterable, but Rai Rayan, the chief Hindu noble
          and one of the leading spirits among the conspirators, was a personal friend of
          Imadul Mulk, and refused to be a party to his death. He proposed to inform him
          of the plot and to gain his acquiescence, and, notwithstanding the minister's
          protests, carried out his intention. Imadul Mulk feigned acquiescence, but
          secretly summoned his troops from his fiefs and took other steps to defeat the
          designs of the conspirators, and Qaisar Khan Faruqi, who was at Ahmadabad,
          privately informed the king of the affair, so that it came to naught.
           Mahmud, instead of arraigning the conspirators, as might have been
          expected from the energy of his character, took steps to test the fidelity of
          his servants. He made all the necessary preparations for a sea voyage, and
          announced that he intended to perform the pilgrimage to Mecca, leaving his son
          Ahmad as regent of the kingdom. The nobles were summoned from Ahmadabad to
          Cambay to consider this proposal, and, perceiving that their plot had been
          discovered, urged the king to return to Ahmadabad and set the affairs of the
          kingdom in order before taking any irrevocable step. He accepted their advice
          and returned to Ahmadabad, where he kept them still on the rack. He desired, he
          said, to make the pilgrimage, but must leave the matter to the decision of his
          counselors, and would neither eat nor drink until he had received that
          decision. The courtiers were in a quandary. They knew not how their advice
          would be accepted, but knew that they must either forgo the object of their
          conspiracy or be accounted hypocrites. So long did they hesitate that it became
          necessary to remind them that the king was hungry and awaited their decision.
          They had arrived at none, and sent Nizamul Mulk Aisan,
          the oldest courtier, to the king as their spokesman. Nizamul Mulk, who
          perceived that the king had outwitted the conspirators, adroitly suggested
          that just as the king was satisfied of his son's ability to guide the affairs
          of the kingdom, so he too had a son who was competent to advise and assist him,
          and requested that he himself might be permitted to accompany the king on his
          pilgrimage. It was now Mahmud's turn to be at a loss, but he sent Nizamul Mulk
          back to those who had sent him, saying that he could not permit him to
          accompany him to Mecca and demanding a categorical answer. By the advice of
          Imadul Mulk, Nizamul Mulk was sent back to the king with the message that he
          would do well to conquer Champaner before deciding to make the pilgrimage. This
          advice was accepted, but it was not convenient to attack Champaner at once, and
          Mahmud marched to Patan and thence sent Imadul Mulk and Qaisar Khan Faruqi on
          an expedition to Sanchor and Jalor in Marwar. As the expedition was about to start
          the two sons of the minister, Khudavand Khan, entered the tent of Qaisar Khan
          and murdered him for his share in discovering the plot to the king. The actual
          murderers escaped, but Khudavand Khan was imprisoned, and Muhafiz Khan was made
          chief vazir in his place. Imadul Mulk died in the same year, and was succeeded by his son,
          Buda Imadul Mulk. From Patan Mahmud returned to Ahmadabad, and the country now
          suffered from a failure of the rains and famine.
           Siege of Champaner 
           In 1482 Mahmud obtained the opportunity which he sought of attacking
          Champaner. Malik Sudha, his governor of Rasulabad,
          fourteen miles south-west of Champaner, led a raid into the raja’s territories,
          and plundered and laid them waste nearly to the walls of the fortress, slaying
          the inhabitants. As he was returning, the raja, Patai, son of Udai Singh,
          followed him up, attacked and slew him, recovered all his booty, took two
          elephants, and sacked and destroyed Rasulabad. Mahmud, on hearing of this
          defeat, assembled his forces, and on December 4, 1482, marched from Ahmadabad
          to Baroda, on his way to Champaner. From Baroda he sent an army to besiege
          Champaner while he invaded the raja's territories to collect supplies for the
          besiegers, whom it was difficult, owing to the famine, to provision.
           Raja Patai came forth to meet his enemy, but was defeated and driven
          into Pavagurh, his hill fortress above Champaner, while the besiegers occupied
          the town. Patti succeeded in cutting off one convoy sent by Mahmud to his army,
          but this was his sole success. When Mahmud joined the besieging army in person
          Patti made repeated offers of submission, but none was accepted, and Mahmud
          displayed his determination to capture the place by building in the city the
          beautiful mosque which still adorns its ruins. This measure not only
          discouraged Patai, but stimulated the Muslim officers, who now perceived that
          they would not be allowed to leave the fortress uncaptured,
          to exertions more strenuous than their former faint efforts. Patai sent his minister, Suri, to seek help of Ghiyasuddin Khalji of Malwa,
          and Ghiyasuddin, assembling his troops, left Mandu and marched as far as
          Nalcha. Mahmud, leaving his officers to continue the siege, led a force as far
          as Dohad to meet Ghiyasuddin, but the latter, repenting of his enterprise,
          which, as he was advised by Muslim doctors at his court, was unlawful, retired to Mandu, and Mahmud returned to Champaner and continued the siege.
           The operations lasted for a year and nine months, throughout which
          period Mahmud, besides besieging the fortress, continued to plunder the
          country, so that there remained no town, no village, no house, of which the
          money was not taken into the royal treasury, the cloths and stuffs into the
          royal storehouses, the beasts into the royal stables, the corn into the royal
          granaries and kitchens. At the end of this time the Rajputs were reduced to
          extremities, and resolved to perform the dreadful rite of jauhar. The women were burnt, and
          the men, arrayed in yellow garments, went forth to die. On November 21, 1484,
          the Muslims forced the gate and met their desperate opponents. Of the seven
          hundred Rajputs who performed the rite nearly all were slain, but Raja Patai
          and a minister named Dungarsi were wounded and
          captured. Mahmud called upon them to accept Islam, but they refused and
          remained steadfast in their refusal during an imprisonment of five months, at
          the end of which time they were executed, together with the minister Suri. Patai's son accepted
          Islam and in the next reign became Amir of Idar, receiving the title of Nizamul
          Mulk.
           Mahmud now made Champaner one of his principal places of residence,
          giving it the name of Muhammad-abad, the other being
          Mustafa-abad or Junagarh. The kingdom of Gujarat had
          reached its extreme limits. After this conquest Mahmud held possession of the
          country from the frontiers of Mandu to the frontiers of Sind, by Junagarh; to
          the Siwalik Parbat by Jalor and Nagaur; to Nasik Trimbak by Baglana; from
          Burhanpur to Berar and Malkapur of the Deccan; to Karkun and the river Narbada
          on the side of Burhanpur; on the side of ldar as far as Chitor and Kumbhalgarh,
          and on the side of the sea as far as the bounds of Chaul. It seems to have been
          after the conquest of Champaner that Mahmud was first styled Begarha.
           In 1487, while he was hunting at Halol, near
          Champaner, a company of horsedealers complained to
          him that the raja of Abu had robbed them of 403 horses, which they were
          bringing to Gujarat for him by his order. Mahmul paid them the full price of the horses and gave them a letter to the raja
          demanding restitution of the stolen property. The raja was terrified, and
          restored 370 horses, paid the price of 33 which had died, gave the merchants
          valuable gifts for Mahmud, and begged them to intercede with him. Mahmud, content
          with this display of his power and the raja's humiliation, permitted the
          merchants to retain the horses as well as their price.
           Depredations of Bahadur Gilani 
           In 1491 Mahmud received complaints of the exactions of Bahadur Gilani,
          who, during the troubles which had fallen upon the Bahmani kingdom, had
          possessed himself of the whole of the Konkan and committed piracy at sea and
          brigandage on land, his depredations extending as far north as Cambay. Qivamul
          Mulk, who was sent with an army to punish him, discovered that he could not
          reach him without invading the Deccan, and returned to Ahmadabad to seek
          authority for this action, but Mahmud was averse from any act of aggression
          against the southern kingdom, and contented himself with writing to Mahmud Shah
          Bahmani, reminding him of the claims which Gujarat had on the gratitude of his
          house and requesting him to suppress the marauder. Bahadur was in fact in
          rebellion against the feeble Bahmanid, who had no
          control over him, but a reassuring reply was sent to Gujarat and Mahmud
          Bahmani, or rather his minister Qasim, Baridul Mamalik, with the help
          of Ahmad Nizam Shah, who was now virtually independent at Junnar, undertook a
          campaign against the pirate. The operations were protracted, and it was not
          until 1494 that Bahadur Gilani was defeated and slain and full reparation was
          made to Gujarat. The ships which Bahadur had taken were restored to their
          owners, and gifts consisting of Arab horses, a large quantity of pearls, five
          elephants, and a jeweled dagger were sent to Mahmud.
           In 1492 Bahauddin Ulugh Khan, son of Ulugh
          Khan Suhrab and governor of Modasa, oppressed the people and appropriated the
          pay of his troops, so that they rose against him and he fled. Mahmud sent Sharafi Jahan to reassure him,
          but the mission was a failure, and Ulugh Khan, just as his father had joined
          Mahmud Khalji, sought an asylum with Ghiyasuddin Khalji of Malwa, who refused
          to receive him. He then went to Sultanpur, and
          besieged the governor, Azizul Mulk Shaikhan, but on the arrival of a relieving force fled
          into Baglana, and was followed thither and defeated. After wandering for some
          time as a fugitive he submitted to the king, and was pardoned and reinstated,
          but shortly afterwards, having murdered one of his officers, was thrown into
          prison, where he died in 1496.
           On November 20, 1500, Ghiyasuddin Khalji of Malwa had been deposed by
          his son, Nasiruddin, and died in February 1501, not without suspicion of
          poison. Mahmud resolved to punish the reputed parricide, and prepared to invade
          Malwa, but Nasiruddin succeeded in persuading him that his father had
          acquiesced in his deposition, and that he was innocent of his death, and the
          expedition was abandoned.
           Vasco da Gama had appeared on the Malabar
          Coast in 1498, and the Portuguese were now firmly established in more than one
          western port. In 1506 a strong fort was built at Cochin, which was their chief
          emporium, and in 1507 a settlement was made on the island of Socotra, near the
          entrance of the Red Sea. Thus, in less than a decade, they had diverted the
          greater part of the lucrative spice trade from the Red Sea and Egypt; for the
          discovery of the direct sea route to Europe had deprived the Manila Sultans of
          one of their chief sources of revenue, heavy dues being levied both at Jedda
          and Alexandria on goods in transit. The important ports of north-western India,
          such as Cambay and Chaul, which were held by the Muslims, were at the same time
          seriously affected, and thus the Portuguese incurred the hostility of all the Muhammadan powers surrounding the Arabian Sea, who
          determined to make a combined effort to oust the infidel intruders. It was
          finally arranged, by correspondence which passed between Qansauh-al-Ghauri, sultan of Egypt, the king of Gujarat, other local Muhammadan rulers, and the Zamorin of Calicut, who had been the most intimately associated with the Europeans,
          that a fleet should be equipped at Suez and dispatched to India, where it would
          be reinforced by such vessels as were available locally. The Egyptian fleet was
          under the command of Amir Husain the Kurd, governor of Jedda, while the Indian
          contingent was commanded by Malik Ayaz, a Turkish subject who had found his way
          to the court of Gujarat. Up to the year 1507 the Portuguese had confined their
          activities inland to the Malabar Coast, though they had frequently harassed the
          trading vessels and pilgrim ships bound from Gujarat, the Gate of Mecca to
          Indian Muslims, for Jedda. The Portuguese Viceroy, Francesco de Almeida, in
          this year resolved to exploit the northerly coast of India, and dispatched his
          gallant son Lourenço with a squadron to explore the coast as far as Gujarat. It
          does not appear that the Viceroy had any intimation of the attack which was to
          be made by the Egyptian fleet, although he was aware of the correspondence
          which had been passing between India and Egypt. Had he known that Amir Husain
          was on his way it is unlikely that he would have sent so small a squadron under
          his son. Amir Husain reached India at the end of 1507
          and encountered Lourenço in the harbor of Chaul in January, 1508, when a fierce
          fight ensued in which the Portuguese were utterly defeated by Amir Husain and
          Malik Ayaz, and Dom Lourenço died a hero's death. After this victory, which was
          the occasion of much jubilation and of mutual congratulations among the
          Muslims, Mahmud returned to Champaner.
