Ghiyasuddin Azam Shah

Ghiyasuddin Azam Shah (Bengali: গিয়াসউদ্দীন আজম শাহ) was the third Sultan of Bengal and the Ilyas Shahi dynasty.[1] He was one of the most prominent medieval Bengali sultans. He established diplomatic relations with the Ming Empire of China, pursued cultural contacts with leading thinkers in Persia and conquered Assam.[2]

Ghiyasuddin Azam Shah
Sultan
Tomb of Ghiyasuddin Azam Shah in Sonargaon, Bangladesh
3rd Sultan of Bengal
Reign1390–1411
PredecessorSikandar Shah
SuccessorSaifuddin Hamza Shah
HouseIlyas Shahi dynasty
ReligionIslam

Reign

Ghiyasuddin Azam Shah became the Sultan of Bengal after his own forces overthrew and killed his father Sultan Sikandar Shah at the Battle of Goalpara in 1390, despite Azam Shah ordering them not to kill his father.[3] During the early part of his reign, he conquered and occupied Kamarupa in modern-day Assam. His interests included establishing an independent judiciary and fostering Persianate and Bengali culture.

Diplomatic and regional affairs

The Sultan pioneered diplomatic relations with China by sending embassies to the Ming dynasty court in Peking. He exchanged envoys and gifts with the Yongle Emperor. Bengal was interested in establishing a strategic partnership with China to counter the influence of its neighbors, including the Delhi Sultanate. The Chinese mediated in several regional disputes. The Sultan also built strong relations with the Sultanate of Jaunpur in North India. He sent envoys to the Hejaz and financed the construction of madrasas in Mecca and Medina.[4][5]

Excerpt from Divan-e-Hafez

ساقی حدیث سرو و گل و لاله می‌رود
Sāqī hadīth-e-sarv-o-gul-o-lālah mī-ravad
O Saqi (cup-bearer)! The tale of the cypress, the rose and the tulip is going on
وین بحث با ثلاثه غساله می‌رود
Vīñ bahth bā-thalāhta-e-ġhassālah mī-ravad
And with the three washers (of cups), this dispute is going on
شکرشکن شوند همه طوطیان هند
Shakkar-shikan shavand hamah tūtiyān-e-hind
All the parrots [poets] of Hind have become sugar-shattering [excited]
زین قند پارسی که به بنگاله می‌رود
Zīñ qand-e-pārsī kih bah-bangālah mī-ravad
That this Persian candy [ode], to Bengal is going [on].
حافظ ز شوق مجلس سلطان غیاث دین
Hāfiz ze shauq-e-majlis-e-Sultāñ Ġhiyāth-e-Dīñ
Of love for the assembly of the Sultan Ghiyasu-d-Din, oh Hafiz
غافل مشو که کار تو از ناله می‌رود
Be not silent. For, from lamenting, your work is going on

  A poem jointly penned by the Sultan and Persian poet Hafez.

Literary patron

Ghiyasuddin was a patron of scholars and poets. Among others, the Persian poet Hafez kept correspondences with him. Shah Muhammad Sagir, a Muslim Bengali poet, wrote his famous work, Yusuf-Zulekha, during Ghiyasuddin's reign. The Hindu poet, Krittibas Ojha, also translated the Ramayana in Bengali as Krittivasi Ramayan during his reign.

gollark: The main worry is unrealistically *high* grades, I think.
gollark: But people said "HOW DARE YOU GIVE ME BAD GRADES AAAAAAA THE MAGIC ALGORITHM IS BIASED AGAINST ME AAAAAA"
gollark: There WAS some kind of standardization process.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Which seems kind of æææææ.

See also

Preceded by
Sikandar Shah
Sultan of Bengal
1390–1410
Succeeded by
Saifuddin Hamza Shah

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.