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Mianwal Movement

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mughal Conquest of Sindh
Datec. 1600–1737
Location
Sindh (modern-day Pakistan)
Result

Kalhora victory

Territorial
changes
Sindh seceded under the Kalhora dynasty
Belligerents
Kalhora dynasty
Commanders and leaders
Mians:
Adam Shah Kalhoro
Daud Khan Kalhoro
Ilyas Muhammad Kalhoro
Shahul Muhammad Kalhoro
Nasir Muhammad Kalhoro
Deen Muhammad Kalhoro
Yar Muhammad Kalhoro
Noor Mohammad Kalhoro

Emperors:
Akbar
Jahangir
Shah Jahan
Aurangzeb
Azam Shah
Bahadur Shah I
Jahandar Shah
Farrukhsiyar
Rafi ud-Darajat
Shah Jahan II
Muhammad Shah


  • Patar Das Khattari
  • Jani Beg Tarkhan
  • Ghazi Beg Tarkhan
  • Abd al-Razzaq Mamuri
  • Mirza Rustam Safavi
  • Tash Beg Qurchi
  • Shamsher Khan
  • Shah Beg Arghun II
  • Bayazid Bukhari
  • Shahryar Mirza
  • Abu Saeed
  • Isa Khan Tarkhan II
  • Khwaja Baqi Khan
  • Hussam al-Din Anju
  • Mir Abul Baqi
  • Yusuf Khan Tashqandi
  • Daulat Khan Mayi
  • Tamar Ghayrat Khan
  • Shad Khan
  • Mughal Khan
  • Sardar Khan Shahjahani
  • Zafar Khan Ahsanullah
  • Sipihr Shikoh
  • Qabad Khan Akhur
  • Yadgar Lashkar Khan
  • Abd al-Razzak Gilani
  • Ghazanfer Khan
  • Abu Nusrat Khan
  • Saadat Khan
  • Khana Zaad Khan
  • Sardar Khan
  • Murid Khan
  • Zabardast Khan
  • Hifzullah Khan
  • Saeed Khan
  • Amin al-Din Khan Husayn
  • Yusuf Khan Tirmizi
  • Ahmad Yar Khan
  • Atur Khan Bahadur
  • Mahin Khan
  • Shakir Khan
  • Muhammad Khalil Khan
  • Yaqub Kashmiri
  • Shujaat Khan Shafi
  • Lutf Ali Khan
  • Azam Khan
  • Mahabat Khan
  • Sultan Mahmud Khan
  • Saifullah Khan
  • Sadiq Ali Khan
  • Dilerdil Khan
  • Himmet Dilerdil Khan

The Mianwal Movement (Sindhi: ميانوال تحريڪ Sindhi pronunciation: [miːʔŋʋaːl təhriːk]) was a 17th and 18th century socialist, political and religious movement led by the Mians of the Kalhora tribe against the representatives of the Mughal Empire in the Thatta Subah.[1][2][3] The movement led to the succession of the Kalhora as the sixth independent dynasty to rule over Sindh.[4][5][6][7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Chandio, Nornag; Chandio, Dr Amir Ali (2021). "MIANWAL TAHREEK (MOVEMENT) AS A STRUGGLE FOR THE INDEPENDENCE OF SINDH DURING MUGHAL RULE". Grassroots. 55 (II). doi:10.52806/grassroots.v55iII.4280. ISSN 2521-456X.
  2. ^ "Unsung Mianwal Hero". The Friday Times. 2020-10-23. Retrieved 2025-01-10.
  3. ^ "Sentinels of Sindh". The Friday Times. 2019-10-11. Retrieved 2025-01-10.
  4. ^ "Gaji Shah Mazar, Dadu". heritage.eftsindh.com. Retrieved 2025-01-10.
  5. ^ "Kingdom Of The Kalhora: A Glorious Past And Melancholic Present". The Friday Times. 2024-03-18. Retrieved 2025-01-10.
  6. ^ Newspaper, From the (2011-08-13). "Kalhora dynasty: important part of Sindh's history". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 2025-01-10.
  7. ^ "Tomb of Yar Muhammad Kalhoro". Naqoosh-e-Javidan. 2024-02-02. Retrieved 2025-01-10.