Lutfullah Shirazi

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MonarchShah Jahan
GovernorShah Shuja
Preceded byNoorullah Khan Herati
Succeeded byUnknown
Lutfullah Khan Shirazi
Faujdar of Kamrup/Shujabad
In office
1656–1658
MonarchShah Jahan
GovernorShah Shuja
Preceded byNoorullah Khan Herati
Succeeded byUnknown
Faujdar of Sylhet
In office
1658–1663
MonarchAurangzeb
GovernorMir Jumla II
Preceded bySultan Nazar
Succeeded byIsfandiyar Beg
Personal details
ChildrenMotiullah Khan (son)
RelativesSunarful (descendant)

Mīr Lutfullāh Khān Bahādur Shirāzī (Persian: مير لطف الله خان بهادر شيرازي, Bengali: মীর লুৎফুল্লাহ খান বাহাদুর শিরাজী, Meitei: ꯃꯤꯔ ꯂꯨꯠꯐꯨꯜꯂꯥꯍ ꯈꯥꯟ ꯕꯍꯥꯗꯨꯔ ꯁꯤꯔꯥꯖꯤ), was a Mughal official who held a number of positions during his life such as the Faujdar of Shujabad Sarkar from 1656 to 1658 and the faujdar of Sylhet Sarkar up until 1663.

Ahom King Sukhrungphaa is said to have continued to pay great attention to Powa-Makkah Mosque in Hajo even after the Mughal expulsion in 1682.

Shirazi was of Persian descent, originally from the Iranian city of Shiraz.[1]

Career

Shah Jalal's mausoleum.

Documents show that Shirazi was a commander for the Subahdar of Bengal, Shah Shuja. He succeeded Noorullah Khan Herati as Faujdar of Shujabad Sarkar (Kamrup region) in 1656. In 1657, Shirazi built the hilltop mosque at Hajo, known as Powa-Makkah Barmaqam. It contained the shrine of Ghiyath ad-Din Awliya, an Iraqi prince and preacher commonly credited for introducing Islam to the region.[2] Shirazi was a disciple of Shah Syed Niamatullah of Karnal and he was visited by the Shah in this mosque according to inscriptions.[3][4]

As Mir Jumla's invasion of Assam commenced, Shirazi fled from Guwahati to Dhaka in 1658 after the Ahoms and the Koch Biharis rebelled, being led by their rulers Supangmung and Pran Narayan respectively. In Dhaka, he was then appointed the faujdar of Sylhet Sarkar and migrated there, replacing Sultan Nazar. In 1660, he established a strong enclosure in the Shah Jalal Dargah in Sylhet town and also built a small mosque next to it. The Persian inscription stating this is still in existence today.[5][6]

He granted Pandit Raghunath Bisharad of Shamshernagar three and a half haals of land in Ita Pargana in 1663.[7][8]

Legacy

See also

References

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