Inayat Khan (historian)

Inayat Khan (1628-1671) was a historian during the Mughal Empire. In his work the Shahjahannama he chronicled the life of Mughal emperor Shah Jahan.

Inayat Khan
BornMuhammad Tāhīr
1628
Agra, Mughal Empire, now Uttar Pradesh, India
Died1671 (aged 43)
Kashmir, Mughal Empire
Notable worksShahjahannama
Years active1635–1666

Birth and early days

Inayat Khan was born in 1628, the same year that Mughal emperor Shah Jahan came to the throne. In 1635, the seventh year of his life, he received as he informs us, "a suitable mansab". He was sent to join his father in Kashmir while he was Mughal governor there. He was afterwards a "Darogha" and subsequently had an office in the Imperial Library.

Family

Zafar Khan, father of Inayat Khan was Wazir of Jahangir. In the reign of Shah Jahan, he was at one time ruler of Kabul, and afterwards of Kashmir, during which latter government he effected the conquest of Tibet. Later period, he was appointed to the administration of Thatta. He was celebrated as a poet, as a patron of letters, and as a just and moderate ruler.

Inayat Khan's maternal grandfather, Saif Khan, was governor of Agra, and when Shah Shuja (Mughal prince) appointed ruler of Bengal and Bihar in 1641, Saif Khan was sent thither to conduct the administration until the arrival of the Shah Shuja (Mughal prince).

Later days

Inayat Khan was a close friend of Shah Jahan. After retirement he settled in Kashmir, where he died in 1666.[1]

gollark: I can barely visualise things but not in detail. I also have really good memory for random facts but not life events, and excellent short term verbal memory but awful picture/number memory. Which is odd since those are meant to be correlated.
gollark: That isn't the halting problem and I disagree.
gollark: Regular polyhedra.
gollark: Do you know what that is?
gollark: They're meant to test some underlying general intelligence factor. Correlates quite well with stuff.
  • "Shah Jahan-nama of Inayat Khan". Archive.org. pp. 79–128.

References

  1. Henry Miers, Elliot (1875). Shah Jahan. Lahore, British Raj: Sheikh Mubarak Ali & Sons. pp. 79–81.
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