Tatar Khan
Muhammad Tatar Khan (Bengali: মুহাম্মাদ তাতার খান, Persian: محمد تاتار خان) was the Sultan of North Bengal during 1259-1268 CE after usurping the Governorship of Ijjauddin Balban Iuzbaki.[1]
History
In 1258 CE, Tatar Khan defeated Iuzbaki, later building a tomb for his predecessor in 1261.
After the Sultan of Delhi, Nasiruddin refused to sanction his Campaigns against the Eastern Ganga dynasty who held South Bengal, Tartar Khan declared independence from Delhi until 1266 when he sent his envoys to Sultan Ghiyasuddin Balban. This diplomatic mission from Bengal was accorded a royal reception at Delhi worthy of embassies from Iran or Turan. The envoys of Tatar Khan were loaded with valuable gifts and given leave of departure as well as official sanction for Military campaigns in South Bengal.
However Muhammad Tatar Khan died before the Envoys returned, two years after Balban's accession.[2]
Preceded by Ijjauddin Balban Iuzbaki |
Mamluk Governor of Bengal 1259–1268 |
Succeeded by Sher Khan |
Sources
- "Tatar Khan - Banglapedia". en.banglapedia.org. Retrieved 2019-04-26.
- https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.282386
- Salim, Ghulam Husain (1902). The Riyazu-S-Salatin, A History of Bengal. Bibliotheca Indica. 154. Asiatic Society of Bengal. p. 78.