Sind State
| 1593–1843 | |||||||||||||||||
![]() ![]()  | |||||||||||||||||
Motto: 
  | |||||||||||||||||
![]() ![]() ![]()  | |||||||||||||||||
| Status | 
  | ||||||||||||||||
| Capital | 
  | ||||||||||||||||
| Common languages | Persian (official) Sindhi (regional and dynastic) Balochi (dynastic) Saraiki (northern frontier) Rajasthani (eastern frontier)  | ||||||||||||||||
| Ethnic groups | 
  | ||||||||||||||||
| Religion | Sunni Islam (official from 1593 to 1783), Shia Islam (official from 1783 to 1843), Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism, Sikhism, Christianity | ||||||||||||||||
| Demonym(s) | Sindhi | ||||||||||||||||
| Government | 
  | ||||||||||||||||
| Hakim/Subahdar (1593–1737)  | |||||||||||||||||
• 1593–1594   | Patar Das Khattari (first) | ||||||||||||||||
• 1736–1737   | Sadiq Ali Khan (last) | ||||||||||||||||
| Nawab (1737–1783)  | |||||||||||||||||
• 1737–1755   | Noor Mohammad Kalhoro (first) | ||||||||||||||||
• 1782–1783   | Abdul Nabi Kalhoro (last) | ||||||||||||||||
| Mir (1783–1843)  | |||||||||||||||||
• 1783–1801   | Fateh Ali Talpur (first) | ||||||||||||||||
• 1840–1843   | Nasir Khan Talpur (last) | ||||||||||||||||
| Historical era | |||||||||||||||||
• Tarkhan forces surrender to Khan-i-Khanan at Thatta   | 1 November 1592 | ||||||||||||||||
• Jani Beg Tarkhan forced to abdicate to Emperor Akbar at Lahore   | 28 March 1593 | ||||||||||||||||
• Independence from Mughal Empire   | 1737 | ||||||||||||||||
| 14 January 1761 | |||||||||||||||||
| 1783 | |||||||||||||||||
• Alliance with the East India Company   | 1809 | ||||||||||||||||
| 17 February 1843 | |||||||||||||||||
| 24 March 1843 | |||||||||||||||||
| Area | |||||||||||||||||
• 1601  | 25,335[2] sq mi (65,620 km2) | ||||||||||||||||
| Currency | Rupee | ||||||||||||||||
 
  | |||||||||||||||||
| Today part of | |||||||||||||||||
The Thatta Sarkar (1593–1629), Thatta Subah (1629–1737) or Sind State (1737–1843), also referred to as Scinde or Sindh, was a Mughal Sarkar later a Subah, then a proto-state, and lastly a princely state in the Sindh region of the Indian subcontinent until its annexation by the East India Company in 1843. The name Sind (/sɪŋd/), now obsolete, was once the anglicized name of the state, which was also adopted by the British to refer to its division.
Geography
The Thatta Subah was bordered to the north by the Multan Subah, to the west by the Safavid Empire and later the Khanate of Kalat, to the east by the Ajmer Subah and to the south by the Gujarat Subah and the Arabian Sea.
