Mubarak shah

  1. Mubarak Shah (Sayyid dynasty)
  2. Complete Biography of Qutb
  3. Fakhruddin Mubarak Shah
  4. Khusrau Khan


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Mubarak Shah (Sayyid dynasty)

[ citation needed] Mubarak Shah (born Mubarak Khan) ( r.1421–1434) was the second Ancestry [ ] Sultan Mubarak Shah was the son of Life [ ] He succeeded his father, Mubarak Khan, he took up the Muizz-ud-Din Mubarak Shah or simply Mubarak Shah. The Sayyids were subservient to chatr (a ceremonial parasol) from the See also [ ] • Notes [ ]

Complete Biography of Qutb

Under the influence of Malik Kafur, Ala-ud-Din had disinherited Khizr Khan and nominated his minor son, Shihab-ud-Din Umar, as his successor. When Ala-ud-Din died, this boy was hardly six. Malik Kafur put this boy on the throne and himself became the regent. Khizr Khan and Shadi Khan were blinded. Mubark Khan, the third son of Ala-ud-Din, who was them about seventeen or eighteen years of age, was imprisoned and Malik Kafur sent his agents to take out his eyes. However, Mubarak bribed those persons and instead of blinding Mubarak, they went back and killed Malik Kafur. After the death of Malik Kafur, Mubarak was appointed regent for Shihab-ud-Din Umar. After about two months, Mubarak dethroned and blinded Shihab-ud-Din Umar and put himself on the throne. This happened on 1st April, 1316. Mubarak took up the title of Qutb-ud-Din Mubarak Shah. After seating himself on the throne, he tried to win over the goodwill of the people. All persons were released. All harsh regulations of his father were cancelled. Those nobles, who had been banished by his father, were called back. ADVERTISEMENTS: A policy of forget and forgive was followed. The lands which were confiscated were given to their levitate owners. Taxes were lowered. Zia-ud-Din Barani tells us that there was no longer fear of any dictation by the state in every matter. Unfortunately, the result of relaxation of controls was that there was a fall in the moral standards of the country and officials. Mubarak Shah also joined...

S4

Mubarak Shah : Dr. Mubarak Shah, Agere Chair Professor of Computer Science, is the founding director of the Computer Visions Lab at UCF. His research interests include: video surveillance, visual tracking, human activity recognition, visual analysis of crowded scenes, video registration, UAV video analysis, etc. Dr. Shah is a fellow of IEEE, AAAS, IAPR and SPIE. In 2006, he was awarded a Pegasus Professor award, the highest award at UCF. He is ACM distinguished speaker. He was an IEEE Distinguished Visitor speaker for 1997-2000 and received IEEE Outstanding Engineering Educator Award in 1997. He received the Harris Corporation's Engineering Achievement Award in 1999, the TOKTEN awards from UNDP in 1995, 1997, and 2000; Teaching Incentive Program award in 1995 and 2003, Research Incentive Award in 2003 and 2009, Millionaires' Club awards in 2005 and 2006, University Distinguished Researcher award in 2007, honorable mention for the ICCV 2005 Where Am I? Challenge Problem, and was nominated for the best paper award in ACM Multimedia Conference in 2005. He is an editor of international book series on Video Computing; editor in chief of Machine Vision and Applications journal, and an associate editor of ACM Computing Surveys journal. He was an associate editor of the IEEE Transactions on PAMI, and a guest editor of the special issue of International Journal of Computer Vision on Video Computing. For more, see Crowd Analysis Particle-based methods for tracking individuals in cro...

Fakhruddin Mubarak Shah

Fakhruddin Mubarak Shah sultan of Bengal (1338-1349). He was the founder of the earliest independent Muslim sultanat in Bengal with his headquarters at the historic city of Sonargaon. This epoch making change in the administration of Bengal was initiated at a period when after the fall of the new Mamluq dynasty the whole realm of Bengal was under the yoke of the Tughlaq sultan of Delhi. Fakhruddin was of Turki origin and appears to belong to the Qaraunah Turks. He was the silahdar (superintendent of armoury) in the service of wali) of Sonargaon. On the death of Bahram Khan in 1337 AD, Fakhruddin emerged to have been the master of the situation, assumed the government of Sonargaon, and having consolidated his position asserted sovereignty the following year. In his coins, Fakhruddin is styled as Al-Sultan al-Azam Fakhr al-duniya wal-din AbuÕl Muzaffar Mubarak-shah al-sultan. (The great Sultan, Pride of the world and of the religion, Father of the conqueror, Mubarak Shah the sultan). Immediately after assumption of sovereignty by Fakhruddin in 1338 AD, Qadr Khan, Tughlaq governor of Lakhnauti, Izzuddin Yahya, muqti of Satgaon, became united in arms under the directives of Delhi Sultan Muhammad Tughlaq, and being reinforced by Firuz Khan, amir of Kara (Koh-i-Jud), marched towards Sonargaon to crush the rebel. Fakhruddin was defeated by the combined forces under Qadr Khan, and was compelled to withdraw from his capital, and took position perhaps to the other side of the Meghna...

Khusrau Khan

Born Died 1320 Spouse Nasiruddin Khusrau Khan was the Khusrau Khan led a successful campaign to reassert Delhi's control over Nasiruddin. However, he was soon deposed by a group of rebels led by the noble Malik Early life [ ] According to the Delhi chronicler naib-i khas-i hajib Malik Shadi. The two brothers acted as passive homosexuals to maintain their status and position. After Alauddin's death in 1316, his slave-general Khusrau Khan, with the former fief of Malik Kafur. Within a year, Khusrau Khan was promoted to the post of Military career under Mubarak Shah [ ] The Another tributary, the Assassination of Mubarak Shah [ ] Chronicler Khusrau Khan also convinced Mubarak Shah to allow him to raise an army of Baradu Hindus by arguing that all other nobles ( maliks) had their own groups of followers. He enlisted several soldiers at Bahilwal (near Tughluq Nama, this army included 10,000 Baradu horsemen, and was commanded by several Hindu chiefs ( rais and ranas). Next, Khusrau Khan contacted officers who resented Sultan Mubarak Shah, and conspired with them to kill the Sultan in the royal palace. He told the Sultan that he wanted his men to be granted access to the palace, so that they could meet him without requiring him to leave the Sultan's company. The Sultan obliged, and subsequently, every night 300-400 Baradus started entering the palace. They assembled in the former chambers of Malik Kafur on the ground floor of the palace, which had been assigned to Khusrau Khan. O...