Wazir Khan (Sirhind)

Wazir Khan (died 1710, real name Mirza Askari) was Governor of Sirhind, administering a territory of the Mughal Empire between the Sutlej and Yamuna rivers.[1][2][3][4]

Wazir Khan
Governor Of Sirhind
Sculpture depicting Wazir Khan overseeing the execution of the younger sons of Shri Guru Gobind Singh
Nawab of Sirhind
Administrative territorySirhind
TitleNawab, Governor
SuccessorBaj Singh (Khalsa Army, May 1710)
Born1635
Mukatsar, Punjab, Mughal dynasty
DiedMay 12, 1710
Chappar Chiri
SpouseShaharzad Begum
IssueTulghan Khan
Full name
Mirza Askari ( تلکس نینی )
FatherZahir Haram Khan
MotherAmina Begum
ReligionPurist Sunnism (an Sunni theology of Kamran bayh (bayh refers to tribe or clan and its main Hindi and Sanskrit equivalent is gotra))
OccupationGovernor

Wazir Khan is noted for his conflicts with the Sikhs, and became infamous for ordering the execution of Guru Gobind Singh's young sons (Sahibzada Fateh Singh and Sahibzada Zorawar Singh) in 1705. He was the governor of Sirihind, when he arrested the two younger sons of Guru Gobind Singh. Wazir Khan tried to force the young sons of the Guru to embrace Islam. He bricked them alive, when they refused to accept Islam.

He was beheaded by a Sikh named Fateh Singh, a warrior in the Sikh army led by Banda Singh Bahadur, during the Battle of Chappar Chiri in May 1710.[5]

References

  1. Dr Harjinder Singh, 'Sikh History in 10 Volumes', Sikh University Press, Belgium, vol. 2, p. 31.
  2. Dr Harjinder Singh, 'Sikh History in 10 Volumes', Sikh University Press, Belgium, vol 1, pp 64, 259-60.
  3. Tony Jaques (2007). Dictionary of battles and sieges. 3. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 948. ISBN 9780313335396.
  4. History of Islam, p. 506, at Google Books
  5. William Irvine (1904). Later Mughals. Atlantic Publishers & Distri.
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