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Tabaqat-i Nasiri, written by the Sultan's court historian Minhaj-i-Siraj, calls him a son (ibn) of Iltutmish. [2] According to Minhaj's account, Nasiruddin was born in the year of 626 Hijri (1229-1230 CE), in Delhi's Kasr-Bagh (the Garden Castle).
A translation of the Niʻmatnāmah was published by Norah M. Titley in 2005. The book provided a complete facsimile of the manuscript’s folios and detailed study of the terms for flora, fauna, food and other substances, with their modern and Latin equivalents.
By 1303, Syed Nasiruddin had become the Sipah Salar of the Sultan's army. During this time, Firoz Shah was involved in a war with the Hindu king of Sylhet , Gour Govinda . Two unsuccessful attacks against Govinda had already been attempted by the Sultan's army, led by his nephew Sikander Khan . [ 4 ]
Nasiruddin Mahmud was a son of sultan Nasir ud din Muhammad Shah III, who ruled the Delhi Sultanate from 31 August 1390 to 20 January 1394.Upon his death, his older son Ala ud-din Sikandar Shah became sultan, but he soon died of illness on 8 March 1394, and his younger brother Nasiruddin Mahmud succeeded him.
Nasiruddin Mahmud Chiragh Dehlavi (or Chiragh-e-Delhi) [8] was born as Nasiruddin Mahmud Al Hasani around 1274, at Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh. [9] [10] Dehlavi's father, Yahya Al Hasani, who traded in Pashmina, and his grandfather, Shaikh Yahya Abdul Latif Al Hasani, first migrated from Khorasan, northeastern Iran, to Lahore, and thereafter settled in Ayodhya, in Awadh.
A 17th-century miniature of Nasiruddin, from the collection of the Topkapı Palace Museum. Nasreddin (/ n æ s ˈ r ɛ d ɪ n / [1]) or Nasreddin Hodja (variants include Mullah Nasreddin Hodja, Nasruddin Hodja, Mullah Nasruddin, Mullah Nasriddin, Khoja Nasriddin) (1208–1285) is a character commonly found in the folklores of the Muslim world, and a hero of humorous short stories and satirical ...
Sultan Ghari was the first Islamic Mausoleum (tomb) built in 1231 AD for Prince Nasiruddin Mahmud, eldest son of Iltumish, in the "funerary landscape of Delhi" in the Nangal Dewat Forest, Near Nangal Dewat Vasant Kunj). [2] [3] Iltumish was the third Sultan of the Slave Dynasty who ruled in Delhi from 1210 to 1236 AD.
In 1228, Nasiruddin attacked and killed Raja Prithu (r. 1185–1228), a ruler in Kamarupa. [4] He subsequently attacked Tibet however he had to retreat back to Bengal due to cold weather and snow as many of his soldiers had died of hypothermia. [citation needed] After ruling for one and a half years, Nasiruddin died in 1229. [4]