After the decease of Ahmad Sháh, his son Mohammed ascended the throne, in the year of the Hijra 845, A.D. 1441; but hegiving himself up to pleasure and amusement, showed no solicitude about the affairs of his government. Being very liberal and profuse in his presents, this Sultán was named by the people Zir-Bakhsh. In that very year, he led an army against the Rájá of Ídur,* who, having fled before him, lurked for some time among the hills; but, having soon after sent ambassadors to ask pardon for his faults, he was accordingly forgiven, and gave his daughter in marriage to the Sultán. From thence he carried an army into the district of Bágar (Wágar); and, after plundering the country, returned to his capital. In that same year, the holy Shaikh Ahmad Khattú Ganj Bakhsh died.
The Sultán, after ordering a mausoleum and
mosque to be erected in the neighbourhood of
the Shaikh's tomb, marched against the fort of
Chámpánír, in A. Hij. 854, A.D. 1450. When returning
from this expedition, he fell sick at the
town of Godhrah in the parganah of Sanaulí,
and died afterwards at Ahmadábád, on the 20th
22d Feb.
A.D. 1451.
The length of this Sultán's reign was nine years and some months, though sometimes said to be seven years and four months. The manner of his death is also differently related, as may be found in the history called the Mirát Sikandarí.