Ibrahim Adil Shah II explained

Ibrahim Adil Shah
Sultan
Succession:6th Sultan of Bijapur
Reign:17 August 1579 – 12 September 1627
Full Name:Abdul Muzaffar Ibrahim Adil Shah Jagadguru Badshah
Predecessor:Ali Adil Shah I
Successor:Mohammed Adil Shah
Spouse:Chand Sultana (daughter of Ibrahim Qutb Shah)
Kamal Khatun
Taj Sultan
Sundar Mahal
Daughter of Dasu Pandit
Issue:Durvesh Badshah
Sultan Sulaiman
Muhammad Adil Shah
Khizar Shah
Zahra Sultana
Burhan
Sultan Begum
Fatima Sultana
Dynasty:Adil Shahi dynasty
Father:Tahamasp
Mother:Haji Badi Sahiba Begum
Birth Date:c. 1570
Death Date:12 September 1627 (aged 56-57)
Death Place:Bijapur
Place Of Burial:Ibrahim Rauza
Religion:Sunni Islam[1]

Ibrahim Adil Shah II (1570 – 12 September 1627) was Sultan of the Sultanate of Bijapur and a member of the Adil Shahi dynasty. Under his reign the dynasty had its greatest period[2] as he extended its frontier as far south as Mysore. He was a skilful administrator, artist, poet[3] and a generous patron of the arts. He reverted to the Sunni orthodoxy of Islam,[4] but remained tolerant of other religions, including Christianity. However, during his reign high-ranking Shiite immigrants became unwelcome[5] and in 1590, he ordered the confinement of criers who read the khutba in the Shia form.[6] After his reign, increasing weakness permitted Mughal encroachment and the successful revolt of the Maratha king Shivaji, who killed the Bijapur general Afzal Khan and scattered his army. The dynasty left a tradition of cosmopolitan culture and artistic patronage whose architectural remains are to be seen in the capital city of Bijapur.

Early life

Ibrahim Adil Shah (the father of Ali Adil Shah I) had divided power between the Sunni nobles, the Habshis and the Deccanis. However, Ali Adil Shah favoured the Shi'i.[7]

Monarchy

After the death of Ali Adil Shah I in 1580, the kingdom's nobles appointed Imran Ibrahim, son of Imran Sayzada Tahmash Adil Shah and nephew of Ali Adil Shah I, as king. At this time, Ibrahim Adil Shah II was a nine-year-old boy.[8]

Siege

Kamal Khan (a Deccani general) seized power and became the regent.[8] Kamal Khan showed disrespect to the Dowager queen Chand Bibi, who felt that he had ambitions to usurp the throne. Chand Bibi plotted an attack against Kamal Khan, with help from another general, Haji Kishvar Khan. Kamal Khan was captured while fleeing and was beheaded at the fort.

The Regents

Kishvar Khan was the second regent of Ibrahim. He defeated the Ahmadnagar Sultanate at Dharaseo, capturing all the artillery and elephants of the enemy army. He ordered other Bijapur generals to surrender the highly valued elephants that they had captured. The generals, along with Chand Bibi, hatched a plan to eliminate Kishvar Khan with help from General Mustafa Khan of Bankapur. Kishvar Khan's spies informed him of the conspiracy. Kishvar Khan sent troops against Mustafa Khan, who was captured and killed in the battle.[8]

De facto rulers

Chand Bibi challenged Kishvar Khan, who had her imprisoned at the Satara fort and tried to declare himself the king. However, Kishvar Khan was already unpopular among the rest of the generals. He was forced to flee when a joint army, led by General Ikhlas Khan, marched to Bijapur. The army consisted of forces of three Habshi nobles: Ikhlas Khan, Hamid Khan and Dilavar Khan.[7] Kishvar Khan attacked Ahmednagar unsuccessfully and then fled to Golconda. He was killed in exile by a relative of Mustafa Khan. Chand Bibi was then declared the regent.[8]

Ikhlas Khan became regent for a short time, but he was dismissed by Chand Bibi shortly afterwards. Later, he resumed his dictatorship, which was soon challenged by other Habshi generals.[7]

Attack on Bijapur

Taking advantage of the situation in Bijapur, Ahmadnagar's Nizam Shahi sultan allied with the Qutb Shahi of Golconda to attack Bijapur. The troops available at Bijapur were not sufficient to repulse the joint attack.[8] The Habshi generals realised that they could not defend the city alone and tendered their resignations to Chand Bibi.[7] Abu-ul-Hassan, a Shi'a general appointed by Chand Bibi, called for the Maratha forces in Carnatic. The Marathas attacked the invaders' supply lines,[8] forcing the Ahmednagar-Golconda allied army to retreat.

