134 W. Irvine—The Bangash Naw.ibs of Furrukhabad. [No. 2, 
many thousands of rupees. He was the agent at Delhi of Mahdbat Jang, 
Subahdar of Bengal. We have already seen him employed by Safdar Jang 
to carry out the resumption of the Farrukhabdad territory after the death 
of Kaim Khan. 
Once Nawab Ahmad Khan, Ghazi-ud-din Khin Wazir, and Rajah 
Jugal Kishor were returning to Farrukhabad from a visit to Makhanpur.* 
Their three elephants were moving in one line. In the plain of Nanauwah, 
on the road from Yakutganj to the city, close to where the central jail 
now stands, the Rajah got down for a necessary purpose, when the elephant 
ran at him and killed him. All his servants set wp weeping and wailing ; 
while Nawab Ahmad confiscated the whole of the property to his own use. 
In this affair, Naw4b Ahmad Khan and Ghazi-ud-din had given the hint 
to the Rajah’s Mahaut, Jugal Kishor having one day been wanting in proper 
respect to those two nobles. No doubt Ahmad Khan also bore him a grudge 
for the part he had played in Safdar Jang’s time. Jugal Kishor’s grandson, 
Shitabu, was still alive in 1839, his house was in Mohalla Nunhai, and at 
the Holi festival, in the drama (swdng) of the Jogis, he used to dress as a 
female mendicant and dance. 
17. Nawab Jaldl-ud-daula, called Mir Sulaiman. 
His house was in Mohalla Nitganja. He was a great favourite of 
’*Tmad-ul-Mulk, and they attribute to his bad advice the blinding of Ahmad 
Shah, and the murders of ’Alamgir II, Intizim-ud-daula Khan-khanan, 
and ’Akabat Mahmud Khan. He received Rs. 400 a month, and left Far- 
rukhabad with his patron. 
18. Nawdéb Ra’dyat Khan. 
He was the son of Zahir-ud-daula ’Azimullah Khan (Subahdar of M4l- 
wa, and afterwards Sadr), son of Ra’dyat Khan, younger brother of Muham- 
mad Amin Khan. Ra’ayat Khan’s mother was Nur-un-nissa Begam, sister 
of ’Itimad-ud-daula Kamr-ud-din Khan. Ra’dyat Khan married a cousin, 
the daughter of Kamr-ud-din Khan. He left Farrukhabad upon the death 
of Ahmad Khan in 1771. The Zurtkh-i-Muzaffari also mentions a brother, 
Kutbe Khan, as being at Farrukhabad (year 1176). 
19. Mir Fakhr-ud-din Khan. 
Commonly known as Nawab Shah Jit. He was the son of ’Itimad- 
ud-daula Kamr-ud-din Khan, Wazir, and husband of the daughter of 
Muzaffar Khan, brother of Samsam-ud-daula, Khan Daurin Khan. He 
received Rs. 1000 a month, and on the death of Ahmad Khan he returned 
to Delhi, where he died. 
* In Parganah Bilhor of the Cawnpiar district, 
