Khwaja Hafizullah

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Reign1780–1815
PredecessorMoulvi Khwaja Abdullah
Khwaja Hafizullah
Zamindar of Dacca
Reign1780–1815
PredecessorMoulvi Khwaja Abdullah
SuccessorKhwaja Alimullah
Born1735
Rawalakot, Durrani Empire
Died1815(1815-00-00) (aged 79–80)
Dacca, Bengal Presidency
Burial
HouseDhaka Nawab Family
FatherMoulvi Khwaja Abdullah

Khwaja Hafizullah Kashmiri (1735–1815),[1] also known as Moulvi Hafizullah, was an 18th-century merchant of Kashmiri origin. He and his nephew, Khwaja Alimullah, were the founding members of the Dhaka Nawab Estate, the largest zamindari held by any landholder in Eastern Bengal during the British colonial period.[2]

He was the youngest of six children.[1] His father was Moulvi Khwaja Abdullah (d. 1796), while his mother was the daughter of Khwaja Abdul Salam.[1] His paternal grandparents were Khwaja Abdul Kader Kashmiri and Asuri Khanam.[1] The father of Asuri Khanam was Khwaja Abdul Hakim Kashmiri.[1]

House of Hafizullah on the bank of Buriganga River (1847 lithograph)

Hafizullah collaborated with the Greek and Armenian merchants in Dhaka and developed a business in hides, skins, salt and spices. Under the act of the Permanent Settlement of Bengal, he bought some lots for the estate. In 1806, he acquired his first lot in the Atia pargana in the then Mymensingh district for a 4-anna share of a mortgage bond for Rs. 40,000.[2] In 1812, he bought Aila Phuljhuri in the Sundarbans of about 44,000 acres for Rs. 21,000 at a revenue demand of Rs. 372 per year.[2]

References

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