Tarikh I Muzaffari

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TARIKHIMUZAFFARl, by Muhammad 'All Khan Ansari, is the title of a Persian manuscript of much historical value copies of which are preserved in several libraries in India and abroad. The author belonged to a prominent family of Arab extraction, long resident at Panipat, in presentday Haryana state. His grandfather, Lutfullah Khan Sadiq, a haftliazan mansabdar, had been a minister under emperors Farrukh Siyar and Muhammad Shah and was the governor of Delhi at the time of Nadir Shah's invasion (1739). His father, Hidayatullah Khan had held a panjhazan mansab. Muhammad 'All Khan himself was daroghahi'adalat faujdan (superintendent of criminal court) ofTirhut and Hajipur in Bihar. The work, completed in 1225 AH/AD 1810, is a history of the Indian Timurides, i.e. the Mughals, from the beginning to Emperor Akbar II (180637). The account, sketchy in respect of the period from Babur to Aurangzib, is more detailed in respect of the later Mughals and Nadir Shah and Ahmad Shah Durrani. The author had already written a much larger book, Bahr ulMawwaj in nine parts. The TankhiMuzaffan corresponds to the last part of that work, at places reproducing passages verbatim. Of special interest to students of Sikh history are references in the Tarikh to the Sikhs at two placesthe imperial campaign against Banda Singh Bahadur and the role of the Sikh misis as allies ofJats and Zabita Khan Ruhila against the imperial prime minister Najaf Khan (d. 1782). Unlike some other Muslim chroniclers of the period, Muhammad 'Ah Khan's language is restrained and free from calumny when writing about the Sikhs. The campaign of 'Abd usSamad Khan and his son Zakariya Khan against Banda Singh Bahadur is described in detail. As the imperial forces besieged the Sikh stronghold (at GurdasNangal), they setup an alang, a virtual wall of fortifications around the fortress. Yet Sikhs, says the author, remained undaunted. They came out in day time and they made sallies by night, falling fiercely upon the besiegers and returning to their place of refuge after the attack. The TankhiMuzaffari does not contain the harrowing details of the massacre of Banda Singh, his infant son and his followers, but it doesnarrate the story of a Sikh youth yet in his teens whose widowed mother had managed to secure orders for his release but who, when asked to leave, refused to do so and insisted that he be executed like others, too.

References

1. Kirpal Singh, A Catalogue of Persian and Sanskrit Manuscripts. Amritsar, 1962