(Redirected from Shuja Shah)
'Shuja Shah Durrani' (also known as ''Shah Shujah'', ''Shoja Shah'', ''Shujah al-Mulk'') (c.
November 4,
1785 -
April 5,
1842) was ruler of the
Durrani Empire from
1803 to
1809. He then ruled from
1839 until his death in 1842. Shuja Shah was of the
Sadozai line of the
Abdali group of
Pashtuns. He became the fifth
King of Afghanistan
Family
Shuja Shah was the son of
Timur Shah Durrani of the
Durrani Empire. He ousted his brother,
Mahmud Shah, from power, and ruled
Afghanistan from 1803 to 1809.
Marriages
# A daughter of Fath Khan Tokhi
# Wafa Begum
# A daughter of
Sayyid Amir Haidar Khan;
Amir of
Bokhara
# A daughter of Khan Bahadur Khan Malikdin Khul
# A daughter of Sardar Haji Rahmatu'llah Khan Sardozai;
Wazir
# Sarwar Begum
# Bibi Mastan; of
Indian origin
Career
Depositions, Imprisonments and Alliances
Shuja was the governor of
Herat and Peshawar from
1798 to
1801. He proclaimed himself as King of Afghanistan in October 1801 (after the deposition of his brother
Zaman Shah), but only properly ascended to the throne in on
July 13, 1803.
Shuja allied Afghanistan with the
United Kingdom in 1809, as a means of defending against a combined invasion of
India by
Napoleon and
Russia.
On
May 3, 1809, he was overthrown by his predecessor
Mahmud Shah and went into exile in
India, where he was captured by Jahandad Khan Bamizai and imprisoned at
Attock (1811-1812) as well as in
Kashmir (1812-1813). Shortly afterwards, he was handed over to Maharajah
Ranjit Singh and imprisoned at
Lahore from
1813 to
1814. Once a holder of the famous
Koh-i-Nor diamond, he was forced to hand it over to his captor to gain back his freedom. He stayed first in
Punjab and later in
Ludhiana.
In
1833 he struck a deal with Maharajah
Ranjit Singh of the
Punjab: He was allowed to march his troops through Punjab, and in return he would cede
Peshawar to the Sikhs if they could manage to take it. In a concerted campaign the following year, Shuja marched on Kandahar while the
Sikhs, commanded by general
Hari Singh Nalwa attacked Peshawar. In July, Shuja Shah was narrowly defeated at
Kandahar by the Afghans under
Dost Mohammad Khan and fled. The Sikhs on their hand seized
Peshawar.
In
1838 he had gained the support of the British and Punjab for an invasion of Afghanistan. This triggered the
First Anglo-Afghan War (1838-
42). Shuja was restored to the throne by the British in August
1839, almost 30 years after his deposition, but did not remain in power when the British left. He was assassinated by Shuja ud-Daula in April 1842.
References
Further reading
★ ''Divan-i-Shuja'' (1825)
★ ''Memoirs of Shuja ul-Mulk Shah, King of Afghanistan'' (1826)
External links
★
The British Library - Chronology: from the emergence of the Afghan Kingdom to the Mission of Mountstuart Elphistone, 1747-1809 (Shah Shuja)
★
Afghanistan - The Durrani Dynasty: Genealogy