Munnawar Khan Explained

Honorific Prefix:Shahid
Munawwar Khan
Native Name:منور خان
Native Name Lang:fa
Birth Place:Agra, Agra Subah, Mughal Empire
Death Date:1671
Death Place:Brahmaputra River, Saraighat, Ahom kingdom
Allegiance: Mughal Empire
Branch:Mughal Navy
Branch Label:Branch
Rank:Admiral
Rank Label:Rank
Battles:Conquest of Golconda, Battle of Saraighat
Battles Label:Conflicts
Awards:Istishhad (1671)

Munnawar Khan (Persian: منور خان; d. 1671) was a Mughal Empire admiral during the reign of Emperor Aurangzeb.

Biography

Khan was born to a Muslim family in the city of Agra. He entered service during the rule of Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb, during the conquest of Golconda, he first started his naval training by protecting Mughal supply routes in narrow and difficult rivers, he was also promoted as the chief admiral in the Bay of Bengal, he visited Janjira on several occasions. Munnawar Khan was sent on a campaign in the Brahmaputra River against the Ahoms in Assam along with the talented Muhammad Saleh Kamboh, they built trade cog sized Dhows some with artillery, archers and musketeers under five Sardars (admirals), during the Battle of Saraighat. But the Mughal fleet was outnumbered by 3300 Ahom war-canoes. Munnawar Khan was killed by a deadly arrow which struck his backbone, throwing the Mughals out of gear. They suffered the loss of three top-ranking Amirs, and another 4000 dead on that fatal day in 1671.

However, Mughal Admiral Muhammad Saleh Kamboh survived and wrote an account on that tragic encounter against the Ahoms, he noted:

Although much weaker, the Ahom army defeated the Mughal army by brilliant uses of the terrain, clever diplomatic negotiations to buy time, guerrilla tactics, psychological warfare, military intelligence and by exploiting the sole weakness of the Mughal forces—its navy.

See also