Nawab of Masulipatnam | |
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History | |
The Nawabs of Masulipatam ruled under the Nizam in eastern India. The best known of them was Nawab Haji Hassan Khan.
Their title later became Nawab of Banganapalle as they shifted from Masulipatam to Banganapalle. They belong to the Najm-i-Sani Dynasty.
Nawab | reign |
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Nawab Ali Quli Khan Bahadur | |
Nawab Muhammad Taqi Khan Bahadur | |
Nawab Hasan Ali Khan Bahadur | (1731–1771) |
Subhan Bakhsh | (1771–1799) |
Qutb ud-Daula | (1799–?) |
Nawab Muhammad Ali Khan Bahadur | (?–1853) |
Nawab Daud Ali Khan Bahadur | (1853–1883) |
Nawab Husain Ali Khan Bahadur | (1883–?) |
Nawab Jaafar Ali Khan Bahadur | |
Nawab Faiz Ali Khan Bahadur, was a ruler of the princely state of Banganapalle, including the Chenchelimala territory.
The CarnaticSultanate was a kingdom in South India between about 1690 and 1855, and was under the legal purview of the Nizam of Hyderabad, until their demise. They initially had their capital at Arcot in the present-day Indian state of Tamil Nadu. Their rule is an important period in the history of the Carnatic and Coromandel Coast regions, in which the Mughal Empire gave way to the rising influence of the Maratha Empire, and later the emergence of the British Raj.
Haji Hassan Khan was Nawab of Masulipatam. He was second son of Nawab Muhammad Taqi Khan Bahadur who in turn was Nawab of Masulipatam.
Subhan Bakhsh was son of Nawab Hasan Ali Khan Bahadur, and succeeded him as Nawab of Masulipatam in India.
Muhammad Ali Khan, popularly known as Nawab Muhammad Ali Khan Bahadur, was perhaps the most well known and reputed Nawab of Masulipatam in India. He was preceded by Qutb Ud Daula. The Nawabs of Masulipatam ruled under the Nizam in east India. The title was later known as Nawab of Banganapalle, as they family shifted from the region of Masulipatam to the territory of Banganapalle. Nawab Muhammad Ali Khan Bahadur belongs to the dynasty of Najm-i-Sani.
Daud Ali Khan Bahadur was Nawab of Masulipatam in India. He was son of Nawab Muhammad Ali Khan Bahadur.
Husain Ali Khan Bahadur was Nawab of Masulipatam in India.
Nawab Muhammad Taqi Khan Bahadur was Nawab of Masulipatam. He attacked Sisupalgarh town in 1731.
Nawab Ali Quli Mirza Bahadur was the ancestor of Nawabs of Banganapalle and Masulipatam. He belongs to The Najm-i-Sani Dynasty.
Nawab Jaafar Ali Khan Bahadur was son of Nawab Husain Ali Khan Bahadur. Although he did not rule in Masulipatam, he was given the title Nawab of Masulipatam and Khan Bahadur.
Muhammad Beg Khan-e Rosebahani was Qiladar and Jagirdar of Banganapalle. He was a supposed uncle of Imad ul-Mulk, Nawab Khwaja Muhammad Mubariz Khan Bahadur, Hizbar Jang, sometime Subadar of the Deccan and Wazir. In 1665, he was appointed as Qiladar of Banganapalle Fort and granted the surrounding districts in jagir by the Sultan of Bijapur. He died in 1686.
Nawab Fazl Ali Khan III Bahadur was Nawab of Banganapalle between 1758 and 1769. But his possessions was confirmed only in 1765.
Husain Ali Khan Bahadur was Nawab of Banganapalle between 1769 and 1783. He belonged to the Naqdi Dynasty.
Nawab Syed Ghulam Muhammad Ali Khan I Bahadur Mansur-Ud-Daullah was twice Nawab of Banganapalle in India.
Nawab Sayyid Husain Ali II Khan Bahadur abducted his father and succeeded him as Nawab of Banganapalle in 1822, a position he held for ten years until 1832.
Nawab Sayyid Asad Ali Khan Bahadur was Nawab of Chenchelimala between 1765 and 1791. He was son of Sayyid Muhammad Ali Khan Naqdi who was acted as Nawab of Banganapalle and Chenchelimala for Nawab Fazl Ali Khan III Bahadur.
The Najm-i-Sani dynasty was a Muslim dynasty of rulers in India. It is founded by Nawab Ali Quli Khan Bahadur, who was minister to Emperor Aurangzeb, and founder of the following lines:
Fāʾiz is a male Arabic name meaning "successful" and "victorious" overflowing, plenty.
Banganapalle State was one of the princely states of India during the period of the British Raj. The state was founded in 1665 and had its capital in Banganapalle. Its rulers were Shia Muslims and the last one signed the accession to the Indian Union on 23 February 1948.
Turkic peoples have historically been associated as one of the non-indigenous peoples to have ruled areas of the Indian subcontinent. Modern day Turkish people in India, on the other hand, are very small in number, and are recent immigrants from Turkey. In the 1961 census, 58 people stated that their mother tongue was Turkish. According to the 2001 census, 126 residents of India stated their place of birth as Turkey. In a state visit during early 2010, Prime Minister Abdullah Gül of Turkey met Turkish expatriates living in India and handed out Hindi-Turkish dictionaries to Turkish students in New Delhi.