Origin of this chief. — Accidental circumstance of his being first
brought to the King's notice — is raised to the rank of a noble
of two thousand horse, and receives the districts of Talnere
and Kuronde in jageer — compels the Raja of Buglana to
pay tribute — invades the districts of Sooltanpoor and Nun-
THE first person who assumed independence in the province of Kandeish was Mullik Raja, the son of Khan Jehan Farooky, whose ancestors were among the most respectable nobles at the Dehly court, in the reigns of Alla-ood-Deen Khiljy and Mahomed Toghluk.
On the death of Khwaja Jehan, his son Mullik Raja was very young, and inherited only a small patrimony. He was diffident in his disposition, and, at the same time, too proud to thrust himself
into notice through the throng of abject courtiers who usually attend on monarchs. When he arrived at a certain age, he found he had expended the little property which he inherited, and he therefore entered the King's army as a private horseman. He was excessively addicted to the chase; and one day having attracted the notice of some of the courtiers on a hunting party, while he attended the King, he was admitted into the gholam khas, or the life-guard of Feroze Toghluk. Some time after this, it happened when the King was on a sporting excursion in Guzerat that his Majesty followed an antelope thirteen or fourteen coss (from twenty-six to twenty-eight miles), and his attendants, excepting one or two, were all left behind. The King and his steed were completely exhausted. Far removed from the camp, and with his horse jaded, it appeared improbable that he could reach it for many hours. At this moment a horseman was descried at a distance, leading a brace of greyhounds, whom the King's party beckoned towards them. Upon his arrival he was asked if any thing could be procured to eat. He replied, pointing to his steed, which carried some game, that he had some venison, and if his Majesty pleased he would instantly strike a light and dress it. The King, upon learning that his host was Mullik Raja, the son of the late Khan Jehan, an officer of respectability, resolved to promote him; and at the very first durbar raised him to the rank of an officer of two thousand horse, and shortly afterwards conferred on him the districts of Talnere and Kuronde, situated on the borders of the Deccan.
A. H. 772. After the death of Feroze, when Dilawur Khan
Ghoory assumed independence in Malwa, an intimate
connection took place between the latter
and Mullik Raja, so much so, that Dilawur Khan
gave his daughter in marriage to Mullik Nuseer,
the son of the governor of Kandeish. At this
period, Moozuffur Shah of Guzerat declared himself
independent; and some internal commotions
subsequently arising, Mullik Raja, relying on the
support of Dilawur Khan, invaded the Guzerat provinces,
and laid waste the districts of Sooltanpoor
and Nundoorbar. Moozuffur Shah, though engaged
in reducing the infidel Hindoos in his kingdom,
on hearing of this inroad, made rapid marches to
Sooltanpoor, from whence Mullik Raja was glad to
retreat, and to seek protection in the fort of Tal-
Shaban 22.
A. H. 801.
April 28.
A. D. 1399.
the month of Shaban, A. H. 801, Mullik Raja died, and was buried at the town of Talnere, after a reign of twenty-nine years.*
In the year 1013, (A. D. 1604,) when the
author attended the palanquin of the daughter of
Ibrahim Adil Shah from Beejapoor to Boorhan-
Mullik Raja, the first Mahomedan ruler of
Kandeish, is descended from the Caliph Oomr
Farook, and traces his pedigree thus: Mullik
Raja, the son of Khan Jehan, the son of Ally
Khan, the son of Oothman Khan, the son of
Simeon Shah,
*
the son of Ashab Shah, the son of
Armian Shah, the son of Ibrahim Shah of Bulkh,
the son of Adhum Shah, the son of Ahmud
Shah, the son of Mahmood Shah, the son of Ma-
Mullik Raja became the disciple of the holy saint Zein-ood-Deen of Dowlutabad, and from him received the “garb of desire and assent,” which he delivered to his son Nuseer, who in like manner transmitted it to his son, and in this way it was handed down from father to son for nearly two hundred years; and Bahadur, the son of Raja Ally Khan, the last of the independent rulers of Kandeish, possessed this precious relic when he lost his kingdom.