           War of Succession in Khandesh 
           We must revert to the history of Khandesh, in the affairs of which
          Mahmud was now, not unwillingly, entangled. We have already traced its history,
          in outline, to the succession of Khan II in 1457.
           Adil Khan II was one of the most energetic and most powerful rulers of
          Khandesh. He consolidated his authority in that region, and extended it over
          Gondwana, he suppressed the depredations of the Kolis and Bhils, thus ensuring
          the safety of travelers in his dominions, and carried his arms as far as
          Jharkhand, the modern Chota Nagpur, from which circumstance he is known as Jharkhandi Sultan. Since Khalaf Hasan’s invasion
          the rulers of Khandesh had regarded the king of Gujarat as their natural
          protector, and had paid him tribute, but Adil Khan II, in his career of
          victory, had scorned dependence, and had omitted to send the usual tribute. A
          demonstration of force by Mahmud in 1499 or 1500 had sufficed to bring him to
          his senses, and from that time until his death, more than a year later, he was
          on cordial terms with his suzerain and visited his court.
           On September 28, 1501, Adil Khan II died without issue and was succeeded
          by his younger brother, Daud Khan. There was, however, another aspirant
          belonging to the Faruqi family, named Alam Khan, who had enjoyed the protection
          of the king of Gujarat. This Alam Khan was the great-great-grandson of Hasan
          Khan, who had been expelled from Khandesh by his elder brother, Nasir Khan, and
          had fled to the court of Ahmad Shah of Gujarat. Ali Hasan Khan's descendants,
          with the exception of one, who married a daughter of Jam Nizamuddin of Sind,
          had married princesses of the royal house of Gujarat, and Alam Khan was the grandson
          of Mahmud Begarha. It thus came about that Mahmud induced Adil Khan II to
          nominate his youthful kinsman as his heir, to the exclusion of his brother
          Daud, but in 1501 Mahmud was not in a position to press his grandson’s claim,
          and Maud succeeded without opposition to the throne of Khandesh. He was a
          feeble but reckless prince, who contrived to embroil himself with Ahmad Nizam
          Shah of Ahmadnagar, who invaded Khandesh and could not be expelled until Daud
          had purchased the aid of Nasiruddin Khalji of Malwa by the humiliating
          concession of causing the khutba to be recited in his name. His death on August 28,
          1508, ended an inglorious reign, and he was succeeded by his son Ghazni Khan,
          who was poisoned after a reign of ten days. Ahmad Nizam Shah now again invaded
          Khandesh with the object of placing on the throne another scion of the Faruqi
          house also named Alam Khan, who had taken refuge at his court. Mahmud Begarha
          was at this juncture reminded of his pledge to support his grandson's claim,
          and he too invaded Khandesh with the object of placing the other Alam Khan on
          the throne. Khandesh was divided into two factions, the one supporting the
          Gujarat claimant and the other the Ahmadnagar claimant. The adherents of the
          former, under Malik Husain the Mughul, established
          themselves in Burhanpur, where they were joined by Ahmad Nizam Shah and the
          king of Berar, while Malik Ladan, the leader of the
          Gujarat party, shut himself up in Asirgarh, where he
          was besieged. Meanwhile Mahmud Begarha, with his grandson, was marching on
          Thalner, and when news of his arrival reached Burhanpur Ahmad Nizam Shah and
          the king of Berar withdrew, leaving a force of 4000 to support the Ahmadnagar
          candidate and Malik Husain. When they heard that Mahmud had sent a force to
          attack them these troops fled from Burhanpur, carrying the pretender with them,
          and Malik Husain, thus deserted, was obliged to submit to Mahmud. All
          opposition being thus removed, the king of Gujarat held a court at Thalner and
          installed his candidate on the throne of Khandesh with the title of Adil Khan
          III. After Mahmud's return to Gujarat an envoy from Ahmud’s son and successor, Burhan Nizam Shah, waited on him and demanded that some
          provision should be made for Alam Khan, but was compelled to convey to his
          master the humiliating message that the sultan of Gujarat recognised no royalty
          in the rebellious slave of the kings of the Deccan, and that if Burhan dared
          again to address a king otherwise than as a humble suppliant he should repent
          it.
           Adil Khan III of Khandesh cemented his alliance with Gujarat by marrying
          a daughter of Sultan Muzaffar, Mahmud's son, who afterwards succeeded his
          father as Muzaffar II. One of his first acts was to cause Malik Husain, who was
          again plotting with the king of Ahmadnagar, to be assassinated. The dispatch
          from Gujarat of a large force averted a danger which threatened the state from
          the direction of Ahmadnagar, and the reign of Adil Khan III was not marked by
          any noteworthy event. On his death, on August 25, 1520, he was succeeded by his
          son, Muhammad I, generally known as Muhammad Shah, from his having been
          summoned to the throne of Gujarat, which he never lived to occupy.
           Death of Mahmud Begarha 
           From Thalner Mahmud returned to Champaner, where, in 1510, he was
          gratified by the arrival of a mission from Sikandar Lodi of Delhi, who tendered
          him his congratulations on his successes in Khandesh. A mission in the
          following year from Shah Ismail I Safavi, of Persia, was less favorably
          received. The envoy, Yadgar Beg Qizilbash,
          was commissioned to invite Mahmud to embrace the Shiah faith, but Mahmud, whose health was failing, had refreshed his orthodoxy by
          visits to the shrines of saints at Patan and Sarkhej,
          and sent a message to the heretics bidding them begone.
          He had already designated his son Muzaffar as his heir, and feeling the
          approach of death summoned him from Baroda. Muzaffar arrived only in time to
          assist in bearing his father's coffin from Ahmadabad to his tomb at Sarkhej, for Mahmud I, the greatest of the sultans of
          Gujarat, had breathed his last on November 23, 1511.
           Mahmud Begarha was not only the greatest of the sultans of Gujarat. He
          holds a prominent place among the warrior princes of India. Succeeding to the
          throne at an age when even Akbar was under tutelage, he at once assumed the
          management of affairs, overcame an extensive conspiracy backed by armed force,
          and administered his kingdom with complete freedom, whether from the dictation
          of a minister or from the more pernicious influence of the harem. He was, in
          short, a prodigy of precocity. When he grew to manhood his appearance was
          striking. Tall and robust, with a beard which descended to his girdle and a
          heavy moustache which twisted and curled upwards, his mien struck awe into his
          courtiers. His elder brother, Qutbuddin Ahmad Shah, had died by poison, and
          wonderful fables are related of the means by which Mahmud protected himself
          from a like fate. He is said gradually to have absorbed poisons into his system
          until he was so impregnated with them that a fly settling on his hand instantly
          died, and he was immune from the effects of any poison which might be
          administered to him. It is to him that Samuel Butler refers in Hudibras, first published
          in 1664 :
           The prince of Cambay's daily food
           Is asp and basilisk and toad'.
           Physicians will estimate the practicability and efficacy of such a
          course of prophylactic treatment, but whatever foundation there may be for
          these strange legends there is no reason to doubt that Mahmud profited from the
          general belief in his immunity from poison, and Butler's description of his
          diet is at least incomplete, for his voracious appetite demanded large supplies
          of more wholesome food. His daily allowance was between twenty and thirty
          pounds' weight, and before going to sleep he placed two pounds or more of
          boiled rice on either side of his couch, so that he might find something to eat
          on whichever side he awoke. When he rose in the morning he swallowed a cup of
          honey, a cup of butter, and from 100 to 150 bananas.
           His martial exploits and the expansion of his dominions which they
          brought about have been recounted. He was mild and just to his own servants,
          and his fierce intolerance of Hinduism is counted to him by historians of his
          own religion as a merit. Of his nickname Begarha two explanations have been
          given, but there can be no doubt that the true interpretation is be garb, or
          'two forts', and that it had reference to his capture of the two great Hindu
          strongholds of Girnar and Champaner.
           The naval victory over the Portuguese at Chaul in 1508, which had so
          elated the Muslims, was without lasting results, for in the following year
          Almeida sailed up the west coast with his whole fleet to Diu, where he found
          the Egyptian fleet with its Indian auxiliaries lying between the island and the
          mainland. In the desperate battle which followed the Muslims were totally
          defeated and the Egyptian fleet almost entirely destroyed. No mention of this
          Portuguese victory is made by the Muslim historians, but it is alluded to by
          the Arabic historian of the Zamorins of Calicut.
          Full and circumstantial accounts are, however, to be found in the Portuguese
          chronicles. After this failure to drive the Portuguese from the Indian seas
          Mahmud Begarha ordered Malik Ayaz to make peace, and to return the prisoners
          taken at Chaul. In the following year the Portuguese first obtained possession
          of Goa and transferred their headquarters from Cochin to that city. Mahmud
          offered them a site for a factory at Diu, and almost immediately after the
          accession of Muzaffar II in 1511 a Portuguese mission arrived to seek
          permission for the construction of a fort to protect the factory. This request
          was not granted, and the mission left. Yadgar Beg,
          the ambassador from Shah Ismail Safavi whom Mahmud Begarha had refused to
          receive, was favorably received by Muzaffar, and was lodged at Ahmadabad, and
          afterwards at Champaner.
           Events in Malwa 
           Mahmud II, who had ascended the throne of Malwa in 1510, was the younger
          son of his father, Nasiruddin, whom he had deposed, and the elder son, Sahib
          Khan, entitled Muhammad Shah, now sought refuge with Muzaffar and begged him to
          help him to expel his brother and gain his throne. He joined Muzaffar’s camp at
          Baroda, on the way from Ahmadabad to Champaner, and Muzaffar sent an agent into
          Malwa to investigate the situation and report upon it.
           The agent, Qaisar Khan, returned with a report favorable to Sahib Khan's
          claim, and Sahib Khan was impatient for his host to take the field. Muzaffar
          bade him have patience and promised to invade Malwa at the end of the rainy
          season, but before the time came to redeem his promise Sahib Khan had left
          Gujarat in consequence of the gross misconduct of the Persian ambassador, who
          invited him to dinner and assaulted him. The prince's servants attacked the
          ambassador's suite and plundered his lodging, but the affair was noised abroad,
          and Sahib Khan was so overcome with shame that he fled from Gujarat and
          attempted to take refuge with Adil Khan III of Khandesh, but while be was travelling to that court the governor of a frontier
          district of the kingdom of Malwa attacked and defeated him, and he fled, with a
          following of 300 horse, to Alauddin Imad Shah of Berar, who would not offend
          the sultan of Malwa by offering the fugitive armed assistance, but assigned to
          him lands for his maintenance.
           Nasiruddin of Malwa had employed in his army a large number of Rajputs
          from eastern Hindustan, who had become so powerful in the kingdom that Mahmud
          II was a puppet in their hands. Muzaffar II marched to Godhra with a view to
          invading Malwa and restoring Mahmud's authority by crushing the Rajputs, but at
          Godhra he received disturbing news from Idar. Ainul Mulk Fuladi, governor of Patan, was marching with his contingent to join him at
          Godhra, but on the way learned that Bhim Singh of Idar, taking advantage of
          Muzaffar's preoccupation with the affairs of Malwa, had raided the whole
          country to the east of the Sabarmati River. He turned aside to punish him, but
          the raja defeated him, slew his brother and 200 of his men, and compelled him
          to flee. Muzaffar, on receiving the news, marched in person to Modasa, drove
          Bhim Singh to the hills, and sacked his capital, destroying the temples and
          other buildings. Bhim Singh was fain to purchase peace, and permission to return
          to Idar by a payment of 800,000 rupees and the delivery of 100 horses.
           Having thus settled affairs on his north-eastern frontier Muzaffar, in
          1513, marched to Godhra, sent his son Sikandar to Champaner as governor,
          dispatched a force under Qaisar Khan to Deoli near the Mahi, and followed him
          with his army. He had now changed his intention of aiding Mahmud by crushing
          the Rajputs, and had formed the design of conquering and annexing Malwa. He
          sent a force to occupy Dhar, the governor of which offered no resistance on
          receiving an assurance that the city should not be sacked nor its inhabitants massacred.
