352 
W. Irvine —The Bang ash Naiodbs of Karrulchabdd. [No. 4, 
marriage to Nawab Muzaffar Jang, was the parganah of Sakrawa. He left 
one son. 
13. Mansur ’Ali Khan. He liad one daughter. 
14. Hadidad Khan. Killed with Kaim Khan, leaving no issue. 
15. Bahadur Khan. He also was killed with Kaim Khan ; he left 
two sons. 
16. Shadi Khan. He was killed by a cannon shot at the siege of 
the Fatehgarh fort by the Mahrattas in April—May 1751. He left no 
issue. 
17. Salabat Khan. He was living in 1802 ; lie had four sons. 
18. Manavar Khan. He left six sons. 
19. Muhammad Amin Khan. He gave abuse to some zamindar, who 
thereupon cut him down with his sword. Miyan ’Alim-ullah Shah Pirzada ) 
who lived in Jan ’Ali Khan’s masjid at the gate of the fort, cut down the 
zamindar. Amin Khan left two sons. 
20. ’Ata-ullali Klian. He was shot by mistake by Itoshan Khan 
Bangash Ustarzai, son-in-law of Muhammad Khan, one day that the Nawab 
was out tiger-shooting in Bahbalpiir S a war ah. # 
21. ’Azim Khan. He survived the Cession and left ten sons. 
22. Shaistah Khan. He also was alive in 1802, he left one son. 
In the time of ’Alamgir II. (1754—1759) Nawab Ahmad Khan at¬ 
tended for two years at Court, and performed his duties as Bakhshi of the 
empire. While he was away, Shaistah Khan set up an imperial throne in 
his house and made a guldl bdri in imitation of the Emperor’s audience hall. 
He ordered his servants to make him obeisance as if he were Emperor. 
Several thousand rupees were also coined, worth seventeen annas each, with 
the legend— 
SikJca zacl cJar bahr o bar az auj mdhi td bamdh 
Sdni Taimur o Bdbar , Hazrat i Shaistah Slidh. 
Sending one of the rupees, Bakhshi Eakhr-ud-daula reported all this 
to Ahmad Khan. Alarmed lest the Emperor might hear of it, he ordered 
the Bakhshi to take away Shaistah Khan’s jagvr , to seize and destroy all 
the rupees he could lay hands on, and to imprison the Sahibzada in the 
fort. It was only after many months that Shaistah Khan was set at liber¬ 
ty. 
The daughters of Muhammad Khan. 
It is said that the late Amir Dost Muhammad of Kabul had so 
* The MS. says near Kadirganj, which is in the Eta District near the Ganges, some 
45 miles N. W. of Farrukhahad (Gaz. IV, 151) while the place meant is in the Tarai 
between the Burh Ganga and the Ganges, four or five miles west of Kampil, nine or ten 
miles from Kadirganj, and some 35 miles N. W. of Farrukhahad. There is good shoot¬ 
ing there still, but no tigers. 
