278 Of the early History of Sindh. [No. 1 12. 



Shah Hussein after this, evaded the promise of giving his daughter 



Yad Gar quits in marriage to Yad Gar Nasir, who left the coun- 



Bukkur, and Sindh tr an( j t ^ e power j n Sindh reverted solely to 



again reverts to Shah J ' r ^ J 



Hussein. Mirza Shah Hussein, who appointed Meer Shah 



Mahmoud Urghoon governor of Bukkur. 



Kamran Mirza being in rebellion with Humayun Padshah, son of 



Baber Shah, fled to Sindh, and sought protection 

 Kamran Mirza. 



from Mirza Shah Hussein, whose daughter, Joirjok 



Begum, he had previously married. Shah Hussein appointed him 

 for a residence the place called Shuhperlah, on the river to the west 

 of Bukkur, with the purgunnah of Butthoora for the expences inci- 

 dental to his household. But Kamran Mirza determined to make a 

 pilgrimage to Mecca, and there end his days. Shah Hussein tried to 

 prevent his daughter accompanying him ; but her conjugal affec- 

 tion resisted all his persuasions to effect a separation. She observed to 

 her father : " that he had given her to Kamran Mirza for wife when 

 the latter was a powerful prince, and now that misfortunes had assail- 

 ed him, he wished to separate them ; but that while they lived she 

 would never desert her husband." Shah Hussein finding threats and 

 intreaties alike unavailing, gave them every necessary for their jour - 

 His death 964 h. ne y> an( * Kamran Mirza died at Mecca in the year 

 1556 a. d. 9Q4 H< 155Q At D# Hig faithful wife only survived 



him a few months. 



Mirza Shah Hussein in the latter days of his life became very 

 infirm, and suffered much from palsy, from which disease he sought 

 relief in intoxication, and dissipated men began to assume an ascen- 

 dancy at his court. The men of Urghoon and Tirkhan being dissatis- 

 fied, collected round Mirza Eessan Tirkhan, governor of Tattah, and 

 in the year 962 h. 1554 a. d. broke into open insurrection. Shah 

 Hussein sent Mahmoud, governor of Bukkur, to quell this rebellion ; 

 but he privately made terms with Mirza Eessan Tirkan, by which 

 after the death of Shah Hussein, (an event they plainly saw was fast 

 approaching,) they should divide the government of Sindh between 

 them. 



Mirza Shah Hussein died on Monday on the 15th of Rubeh-ul- 

 Death of Mirza Shah Uwul in the above year, being on his road to 



Hussein. .){>£, h. 1do4 



a. d. Seeoostan, (where, by the advice of his physician, he 