           Muzaffar now learnt that Mahmud was at Chanderi, endeavoring to crush a
          rebellion of the Rajput troops under their leader, Medeni Rai, and he once more
          changed his mind. For this second instance of vacillation two reasons are
          assigned. The first, more favorable to Muzaffar’s character, was the reflection
          that to attack a brother Muslim who was in straits owing to the misconduct of
          infidels would be both unlawful and ungenerous, and the second was the defeat
          of a detachment sent by him to Nalcha, which he regarded as an evil omen. The
          former reason may be accepted as the true one, first because it is conformable
          to the whole course of Muzaffar's behavior towards Mahmud Khalji, and secondly
          because the fact that his troops were defeated is not established. He retired
          to his own dominions and relieved the anxiety which oppressed Mahmud, beset on
          all sides by difficulties.
           In 1515 Raja Bhim Singh of Idar died, and should have been succeeded by
          his son Bihari Mal, but his cousin german contested
          the succession, and Sangrama Singh, Rana of Mewar, the Sanga,
          or Sanka of Muslim historians, welcomed the
          opportunity of asserting his ill-founded claim to supremacy over all Rajput
          princes and supported the pretender, who was his brother-in-law. He invaded
          Idar and enthroned Rai Mal, expelling Bihari Mal, who took refuge with
          Muzaffar. Muzaffar would not brook this interference in a state which had for
          many years owned allegiance to Gujarat, and, marching to Ahmadnagar, sent
          Nizamul Mulk to Idar to expel Rai Mal and establish Bihari Mal as raja. The
          selection of Nizamul Mulk for the duty was not merely fortuitous, for he was
          the son of Raja Patai of Champaner, and had embraced Islam after the fall of
          that stronghold. He expelled Rai Mal from Idar and restored Bihari Mal. He then
          followed Rai Mal into the Bichabhera hills and attacked him. The battle was
          indecisive, many lives being lost to no purpose, and Muzaffar rebuked Nizamul
          Mulk for his inconsiderate rashness; and shortly afterwards Nizamul Mulk was
          stricken with paralysis and was relieved at his own request, Nusratul Mulk
          being sent to Idar in his place. Nizamul Mulk was so eager to return to
          Champaner that he started from Idar before Nusratul Mulk could arrive, leaving
          Zahirul Mulk with no more than a hundred men to hold Idar.
           Rai Mal marched on Idar and Zahirul Mulk went forth with his small force
          to meet him, and was defeated with the loss of more than a quarter of his men.
          Nusratul Mulk, who was at Ahmadnagar, pressed on, drove off Rai Mal, and made
          Ahmadnagar his headquarters, maintaining order in the plains by harrying the
          brigands of the Vajinagar hills.
           Defeat of the Rajputs 
           Mahmud II of Malwa was so weary of the dominance of his Rajput officers
          that he secretly left his capital and arrived at Bhagor, where he was received
          by the Gujarat noble, Qaisar Khan. As soon as Muzaffar heard of his arrival he
          sent him tents, treasure, and elephants, and shortly afterwards joined him with
          an army and entertained him at a banquet to celebrate the occasion. When Medeni
          Rai heard of these doings he set out for Chitor, in order to seek help from
          Rana Sangrama, leaving a garrison to protect Mandu, against which Mahmud and
          Muzaffar were marching. The Rajput garrison was twice defeated before the
          walls, and Muzaffar formed the siege of the fortress. Pithaura, who commanded
          the garrison, had heard from Medeni Rai that the Rana was coming to his aid, and
          strove by feigned negotiations, as well as by force of arms, to hold out as
          long as possible. Muzaffar II was now joined by his nephew and son-in-law, Adil
          Khan III of Khandesh, whom he sent with Qivamul Mulk to check the progress of
          the Rana and Medeni Rai, who had already reached Ujjain.
           On February 23, 1518, the day of the Hindu festival of the Holi, Mandu was carried by escalade, the Rajput garrison
          performed the rite of jauhar,
          and Muzaffar, on entering the city, ordered a general massacre of the surviving
          Rajputs. Nineteen thousand were put to the sword, and the streets ran with
          blood, which streamed from the drains which carried rainwater into the ditch.
           Muzaffar now prepared to march against the Rana and Medeni Rai, but
          learned that they had been so terror-stricken by the news of the massacre that
          they at once turned and fled, riding fifty-four miles on the first night of
          their flight. Muzaffar restored Mandu to Mahmud, who entertained him
          sumptuously and accompanied him on his homeward way as far as Deoli, and Asaf
          Khan with 10,000 horse was left in Malwa to aid Mahmud
          against his enemies. In connection with the siege of Mandu we first hear of
          Imadul Mulk, Khush Qadam,
          who played such an important part in the affairs of Gujarat at this time.
           Muzaffar, after returning to Champaner, learned that Rai Mal had been
          ravaging the Patan district, and marched to punish him, remaining for some time
          in Idar while Rai Mal and his confederates were pursued in the hills.
           In 1519, after his return to Champaner Muzaffar heard
          of the defeat and capture of Mahmud II by Rana Sangrama near Gagraun, and of
          the heavy losses suffered by his own contingent of 10,000 horses. He sent reinforcements into Malwa, but they were not required, for the
            Rana generously restored his vanquished foe to his throne.
             Mubarizul Mulk was now sent to relieve Nusratul Mulk at Idar, where he
          was so annoyed by hearing the praise of the valor and generosity of the Rana
          that he named a dog Sangrama, and tied it up at one of the gates of the town.
          The Rana, on hearing of this insult, assembled his army and marched on Idar,
          where Mubarizul Mulk’s officers were so enraged with him for having by his
          contemptible act endangered them and the city that they dissuaded the king from
          sending assistance to him, and retired to Ahmadnagar, carrying him with them.
          The Rana occupied Idar and marched on to Ahmadnagar, where he defeated
          Mubarizul Mulk with heavy loss and compelled him to retreat to Ahmadabad. After
          plundering Ahmadnagar he marched to Vadnagar, the inhabitants of which town,
          being Brahmans, escaped molestation thence he marched to Visnagar, plundered
          the town after defeating Malik Hatim, who gallantly came forth to meet him with
          the small force at his disposal, and then returned to his own country.
           After his departure Mubarizul Mulk returned with a small force to
          Ahmadnagar and buried the dead. Here he was attacked by the Kolis of Idar, whom
          he defeated.
           In January, 1521, Muzaffar sent an army of 100,000 horse and 100
          elephants under the command of Malik Ayaz, governor of Sorath, to chastise the
          Rana for his raid into Gujarat. Bakor, Galiakot, Dungarpur, Sagwara,
          and Banswara were ravaged and laid waste. At Banswara a large force of Hindus
          lying in ambush was attacked and put to flight after suffering losses. Malik
          Ayaz then marched to Mandasor, and besieged that town. Rana Sangrama marched to
          its relief, but would not venture within twenty miles of the Muslim camp, and
          sent agents to Malik Ayaz offering to pay tribute to Muzaffar II if he would raise
          the siege, but his prayers were unheeded. Mahmud II joined Malik Ayaz, and
          Mandasor might have been captured and Sangrama defeated, but for the jealousy
          of Malik Ayaz, who feared lest Qivamul Mulk, his principal lieutenant, should
          gain the credit for the victory. He therefore made peace with the Rana on his
          promising to pay tribute, to place a son at Muzaffar's court as a hostage, to
          wait in person on the king, and to be obedient to his orders. Qivamul Mulk was
          strongly opposed to this treaty and persuaded Mahmud Shah to join him in an
          attack on the Rana, but Malik Ayaz was informed of this design, used his
          authority over the army of Gujarat to prevent its execution and marched back to
          Ahmadabad. Muzaffar was so deeply disappointed by this termination of a
          promising campaign that he would not see Malik Ayaz, but sent him straight back
          to Sorath, where he died in the following year and was succeeded by his son
          Ishaq.
           Muzaffar himself was preparing, in 1522, to march against the Rana, but
          before he could start from Ahmadabad Sangrama's son arrived with gifts from his
          father, and the expedition was abandoned.
           Bahadur's flight from Gujarat 
           In 1524 Alam Khan, son of Buhlul Lodi of Delhi, who was a refugee at
          Muzaffar's court, informed him that according to information received by him
          from Delhi there was much dissatisfaction with his nephew, Sultan Ibrahim Lodi,
          and the chances of his obtaining his father's throne appeared to be good.
          Muzaffar accordingly supplied him with a sum of money and a small force and
          dismissed him.
           Late in 1524 Muzaffar's second son, Bahadur, demanded equality of
          treatment with his eldest brother, Sikandar, but the king, who had designated
          Sikandar as his heir, feared to place more power in the hands of the ablest and
          most energetic of his sons, and put him off with fair words. Bahadur fled
          disgusted from his father's court, and repaired first to Udai Singh of
          Dungarpur, then to Sangrama Singh at Chitor, and next to Mewat, where the local Muhammadan ruler, Hasan, entertained him hospitably.
          He eventually proceeded to Delhi, but it is not quite clear at what precise
          date. In all probability it was at the beginning of 1526, for the people of
          Delhi were then expecting the approach of Babur with his invading army. Bahadur
          was well received by Ibrahim Lodi, who was doubtless glad to obtain the
          services of this young but experienced soldier. Ibrahim was encamped at Panipat
          when Bahadur joined him, and skirmishes had already begun with the advanced
          guard of the Mughul army. It was in one of these
          skirmishes that Bahadur so greatly distinguished himself that the jealousy of
          Ibrahim Lodi was roused, and Bahadur deemed it prudent to withdraw, and set out
          for Jaunpur, possibly selecting this town in response to an invitation received
          from the local nobles, who are said to have offered him the throne. The battle
          of Panipat, in which Babur defeated Ibrahim, was fought on April 18. Abu Turab, a contemporary writer, tells us that Bahadur was
          present at this battle, but took no part in the fighting. If this refers to the
          decisive action Bahadur must have left for Jaunpur as soon as the issue of the
          day had been decided. On April 7 his father Muzaffar died, and it was while he
          was on his way to Jaunpur that Bahadur received an invitation to return, and
          immediately turned back in the direction of Gujarat, travelling by way of
          Chitor.
           The nobles of Gujarat were now divided into three factions, supporting
          the claims of Sikandar, Bahadur and Latif, the eldest, second, and third sons
          of Muzaffar. Sikandar, who had been designated heir by his father, was
          immediately proclaimed by Imadul Mulk Khush Qadam and Khudavand Khan al-Iji,
          and marched from Ahmadabad to Champaner. The new king was feeble and
          ill-advised. He alienated the old nobles of his father's reign by advancing his
          own personal servants beyond their merits, and by his untimely profusion. There
          was general dissatisfaction, and an impression prevailed that Bahadur would
          soon return to seize the throne, but the immediate danger was from Latif Khan,
          who was assembling his forces at Nandurbar. A force under Sharza Khan was sent
          against him, but he retired into Baglana and when Sharza Khan followed him
          thither he was attacked, defeated, and slain by the raja, and the Rajputs and Kolis
          followed the defeated army and slew 1700 of them. The superstition of the time
          regarded the termination of the first enterprise of the reign as an augury of
          the future fortune of the king. Another army, under Qaisar Khan, was assembled,
          but the choice was an indication either of the ignorance and folly of the king
          or of the treachery of the nobles, for Qaisar Khan was Latif's principal adherent; but before the expedition could start Imadul Mulk Khush Qadam had caused Sikandar
          to be assassinated during the midday slumbers, and had raised to the throne
          Mahmud, an infant son of Muzaffar II, whom on April 12, 1526, he caused to be
          proclaimed as Mahmud II.
           His object in selecting an infant son was, of course, that the
          government of the kingdom might remain entirely in his hands, but it may be
          doubted whether he expected to maintain his puppet against Bahadur, or even
          against Latif. The adherents of the former had been writing to urge him to
          return without delay to Gujarat, and he had eagerly responded to their
          solicitations. The old nobles of the kingdom, disgusted with the rule of the
          freedman, Imadul Mulk, who was as lavish of titles and robes of honor as he was
          niggardly of more substantial favors, fled from Champaner, and Taj Khan Narpali
          led a force to escort Bahadur back to Gujarat.
