Inayetullah Khan

Inayetullah Khān (Bengali: ইনায়েতউল্লাহ খান, Persian: عنایت الله خان, romanized: Inayat Ullah Khan), also known as Enayetullah (Bengali: এনায়েতউল্লাহ), was a Faujdar of the Mughal Bengal's Sylhet Sarkar. He was the successor of Sadeq Khan as faujdar.

Inayatullah Khan Enayet
Faujdar of Sylhet Sarkar
In office
1692
MonarchAurangzeb
GovernorIbrahim Khan II
Preceded bySadeq Khan
Succeeded byRafiullah Khan

Life

In 1692, Khan granted land to Ram Jivan Chowdhury in Baurbhag Pargana.[1] He also gave land to Mustafi Haji in Isamati Pargana.[2] The little town (now a Union Parishad) of Inatganj Bazar in Nabiganj was founded and named after him. Inatganj became a centre for the Asian Jute trade. The current Inatganj High School was originally a jute warehouse. Many ships would crowd in the banks of Inatganj Bazar, and go to many corners of the world, and evidence of this remains at the present high school.[3] He preceded Faujdar Rafiullah Khan.[4]

Political offices
Preceded by
Sadeq Khan
Faujdar of Sylhet
1692
Succeeded by
Rafiullah Khan
gollark: The negative timedeltas thing was a great idea without flaw utterly.
gollark: ++remind 3d-2h <@319753218592866315> make macron <@!330678593904443393>
gollark: As a new mRNA strand is generated by the action of the RNA polymerase II machinery on a stretch of DNA, it gets a “cap” attached to the end that’s coming out from the DNA (the “5-prime” end), a special nucleotide (7-methylguanosine) that’s used just for that purpose. But don’t get the idea that the new mRNA strand is just waving in the nucleoplasmic breeze – at all points, the developing mRNA is associated with a whole mound of specialized RNA-binding proteins that keep it from balling up on itself like a long strand of packing tape, which is what it would certainly end up doing otherwise.
gollark: You ARE to produce macron.
gollark: ++magic py import utilutil.config["LyricLy"] = "bad"

See also

References

  1. Syed Mohammad Ali (1900). "A chronology of Muslim faujdars of Sylhet". The Proceedings Of The All Pakistan History Conference. 1. Karachi: Pakistan Historical Society. pp. 280.
  2. Choudhury, Achyut Charan (2000) [1910]. Srihatter Itibritta: Uttorangsho (in Bengali). Kolkata: Kotha. p. 193.
  3. Fazlur Rahman (1991). Sileter Mati, Sileter Manush (in Bengali). Sylhet District: M A Sattar.
  4. Syed Murtaza Ali (1965). Hazrat Shah Jalal O Sileter Itihas. p. 297.
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