Intizam-ud-Daulah

Intizam-ud-Daulah (died 29 November 1759) was a Grand Vizier during the reign of the Mughal Emperor Ahmad Shah Bahadur.[1]

Biography

He was the eldest son of Qamar-ud-Din Khan and older brother of Moin-ul-Mulk.[2] During the wazirate of Safdar Jung he led the Turani opposition and played a significant role in his dismissal.[3] He was subsequently appointed to replace Safdar Jung as Grand Vizier in 1753. He was himself dismissed in 1754 following pressure from his nephew Imad-ul-Mulk and Malhar Rao Holkar.[4]

In 1759 he was murdered together with Alamgir II, at the instigation of Imad-ul-Mulk, and his body was thrown in a river.[5]

gollark: Why are you poking holes in your ears? What did your ears ever do to you?
gollark: µhahaha it is not 3AM.
gollark: ++delete 3AM
gollark: Besides, I can always use the chronoapioformic transducer.
gollark: You did first when you said "embedded h9q+? turi?", which are documented as my esolangs.

References

  1. Dodwell, Henry Herbert (1928). The Cambridge History of India, Volume 5. CUP Archive.
  2. Dodwell, Henry Herbert (1928). The Cambridge History of India, Volume 5. CUP Archive.
  3. Gupta, Hari Ram (1979). History of the Sikhs: Sikh domination of the Mughal Empire, 1764-1803. University of Virginia.
  4. Dodwell, Henry Herbert (1928). The Cambridge History of India, Volume 5. CUP Archive.
  5. Mīr Taqī Mīr (1999). Zikr-i Mir: The Autobiography of the Eighteenth Century Mughal Poet, Mir Muhammad Taqi ʻMir', 1723-1810. Oxford University Press. ISBN 019564588X.


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