           Accession of Bahadur 
           Imadul Mulk in his terror sent large sums of money to Burhan Nizam Shah
          I of Ahmadnagar and Udai Singh, raja of Palanpur, to induce the former to
          invade Nandurbar and the latter to advance on Champaner in support of the
          infant king, and wrote also to Babur, requesting him to send a force to Diu
          with the same object, and promising him a gift of 10,000,000 tangas and the
          allegiance of Gujarat. This last promise was reported to Khudavand Khan and Taj
          Khan, and only served to increase the general detestation in which Imadul Mulk
          was held. Burhan Nizam Shah accepted the money sent to him, but did nothing in
          return. Udai Singh did indeed march to Champaner, but his aid alone was of
          little consequence, and he almost immediately transferred his allegiance to
          Bahadur.
           Bahadur at once returned to Gujarat by way of Modasa and Patan and, as
          he advanced, was everywhere welcomed and joined by the nobles and officers of
          his father's court. On July 11 he ascended the throne at Ahmadabad, and
          immediately continued his journey to Champaner. The feeble efforts of Imadul
          Mulk to delay or hamper his advance were ineffectual; he entered Champaner
          without opposition and at once went about to punish those who had murdered his
          brother and prepared his own way to the throne. Imadul Mulk Khush Qadam, Saiful Mulk, and the actual assassins of Sikandar were
          immediately put to death. Latif Khan, who was lurking in the city in the hope
          of events taking a turn favorable to his pretensions, wisely accepted the
          advice of his friends and fled to Palanpur, and thence to Nandurbar, where he
          was joined by a number of his partisans. His adherents at Champaner were
          arrested, and their houses were plundered by the mob. Ghazi Khan, who was
          upholding Bahadur’s cause in the Nandurbar district, reported that Latif Khan
          had raised the standard of revolt, that he had defeated him and dispersed his
          followers, and that Latif was a wounded prisoner in his hands. He was ordered
          to see that his prisoner received proper treatment and to send him to court,
          but the prince died on his way thither and Bahadur was left without a
          competitor except his infant brother Mahmud, who was secretly put to death
          within the year. Another brother, Chand Khan, had taken refuge with Mahmud
          Khalji at Mandu, and Mahmud's refusal to surrender him dissolved the friendship
          which had once saved his kingdom for him. The murder of the child Mahmud II
          alienated Udai Singh of Palanpur, who sacked the town of Dohad, but Taj Khan
          Narpali led a punitive expedition against him and chastised him severely.
           Malik Ishaq, who had succeeded his father, Malik Ayaz, in the important
          government of Sorath, lost his reason in 1527, and attacked without any
          justification the Hindu chief of Dwarka, who was an obedient vassal of Bahadur.
          After his return to Junagarh he became so violent that it was found necessary
          to put him in prison, where he died shortly afterwards. He was succeeded by his
          brother, Malik Tughan, famous for his stature and great bodily strength, who in
          order to watch the Portuguese made Diu his principal place of residence. The
          adventurers would not abandon their design to build at Diu a fort for the
          protection of their trade and merchandise, and sought to execute it at times by
          means of negotiations and at times by force, but for several years had no
          success. At length, on September 21, 1534, Bahadur permitted them by treaty to
          build a fort.
           Towards the end of 1527 Bahadur received an appeal for help from
          Alauddin Imad Shah of Berar and Muhammad I of Khandesh. The kings of Ahmadnagar
          and Berar had quarreled over the possession of the town and district of Pathri
          on the Godavari, which belonged to the latter but were coveted and had been
          annexed by the former. Alauddin had enlisted the aid of Muhammad and had
          marched to recover the district, but Burhan Nizam Shah of Ahmadnagar and his
          ally, Amir Ali Barid of Bidar, had attacked and defeated them, captured their
          artillery and elephants, pursued them through Berar, and expelled Alauddin from
          his kingdom, compelling him to take refuge in Khandesh. Bahadur marched to
          Nandurbar, where he was met by his cousin, Muhammad of Khandesh, and by the
          Rahtor raja of Baglana, who did homage to him and entertained him in his
          fortress of Salher. Bahadur gave his sister in
          marriage to Muhammad, upon whom he conferred the title of Shah, and after the
          rainy season of 1528 marched on Ahmadnagar by way of Berar, where he was joined
          by Alauddin Imad Shah, sending a force with the raja of Baglana, whom he
          ordered to advance on Ahmadnagar by the more direct route of his own
          principality.
           Invasion of the Deccan 
           Burhan’s army, with a contingent of 6000 horse furnished by Ismail Adil
          Shah of Bijapur and 3000 furnished by Amir Ali Barid, was in the hilly country
          about Bir, and Amir Ali Barid inflicted two defeats on detachments of Bahadur's
          army between Paithan and Bir, but the army of Gujarat continued to advance, and
          occupied Ahmadnagar for forty days, while Burham, Nizam Shah, who had first
          retired from Bir to Parenda, was pursued to Junnar.
          Meanwhile the army of Ahmadnagar had been engaged in cutting off Bahadur's
          supplies, and the invaders had already begun to suffer from famine when Bahadur
          marched to Daulatabad and opened the siege of the fortress, while Burhan and
          Amir Ali Barid occupied the neighboring hills. They attempted to relieve
          Daulatabad but were driven back into the hills, and then opened negotiations
          with Sultan Bahadur's allies, and found no difficulty in seducing Alauddin Imad
          Shah, who was beginning to suspect that Bahadur did not intend to leave the
          Deccan, and regretted having summoned him to his aid. He sent a quantity of
          supplies into the fortress and hurriedly retired into Berar, leaving his camp
          standing.
           Bahadur's situation gave him some cause for anxiety. He had no prospect
          of capturing Daulatabad, one of his allies had deserted him, the other,
          Muhammad of Khandesh, desired peace, and the rainy season of 1529 was
          approaching. He therefore permitted Muhammad to open negotiations, and after
          some discussion agreed to peace on terms sufficiently humiliating to Burhan
          Nizam Shah. Both he and Alauddin Imad Shah were to cause the khutba to be
          recited in Bahadur's name in their dominions, and were to appear before him as
          vassals; all the elephants taken from Alauddin and Muhammad were to be
          restored, and Pathri and Mahur were to be ceded again to Berar. Burhan
          fulfilled the first condition by causing the khutba to be recited on one
          occasion in Bahadur's name, but it was only with great difficulty that Muhammad
          of Khandesh recovered his elephants, and those of Alauddin were never restored,
          nor were Pathri and Mahur ceded to him.
           Bahadur returned to Gujarat in the spring of 1529, and his relative, the
          Jam Firuz of Sind, who had been expelled from his country by Shah Beg Arghun, took refuge at his court.
           In 1530 the Portuguese, having already assembled at Bombay a great
          fleet, sailed for Daman and captured that town, and in February, 1531, arrived
          before Diu, which they attacked, but Bahadur had already visited the place in
          1530, and had made all provision for its defence, and the Portuguese, having
          failed to take the town, sailed back to Goa, leaving a fleet in the Gulf of
          Cambay to harass the trade and shipping of Gujarat.
           Bahadur returned from Diu to Champaner, where he received some of the
          nobles of the late Ibrahim Shah Lodi of Delhi, who had reached his court with
          300 followers. From Champaner Bahadur marched to Modasa and thence led an
          expedition into Baker and Banswara. The Rana, Ratan Singh II, who had succeeded
          Sangrama after the battle of Sikri, interceded for
          the two chiefs, and Bahadur stayed his hand.
           Mahmud II of Malwa was now pursuing a suicidal policy. He had sent a
          force to ravage the southern districts of the territories of the Rana, he had
          so alienated by his sinister and deceitful course of conduct the nobles of
          Malwa that some had taken refuge with the Rana and others with Bahadur, and he
          was harboring at his court a son of the late Sultan Muzaffar of Gujarat, Chand
          Khan, a pretender to Bahadur's throne, whose claims he was understood to favor.
           The old friendship between Malwa and Gujarat was thus entirely
          dissolved. Bahadur, less bigoted than his father, and sensible of Ratan Singh's
          claims on his friendship, which were based on Sangrama's reception of him when
          he was a fugitive, was inclined to deprecate wanton attacks on his territories,
          was bitterly resentful of the harborage offered to Chand Khan, and was inclined
          to regard Mahmud, who owed his tenure of his throne to the capture of Mandu
          from rebellious Rajputs by Mahmud Begarha, as a vassal: Mahmud, on the other
          hand, was perturbed by Bahadur's harborage of malcontents from Malwa, and
          suggested a meeting at which differences could be settled. Bahadur haughtily replied
          that he had been awaiting a request for an interview at which Mahmud could
          appear before him and explain matters. This had not been Mahmud's intention,
          but he found it difficult to recede from his suggestion, and could hardly
          propose that Bahadur should wait upon him. He feigned to be eager to pay his
          respects to the sultan of Gujarat but always discovered a pretext for evading a
          meeting. Ratan Singh of Mewar marched as far as Sarangpur and threatened
          Ujjain, to which city Mahmud advanced.
           Conquest of Malwa 
           Bahadur entered Malwa and awaited Mahmud’s arrival at his camp, but an
          envoy from Mahmud made his excuses by explaining that his master had broken his
          arm whilst out hunting. In private he informed Bahadur that Chand Khan was the
          real difficulty, as Mahmud did not wish to surrender him, but feared to refuse.
          Bahadur bade the envoy reassure his master on this point, and marched slowly
          towards Mandu, accompanied by Muhammad Shah of Khandesh, expecting Mahmud at
          each stage; but Mahmud had washed his hands of kingship, and had withdrawn into
          his seraglio at Mandu, meeting the remonstrances of
          his courtiers with the answer that he knew that his reign was drawing to its
          close, and that he intended to enjoy life while it lasted. He had thoughts of
          abdicating and installing his son Ghiyasuddin, but seemed to be unable to
          execute any plan. Meanwhile Bahadur marched to Nalcha and formed the siege of
          Mandu, being joined by many of the nobles and officers of Malwa. The sloth and
          carelessness of Mahmud infected his army, and on the night of March 17 the
          besiegers scaled an unguarded section of the wall and entered the city
          unopposed. Mahmud formed the intention of imitating the Rajputs and performing
          the rite of jauhar,
          but, on receiving a message from Bahadur that his life and honor were safe,
          abandoned it and waited on Bahadur with seven of his officers. The khutba was
          recited at Mandu in the name of Bahadur, Malwa was annexed to Gujarat, and
          Mahmud and his family were sent towards Champaner, where Bahadur proposed to
          imprison them, but on April 12, 1531, the camp of Asaf Khan, in whose custody
          the prisoners were, was attacked by Bhils and Kolis, and Mahmud's guards,
          fearing a rescue, put him to death, and he was buried near Dohad. His seven
          sons were sent to Champaner, where they were imprisoned.
           Bahadur remained awhile at Mandu and marched in June to Burhanpur, where
          he was entertained by Muhammad Shah of Khandesh, who persuaded him, with some
          difficulty, to receive the learned and pious Shah Tahir, who had come as an
          envoy from Burhan Nizam Shah I of Ahmadnagar. Burhan had not fulfilled the
          conditions of the treaty of Daulatabad, and Bahadur was consequently
          ill-disposed towards him, but Shah Tahir undertook that his master should wait
          on him at Burhanpur and, returning to Ahmadnagar, persuaded Burhan to carry out
          this promise, which he had made at Daulatabad. The humiliating circumstances of
          the reception were somewhat alleviated by an artifice of Shah Mir, who bore a
          copy of the Koran for presentation to Bahadur, and thus obliged the latter to
          descend from his throne to do reverence to the holy book. Both Bahadur and
          Burhan remained for a short time at Burhanpur as the guests of Muhammad Shah,
          and before they parted Bahadur gratified Burhan's vanity by recognizing his
          title of Shah.
           The Rajput Silahdi, who held the districts of Raisen, Bhilsa, and
          Sarangpur, nominally as fiefs of Malwa but actually as a small principality,
          had been permitted by Bahadur to visit Raisen after the fall of Mandu, but
          showed no disposition to fulfill his promise to return, and Nassau Khan, who
          was sent to Raisen and him to court, privately informed the king that he was
          disloyal, and if permitted again to leave the court would ally himself to the
          Rana. He was therefore arrested at Idar, his troops were plundered and
          dispersed, and his elephants were confiscated.
           Early in January, 1532, Bahadur sent Imadul Mulk Malikji, son of Tawakkul, to arrest Silahdi’s son Bhopat, who had remained
          at Ujjain when his father came to court and had since occupied Sarangpur.
