Dilawar Khan

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Dilawar Khan
'Amid Shāh Dā'ūd
1st Sultan of Malwa
Reign1401–1406
Coronation1401
PredecessorPosition established
(himself as Governor of Malwa)
SuccessorHoshang Shah
Governor of Malwa
Reign1392–1401
PredecessorPost established
SuccessorPosition abolished (himself as
Sultan of Malwa)
Died1406
Dhar
Malwa Sultanate
(present-day Madhya Pradesh, India)
DynastyGhurid dynasty

Dilawar Khan was a governor of the

khutba to be read in his name in A.H. 804/C.E. 1401–02, declaring himself independent and establishing the Malwa Sultanate.[4] He passed his kingdom – the Malwa Sultanate – to his son Hoshang Shah upon his death in A.H. 809/C.E. 1406.[5]

Dilawar Khan was a follower of

Firuz Shah Tughluq's son, Muhammad ibn Firuz, later known as Muhammad Shah.[6] He was imprisoned by the court officials at Delhi for his support for the rebel prince. Not only Dilawar Khan, but many important provincial governors, such as that of Gujarat, and various other important and powerful nobles of the court supported the Prince's claim to the throne. After Timur's invasion in 1398, the same prince, who was the then Sultan of Delhi, ran away from the capital and sought shelter, first in the Gujarat Sultanate, but receiving a less than enthusiastic response there, moved to the Malwa Sultanate. Dilawar Khan is said to have welcomed him with open arms and told him that his Sultanate and treasure was all for the service of the Delhi Sultan. Dilawar Khan went to war with the Jaunpur Sultanate after its founder Malik Sarwar declared himself independent from Delhi however his forces were defeated and forced to retreat.[7]

References

Citations
  1. .
  2. .
  3. ^ Day (1965), pp. 8-24.
  4. ^ Day (1965), p. 21.
  5. ^ Tarikh-i-Muhammadi, and conclusions derived from U.N. DAY, Medieval Malwa.
  6. ^ Muhammad Bihamad Khani, Tarikh-i-Muhammadi, translated portions by Zaki Khan, CAS, Aligarh
  7. ^ Day, Medieval Malwa.
Bibliography