Ikhlas Khan then attacked Dilavar Khan to seize control of Bijapur. However, he was defeated and Dilavar Khan became the supreme ruler from 1582 to 1591.[7] He was the last regent of Ibrahim.

Ibrahim Adil Shah's reign

The fifth king of the Adil Shahi dynasty is known in Indian history as Jagadguru Badshah. He loved music and played musical instruments. For him, the Tanpura personified learning – "Ibrahim the tanpurawala became learned due to grace of god, living in the city of Vidyanagari" (Vidyanagari is the earlier name of Bijapur.) He composed poems on his wife Chand Sultana, his Tanpura Motikhan and his elephant Atish Khan.

Ibrahim II publicly declared that all he wanted was Vidya or learning, music, and Guruseva (serving the teacher). He was a devotee of Banda Nawaj, the Sufi saint of Gulbarga. He composed a prayer to him to bestow Vidya or learning and charitable disposition.

He founded a new township at Navraspur to give concrete shape to his idea of a musical city. He had a temple built inside the precincts of the palace that still exists.

Bijapur attracted the period's best musicians and dancers because the king was famous as a great connoisseur and patron of music.

He spoke Marathi, Dakhani, Urdu and Kannada languages fluently, and like his predecessors, employed several Hindus in top posts.

Issue

By Chand Sultana:

By Kamal Khatun:

By Taj Sultan:

By Sundar Mahal:

By unknown mothers:

Kitab-e-Navras

Ibrahim II wrote the book Kitab-e-Navras (Book of Nine Rasas) in Dakhani. It is a collection of 59 poems and 17 couplets. According to his court-poet Muhammad Zuhuri, he wrote it to introduce the theory of nine Rasas, which occupies an important place in Indian aesthetics, to acquaint people who knew only the Persian ethos. The book opens with a prayer to Sarasvati, the Goddess of learning.

bhaka nyari nyari bhava ek
kaha turuk kaha barahaman

"Whether a Turk (Muslim) or a Brahmin with different language—emotion is the same."

nouras soor juga joti ani saroguni
yusat sarasuti mata
ibrahim parasada bhayi dooni

"Oh mother Saraswati! Since you have blessed Ibrahim, his work Navras will last for long"

References

  1. Farooqui Salma Ahmed, A Comprehensive History of Medieval India: Twelfth to the Mid-Eighteenth Century, (Dorling Kindersley, 2011), 176.
  2. Book: Sen, Sailendra . A Textbook of Medieval Indian History . Primus Books . 2013 . 978-9-38060-734-4 . 119.
  3. Book: Schimmel, Annemarie . [{{google books |plainurl=y |id=N7sewQQzOHUC |p=39}} The Empire of the Great Mughals: History, Art and Culture]. Corinne Attwood, translator. Burzine K. Waghmar. 2004. Reaktion Books. 978-1-86189-185-3 . 39.
  4. Book: Meri. Josef W.. Medieval Islamic Civilization: An Encyclopedia. 1 Nov 2005. Psychology Press. 9780415966900. 108.
  5. Book: Stephen P. Blake. Time in Early Modern Islam: Calendar, Ceremony, and Chronology in the Safavid, Mughal and Ottoman Empires. 11 Feb 2013. Cambridge University Press. 9781139620321. 122.
  6. Book: Richard Maxwell Eaton. The Sufis of Bijapur, 1300-1700: Social Roles of Sufis in Medieval India. 8 Mar 2015. Princeton University Press. 9781400868155. 129.
  7. Web site: Great Habshis in Ethiopian/Indian history: History of the Ethiopian Diaspora, in India – Part IV. Dr. Richard Pankhurst. 24 December 2006.
  8. Web site: The Wars & Campaigns of Ibrahim Adil Shahi II of Bijapur 1576–1627 . Ravi Rikhye . 7 March 2005 . 24 December 2006 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20061020232641/http://orbat.com/site/cimh/kings_master/kings/ibrahimII_adil_shahi/ibrahimII_adil_shahi.html . 20 October 2006 . dmy-all .

Further reading