          Imadul Mulk reported that he had fled to Chitor to seek help of the Rana, and
          the king marched by Bhilsa, which he occupied, to Raisen, still held by
          Silahdi’s brother, Lakhman Singh. He was attacked as he approached the town on
          January 26, but drove the Rajputs into the fortress and formed the siege.
           Bahadur’s artillery, under Mustafa Rumi Khan, who had succeeded Tughan
          as governor of Diu, did much execution, and Silahdi conciliated Bahadur by
          perfidiously feigning to accept Islam, and thus obtained permission to meet his
          brother, ostensibly with the object of arranging for the surrender of the
          fortress, but when he and Lakhman Singh met they agreed to await the relieving
          force expected from Chitor, and sent 2000 men under Silahdi's youngest son to
          hasten its arrival. This force, was, however, intercepted by the besiegers and
          defeated, Silahdi's son being slain, and Bahadur, on learning of Silahdi's
          perfidy, sent him in custody to Mandu and dispatched a force under Muhammad
          Shah of Khandesh and Imadul Mulk Malikji to meet the Rana and Bhopat. This
          force met and put to flight at Kamkera another force
          of 2000 Rajputs under Puran Mal, another of
          Silahdi's sons, and Bahadur, learning that the Rana was at the head of a large
          army left his officers to continue the siege and marched against him.
          Vikramaditya, who had succeeded his father Ratan Singh, would not face Bahadur
          in the field, but retired to Chitor, and Bahadur returned to Raisen. Lakhman
          Singh, despairing of relief, offered to surrender on condition that Silahdi was
          pardoned, but when Silahdi, having been recalled from Mandu, was again
          permitted to enter Raisen, he was persuaded to perform the rite of jauhar rather
          than incur the disgrace of being implicated in the surrender. Over 700 women
          were burnt, and the men sallied forth, according to custom, in garments died
          yellow, but exhibited little of the spirit of the Rajput, for though all were
          slain the losses of the Muslims amounted to no more than four or five.
           Quarrel with Humayun 
           Muhammad Shah of Khandesh, who was sent to establish Bahadur's authority
          over the outlying districts of Malwa, captured Gagraun and Kanor, both of which
          had been treacherously surrendered by Medeni Rai, who had held them of the king
          of Malwa, to the Rana of Mewar, and Bahadur, having appointed as governor of
          Raisen Sultan Alam, chief of Kalpi, who had fled from his principality before
          Babur, overran part of Gondwana, captured many elephants, appointed Alp Khan
          governor of that region, and, turning westward, captured Islamabad and
          Hoshangabad, and met Muhammad Shah of Khandesh at Sarangpur, where the Rana's
          governor of Gagraun was presented to him. Then returning to Mandu' he sent
          Imadul Mulk Malikji and Ikhtiyar Khan to take Mandasor, formerly spared at the
          intercession of Sangrama Singh, whose successor's writ no longer ran either in
          Malwa or in Gujarat. The town and fortress were taken, the Rana's officer fled,
          and Bahadur dismissed Muhammad Shah to Khandesh, visited Diu, and on his return
          thence spent the rainy season at Champaner considering the punishment of the
          Rana. The occasion was opportune, for Vikramaditya was the Commodus of
          Rajputana, and disgusted his haughty nobles by his preference for the society
          of gladiators, wrestlers, and professional swashbucklers.
           Bahadur, having been joined by Muhammad Shah of Khandesh, marched from
          Champaner on November 6, 1532, and on February 14, 1533, the two kings arrived
          before Chitor. Ten days later the queen-mother, the widow of Sangrama Singh,
          purchased peace with what remained of the plunder taken by her husband when he
          captured Mahmud Khalji II of Malwa, including the jeweled crown of Hushang, and
          Bahadur retired, but returned again in 1534.
           On this occasion he received in his camp Muhammad Zaman Mirza, a prince of the house of Timur, whose
          pretensions had so incensed his kinsman, the emperor, that he had been
          sentenced to imprisonment in the fortress of Bayana and to the loss of his
          eyes, which he saved by flight. Humayun, whose relations with Bahadur had
          hitherto been perfectly friendly, took umbrage at his harboring the fugitive
          and his followers, and a correspondence ensued which led to a permanent rupture
          between the two monarchs. Two of the letters which passed between them have
          been preserved in their entirety and offer a striking picture of the diplomatic
          methods of that day. Humayun pointed out that although his ancestor Timur had
          desisted from attacking the Ottoman Sultan Bayazid while he was engaged in
          fighting the Franks he protested against Bayazid’s harboring princes who had rebelled against himself. He therefore demanded that
          the prince should be either surrended or expelled.
          To this Bahadur, who is said to have dictated his reply when in his cups, sent
          a most insulting answer, in which he ironically suggested that Humayun had
          boasted of the exploits of "his sire seven degrees removed" because
          he himself had achieved nothing worthy of record.
           So shocked were Bahadur and his nobles when they considered the tone of
          this letter on the morrow that an effort was made to overtake the courier, but
          without success, and their only solace was the reflection that nothing more
          could be done, and that what was decreed must come to pass.
           Bahadur gained an easy victory over Vikramaditya at Loicha,
          in the dominions of Surjan, Rao of Bundi, for the
          Rana was deserted by most of his vassals, who marched to the defence of Chitor,
          and Bahadur, after his success, turned in the same direction and formed the
          siege. Burhanul Mulk now held Ranthambhor, which he had captured for Bahadur
          when he had first appeared before Chitor in the preceding year, and Bahadur
          sent Tatar Khan Lodi, a grandson of Buhlul Lodi of Delhi who had entered his
          service, with a vast sum of money, in order that he and Burhanul Mulk might
          attack the Mughul Empire. Tatar Khan raised au army
          and captured the fortress of Bayana, but Humayun’s youngest brother immediately
          recovered it, and slew him. Meanwhile the siege of Chitor continued. According
          to Rajput legend Jawahir Bai the queen-mother, of Rahtor race, sent Humayun a bracelet, in accordance with
          the chivalrous custom of Rajasthan, adopting him as her champion against
          Bahadur, but the legend is inconsistent with the Muslim chronicles and with the
          conduct of Humayun, who, despite the gross provocation which he had received,
          would not attack a brother Muslim while he was engaged in fighting the
          misbelievers.
           Bahadur was seriously perturbed by the news of the defeat and death of
          Tatar Khan Lodi and by apprehensions of being attacked by Humayun, and would
          have raised the siege but for the confident assurance of Sadr Khan, one of his
          officers, that Humayun would never attack him while he was besieging Chitor.
          After a lapse of three months an extensive breach was made in the rampart, which
          had never before been exposed to artillery fire. It was stoutly defended but
          with a terrible sacrifice of life, and the valiant Jawahir Bai led a sortie from the fortress and was slain at
          the head of her warriors. The garrison lost hope. The infant heir, Udai Singh,
          was conveyed by Surjan, prince of Bundi, to a place of safety, and the
          surviving Rajputs performed the rite of jauhar. Thirteen thousand women,
          so the legend says, headed by Karnavati, the mother
          of the young prince, voluntarily perished in an immense conflagration fed by
          combustibles, and the survivors of the slaughter in the breach, led by Baghji, prince of Deola, rushed
          on the Muslims and were exterminated. Chitor was for the moment a possession of
          the king of Gujarat, and received a Muslim governor.
           Flight of Bahadur 
           Bahadur had now to think of his return to his capital, and had reason to
          repent the folly which had prompted him to insult the emperor; for Humayun,
          though he had scrupulously abstained from attacking him while he was engaged with
          the misbelievers, had advanced to Mandasor, and was there awaiting him. Bahadur
          had already taken a step which proclaimed his despair by sending to Mecca,
          under the charge of a certain Asaf Khan, both the ladies of his harem and his
          treasury. His army, as it approached the emperor's position at Mandasor, was
          disheartened by the defeat of its advanced guard and by the defection of Sayyid
          Ali Khan Khurasani, who deserted to the emperor. Bahadur was beset by
          conflicting counsels. Sadr Khan urged that an immediate attack should be
          delivered, while the army was still flushed with its victory at Chitor, but
          Rumi Khan, who commanded the artillery, was of opinion that it should entrench
          itself and rely on its great superiority in guns. Unfortunately the advice of
          the artilleryman was followed. The light armed troops of Gujarat dared not face
          the Mughul archers in the field, and the imperial
          troops, beyond the range of the guns, were able to cut off the supplies of the
          entrenched camp. A reinforcement from Raisen only
          increased his difficulties by consuming his supplies, and after enduring a
          siege of two months, during which losses from famine were heavy, he basely
          deserted his army by night on April 25, 1535, and fled with Muhammad Shah of
          Khandesh, Mallu Qadir Khan, governor of Malwa, and three other nobles, to
          Mandu. His army dispersed, only a few of the principal officers being able to
          lead off their contingents.
           Humayun pursued him and besieged him in Mandu. A division escaladed the
          walls of the fortress at night, and Bahadur, who was asleep at the time,
          escaped with difficulty to Champaner with no more than five or six followers.
          Sadr Khan and Sultan Alam, governor of Raisen, retired into the citadel,
          Songarh, but were forced to surrender after the lapse of two days, when the
          former entered the emperor's service and the latter, guilty of being a member
          of the Lodi clan, was mutilated by the amputation of his feet. Sadr Khan was
          not the only one who changed his allegiance. Mustafa Rumi Khan, to whom the
          government of Ranthambhor had been promised during its siege, so resented his
          master's failure to keep his word that he entered Humayun's service after the
          defeat at Mandasor.
           After reducing the citadel of Mandu Humayun pursued Bahadur, who fled
          from Champaner to Cambay. Humayun followed him thither, but arrived at the port
          on the day on which he had taken ship for Diu. The remnant of the fugitive's
          army was staunch and made a night attack on the imperial camp, but a traitor
          had betrayed their design and the imperial troops, having vacated their tents,
          allowed the enemy to plunder them and then, falling on them, put them to the
          sword. They also slew, lest they should be rescued, Sadr Khan and Firuz,
          formerly Jam of Sind, who had fallen into their hands.
           Bahadur induced Humayun to withdraw from Cambay by sending Mahmud Lari, Muhtaram Khan, to
          interview Mustafa Rumi Khan. Haji Dabir reports the interview as it was related to him by Muhtaram Khan, who conveyed such bitter reproaches from
          Bahadur that Rumi Khan sweated with shame, and added, "If this attack on
          Diu is your suggestion, then employ some device to deter him : if it is not
          your suggestion then try to shake his purpose". Rumi Khan, stung by these
          reproaches, went to Humayun, who happened to be suffering from the effects of
          the climate and advised him to postpone the attack on Diu, as the sea air was
          bad for his health. Humayun agreed, and at the same time news of disturbances
          in Ahmadabad was received, and he withdrew to Champaner.
           Champaner was still held by Ikhtiyar Khan for Bahadur, and Humayun
          besieged the fortress. Selecting the most inaccessible part of the wall as
          likely to be the most lightly guarded he led the spot 300 men armed with steel
          spikes, by means of which, driven into the mortar between the stones, they
          escaladed the wall and, on August 9, 1535, opened the gates to the rest of the
          army. Ikhtiyar Khan fled to the citadel, but almost immediately surrendered,
          and Humayun was master of Champaner.
           The treasure found at Champaner relieved the imperial troops of the duty
          of dispersing themselves throughout the country for the collection of revenue,
          and the fief-holders sent to Bahadur in Kathiawar a message expressing their
          unaltered loyalty and their readiness to pay the land tax, if officers could be
          sent to collect it. Bahadur selected Imadul Mulk Malikji for this duty, and he,
          assembling an army of 50,000 horses, encamped before Ahmadabad and sent out
          detachments to collect the revenue. Humayun, who would have been better
          employed in his own dominions, was intoxicated by his new conquest and bent on
          including it in his empire. He marched towards Ahmadabad and his advanced guard
          defeated Imadul Mulk between Nadiad and Mahmudabad.
          The victory encouraged him to distribute the fiefs of Gujarat among his
          officers, as though the conquests were complete and permanent, and the kingdom
          assumed for a short time the appearance of a settled province of the empire.
