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  2. Sadiq Khan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sadiq_Khan

    Khan and his siblings grew up in a three-bedroom council flat on the Henry Prince Estate in Earlsfield. [15] He attended Fircroft Primary School and then Ernest Bevin School, a local comprehensive. [15] Khan studied science and mathematics at A-level, in the hope of eventually becoming a dentist. A teacher recommended that he study law instead ...

  3. Sadeq Khan Zand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sadeq_Khan_Zand

    Sadeq Khan was the son of a certain Inaq Khan Zand, and had 3 sisters, a brother named Karim Khan Zand, and two half-brothers named Zaki Khan Zand and Eskandar Khan Zand. In 1722, the Safavid Empire was on the verge of collapsing— Isfahan and most of central and east Iran had been seized by the Afghan Hotak dynasty , while the Russians had ...

  4. Sadeq Khan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sadeq_Khan

    In 1688, Sadeq also granted land to his citizens. [2] He gave land to Kashmishwar Chakrabarti, father of Ramchandra Chakrabarti, in Longla Pargana. [3] Faujdar Enayatullah Khan was the next known faujdar after Sadeq. An inscription on a certain mazar (mausoleum) in the dargah of Shah Jalal was found to have been built in 1689.

  5. Zand dynasty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zand_dynasty

    Painting thrived under Karim Khan, and notable paintings from this era include Muhammad Karim Khan Zand and the Ottoman Ambassador which was created c. 1775. [17] The most important painter of the Zand era was Mohammad Sadiq. [17] The art of this era is remarkable and, despite the short length of the dynasty, a distinct Zand art had the time to ...

  6. Sadeq Mohammad Khan V - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sadeq_Mohammad_Khan_V

    Sadeq aged 15 Darbar Mahal, was the primary palace of the Nawab. Sir Sadeq Muhammad Khan Abbasi was born at Derawar on 29 September 1904, the only son and heir of Haji Nawab Muhammad Bahawal Khan Abbasi V, Nawab of the state of Bahawalpur.

  7. Sadeq Khan Shaqaqi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sadeq_Khan_Shaqaqi

    Sadeq Khan Shaqaqi (Persian: صادق خان شقاقی) was the chief of the Shaqaqi tribe and khan of Sarab from 1786 to 1800. [1] He was the eldest son and successor of Ali Khan Shaqaqi. [2] The Shaqaqi were Kurds who had become Turkified and converted to Shia Islam. They originally populated the Ardabil region, using Meshginshahr as their ...

  8. Ottoman–Persian War (1775–1776) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottoman–Persian_War_(1775...

    The Ottoman–Persian War of 1775–1776 (or Ottoman–Iranian War of 1775–1776) was fought between the Ottoman Empire and the Zand dynasty of Persia.The Persians, ruled by Karim Khan and led by his brother Sadeq Khan Zand, [5] invaded southern Iraq [6] and after besieging Basra for a year, took the city from the Ottomans in 1776. [7]

  9. Sadeq Mohammad Khan IV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sadeq_Mohammad_Khan_IV

    Sadiq Muhammad Khan Bahadur was born in 1862. He became Nawab of Bahawalpur on 25 March 1866, after the death of his father Mohammad Bahawal Khan IV. As he was still a minor, the British temporarily administered the region. [2] He was invested with full ruling powers at Derawar Fort on 28 November 1879.