Mukarram Jah Explained

Mir Barakat Ali Khan
Asaf Jah VIII
Succession:8th Nizam of Hyderabad (titular)
Reign:24 February 1967 – 5 November 1971
(pretender 1971–2023)
Coronation:6 April 1967
Predecessor:Mir Osman Ali Khan, Asaf Jah VII
Successor:Position abolished
Birth Date:6 October 1933
Birth Place:Hilafet Palace, Nice, France
Death Place:Istanbul, Turkey
Burial Date:18 January 2024
Burial Place:Makkah Masjid, Hyderabad, Telangana, India
Spouse:Princess Esra Birgin
(1959–1974; divorced)
Aysha Simmons
(1979–1989; widowed)
Manolya Onur
(1992–1997; divorced)
Jameela Boularous (co-wife)
(since 1992)
Princess Ayesha Orchedi (co-wife)
(since 1994)
Issue:
House:House of Asaf Jah
Father:Azam Jah
Mother:Dürrüşehvar Sultan
Religion:Sunni Islam

Nizam Mir Barkat Ali Khan Siddiqi Mukarram Jah, Asaf Jah VIII (6 October 1933 – 15 January 2023), less formally known as Mukarram Jah, was the titular Nizam of Hyderabad between 1967 and 1971. He was the head of the House of Asaf Jah until he died in 2023.

Born as the eldest son of Azam Jah and Dürrüşehvar Sultan, he was named successor to the title of Nizam of Hyderabad by his grandfather Mir Osman Ali Khan. Upon Osman's death in 1967, he became the titular Nizam. He lost his titles and the privy purses in 1971 when the 26th Amendment to the Indian constitution was passed.

Jah subsequently moved to Australia, where he stayed at the Murchison House Station. While the prince remained in Australia, his palaces in Hyderabad were encroached upon and fell into disrepair. Numerous divorce settlements and failed business ventures led to the loss of the majority of his fortune. In 1996, he moved to Turkey where he remained until his death in 2023. Jah was buried in Hyderabad.

Jah chaired the H.E.H. The Nizam's Charitable Trust and Mukarram Jah Trust for Education & Learning (MJTEL) Mukarram Jah high school.[1]

Biography

Early life and education

Mukarram Jah was born to Azam Jah, the son and heir of Osman Ali Khan, the last reigning Nizam of Hyderabad state, by his wife Dürrüşehvar Sultan, daughter of the last Caliph of the Ottoman dynasty, Abdulmejid II. Jah was educated in India at the Doon School in Dehradun and in England at Harrow and Peterhouse, Cambridge. He also studied at the London School of Economics and at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst.

Jah stayed at Teen Murti Bhavan in New Delhi for a while and briefly served as an honorary aide-de-camp of Jawaharlal Nehru.[2] He stated in 2010 that Nehru had wanted him to become his personal envoy or the Indian ambassador to a Muslim country.

Nizam of Hyderabad

He became the titular Nizam of Hyderabad after the death of his grandfather in 1967.

Life in Australia and Turkey

In 1972, he visited Australia[3] and came across the Murchison House Station,[4] a pastoral property of 350,000 acres on the west coast, near Kalbarri. He bought the farm and permanently moved to Australia.[5] He also purchased Havelock House,[6] a mansion in Perth.

In 1996, he sold the farm and moved to Turkey shortly after.[7]

His two main palaces in Hyderabad, Chowmahalla and Falaknuma, have been restored and opened to the public, the former as a museum showcasing the era of the Nizams and the latter as a luxury hotel. The Taj Falaknuma Palace Hotel opened in February 2010, having been leased to the Taj Group, after some ten years of renovations.

Like his grandfather, Mukarram was the richest man in India until the 1980s. However, in the 1990s, he lost some assets to divorce settlements. His net worth is nevertheless estimated at $US 2 billion.[8] [9]

Death and funeral

Jah died on 15 January 2023, at the age of 89.[10] According to Jah's wish his funeral took place in Hyderabad which was the former capital of Hyderabad State and of the Nizam of Hyderabad on 18 January 2023.

His remains were laid in state at the Chowmahalla Palace, where family members and government officials paid their respects.[11] In the evening of 18 January, he was buried at the Mecca Masjid.[12]

Personal life

Marriages

Mukarram Jah married five times. His first wife was a Turkish noble woman, Esra Birgin (b. 1936), and they married in 1959.[13] Jah left his Hyderabad palace for a sheep station in the Australian outback and divorced his wife, who did not want to move with him. In 1979, he married a former air hostess and employee of the BBC, Helen Simmons (b. 1949 – d. 1989);[14] she converted to Islam and changed her name to Aysha. After her death, he married Manolya Onur (b. 1954 – d. 2017), a former Miss Turkey in 1992, and divorced her after a five-year marriage in 1997.