          Bahadur, at Diu, was trembling at the prospect of an attack by land on that
          port and wrote to Nunho da Cunha, governor of Portuguese India, imploring his aid. Da Cunha visited Diu and on October 25 concluded a treaty by which he undertook to
          assist Bahadur against his enemies by land and sea, and received in return
          confirmation of the cession of the port of Bassein to the king of Portugal and permission to build a fort at Diu, the customs dues
          of the port being retained, however, by Bahadur.
           Retreat of Humayun
           Humayun, fired with the lust of conquest, marched into Khandesh and
          visited Burhanpur. Muhammad Shah wrote, begging him to spare his small kingdom
          the horrors of an invasion, and at the same time wrote to Ibrahim Adil Shah I
          of Bijapur, Sultan Quli Qutb Shah of Golconda, and Darya Imad Shah of Berar, proposing a league for the
          defence of the Deccan, but Humayun's operations were confined to a military
          promenade through Khandesh, whence he returned to Mandu.
           While he had been indulging in dreams of conquest Sher Khan Sur, the
          Afghan, had risen in rebellion in Bengal, the nobles of Gujarat, with the aid
          of the Portuguese, had recovered some posts from the Mughuls,
          and Askari Mirza, at
          Ahmadabad, was meditating his own proclamation as king
          of Gujarat. Tardi Beg, the Mughul governor of Champaner, refused to admit into the fortress the officers who, having
          been driven from their posts by Bahadur’s troops, desired to take refuge there, for he believed them to be partisans of Askari and disaffected towards Humayun. They accordingly
          besieged him in Champaner and Humayun hastily returned towards Agra, where his
          presence was urgently required, and was joined on the way by Askari and those who had besieged Champaner who now made
          their peace with him. His ill-timed expedition into Gujarat had lasted for
          thirteen months and thirteen days.
           Bahadur had closely followed the retreating Mughuls,
          and as he approached Champaner Tardi Beg evacuated
          it and Bahadur reoccupied it on May 25, 1536. He apologized to his nobles for
          having at Mandasor followed the advice of Mustafa Rumi Khan, who had since
          deserted to Humayun, to which error all the subsequent misfortunes of Gujarat
          were to be traced. Mallu Qadir Khan returned to Mandu as governor of Malwa.
           Bahadur, having regained his kingdom, repented of his bargain with the
          Portuguese, and sought to expel them from Diu. Manoel de Sousa, who commanded the fort, was aware of this design, and when the king
          visited Diu late in 1536 would not wait upon him, lest he should be
          treacherously assassinated. Nunho da Cunha, in response to an invitation from Bahadur,
          visited Diu towards the end of December, but having been warned by de Sousa
          that it was the king's intention to send him in a cage to the sultan of Turkey,
          feigned sickness and refused to land. He persisted in his refusal until the
          king lost patience and decided, on February 13, 1537, against the advice of all
          his counselors, to visit him on board his ship. He made his visit accompanied
          by thirteen officers of high rank, and after remaining a short time on board
          expressed a desire to return. The Portuguese attempted to detain him,
          ostensibly that he might inspect the gifts which they had brought for him from
          Goa, but doubtless with a view to obtaining a pledge that he would abandon his
          designs against them and to extorting further concessions from him. He is said
          to have cut down a priest who attempted to bar his way, and when he entered his
          barge the Portuguese boats closed round it and swords were drawn. Manoel de Sousa was killed, and the king and Khvaja Safar
          leaped into the water. A Portuguese friend drew the Khvaja aboard his boat, but
          the king was drowned and all his other companions were killed.
           Bahadur was one of the greatest and may be reckoned the last of the
          kings of Gujarat, for his three actual successors were mere puppets in the
          hands of a turbulent and factious nobility. His one
          great error was committed at Mandasor, when he entrenched himself instead of
          falling at once on the imperial army. His disgraceful flight was almost a
          necessary consequence, for in it lay his only chance
          of saving his kingdom. If we except these two actions and his meditated
          treachery towards his Portuguese allies, which was not regarded as
          reprehensible in his faith and in that age, we shall be inclined to agree in
          the praise bestowed upon him by Haji Dabir, author of the Zafar-ul-Walih, who describes him
          as liberal, generous, and valiant, with a loftier spirit and wider ambitions
          than any of his line, and reckons as his conquests the places in which he
          caused the khutba to be recited in his name; Gujarat, the Deccan, Khandesh, Malwa, Ajmer, the
          Aravalli Hills, Jalor, Nagaur, Junagarh, Khankot, Raisen, Ranthambhor, Chitor,
          Kalpi, Baglana, Idar, Radhanpur, Ujjain, Mewat, Satwas, Abu, and Mandasor.
           Decline of the Royal Power 
           Bahadur left no son, and Muhammad Zaman Mirza, the kinsman and brother-in-law of Humayun,
          impudently claimed the throne on the ground that Bahadur’s mother had adopted
          him as her son, but Imadul Mulk Malikji hastened from Diu to Ahmadabad and
          agreed to call to the throne Muhammad Shah of Khandesh, whose wife, mother,
          grandmother, and two more remote ancestresses had
          all been princesses of Gujarat. Descent in the female line seldom counts for
          much in questions of succession in Muslim states, but Muhammad had been for
          years the loyal vassal and faithful companion in arms of Bahadur, whose
          recognition of his title of Shah was understood to indicate a wish that he
          should succeed him. Muhammad Shah obeyed the summons and set out from Burhanpur
          to ascend the throne of Gujarat, but died on May 24, on his way to Champaner.
           There now remained only one possible successor, the last descendant of
          Muhammad Karim, Mahmud Khan, son of Bahadur’s
          brother Latif Khan, who, during his uncle’s reign, had been placed in the
          custody of Muhammad of Khandesh, and was a state prisoner in a fortress in that
          state. The nobles of Gujarat summoned him to the throne, but Mubarak II, who
          had succeeded his brother in Khandesh, and had almost certainly hoped to
          receive a summons to the throne of Gujarat, would not surrender him until a
          force led by Ikhtiyar Khan invaded Khandesh. Ikhtiyar Khan carried Mahmud with
          him to Ahmadabad, where he was enthroned on August 8, 1587, as Saduddin Mahmud Shah III.
           The part which Ikhtiyar Khan Siddiqi had
          played in bringing the new king from Khandesh and placing him on the throne
          gained for him the regency, for Mahmud was but eleven years of age. Ikhtiyar
          Khan was learned and accomplished and his surname indicates descent from Abu Bakr as-Siddiq (the truthful),
          the first successor of the prophet Muhammad, but his father had held the
          comparatively humble post of qazi of Nadiad and his
          advancement was resented by many of the nobles, now divided into factions
          quarrelling over the part which each had borne in attempting to overcome the
          calamities which had recently fallen upon the kingdom and over the compensation
          due to each for his sufferings and his losses.
           Two nobles of the second rank, Fattuji Muhafiz Khan and Darya Khan Husain, urged Imadul Mulk Malikji, son of Tawakkul, who had long taken a prominent part in the
          affairs of the kingdom and now found himself relegated to the third place, that
          of deputy minister, to remove Ikhtiyar Khan by assassination, and his jealousy
          and ambition succumbed to the temptation. He stepped into Ikhtiyar Khan's place
          and appropriated the title of Amirul Umara, but Abdul Latif Sadr Khan, the minister, grieved
          deeply for his old friend, and taxed Imadul Mulk with having been accessory to
          his death. The new regent's denial of his complicity was not believed, and Sadr
          Khan voluntarily resigned his post, and explained to the king the grounds for
          his action. He informed both the king and the regent that Darya Khan aspired to
          the first place in the kingdom, and privately warned Imadul Mulk that the life
          of none would be safe if ambitious subordinates were permitted to foment
          discord between the great officers of state and to persuade them to remove
          rivals by assassination. Darya Khan obtained the post vacated by Sadr Khan, but
          the latter's warning was not lost upon Imadul Mulk who regarded his late
          accomplice with suspicion, which was rewarded with secret intrigue and open
          hostility.
           Siege of Diu Raised 
           In 1517 the last of the Mamluk Sultans had
          been overthrown, and Egypt became part of the Ottoman Empire, but it was not
          until 1538 that the new rulers of Egypt made any further attempt to drive the
          Portuguese from the Indian Ocean. In 1537, however, when news reached Egypt of
          the tragic death of Bahadur and the consequent strengthening of the Portuguese
          position in India, the Ottoman Sultan, Suleiman I, grew apprehensive and
          ordered the equipment at Suez of a powerful fleet, which eventually set sail
          under Suleiman Pasha al-Khadim, governor of Cairo,
          and then an old man of eighty-two. His objective was Diu, which was now in the
          sole possession of the Portuguese. His public announcement that he was setting
          out on a holy war against the Franks did not prevent his behaving with the
          utmost treachery and cruelty towards his co-religionist at Aden, where he
          called on his way to India. News of his disgraceful behavior at Aden travelled
          quickly to India, and was doubtless the real cause of his failure against the
          Portuguese, for when he reached Muzaffarabad Khvaja
          Safar, Khudavand Khan, whom Mahmud III had placed in command of a large force
          intended to co-operate with the Pasha, and who was at first inclined to join
          him, was deterred by his friends, who reminded him of the fate of the governor
          of Aden, and although he sent many gifts to the Pasha he persistently evaded a
          personal interview. But though co-operation between the land and sea forces was
          thus incomplete the Portuguese were reduced to great straits. They were driven
          by Khvaja Safar from the city into the fort, which they held with their wonted
          determination. Garcia de Noronha, the newly arrived viceroy, either could not
          or would not understand the situation, and failed to send relief; the defences
          were almost destroyed, and of the original garrison of 600 only forty men
          remained fit to bear arms. Sulaiman Pasha, who had
          been attacking by sea, was unaware, owing to the army's failure to cooperate
          with him, of the desperate situation of the defence and was so discouraged by
          repeated failure and by his losses that when Khvaja Safar, disgusted by the
          arrogance of the Turks, which had convinced him that Gujarat had nothing to
          gain by their taking the place of the Portuguese at Diu, sent him a fabricated
          letter, announcing that the viceroy was about to arrive from Goa with a
          formidable fleet, he sailed away on November 5. Some of his officers remained
          behind and entered the service of Gujarat. Among these were Aqa Farahshad the Turk,
          afterwards entitled Fath Jang Khan, Nasir the African, afterwards entitled Habash Khan, and Mujahid Khan, who occupied Junagarh.
          Khvaja Safar, on Sulaiman Pasha’s departure, set
          fire to the town of Diu and retired.
           Imadul Mulk was now to discover the wisdom of Sadr Khan’s warning. His
          relations with Darya Khan had been growing ever more strained and the latter's
          influence over the feeble king ever stronger. He accompanied the king on an
          excursion, ostensibly for the purpose of hunting, but when well beyond the city
          walls carried him off to Champaner, and sent to Imadul Mulk a royal letter
          directing him to retire to his fiefs in Kathiawar. Imadul Mulk assembled his
          troops and attempted to obtain possession of the king's person in order to
          re-establish his influence over him, but the proceeding so closely resembled
          rebellion that many of his officers deserted him for the royal camp, and he was
          obliged to return to Ahmadabad, whence he retired, with Sadr Khan, to Morvi, his principal fief. In 1540 Darya Khan, carrying
          with him the king, marched against Imadul Mulk, defeated him at Bajana, where Sadr Khan was slain, and drove him into
          Khandesh. Darya Khan followed him, and at Dangri,
          near the Tapti, met Mubarak II, who was prepared to oppose any attempt to enter
          his kingdom. Darya Khan was again victorious, and Imadul Mulk fled to Mandu,
          where Mallu Nasir Khan, appointed governor by Bahadur was now independent, styling
          himself Nasir Shah. At this point Darya Khan and Mahmud III abandoned the
          pursuit and returned to Gujarat.
           Darya Khan was now absolute in the kingdom, but Mahmud had sufficient
          spirit to be sensible of the humiliation of his situation, and enlisted the aid
          of a humble attendant, one Chirji, a fowler, to escape from it. Chirji had
          horses ready one night under the city wall, and the king, leaving his palace at
          midnight, mounted and rode to Dhandhuka, the fief of Alam Khan Lodi, nearly
          sixty miles south-west of Ahmadabad.