History
After the Mughal conquest of Sindh, the area was ruled from 1593 to 1629 by a Hakim, who was directly appointed by the Mughal Emperor from Delhi despite Thatta being a Sarkar (Division) of the Multan Subah. The Sarkar was predominantly (but not entirely) influenced by the Tarkhan dynasty with Jani Beg, Ghazi Beg and Isa Khan II serving as Hakim of Thatta. In 1629, Thatta was made into a separate Subah (Province) and was divided into three divisions: Sehwan Sarkar, Bhakkar Sarkar and Thatta Sarkar, each administered by a Faujdar who reported to the Subahdar. In 1699–1700, the Subahdar of Lahore and Multan, Prince Muhammad Mu'azzam and the Subahdar of Thatta, Hifzullah Khan faced off against the Kalhora chieftain and Mianwal Movement leader Deen Mohammad Kalhoro at Khore. Deen Mohammad was killed while his brother, Yar Muhammad Kalhoro, was exiled to Kalat. In his absence, Bhaktia Barozai, a local landowner, took over the Kalhora estate. Yar Muhammad returned to Sindh in 1701 after Hifzullah's death and, along with his subordinate Shahdad Khan Talpur, retook his land making Khudabad his capital. Yar Muhammad was later pardoned by the Mughal court in exchange for complete loyalty. After the death of Emperor Aurangzeb, Yar Muhammad was given the administration of Sehwan Sarkar by the Subahdar of Thatta Prince Mui'zz-ud-Din. In 1708, Yar Muhammad was provided with the additional charge of Sibi and Dhadar which were initially granted to the Barozai Panni tribe by Emperor Aurangzeb. On the orders of Emperor Farrukhsiyar, Yar Muhammad and Mir Lutf Ali Khan, the new Subahdar of Thatta, laid siege to the town of Jhok which served as the base for Shah Inayat, a revolutionary and an agriculturalal reformist who led a peasants rebellion against the feudal landlords and estate holders of Sindh. The siege continued from September–December 1717 and was deemed successful as Shah Inayat was deceivingly captured on 1 January 1718 and executed by Lutf Ali on 7 January. In 1725, Noor Mohammad Kalhoro, the son of Yar Muhammad and also the de facto ruler of Sind (who now had gained the administration of Bhakkar along with Sehwan), forged an alliance with the Emir of Afghanistan Hussain Hotak during his war with the Khanate of Kalat. Noor Mohammad later killed the Khan of Kalat, Abdullah Khan Ahmadzai in the Battle of Kachhi. Noor Mohammad also came into conflict with the Nawab Amir of Bahawalpur, Sadeq Khan I Daudpotra for control over Shikarpur.
Sind officially broke away from the Mughal Empire in 1737 and asserted autonomy under Noor Mohammad and his Kalhora clansmen as the Thatta Sarkar too was allotted to him by Emperor Muhammad Shah. Sind, along with Hyderabad and Awadh, supported the Mughal Empire during Nader Shah's invasion but was subdued by him in his Sindh expedition with Sibi given to Kalat and Shikarpur granted to Bahawalpur. These areas were recaptured by Noor Mohammad shortly after Nader Shah's departure. During Ahmad Shah's invasion, Sind became a tributary state of the Afghan Empire and also reached its greatest glory under Ghulam Shah Kalhoro who not only defeated the Khan of Kalat Nasir Khan I Ahmadzai and Rao of Kutch Godji II but also formed a marital alliance with Nawab of Bahawalpur Mubarak Khan II Daudpotra. Ghulam Shah also took part in the Third Battle of Panipat alongside Ahmad Shah Durrani against the Maratha Confederacy. Tensions arose between Ghulam Shah and Ahmad Shah who wanted to appoint Muhammad Atur Kalhoro to the throne of Sind. Bahadur Khan was sent by Ahmad Shah but was defeated by Ghulam Shah in the Battle of Ubauro. In 1768, Ghulam Shah shifted his capital from Khudabad to the newly built city of Hyderabad which was built on the ruins of an ancient city Neroon Kot by constructing the Pacco Qillo. After the untimely death of Ghulam Shah in 1772, four Kalhora Nawabs were successively enthroned in just 11 years while two battles were fought: the First Battle of Shikarpur in 1781 and the Battle of Larkana in 1782, to decide the fate of Sind.
In 1783, the Talpur Mirs, who long served the Kalhoras as their prime ministers, revolted under Fateh Ali Talpur and replaced the last Kalhora Nawab, Abdul Nabi Kalhoro, in the Battle of Halani. Fateh Ali expanded his domain by reclaiming Karachi that the Kalhoras had lost to Kalat. He also defended his territories during the Shikarpur campaign in which the Talpurs had to face the allied armies of the Afghans, the Khan of Kalat and remnants of the Kalhora dynasty. Under the hegemony of the Talpurs, Sind was divided into three fiefdoms: Hyderabad under the Shahdadani branch, Mirpur Khas under the Manikani branch and Khairpur under the Sohrabani branch, forming a federation and later a confederacy. Sind gradually became a princely state to come under British paramountcy signing a subsidiary alliance agreement in 1809. After the Anglo–Sind War, Sind, except from Khairpur, was annexed by the East India Company and was made a part of the Bombay Presidency. The Mir of Hyderabad, Nasir Khan Talpur, and the Mir of Mirpur Khas, Sher Muhammad Talpur, were defeated in the Battle of Miani (17 February 1843) and the Battle of Hyderabad (24 March 1843) respectively while the Mir of Khairpur, Ali Murad Talpur, continued to resist the British but eventually gave up attempts and entered into treaty with them with Khairpur becoming a princely state in 1853.
