1878.] W. Irvine— The JBangash Nawahs of FarruJcJidhad. 847 
19. Rijstam Khan. He was killed with Kaim Khan in the battle of 
Dauri (1748). 
20. ’Abd-ur Rasul Khan. He was killed in 1728 at the battle of 
Ichauli, (see p. 290). 
21. Haji Sarfaraz Khan. He was one of Ahmad Khan’s Bakhshis, 
and he will be mentioned in the Allahabad campaign, and in the retreat to 
the hills. 
22. JanNisar Khan. He held charge of Ujain in Malwa as the 
deputy of Mukim Khan. Having incurred the Nawab’s displeasure he was 
flogged, and being very frail he died at the first stroke. 
23. Rahmat Kiian. There was a Rahmatganj founded by him, but 
its site is not known now. He was distinguished as “ Sawarahwala,” and 
commanded a cavalry regiment. 
24. Karm Kha'n. He was Harogha of the elephants ; his seal bore 
the inscription JBa fazl- i-JMLuhammad K.arm namdar . 
25. Jowahir Khan. He was Darosdia of the stables. 
o 
26. Salabat Khan. He was the “ Mir Tmarat” or superintendent 
of buildings. 
27. Shamsher Khan, II. He had charge of the poultry. 
28. Mahtab Khan. Darogha of the kitchen. 
29. Namdar Khan. He was a Gahilwar Thakur of the village of 
Chilsara, parganah Shamshabad West, and his descendants still live there. 
A mosque built by him still stands, and to the west of the village are the 
foundations of some ganj or fort once belonging to him. 
30. Namdar Khan, II. 31. Sulaiman Khan. 32. Khushyal Khan. 
33. Fulad Khan. 34. Nash* Khan. 35. Sherdil Khan, a converted 
Tomar Rajput. 36. Nahirdil Khan. 37. Hafizullah Khan. 38. Lutf- 
ullah Khan. 39. Bakhtbuland Khan. 40. Lai Khan. 41. Mashraf 
Khan. 42. Mubarik Khan. 43. Najm-ud-din Khan. 44. Ranmast 
Khan. 45. Bara Khan. 46. Pahar Khan. 47. Nakki Khan. 
• • 
The N’auxib' l s territory. 
We do not know precisely how the large territory, of which Muhammad 
Khan was at his death de facto ruler, had been acquired. A grant in jdgir 
of the parganahs of Shamshabad and Bhojpur in the first year of Muham¬ 
mad Shah’s reign (1719) may have formed the nucleus ; as for the rest 
“ The good old rule 
Sufficeth them, the simple plan, 
That they should take, who have the power, 
And they should keep who can.” 
The extent of the Nawab’s dominions was popularly described by the 
following doggrel verse— 
Y Y 