           Alam Khan received him with every demonstration of loyalty, and summoned
          to his aid his brother-in-law, Nasiruddin Ulugh Khan of Junagarh, Mujahid Khan
          of Palitana, and other fief-holders. Darya Khan, on
          discovering that the king had escaped him and found a powerful protector,
          renounced the struggle to maintain his ascendancy and sent to the king a
          mission with the royal insignia, elephants, horses, and his own letter of
          resignation; but his old accomplice, Fattuji Muhafiz
          Khan, coming into the city from his fief of Viramgam, met the mission at Sarkhej, turned it back, and persuaded Darya Khan to
          strike a blow for the recovery of his lost supremacy. It was necessary to
          oppose a puppet to the actual king, and a child of obscure origin was accordingly
          proclaimed and carried by Darya Khan with the army which he led against Mahmud
          III and his new protectors.
           The armies met to the south-west of Ahmadabad, in a confused conflict
          which had a strange result. Alam Khan Lodi charged with great impetuosity, cut
          his way through the centre of Darya Khan's army, rode to Ahmadabad with only
          five or six of his men, and took possession of the city in the name of Mahmud
          III. Darya Khan, convinced that Alam Khan's small force had been cut to pieces,
          continued the action with apparent success until it was confidently reported
          that Alam Khan had entered the royal palace, proclaimed his victory over the
          rebels, and let loose a mob of plunderers into his house. He hesitated, and was
          lost. His army fled, and Mahmud marched on into the city, Muhafiz Khan and the
          child who had been proclaimed king fleeing before him. Darya Khan fled to
          Burhanpur and Muhafiz Khan, with his puppet, to Champaner, whither he was followed by Mahmud III and Alam Khan. He was glad to purchase
          life by a speedy surrender and disappeared from the kingdom.
           Overthrow of Alam Khan 
           Mahmud III now returned to Ahmadabad to discover that he had but changed
          one master for another. He insisted, in his gratitude, on promoting Chirji the
          fowler to the rank lately held by Fattuji and
          conferred on him all Fattuji’s possessions, and his
          title of Muhafiz Khan, but the advancement profited the humble bird-catcher
          little, for when he took his seat among the nobles of the kingdom Alam Khan
          Lodi protested, and when Chirji, with the king's support, persisted in
          asserting his right, compassed his death. The manner in which the minister's
          decision was executed indicates the estimation in which the king and his wishes
          were held by his new master. Ashja Khan, Alam Khan's
          brother, entered the royal presence with a dagger in his hand, laid hold of the
          wretched Muhafiz Khan, dragged him forth, and as soon as he had crossed the
          threshold of the hall of audience stabbed him to death. Alam Khan became, of
          course, lieutenant of the kingdom, and Naruddin Burhanul Mulk Bambani was appointed minister. Imadul
          Mulk Malikji returned from Mandu and received Broach as his fief.
           The domination of Alam Khan was even less tolerable than that of Darya
          Khan. The latter had, at least, observed some moderation in the pomp with which
          he surrounded himself, but the former encroached, in this respect, on the royal
          prerogative. A minister whose power was absolute might well have avoided this
          indiscretion and should have understood that a king deprived of his power will
          cling all the more jealously to its outward symbols. Nor was this his greatest
          error. The assassination of the recently ennobled fowler wounded the king's
          affections as well as his honor, and in crushing one presumptuous minister he had
          learned how to deal with another. By a private appeal to the loyalty of some,
          who, though nominally Alam Khan's followers were no less disgusted than the
          king with his arrogance and presumption, he succeeded in ridding himself of his
          new master. On a night when Mujahid Khan was on duty at the palace the king
          persuaded him to assemble his troops, and at break of day rode forth with the
          royal umbrella above his head and proclaimed by a crier that Alam Khan's palace
          might be sacked. The mob broke in, and Alam Khan, roused from a drunken
          slumber, fled in confusion and made the best of his way to Mandu, where he
          joined his former enemy, Darya Khan.
           Mujahid Khan now became lieutenant of the kingdom, with Abdus Samad Afzal Khan as
          minister. Muharram bin Safar was
          entitled Rumi Khan, and others who afterwards became prominent in the state
          received titles. Abdul-Karim became Itimad Khan, Bilal Jhujhar Khan, and Abu Sulaiman Mahalldar Khan.
           Darya Khan and Alam Khan now appeared at Radhanpur with Alauddin Fath
          Khan of the royal line of Sind, whose mother had been a princess of Gujarat,
          and proclaimed him king, but Mahmud attacked and defeated them, and they fled
          again to Mandu, while Fath Khan, who had merely been an instrument in their
          hands, made his excuses to Mahmud and was well received at his court.
           Mahmud, now freed from the domination of ambitious ministers, turned his
          attention to the Portuguese. Khvaja Safar, Khudavand Khan, was governor of
          Cambay, and was ordered to construct a fort at Surat for the protection of the
          maritime trade, which had been much harassed by the Portuguese ever since their
          establishment at Diu. Though much hampered by the Portuguese, who attempted,
          first by force and afterwards by bribery, to prevent its construction, the fort
          was successfully completed according to the principles of fortification then
          obtaining in Europe, and was armed with many guns which had belonged to Sulaiman Pasha's fleet, and had been carried to Junagarh
          by Mujahid Khan.
           Mahmud had not forgotten the death of his uncle, Bahadur, nor its
          authors, and his failure to expel the Portuguese from Diu in 1538 had not
          discouraged him. Khvaja Safar, who maintained an outwardly friendly
          correspondence with them, and was well acquainted with their affairs,
          encouraged his master to make another attempt to recover Diu, but before
          resorting to arms endeavored to gain possession of the fortress by treachery.
          The plot was discovered and Khvaja Safar opened the siege. The fort was small,
          and would accommodate only a small garrison, and Safar’s bombardment caused heavy losses, but the Portuguese fought with unflinching
          valor. They were encouraged by the death, on June 24, 1546, of Khvaja Safar,
          whose head was taken off by a gunshot. He was succeeded in the command by his
          son, Muharram
           Khan, who made desperate efforts to take the place, one assault being
          repulsed with the loss of 2000 men and of Bilal Jhujhar Khan, his second in command, but the numbers of the Portuguese were
          reduced to 200, until a timely reinforcement of 400 men under Alvaro de Castro
          encouraged them to sally forth and attack the enemy. They were repulsed with
          heavy loss, but on November 7 a fleet of nearly 100 sail, under the command of
          Joao de Castro, governor of Portuguese India, appeared off Diu.
           On November 10 the Portuguese attacked in force, and drove the Muslims
          into the city, where they massacred men, women, and children without
          discrimination. The Muslims rallied, but after a bloody fight were defeated
          with the loss of 1500 killed, 2000 wounded, and many prisoners. Muharram Rumi
          Khan and many other officers were among the slain and Jhujhar Khan was
          captured. The loss of the Portuguese was no more than 100, and their booty
          included many standards, forty heavy and a hundred and sixty field and light
          guns, and much ammunition.
           Jahangir Khan fled from the field and carried the mournful news to the
          king, who wept with rage and mortification, and caused twenty-eight Portuguese
          prisoners to be torn to pieces in his presence.
           Successes of the Portuguese 
           Joao de Castro celebrated his victory by a triumph at Goa, his prisoners
          following him in chains, in imitation of the Roman custom, which drew from
          Queen Catherine of Portugal the remark that he had conquered like a Christian
          and triumphed like a heathen.
           The failure of the attack on Diu led to the dismissal, on February 21,
          1547, of the minister, Afzal Khan, in whose place Abdul Halim Khudavand Khan was appointed.
           In September, 1547, Jorge de Menezes landed
          at Broach, burned both the fortress and the city, destroyed such guns as he
          could not carry away, and put the inhabitants to the sword. Later in the year
          the governor, Joao de Castro, with 3000 men, formed the foolhardy resolve of
          landing near Broach and attacking Mahmud, who had assembled a force of 150,000 men
          and eighty guns either in order to renew the attack on Diu or to protect his
          ports from raids, but was dissuaded from the rash act. He sailed of and
          plundered and destroyed some ports on the coasts of Kathiawar and the Konkan,
          carrying much booty back to Goa; and Mahmud, unwilling at length to exasperate
          a power which could at all times descend with impunity on his coasts refrained
          from renewing the attacks on Diu, and in 1548 executed a treaty most
          advantageous to the Portuguese.
           In the same year disputes between Mujahid Khan and Afzal Khan had given
          rise to internal troubles, and it was resolved to recall Asaf Khan, who had
          been in Mecca ever since 1535, when Bahadur had sent him away in charge of his
          harem and treasure. His first reform on assuming office was the formation of a
          powerful bodyguard recruited from the foreign legion and composed of Turks,
          Africans, Javanese, and others, numbering in all 12,000. By this means the
          king's authority was firmly established.
           In 1549 the king made Mahmudabad on the Vatrak his ordinary place of
          residence. The town had been built by his ancestor, Mahmud Begarha, and he
          conceived a liking for its air and surroundings. He enlarged the existing royal
          palace and parceled out land among his nobles, bidding them build palaces and
          houses for themselves. Mallu Qadir Shah of Malwa, who had been expelled from
          his kingdom by Shujaat Khan, Sher Shah's governor, was now at his court, and
          described in detail the beauties of the deer-park of Mandu, inspiring Mahmud to
          lay out a replica of it. Here he lived in great splendor and luxury, indulging,
          besides the usual lusts of an oriental prince, his propensity for powerful and
          poisonous drugs, which he took not only for their intoxicating and stupefying
          effect, but also as aphrodisiacs.
           The raja of Idar had, since Humayun’s invasion, behaved as an
          independent monarch, remitting no tribute, and when, in 1549, a small force was
          sent to demand the arrears due he opposed the royal troops and compelled them
          to retire, but a larger force under Imadul Mulk Aslan Rumi, who had been appointed to the command of the foreign legion, captured
          Idar and compelled the raja to pay tribute. Farahshad,
          one of the Turkish officers who had deserted Sulaiman Pasha, on his withdrawal, acted as Imadul Mulk's standard bearer and behaved
          with great gallantry, for which he was rewarded with the title of Fath Jung
          Khan. In the following year a similar expedition was dispatched to Sirohi, the
          country round about which was plundered; but there was no design, apparently,
          of reducing Sirohi to the condition of a vassal state paying regular tribute.
          In 1551 it was necessary to suppress the predatory Rajputs who infested the
          heart of the kingdom and had murdered a doctor of the law travelling from Palau
          to Ahmadabad. A massacre reduced the survivors to temporary obedience.
           Death of Mahmud III 
           One of Mahmud’s immediate attendants, Burhanuddin, a man who made
          pretensions to piety, and one of whose duties it was to lead the prayers when
          the king was in the field, offended him one day by disrespectful behavior, and
          Mahmud in his wrath sentenced him to death by being bricked up in a wall. The
          barbarous sentence was put into execution, but Mahmud happened to pass while
          the wretch’s head yet protruded, took pity on him, and caused the structure to
          be pulled down. He was much lacerated and injured by the pressure of the mortar
          and rubble, but with care he recovered, and lived to resent his sufferings
          rather than to be grateful for his life. His resentment exhibited itself again
          in disrespect, and the king used language which left no doubt that he would not
          escape the punishment to which he had once been sentenced, but the celebration
          of the prophet Muhammad’s birthday, on February 15, 1554, temporarily diverted
          Mahmud’s attention from the matter. At the conclusion of the feast which marked
          the occasion Mahmud, stupefied with wine and drugs, withdrew to his bedroom,
          where he was attended by Daulat, the nephew and accomplice of Burhanuddin, who
          had also taken the precaution of corrupting the royal bodyguard, known as the
          Lion-slayers. It was an easy matter for Daulat to cut the king’s throat as he
          lay on his bed, and Burhanuddin issued summonses in the king’s name to all the
          chief officers of state. Most obeyed, and were assassinated by the royal
          guards, ten being slain in this manner, including the famous vazir, Asaf
          Khan, but Abdul Karim Itimad Khan suspected
          mischief, and remained at home. Burhanuddin then bestowed titles upon the
          soldiers of the guard and the menial servants of the palace, promised to
          promote them to the principal offices in the kingdom, and in the morning caused
          the royal umbrella to be raised over his head and proclaimed his accession.
