Khans of Sahiwal

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Khans of Sahiwal
1528–1811
CapitalSahiwal
  TypeMonarchy
History 
 Established
1528
 Disestablished
1811
Today part ofFlag of Pakistan.svg  Pakistan

The Sahiwal Khans are a Baloch family who arrived in India in 1527. Malik Bajar Khan was a minor chieftain in Kach Mekran, the westernmost province of Balochistan. The descendants of Bajar Khan, who had a strong Mughal alliance, spread their principality throughout northern India, and strongly opposed the Sikh and British Empire. [1]

Contents

History

Malik Bajjar Khan was given zamindari rights over the Thal territory about Shahpur by Babur. He settled near Khushab. His son and successor Gul Bhalak Khan obtained from Humayun the territory around Sahiwal. His successors served the Mughal government one after the other. [2] In 1530, he Bajjar Khan died and was succeeded by his son Gul Bhalak Khan, who founded several new villages in the Shahpur region and defeated the Khatk tribes with a great massacre in the place named after the battle, Haddanwala (Haddi bone) from a huge number of those killed, whose bones whitewashed the plain for a long time. The village is now known as Khadali . He received from the Emperor a piece of land around Sahiwal, which he settled and introduced into culture. He died in 1547.

See also

References

  1. Journal of Regional History. Department of History, Guru Nanak Dev University. 1981.
  2. Banga, Indu; Grewal, J. S. (2001). Maharaja Ranjit Singh: The State and Society. Guru Nanak Dev University. ISBN   9788177700299.
  3. Griffin, Lepel Henry (1865). The Panjab Chiefs: Historical and Biographical Notices of the Principal Families in the Territories Under the Panjab Government. T.C. McCarthy.