List of Subahdars, Nawabs and Mirs
Subahdars
| Title | Personal Name | Reign | Serving Monarch | Notes | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Rao Patar Das Khattari رای پترداس کهتری  |  28 March 1593 – 1594 | Akbar اکبر  |  Removed due to unpopularity among locals. | 
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Mirza Jani Beg Tarkhan میرزا جانی بیگ ترخان  |  1594 – 1 February 1601 | Akbar اکبر  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Mirza Ghazi Beg Tarkhan میرزا غازی بیگ ترخان  |  1 February 1601 – 12 April 1612 | Akbar اکبر Jahangir جهانگیر  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Muzaffer Khan Mir Abd al-Razzaq Mamuri مظفرخان میرعبدالرزاق معموری  |  1612–1614 | Jahangir جهانگیر  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Rustam Mirza Safavi میرزا رستم صفوی  |  1614–1615 | Jahangir جهانگیر  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Taj Khan Tash Beg  تاج خان تاش بیگ  |  1614–1615 | Jahangir جهانگیر  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Arsalan Beg Shamsher Khan Uzbek ارسلان بیگ شمشیر خان اوزبک  |  1615–1617 | Jahangir جهانگیر  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Khan-i-Dauran Mirza Shah Beg Arghun Khan خانِ دوران میرزا شاه بیگ ارغون خان  |  1617–1617 | Jahangir جهانگیر  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Muzaffer Khan Mir Abd al-Razzaq Mamuri مظفرخان میرعبدالرزاق معموری  |  1617–1618 | Jahangir جهانگیر  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Khan-i-Dauran Mirza Shah Beg Arghun Khan خانِ دوران میرزا شاه بیگ ارغون خان  |  1618–1619 | Jahangir جهانگیر  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Mustafa Khan Sayyid Bayazid Bukhari مصطفی خان سید بایزید بخاری  |  1619–1623 | Jahangir جهانگیر  |  Scion of the Uch's Bukhari clan, he first served as the Faujdar of Bukkur. He was granted 2,000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry as well. Also written as Syed Bazayd Bukhari. | 
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Salaf-ud-Din Muhammad Shahryar سلف الدین محمد شهریار  |  13 October 1625 – 1626 | Jahangir جهانگیر  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Mirza Abu Saeed میرزا ابوسعید  |  1626–1627 | Jahangir جهانگیر  |  an Iranian, the nephew of Empress Nur Jahan. | 
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Muhammad Isa Khan Tarkhan II  محمد عیسی خان ترخان دوم  |  1627–1628 | Shah Jahan شاهجهان  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Sher Khwaja Baqi Khan شیر خواجه باقی خان  |  1628–1628 | Shah Jahan شاهجهان  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Mir Hussam al-Din Murtaza Khan Anju میر حسام الدین مرتضی خان انجو  |  1628–1629 | Shah Jahan شاهجهان  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Amir Khan Mir Abul Baqa امیر خان میر ابوالبقا  |  1629–1631 | Shah Jahan شاهجهان  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Yusuf Muhammad Khan Tashqandi یوسف محمد خان تاشقندی  |  1631–1635 | Shah Jahan شاهجهان  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Khawas Khan Daulat Khan Mayi خواص خان دولت خان مئی  |  1635–1640 | Shah Jahan شاهجهان  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Khwaja Kāmgār Ghayrat Khan خواجه کامگار غیرت خان  |  1640–1641 | Shah Jahan شاهجهان  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Shad Khan شاد خان  |  1641–1643 | Shah Jahan شاهجهان  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Amir Khan Mir Abul Baqa امیر خان میر ابوالبقا  |  1643–1647 | Shah Jahan شاهجهان  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Mughal Khan مغل خان  |  1647–1649 | Shah Jahan شاهجهان  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |   Muhi al-Din Muhammad Aurangzeb محی الدین محمد اورنگزیب  |  1649–1653 | Shah Jahan شاهجهان  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Sardar Khan Shahjahani سردار خان