           The surviving nobles led their troops to the palace and attacked the
          usurper, who fell at their first onslaught, and then proceeded to determine the
          succession, which was no easy matter, for Mahmud, who had a nervous dread both
          of providing an heir who might be put forward as a competitor for the throne
          and of a disputed succession after his death, had taken the barbarous
          precaution of procuring an abortion whenever a woman of his harem became
          pregnant. Inquiries were made in the harem and it was reported that one child, Khalil Shah, had escaped the cruel law. After the burial
          of Mahmud the nobles demanded the delivery of Khalil Shah, that he might be enthroned, but were informed that a mistake had been
          made, and that there remained no heir to the throne. It would appear that some
          fraud had been intended, but that when the moment arrived the conspirators lost
          heart and abandoned their design.
           Inquiries were made and a young prince entitled Raziul Mulk, the great-grandson of Shakar Khan, a younger
          son of Ahmad I was raised to the throne under the title of Ahmad Shah II.
           The leaders of the nobles who placed Ahmad II on the throne were Itimad
          Khan and Sayyid Mubarak Bukhari, and it was the former who assumed the office
          of regent, while the latter retired to Mahmudabad, which he occupied as his
          fief. All the nobles of the kingdom were virtually independent, and each lived
          on his estate, leaving Itimad Khan to carry on a pretence of administering the whole country in the name of the youthful king.
           The port of Daman was held by one Sayyid Abul Fath, who, as he neither
          paid taxes nor materially acknowledged the central government, could expect no
          support when, in 1559, the Portuguese viceroy, Constantino de Braganza, attacked him, drove him first from Daman and then from Pardi, and established the Portuguese firmly in Daman and Bulsar, securing native support by assigning the customs
          of the former port to the governor of the island of Salsette,
          which was within the dominions of Ahmadnagar.
           Ahmad II was virtually a prisoner in the hands of Itimad Khan, and after
          passing five years in this condition he reached an age at which he became
          sensible of the restraint to which he was subjected, and of the minister's
          usurpation of his rights. He fled and threw himself on the protection of Sayyid
          Mubarak Bukhari at Mahmudabad, where a number of nobles, influenced more by the
          Sayyid’s prestige and by hostility to Itimad Khan than by loyalty to a
          sovereign whom they hardly knew, assembled. Itimad Khan and his partisans
          marched against this confederacy, and the death of Sayyid Mubarak from an arrow
          involved the defeat and dispersal of the army assembled round the king. Ahmad
          wandered for some days a helpless fugitive in the jungles, until he was obliged
          to return to his master, who carried him back to Ahmadabad and imprisoned him
          in the palace.
           Imadul Mulk Aslan and Tatar Khan Ghuri,
          disgusted with Itimad Khan's monopoly of power, dragged forth their guns and
          bombarded his house at Ahmadabad, and the regent fled to Halol,
          near Champaner, taking the young king with him. Here he began to assemble his
          army, and civil war was on the point of breaking out when peacemakers
          intervened and effected a composition whereby Itimad Khan retained the office
          of regent and the custody of the king and the other nobles parcelled out the kingdom among themselves, Imadul Mulk Aslan, Iimad Khan's principal opponent, receiving Broach,
          Champaner, Nandod, and other districts between the Mahi and Narbada rivers. To
          the king was assigned land sufficient for the maintenance of 1500 horse, but
          this was no more than a concession to his vanity, for he remained almost as
          closely guarded as before.
           Itimad Khan could not, however, entirely seclude him, and he used to
          amuse himself by hatching, with those officers who gained access to him, boyish
          plots for the assassination of the regent, and by drawing his sword and
          severing the soft stem of a plantain tree, with the childish boast that he
          could thus cleave in two his tyrant. All this was reported to Itimad Khan, who,
          though he well knew that the boy was incapable of any desperate deed, began to
          fear lest some officer should earn the king's gratitude and the coveted post of
          regent by giving effect to wishes so unreservedly expressed. He therefore, in
          July, 1562, caused Ahmad to be assassinated, and his body to be flung out of
          the citadel into the open space between the river and the house of a noble
          entitled Vajihul Mulk Abuji Tank, and when it was discovered gave out that Ahmad Shah must have gone
          secretly to Vajih-ul-Mulk's
          house on some amorous adventure and have been slain by some injured person
          before he could be recognised.
           Muzaffar III 
           The death of Ahmad II revived the question of the succession, now more
          complicated than ever, as no scion of the royal house was known to exist.
          Itimad Khan solved it by producing a child named Nathu and swearing that he was the son of Mahmud III by a concubine. He explained his
          birth by saying that Mahmud, when he discovered that the concubine was
          pregnant, handed her over to him with instructions to procure an abortion, but
          that he, discovering that the girl was in the sixth month of her pregnancy,
          could not find it in his heart to subject her to an operation which would
          almost certainly be fatal, and retained her in his house, concealing the birth
          of the child and bringing him up in secret. The story was in the last degree
          improbable, for greater facilities for carrying out Mahmud's unnatural orders
          must have existed in the royal harem than elsewhere, and no explanation of the
          preference shown for a collateral when Ahmad II was enthroned was offered, but
          an heir had to be found, for none of the nobles would have submitted to any one
          of their order, and Itimad Khan's oath was accepted and the child was enthroned
          as Muzaffar III.
           The history of Muzaffar’s ten years’ reign is but a record of perpetual
          strife between the great nobles, each of whom was independent in his fief,
          while Itimad Khan retained the office of regent.
           The whole of northern Gujarat, as far south as Kadi, was divided between
          Musa Khan and Sher Khan Fuladi, two Afghans, and Fath Khan, a Baluch; the country between the Sabarmati and the Mai was
          held by Itimad Khan, and Dholka and Dhandhuka by
          Sayyid Miran, son of Sayyid Mubarak Bukhari; Chingiz
          Khan, son of Itimad Khan's enemy, Imadul Mulk Aslan Rumi, held Surat, Nandod, and Champaner, and his brother-in-law, Rustam Khan,
          Broach; and Kathiawar was held by Amin Khan Ghuri.
           A very brief sketch of the conflicts between these factious nobles will
          suffice.
           In 1563 the Afghans Musa Khan and Sher Khan expelled Fath Khan from
          northern Gujarat, and drove him to take refuge with Itimad Khan, who attacked
          the Afghans but was defeated and driven back to Ahmadabad. The Afghans then
          marched to attack him, and he was defeated at Jotana and fled and sought aid of
          Chingiz Khan, who accompanied him to Jotana. No further fighting took place, a
          peace being arranged, but after the nobles had returned to their fiefs Chingiz
          Khan wrote to Itimad Khan, casting doubt on the king’s birth. The regent
          replied that his oath had been accepted, and that Chingiz Khan's father, had he
          been alive, would have corroborated it. Chingiz Khan then openly demanded more
          land for the support of his troops. Itimad Khan evaded the demand by advising
          him to recover the district of Nandurbar, which had formerly belonged to
          Gujarat and was now held by Muhammad II of Khandesh. Chingiz Khan fell into the
          trap and in 1566 marched to Nandurbar, which he occupied, and, encouraged by
          his success, advanced towards Thalner, but was attacked and defeated by
          Muhammad II and Tufal Khan of Berar, and compelled
          to flee to Broach, where he proceeded, in 1568, to reorganize his army, in
          which work he was assisted by the rebellious Mirzas, Akbar's kinsmen, who had
          fled from the empire and sought a refuge in Gujarat. He now resolved to avenge
          himself on Itimad Khan for the trick which he had played him, and marched on
          Ahmadabad, requesting the regent to withdraw to his fiefs, as he was coming to
          pay his respects to the king, and it was undesirable that they should meet in
          the capital. Itimad Khan and the king marched towards Nadiad,
          near which place the armies met. There was no battle, for Itimad Khan, who had
          heard much of the war-like disposition of the Mirzas, was smitten with sudden
          panic, and fled to Dungarpur, whence he sent a message to Akbar, who was then
          before Chitor, inviting him to invade Gujarat.
           The rest of the army dispersed, the Sayyids of Bukhara going to Dholka, Ikhtiyarul Mulk to Mahmurabad, and Ulugh Khan and Marjan Jhujhar Khan with
          the young king to Virpur. Sher Khan Fuladi jealous
          of the power so suddenly acquired by Chingiz Khan, hinted that he required a share of the spoils, and Chingiz Khan, anxious to
          conciliate him, ceded to him all territory to the west of the Sabarmati.
           Muhammad II of Khandesh profited by these disputes to assert his claim
          to the throne of Gujarat, which was certainly less open to suspicion than that
          of Muzaffar III, and invaded the kingdom with an army of 30,000 horse, but was defeated before Ahmadabad by Chingiz Khan and
          the Mirzas and driven back to his own country. Chingiz Khan rewarded the Mirzas
          with extensive fiefs in the Broach district, but in a short time it was
          discovered that they were encroaching on the land of their neighbors and had
          been guilty of cruelty and oppression on their estates. They defeated a force
          sent against them by Chingiz Khan, but retired into Khandesh.
           Akbar invades Gujarat 
           Meanwhile Muhammad Ulugh Khan and Marjan Jhujhar Khan, who had been
          awaiting help from Itimad Khan or from Sher Khan Fuladi were disappointed and,
          joining Ikhtiyarul Mulk, marched with him to Ahmadabad to make their peace with
          Chingiz Khan. A redistribution of fiefs was agreed upon, and Chingiz Khan
          promised to treat the other nobles as his equals in all respects, but neither
          party trusted the other, and Ulugh Khan was warned that Chingiz Khan was
          meditating his assassination. He provided for his safety by inducing Jhujhar
          Khan to decapitate Chingiz Khan with his sword as the three were riding
          together to the polo ground, and he and his partisans took possession of the
          citadel while their troops plundered those of Chingiz Khan, and Rustam Khan
          rode off, with his brother-in-law's corpse, to Broach.
          (For this crime Akbar afterwards, on the complaint of Chingiz Khan's mother,
          caused Jhujhar Khan to be crushed to death by an elephant).
           Ulugh Khan and Jhujhar Khan, who were joined by Sher Khan Fuladi,
          invited Itimad Khan to return to Gujarat, and he assumed the office of regent,
          but there was little confidence between the parties, and Itimad Khan refused to
          leave the capital when the other nobles marched to expel the Mirzas, who had
          returned to Broach and resumed possession of their former fiefs. His suspicions
          were so bitterly resented that those who had recalled him to power agreed to
          divide his fiefs among themselves, but they quarreled over the division of the
          spoil, and Itimad Khan succeeded in detaching Jhujhar Khan and inducing him to
          join him at Ahmadabad. Ulugh Khan joined Sher Khan Fuladi at Ghiyaspur,
          opposite to Sarkhej, on the Sabarmati, and the king,
          taking advantage of these dissensions, fled from Ahmadabad and joined the camp
          at Ghiyaspur. Itimad Khan wrote to Sher Khan, impudently repudiating his own
          solemn oath and asserting that Muzaffar III was not the son of Mahmud III, and that he had therefore deposed him and invited the
          Mirzas from Broach in order that one of them might ascend the throne. The
          Mirzas arrived, and when the quarrels between the two parties had continued for
          some time without any definite result Itimad Khan again invited Akbar to invade
          the country.
           Sher Khan Math was besieging Ahmadabad when the imperial army reached
          Patan, and fled, carrying with him Muzaffar III, when he heard of its arrival.
          The Mirzas at the same time fled to Baroda and Broach, and on Akbar's arrival
          at Ahmadabad Itimad Khan, Ulugh Khan, Jhujhar Khan, and Ikhtiyarul Mulk
          submitted to him and entered his service.
           In 1572 Muzaffar III fled from the camp of Sher Khan Fuladi, who had not
          treated him well, and on November 15 was found by two of the imperial officers
          lurking in the neighborhood of Akbar's camp at Jotana. On November 20 he
          appeared before Akbar, who detained him as a political prisoner, and Gujarat
          was formally annexed to the empire.
           Some time after the annexation Muzaffar was permitted to live in retirement in
          Kathiawar, but in 1583 a rebellion appeared to offer him an opportunity of
          recovering his throne, and he joined the rebels. After ten years of hopeless
          adventure, during the greater part of which time he was a fugitive, he fell
          into the hands of the imperial troops in 1593, and committed suicide by cutting
          his throat.
           
           
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