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Sohrab Khan Talpur, Mir (1783–1830) Khanate of Kalat (complete list) – Samandar Khan Ahmadzai, Wali (1697–1714) Mir Ahmad II Khan Ahmadzai, Wali (1714–1716) Mir Abdullah Khan Ahmadzai, Wali (1716–1731) Mir Muhabbat Khan Ahmadzai, Wali (1731–1739), Khan (1739–1749) Muhammad Nasir Khan I Ahmadzai, Khan (1749–1794)
The Khanate of Kalat, also known as the Brahui Confederacy, [2] was a Brahui Khanate that originated in the modern-day Kalat region of Pakistan.Formed in 1666 due to the threat of Mughal expansion in the region, [3] [4] it controlled the wider Balochistan at its greatest extent in the mid-18th century, [2] extending from Kerman in the west to Sindh in the east and from Helmand River in the ...
Mir Ahmad I Khan Qambrani III, Wali (1666–1695) Mir Mehrab Khan Ahmadzai I, Wali (1695–1697) Samandar Khan Ahmadzai, Wali (1697–1714) Sri Lanka
Mir Ahmad Yar Khan, Khan of Kalat 'Pioneers of Freedom' postage stamp series (1993) Mir Jafar Khan Jamali 'Pioneers of Freedom' postage stamp series (2007) Mirza Asadullah Khan Mirza Ghalib, 19th-century poet (1969, 1998) Mohamedali Habib, philanthropist (2000)
Mahamad Shah was a paternal cousin of Mizrab Shah. He established his authority in Badakhshan with the aid of Amir Sher Ali Khan. He was the last mir to ruler over Badakhshan. In 1873 Mahmud Shah was ousted from power by the governor of Afghan Turkestan, Naib Muhammad Alam Khan. Alam Khan appointed Hafizullah Khan as governor of Badakhshan. [4 ...
At the end of 1831, Mir-Hasan Khan was in the province of Mazandaran. The son of Fath-Ali shah, Zillisultan Ali Mirza, ruled there. It is written in "Akhbarname": "He (i.e. Ali Mirza) urgently reported the arrival of Mir-Hasan Khan to Fath-Ali shah in Tehran. Fath-Ali shah was afraid and the prince sent him to Tehran.
Mir Zaman Khan stayed loyal to Amanullah Khan and partook in operations against the Khost revolt of the Khostwal tribes and the Shinwari rebellion. He remained loyal to Amanullah Khan through his reforms and modernisation, his second-eldest son Esmatullah Khan fought with him in the Afghan Civil War of 1928. Mir Zaman Khan and his Kunari ...
Jehandad Khan was the son of Mir Painda Khan. [1] Jehandad Khan became the ruler of Amb on the death of his father in 1844. [citation needed] When he was born Amb was an independent kingdom not yet in any way under British domination. It was said, "Of all the tribal chiefs of Hazara, the most powerful [was] said to be Jehandad Khan of the Tanoli."