شاهجهانی  |  1653–1653 | Shah Jahan شاهجهان  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Zafar Khan Khwaja Ahsanullah ظفر خان خواجه احسن الله  |  1653–1655 | Shah Jahan شاهجهان  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Mirza Sipihr Shikoh  میرزا سپهر شکوه  |  1655–1658 | Shah Jahan شاهجهان  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Qabad Khan Mir Akhur  قباد خان میر آخور  |  1658–1660 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Yadgar Beg Lashkar Khan  یادگار بیگ لشکر خان  |  1660–1662 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Izzat Khan Sayyid Abd al-Razzak Gilani  عزت خان سید عبدالرزاق گیلانی  |  1662–1664 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Ghazanfar Khan غضنفر خان  |  1664–1666 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Izzat Khan Sayyid Abd al-Razzak Gilani  عزت خان سید عبدالرزاق گیلانی  |  1666–1669 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Abu Nusrat Khan  ابو نصرت خان  |  1669–1671 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Saadat Khan سعادت خان  |  1671–1673 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Izzat Khan Sayyid Abd al-Razzak Gilani  عزت خان سید عبدالرزاق گیلانی  |  1673–1679 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Khana Zaad Khan خانه زاد خان  |  1679–1683 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Sardar Khan سردار خان  |  1683–1687 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Murid Khan مرید خان  |  1687–1689 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Zabardast Khan زبردست خان  |  1689–1689 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Abu Nusrat Khan  ابو نصرت خان  |  1689–1691 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Hifzullah Khan حفظ الله خان  |  1691–1701 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Saeed Khan سعید خان  |  1701–1702 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Mir Amin al-Din Khan Husayn میر امین الدین خان حسین  |  1702–1703 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Yusuf Khan Tirmizi یوسف خان ترمذی  |  1703–1704 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Ahmad Yar Khan احمد یار خان  |  1704–1707 | Aurangzeb اورنگزیب  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Saeed Atr Khan Bahadur سعید عطر خان بهادر  |  1707–1709 | Azam Shah اعظم شاه Bahadur Shah I بهادرشاه یکم  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Mahin Khan مهین خان  |  1709–1711 | Bahadur Shah I بهادرشاه یکم  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Shakir Khan شاکر خان  |  1711–1712 | Bahadur Shah I بهادرشاه یکم  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Mahin Khan مهین خان  |  1712–1712 | Jahandar Shah جهاندار شاه  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Khwaja Muhammad Khalil Khan خواجه محمد خلیل خان  |  1712–1713 | Jahandar Shah جهاندار شاه  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Saeed Atr Khan Bahadur سعید عطر خان بهادر  |  1713–1714 | Farrukhsiyar فرخسیر  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Yaqub Kashmiri یعقوب کشمیری  |  1714–1714 | Farrukhsiyar فرخسیر  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Mir Muhammad Shujaat Khan Shafi  میر محمد شجاعت خان شفیع  |  1714–1715 | Farrukhsiyar فرخسیر  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Mir Lutf Ali Khan میر لطف علی خان  |  1715–1719 | Farrukhsiyar فرخسیر  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Azam Khan اعظم خان  |  1719–1719 | Rafi ud-Darajat رفیع الدرجات  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Mahabat Khan محبت خان  |  1719–1722 | Shah Jahan II شاهجهان دوم Muhammad Shah محمد شاه  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Sultan Mahmud Khan سلطان محمود خان  |  1722–1724 | Muhammad Shah محمد شاه  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Saifullah Khan سیف الله خان  |  1724–1730 | Muhammad Shah محمد شاه  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Sadiq Ali Khan صادق علی خان  |  1730–1730 | Muhammad Shah محمد شاه  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Dilerdil Khan دلیردل خان  |  1730–1732 | Muhammad Shah محمد شاه  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Himmet Dilerdil Khan همت دلیردل خان  |  1732–1736 | Muhammad Shah محمد شاه  |  |