He married Jameela Boularous (b. 1972), from Morocco, in 1992. In 1994, he married Princess Ayesha Orchedi (b. 1959), who is Turkish.

Children

By Esra Birgin, Mukarram Jah had one son and one daughter:

By Helen Simmons, he had two sons:

By Manolya Onur he had a daughter:

By Jameela Boularous he had a daughter:

Mukarram Jah had a brother Muffakham Jah.[16]

Full style

His Exalted Highness Prince Rustam-i-Dauran, Arustu-i-Zaman, Wal Mamaluk, Asaf Jah VIII, Muzaffar ul-Mamalik, Nizam ul-Mulk, Nizam ud-Daula, Nawab Mir Barakat 'Ali Khan Siddiqi Bahadur, Sipah Salar, Fath Jang, Nizam of Hyderabad and Berar.

Military titlesHonorary Lieutenant-General

Palaces

The palaces he owned:

Complaint against Mukarram Jah

Nawab Najaf Ali Khan another grandson of 7th Nizam, met the Police Commissioner of Hyderabad and submitted a complaint along with supporting documents alleging that Prince Mukarram Jah, his ex-wife Princess Esra, (who is also the General Power of Attorney (GPA) holder of Prince Mukarram Jah), his son Prince Azmat Jah and his brother Prince Muffakham Jah had used false documents in the UK High Court to lay claim over the £35 million Nizam’s Fund lying in NatWest Bank there.[17]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2013-12-20 . Nizam Mukarram Jah Trust for Education and Learning wins tax fight . 2023-01-18 . Deccan Chronicle . en.
  2. News: K.S.S.SESHAN . 2018-10-30 . The progressive princess of Hyderabad . en-IN . The Hindu . 2023-01-17 . 0971-751X.
  3. News: Grattan . Michelle . The Last Nizam . 19 February 2023 . The Age . 12 August 2006 . MGAge.
  4. Web site: Murchison House Station, Western Australia . Murchison House Station . 17 February 2023.
  5. Web site: Janyala . Sreenivas . 2023-01-17 . Trailed by history, the Last Nizam, who travelled continents, died away from 'home' . 2023-01-18 . The Indian Express . en.
  6. Web site: Havelock House . Heritage Council of Western Australia . Government of Western Australia . 18 February 2023.
  7. News: Traub . Alex . 2023-02-07 . Mukarram Jah, Heir to an Opulent Throne He Abandoned, Dies at 89 . en-US . The New York Times . 2023-02-08 . 0362-4331.
  8. https://www.theguardian.com/g2/story/0,3604,497496,00.html Natwest Bank account freeze
  9. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/5118720.stm Costliest divorce in India
  10. News: Mukarram Jah, Eighth Nizam of Hyderabad, Passes Away . 15 January 2023 . The Quint . 15 January 2023.
  11. News: 2023-01-17 . Last Nizam to be laid to rest with police honours . en-IN . The Hindu . 2023-01-17 . 0971-751X.
  12. News: Nanisetti . Serish . 2023-01-18 . Mukarram Jah laid to rest in Mecca Masjid . en-IN . The Hindu . 2023-01-19 . 0971-751X.
  13. Web site: Guruswamy . Mohan . Books: The Last Nizam by John Zubrzycki. Picador India, Delhi, 2006. . City of Hope: a symposium on Hyderabad and its syncretic culture . May 2008 . 30 December 2008.
  14. Sandilands . John . Nizam of Hyderabad marries Perth girl . Australian Women's Weekly . 12 March 1980 . 2–5 . 19 February 2023 .
  15. Web site: Soszynski . Henry . HH Walashan Nawab Mir BEREKET ALI KHAN Mukarram Jah . Ancestry.com . 20 June 2005 . 30 December 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160423005341/http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~royalty/turkey/i377.html . 23 April 2016 . dead .
  16. Web site: Convert Nizam's lands into parks, royal kin urges Telangana CM. 17 January 2022. The New Indian Express.
  17. News: 17 November 2020. VII Nizam's grandson moves police against two cousins, two other kin. en-IN. The Hindu. 6 May 2021. 0971-751X.