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Mian Noor Muhammad Khan Kalhoro (6 August 1698 – 19 June 1755) (Sindhi: مياں نور محمد خان ڪلهوڙو) ruled over Sindh as Subahdar of the Mughal Emperor from 1719 till 1737. He then consolidated his power over the entire of Sindh, subjugating Bakhar Sarkar (Northern Sindh), Sehwan Sarkar (Central Sindh), and Thatta Sarkar (Southern Sindh), and thus established a sovereign state, independent of Mughal suzerainty.
Noor Muhammad Khan Kalhoro نور محمد خان ڪلهوڙو | |||||
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Khuda Yar Khan Mian | |||||
1st Nawab of Sindh | |||||
Reign | 1737 – 19 June 1755 | ||||
Predecessor | Position established (Sadiq Ali Khan as Mughal Subahdar) | ||||
Successor | Muhammad Muradyab Khan | ||||
Born | 6 August 1698 | ||||
Died | 19 June 1755 Jaisalmer, Kingdom of Jaisalmer (present-day Jaisalmer, Rajasthan, India) | (aged 56)||||
Issue | Muhammad Muradyab Khan
Mian Ghulam Shah Sadik Ali Abdul Nabi Ghulam Nabi Athar Muhammad | ||||
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House | Kalhora dynasty | ||||
Father | Yar Muhammad Kalhoro | ||||
Religion | Sunni Islam |
In 1737, Kalhoro assumed the title of Kalhora Nawab of Sindh and was given the title Nawab Khuda-Yar Khan by the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah.[1] In 1739, during Nader Shah's invasion of India, Mian fled to Umerkot for shelter but was captured by the King of Iran. Mian Noor Mohammad Kalhoro sent a small force to assassinate Nader Shah and turn events in favor of the Mughal Emperor during the Battle of Karnal in 1739, but this plot failed.
References
edit- ^ Frances Pritchett. "XIX. A Century of Political Decline: 1707-1803, part2_19". Columbia.edu. Retrieved 2011-11-05.