Mirza Ghulam Murtaza (original) (raw)

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Indian chief and landowner (c.1791–1876)

Ghulam Murtaza
MīrzāRaʾīs-i Qādiyān
Landed gentry
Predecessor Mirza Atta Muhammad
Successor Mirza Ghulam Qadir
Born c. 1791
Died June 1876
Buried Qadian, Punjab, India
Noble family Barlas
Spouse(s) Chiragh Bibi
Issue Murad BegumGhulam QadirGhulam Ahmad
Father Mirza Atta Muhammad
Occupation Rais, physician, military personnel

Mirza Ghulam Murtaza (Urdu: مرزا غلام مرتضى) (c.1791 – June 1876) was an Indian chief and landowner best known for being the father of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, the founder of the Ahmadiyya movement. He belonged to a family of Mughal nobility that had lost most of its estates to the Sikh Kingdom during the late 18th century and only a fraction of which – including Qadian, the family's ancestral seat – he was able to regain from it.[1]

Ghulam Murtaza was mentioned in some detail by Sir Lepel Griffin in The Panjab Chiefs (1865), a survey of the Punjab’s aristocracy, as a man of "considerable local influence".[2] He was married to Chiragh Bibi and had three surviving children.[3]

Mirza Ghulam Murtaza was the son of Mirza Atta Muhammad, the chieftain (Raʾīs) of the fortified village of Qadian. His predecessors had originally exercised authority over a large semi-independent territory of some sixty square miles[4] comprising over seventy villages neighbouring Qadian[5] and had quasi-familial ties with the Mughal emperors. Atta Muhammad was entitled to a seat at the Durbars (courts) of the Mughal emperor.[6] His grandfather, Mirza Faiz Muhammad was conferred the title of Azādud Daulah (Strong Arm of the Government) by the emperor Farrukhsiyar and the rank of Haft Hazārī enabling him to keep a regular force of 7,000 soldiers.[7]

With the insurgency of the Sikh Confederacy, however, during the 18th century, the decline of the Mughals, and lacking any practical support from Delhi, the family saw a steady loss of its estate until, by the time of Atta Muhammad's death, Qadian, the last remaining stronghold, had also come under the control of the Sikhs and merged within the Sikh Empire. The family was expelled and lived in a nearby village for sixteen years until, in 1818, Ghulam Murtaza was allowed by Maharaja Ranjit Singh to return to Qadian in exchange for military support. This he did by joining, alongside his brothers, Ranjit Singh's army and engaging in campaigns in several places. In 1834–5, a further five villages out of his ancestral estate were returned to him by Ranjit Singh.[8] During the Anglo-Sikh wars, the family remained loyal to the Sikhs.[9] The wars ended, however, with a British victory resulting in the dissolution of the Sikh Empire and bringing the Punjab under British control in 1849. During the last days of the Sikh rule an abortive effort was made by some Sikhs to kill Ghulam Murtaza and his brother Mirza Ghulam Muhyuddin in Basrawan near Qadian where the two had been confined by them, but they were eventually rescued by their younger brother Mirza Ghulam Haidar.[10]

Although the Punjab remained relatively peaceful during the Indian Rebellion of 1857, Muslims of the region joined the Sikhs and the Muslim tribesmen of Kohat in providing military support to the British.[11] During the conflict, Ghulam Murtaza and his brother also supported the British by supplying horses and enlisting fifty Sowars (mounted troopers) in the British forces at their own expense.[9][12] Ghulam Ahmad and later Ahmadi authors viewed support for British rule during this period as a more favourable option for Muslims of the Punjab in contrast to the Sikh rule that preceded it.[13][14]

Ghulam Murtaza spent much of his time and fortune trying to regain his properties through litigation in the Colonial courts but to no avail.[15] The British accepted his claim over Qadian and some neighboring villages, but expropriated the rest of the family's ancestral estates.[16][4] Various British generals commended, through letters, the role of Ghulam Murtaza and his brother in helping put down the rebellion[9] and the British Government granted him an annual pension of 700 rupees.[4][17]

Mirza Ghulam Murtaza
Allegiance Sikh Empire
Service / branch Sikh Army
Years of service between 1818 and 1849
Rank Commander

Ghulam Murtaza fought in several places including Kashmir, Peshawar and Multan.[18] Ranjit Singh annexed Kashmir in 1819 following the Battle of Shopian and his forces took Peshawar in 1823 at the Battle of Nowshera,[8] though Ghulam Murtaza's role in these battles is unclear. In the reign of Sher Singh, he was in the army command structure. In 1841, with a general he was sent to Mandi and the Kullu Valley. In 1843, he was the commander of an infantry regiment which was sent to Peshawar. He also fought in Hazara in 1848 and was successful in putting down a rebellion. He also sent his men under his brother's command and quickly gained a good reputation as an able chief and commander.

Family and personal life

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Mirza Ghulam Murtaza's ancestors shared tribal affiliation with the Mughal rulers of the Indian subcontinent. He had four brothers: Mirza Ghulam Muhammad; Mirza Ghulam Mustafa; Mirza Ghulam Muhyuddin; and Mirza Ghulam Haidar. He was married to Chiragh Bibi, the sister of Mirza Jami'at Baig of Aima, a village in Hoshiarpur. They had six or seven children (exact count unsure) several of whom died in infancy. The names of the surviving children were: Murad Begum (daughter); Mirza Ghulam Qadir (son); and Mirza Ghulam Ahmad (son). Ghulam Ahmad was born a twin with a sister named Jannat who died a few days after birth.[3]

Ghulam Murtaza was also a physician, having studied medicine at Baghbanpura and Delhi,[19] He was also a poet using as his pen name (takhallus) the name Tahsin.[20] In his last days he built the Aqsa mosque which was oversized at the time and directed in his will that he be buried in a corner of its courtyard where his grave can still be found today.[21]

  1. ^ Khan 2015, pp. 22–23.
  2. ^ Sir Lepel H. Griffin (1865), The Panjab Chiefs, Online: apnaorg.com. pp.381-2
  3. ^ a b Dard 2008, p. 33.
  4. ^ a b c Adamson 1989, p. 14.
  5. ^ Khan 2015, p. 22.
  6. ^ Adamson 1989, p. 13.
  7. ^ Dard 2008, p. 9.
  8. ^ a b Dard 2008, pp. 13–14.
  9. ^ a b c Adamson 1989, p. 15.
  10. ^ Dard 2008, p. 15.
  11. ^ Hardy 1972, p. 67.
  12. ^ Dard 2008, pp. 17–20.
  13. ^ Geaves 2018, pp. 28–9.
  14. ^ Lavan 1974, pp. 23–4.
  15. ^ Dard 2008, p. 23.
  16. ^ Griffin & Massy 1890, p. 50.
  17. ^ Friedmann 2003, p. 2.
  18. ^ Dard 2008, pp. 13–16.
  19. ^ Dard 2008, p. 20.
  20. ^ Dard 2008, pp. 22.
  21. ^ Dard 2008, pp. 22–24.