Ayub Khan (Emir of Afghanistan)
Mohammad Ayub Khan غازي محمد ايوب خان | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Emir of Afghanistan | |||||
Emir of Afghanistan | |||||
Reign | 12 October 1879 – 31 May 1880 | ||||
Predecessor | Mohammad Yaqub Khan | ||||
Successor | Abdur Rahman Khan | ||||
Born | 1857 Kabul, Emirate of Afghanistan | ||||
Died | 7 April 1914 (aged 56–57) Lahore, Punjab, British India[1] | ||||
Burial | 1914 Peshawar, British India | ||||
Issue | Sardar Abdul Qadir Khan El-Effendi
Sardar Akram Khan Sardar Abdul Samad Khan | ||||
| |||||
Barakzai dynasty | |||||
Father | Sher Ali Khan | ||||
Mother | Momand |
Ghazi Mohammad Ayub Khan (
In Afghanistan, he is remembered as the "National Hero of Afghanistan."[4]
Early life
Khan was born into a
Second Anglo-Afghan war
During the second Anglo-Afghan war, Afghans under the command of Ayub Khan clashed with Anglo-Indian troops at Maiwand on 27 July 1880 and emerged victorious.[5] The Afghan victory at Maiwand was strategically significant for Afghanistan as it saved the country from getting dismembered by Britain, and saved Qandahar from a permanent British occupation. The defeat at Maiwand also compelled the British to withdraw from Qandahar. After the battle, the Afghans buried the dead Anglo-Indian soldiers and erected a monument in their honor and memory.[5]
Ayub Khan later went on to besiege the better equipped British forces at
After second Anglo-Afghan war
A year later, Ayub again tried to take Kandahar, this time from
- "Ayub Khan had an opportunity of realizing his strength as an independent ruler in Afghanistan. Certain tribes in Kushk district having revolted, he desired to send a force from Herat to punish them; but when he asked his men to march, they refused, because he had not paid them for a long time."
- From The Twillingate Sun, Thursday, 3 February 1881.
He escaped to
Death
He died in Lahore in 1914[1] and is buried in Peshawar near the shrine of Sheikh Habib at Durrani graveyard in Peshawar, Pakistan.[4]
Legacy
In Afghanistan, he is remembered as the "National Hero of Afghanistan." He had eleven wives, fifteen sons, and ten daughters.[4] Several of his descendants have served in various capacities in Pakistan. Two of his grandsons, Sardar Hissam Mahmud el-Effendi and Sardar Muhammad Ismail Khan, served with the rank of Brigadier in the Pakistan Army.[5]
Sardar Hissam Mahmud el-Effendi
Sardar Hissam Mahmud el-Effendi was a grandson of Ayub Khan.
After retiring from the military, he became a polo player and organised Pakistani polo for over twenty years, with leading teams invited to play from abroad.[6] He died in August 1983 in Lahore, and had two sons.[citation needed] One of his sons, Sardar Azmarai Javaid Hissam el-Effendi, was a professional polo player. He also coached the Pakistani polo team from 2003 to 2007 and was awarded Tamgha-e-Imtiaz in 1996 by the government of Pakistan.[citation needed]
References
- ^ ISBN 978-1400858910.
- ^ Hamid. "Afghanistan Monarchs". afghanistantourism.net. Archived from the original on 2012-03-27. Retrieved 2011-07-14.
- ^ Wahid Momand. "Leaders". Afghanland.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-09. Retrieved 2011-07-14.
- ^ a b c d various. "Cities". The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed.
- ^ a b c d Arwin Rahi. The legacy of Sardar Mohammad Ayub Khan – The Victor of Maiwand. Express Tribune. 15 July 2021. Archived version
- ^ a b c d "When the Pakistan Army Polo Team went to India in 1955". The Friday Times. 15 March 2019. Archived from the original on 29 December 2019.
The unmistakable figure next to Sher Ali is Brigadier Sardar H.M. el-Effendi. He was of Afghan ancestry, the grandson of Sardar Ayub Khan, who defeated the British at the Battle of Maiwand in 1880, during the second Anglo-Afghan war
- ^ ISBN 9780195472035.
- ^ a b c "Prisoners of Aversa". The Friday Times. 19 February 2019.
- ^ a b Chisholm 1911.
- ^ Conflict in Afghanistan:A Historical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 35.
- ^ Skelton & Bulloch 1912, p. 395.
- ^ "Sahabzada Yaqub-Khan Of Pakistan (1920–2016)". Criterion Quarterly. 7 September 2016.
Lieutenant Sardar Hissamuddin Mahmud El-Effendi, a scion of the Afghan royal family, was assigned to the 11th PAVO Cavalry.
- Sources
- Skelton, Constance Oliver; Bulloch, John Malcolm (1912). Gordons under Arms: A Biographical Muster Roll of Officers named Gordon in the Navies and Armies of Britain, Europe, America and in the Jacobite Risings. Aberdeen University Studies No. 59. Aberdeen: Printed for the University.
- Attribution
Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.