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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Askari_MirzaAskari Mirza - Wikipedia

    Muhammad Askari Mirza ( Persian: محمد عسکری میرزا), sometimes known simply as Askari (1516 – 5 October 1557 [1]) was a son of Babur Mirza, the founder of the Mughal dynasty and Gulrukh Begum. Askari was also a general of the Mughal Army known for his role in the early Mughal conquests of India.

  2. Mirza Askari (1635 — 12 May 1710), better known by his title Wazir Khan, was the Mughal governor (Faujdar) of Sarkar i Sirhind in the present state of Punjab. He administered the territory of the Mughal Empire that laid between the Sutlej and Yamuna rivers.

  3. 1 de sept. de 2022 · Sep 1, 2022. 3 min read. Vanguard Hunter Askari. Updated: May 8, 2023. Copyright: SemiMyth Enterntainment LLC - artwork by Daniel Fabro Gomes. Askari Mirza was the second youngest son of Mughal Emperor Babur. As such, it was unlikely that he would ever become the heir-apparent, leave alone emperor.

  4. Askari Mirza v. Bibi Jai Kishori, 1912 16 IC 344 – Trace Your Case. Askari Mirza v. Bibi Jai Kishori, 1912 16 IC 344. ISSUE: Whether a threat of filing criminal charges lead to coercion under Section 15 of the Indian Contract Act. RULE: To threaten a criminal prosecution is not per se an act forbidden by the Indian Penal Code.

  5. Kamran Mirza (1509 –1557) Gulchehra Begum: Askari Mirza (1516 –1557/1558) Hindal Mirza (1519 –1551) Gulbadan Begum: Gulrukh Begum: 3. Akbar (1542 –1605) Mirza Muhammad Hakim (1553 –1585) 4. Jahangir (1569 –1627) Shahzada Khanam: Shah Murad (1570- 1599) Daniyal (1572- 1604) Shakarunnisa Begum: Aram Banu Begum: Sultan Nisar Begum ...

  6. Muhammad Askari Mirza (1516-5 October 1557) was the Mughal ruler of Sambhal from 1531 to 1554. A son of Babur, he served as governor of Sambhal after aiding in his father's conquest of northern India, and he died in 1557 while he was on a hajj.

  7. Evidence of this discontent can be seen in his decision to ignore Humayun and instead recall MirzaAskari from Multan to help him in the 1528–9 campaign against Bihar and Bengal. Such favor for MirzaAskari may well have prompted Humayun’s precipitous abandonment of Badakhshan in 1529 and unauthorized return to the imperial court.