Sultanate of Khandesh - issuer division [solved]

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This message aims at: requesting the creation or the modification of an issuer in the catalogue

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Hello Numista team.

Studying the coinage and history of India in a group of some Brazilian collectors, we noticed that some coins did not circulate in the whole area, some coins were issued by the Sultanate of Khandesh, coins issued in this region did not circulate in the rest of the country.

The Farooqi dynasty was the ruling dynasty of the Khandesh Sultanate from its inception in 1382 till its annexation by the Mughal emperor Akbar in 1601. When he was compelled to flee from Deccan, he established in Thalner on the Tapti River (in present-day Dhule district in Maharashtra). After receiving the grant of the fiefdoms of Thalner and Karanda (the present day Karwand, 19 km north of Thalner) from Firuz Shah Tughluq in 1370, he conquered the region around Thalner, which later became known as Khandesh (the land of the Khans). By 1382, he started ruling independently. The last ruler Bahadur Shah surrendered to the Mughals. Khandesh became a Mughal Subah.

Rulers of Khandesh Sultanate:


Maps of the region:






Many coins are listed on the site: https://www.zeno.ru/search.php?searchid=573787

Coins I have:

Sultanate of Khandesh, KH03, Bahadur Shah, AE Falus

Anothers issuers with similar characteristics that already exists in the India - Islamic which has a separate issuer.

Best Regards

Balestrin, Gabriel.
Balestrin, Gabriel.
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Good morning, there are numerous discussions about Khandesh and its rulers' coins: http://www.worldofcoins.eu/forum/

There are also numerous references on various recognized numismatic sites:

https://www.mintageworld.com/media/detail/12433-khandesh-sultanate/

https://www.marudhararts.com/e-auction/auction-no-23/lot-no-255/coins-of-india/sultanate-coins/khandesh-sultanate/09-adil-khan-iii-ah-914-926/1509-1520-ad-/copper-half-fulus-of-adil-khan-iii-of-khandesh-sultanate-.html
Balestrin, Gabriel.
"Goron, Stan & J. P. Goenka
2001, xxxi, 532 pages, well illustrated, rarity levels, large format, blue laminated boards, dust jacket. As New. Includes Sultans of Delhi. 2. Sultans of Bengal. 3. Sultans of Madura. 4. Bahmani Sultans and their precursors. 5. Adil Shahs of Bijapur. 6. Barid Shahs of Bidar. 7. Nizam Shahs of Ahmadnagar. 8. Qutb Shahs of Golkonda. 9. Sultans of Jaunpur. 10. Sultans of Kalpi. 11. Sultans of Gujarat. 12. Sultans of Khandesh. 13. Sultans of Malwa. 14. Sultans of Kashmir. 15. Rulers of Sind and the Punjab. From the Preface - "The Coinage of the Indian Sultanates is a very important primary source for helping us to understand the political and economic history of much of what is now India,Pakistan and Bangladesh during the period from the beginning of the thirteenth century AD until the seventeenth century when the last of the Sultanates, that of Bijapur, was absorbed into the Mughal Empire. The right of Sikka, i.e., the right to strike coins was one of the two juridically recognised expressions of the right of the ruler to sovereignty, and it was a right that was jealously guarded."

A reference catalog has a chapter dedicated to the Sultanate of Khandesh, but I don't have access to it so I can better verify your information about it.

Coins listed in the book: http://www.worldofcoins.eu/forum/index.php/topic,24473.msg235893.html#msg235893
Balestrin, Gabriel.
KHANDESH, 19th century

Formed in the 14th century itself, Khandesh has been variously spelled throughout history on European maps. Candich, Candish, Candeish, Khandeish etc. Consisting of today's three districts of Maharashtra - Nandurbar, Dhule and Jalgaon, Khandesh is one of those regions of India whose name has been completely wiped out and hardly anyone knows its location. Khandesh wasn't just one district and similar to territories such as Malwa, Berar, Bundelkhand, Baghelkhand etc., was a historical region situated just between Malwa in the north, Gujarat in the west, Berar in the east and Nizam's Hyderabad in the south.

Although Khandesh has been mentioned on maps dating as old as 16th centuries, the actual demarcation of the district took place in 1869 and a bifurcation took place in 1906 as East Khandesh (later, Jalgaon) and West Khandesh (later, Dhule which further bifurcated into Dhule and Nandurbar).

Differentiating between empires and dynasties under that empire, one such clan established (and ruled) this region under the Mughals. The Farooqui Dynasty under Malik Ahmed in 1382 (originally a rebel against the Bahmani Sultanate) established himself at Thalner (in today's Dhule district) and referred to the region as 'country of Khans', hence the name. Later, in 1601 the territory was annexed by Mughal Emperor, Akbar. Two major towns emerged from the history of Khandesh - Burhanpur and Asirgarh - which played major roles in Maratha history in the coming century. Before the death of Aurangzeb in 1707, Burhanpur and Asirgarh were involved in the '27 Years War' between the Marathas and Mughals and stood as key fortified towns which the Marathas conquered eventually. Interestingly, after the fall of the Marathas in 1818, these two towns were annexed to newly formed Nimar district in 1861, separated out of Khandesh.

All the consecutive rulers of Khandesh - Nasir Khan, Miran Adil Khan I, Miran Mubarak Khan I, Daud Khan, Ghazni Khan etc. justified the etymology of Khandesh and it was one of those territories that was involved in conflict with several medieval Indian kingdoms - Bahmani, Mughals, Marathas, British and even the Nizams. Even after independence till 1960s, the names 'East Khandesh' and 'West Khandesh' were mentioned when later it changed to Dhule (or Dhulia) and Jalgaon.

Its unfortunate that a territory that surrounded some of the most powerful regions of India during British era - Central Provinces, Nizam's Hyderabad, Gujarat States and Central India Agency - was later diminished with wiping out its name altogether. In fact, the towns by which Khandesh's prominence was known were themselves detached from the territory leaving the region with few forts that were of less strategic importance as compared to others.

The map here shows Khandesh of the 19th century and one could see the location of Burhanpur and Asirgarh in the Nimar district, Central Provinces.



https://www.facebook.com/mapsbysagar/photos/khandesh-19th-centuryformed-in-the-14th-century-itself-khandesh-has-been-various/302669374435801/
Cristiano
History of the Deccan Sultanates

https://www.zum.de/whkmla/region/india/xdeccansult.html



Khandesh under the Great Mughals had not been a subject of an intensive research as other areas under the same rulers had been. This constitutes the main justification for the present study. The annexation of Khandesh in 1601 by Akbar was an event of great military and economic importance in the history of Mughal India. Khandesh provided a territorial link between the north and the south. The Mughals realised this; they made use of its resources to promote, preserve and protect the imperial interests. The region, in fact, assumed far greater importance under the Mughals than it had under the Faruqis. For a century and a quarter (1601-1724), Khandesh as a Mughal province played a vital role in the history of medieval Deccan. The terminal date for the study of the political history of Khandesh under the Great Mughals should be 1707, when Aurangzeb passed away, but the legacies of the Great Mughals in the socio-economic and cultural life on the people of Khandesh could be traced to 1724, when Asaf Jah began his rule.
Balestrin, Gabriel.
Status changed to Done (stratocaster, 23 Jan 2022, 13:35)
Thank you for the information gathered here, I've just added the issuer:
https://en.numista.com/catalogue/khandesh_sultanate-1.html
:wiz:

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