| Subahdar  صوبهدار  |  Sadiq Ali Khan صادق علی خان  |  1736–1737 | Muhammad Shah محمد شاه  |  Deposed by Mian Noor Kalhoro who became the Nawab of Sindh. | 
Nawabs (Kalhora dynasty)
| Title | Personal Name | Reign | 
|---|---|---|
| Nawab  نواب  |  Mian Noor Muhammad Khan Kalhoro میان نورمحمد خان کلهوره  |  1737–1755 | 
| Nawab  نواب  |  Mian Muradyad Muhammad Khan Kalhoro میان مرادیاب محمد خان کلهوره  |  1755–1757 | 
| Nawab  نواب  |  Mian Ghulam Muhammad Shah Kalhoro میان غلام محمد شاه کلهوره  |  1757–1757 | 
| Nawab  نواب  |  Mian Atur Muhammad Khan Kalhoro میاں عطر محمد خان کلهوره  |  1757–1758 | 
| Nawab  نواب  |  Mian Ghulam Muhammad Shah Kalhoro میان غلام محمد شاه کلهوره  |  1758–1772 | 
| Nawab  نواب  |  Mian Sarfaraz Muhammad Khan Kalhoro میان سرفراز محمد خان کلهوره  |  1772–1775 | 
| Nawab  نواب  |  Mian Ghulam Nabi Muhammad Khan Kalhoro میاں غلام نبی محمد خان کلهوره  |  1775–1776 | 
| Nawab  نواب  |  Mian Abdul Nabi Muhammad Khan Kalhoro میان عبدالنبی محمد خان کلهوره  |  1776–1781 | 
| Nawab  نواب  |  Mian Sadik Ali Muhammad Khan Kalhoro میاں صادق علی محمد خان کلهوره  |  1781–1782 | 
| Nawab  نواب  |  Mian Abdul Nabi Muhammad Khan Kalhoro میان عبدالنبی محمد خان کلهوره  |  1782–1783 | 
Mirs (Talpur dynasty)
Shahdadani Talpurs of Hyderabad
| Title | Personal Name | Reign | 
|---|---|---|
| Mir  میر  |  Fateh Ali Khan Talpur فتح علی خان تالپور  |  1783–1801 | 
| Mir  میر  |  Ghulam Ali Khan Talpur غلام علیخان تالپور  |  1801–1811 | 
| Mir  میر  |  Karam Ali Khan Talpur کرم علیخان تالپور  |  1811–1828 | 
| Mir  میر  |  Murad Ali Khan Talpur مراد علیخان تالپور  |  1828–1833 | 
| Mir  میر  |  Noor Muhammad Khan Talpur نور محمدخان تالپور  |  1833–1840 | 
| Mir  میر  |  Muhammad Naseer Khan Talpur محمد نصیرخان تالپور  |  1840–1843 | 
| Title | Personal Name | Reign | 
|---|---|---|
| Mir  میر  |  Sohrab Ali Khan Talpur سهراب علیخان تالپور  |  1783–1811 | 
| Mir  میر  |  Rustam Ali Khan Talpur رستم علیخان تالپور  |  1811–1842 | 
| Mir  میر  |  Ali Murad Khan Talpur علی مرادخان تالپور  |  1842–1894 | 
| Mir  میر  |  Faiz Muhammad Khan Talpur فیض محمدخان تالپور  |  1894 – 5 March 1909 | 
| Mir  میر  |  Imam Bakhsh Khan Talpur امام بخش خان تالپور  |  5 March 1909 – 8 February 1921 | 
| Mir  میر  |  Ali Nawaz Khan Talpur علی نوازخان تالپور  |  8 February 1921 – 25 December 1935 | 
| Mir  میر  |  Faiz Muhammad Khan Talpur II فیض محمدخان تالپور دوم  |  25 December 1935 – 19 July 1947 | 
| Mir  میر  |  George Ali Murad Khan Talpur II جارج علی مرادخان تالپور دوم  |  19 July 1947 – 10 November 1954 | 
Manikani Talpurs of Mirpur Khas
| Title | Personal Name | Reign | 
|---|---|---|
| Mir  میر  |  Tharo Ali Khan Talpur تهاره علیخان تالپور  |  1783 – 1806 | 
| Mir  میر  |  Ali Murad Khan Talpur علی مرادخان تالپور  |  1806 – 1829 | 
| Mir  میر  |  Sher Muhammad Khan Talpur شیر محمدخان تالپور  |  1829 – 1843 | 
See also
References
- ^ Beasley, Edward (2016). The Chartist General Charles James Napier, The Conquest of Sind, and Imperial Liberalism. Taylor & Francis. p. 214. ISBN 9781315517285.
 - ^ Habib, Irfan (1986). "Table I: Area and ʽJama of the Mughal Empire, c. 1601". An Atlas of the Mughal Empire: Political and Economic Maps with Detained Notes, Bibliography and Index. Oxford University Press. pp. xii–xiii. ISBN 978-0-19-560379-8.
 
Notes
- ^ Hyderabad served as the central seat for the autonomous Sohrabani Talpurs of Khairpur and Manikani Talpurs of Mirpur Khas from 1783 onwards
 




