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  1. Prince Sahibzada Sayyid Shareef Ghulam Muhammad Sultan Khan Sahib, KCSI (March 1795 in Srirangapatnam – 11 August 1872 in Tollygunge, Calcutta) was the youngest son of Tipu Sultan.

  2. A grandnephew of Sir Ghulam Muhammad by his elder half-brother Shahzada Munir-ud-din Sultan Sahib. Magistrate, Sheriff of Calcutta and Fellow of Calcutta University. Chief Representative from 14 December 1896-1892 January 1913.

  3. www.royalark.net › India4 › tipu8tipu8 - royalark.net

    The Family of Tipu Sultan. GENEALOGY. continued from the previous page. 14) H.H. Prince ( Shahzada) Ghulam Muhammad Sultan Sahib, KCSI (28.5.1870). b. at Seringapatam, March 1795, educ. privately. Deported to Calcutta with his brothers and the rest of his family, 20 th August 1806.

  4. This is a letter written by Prince Ghulam Muhammad Sultan, the fourteenth son of Tipu Sultan (1751-1799), the ruler of Mysore. The letter, dated 21st August 1868, is addressed to a British government official, Captain Peacock. After Tipu Sultan’s defeat in Seringapatam, the British deported the Sultan’s remaining family members to Calcutta.

  5. Shahzada Sir Ghulam Muhammad Sultan Sahib, KCSI (March 1795, Seringapatam-11 August 1872, Russapagla, Calcutta) was the fourteenth son of Tipu Sultan, the Indian warrior-emperor of Mysore.

  6. Nov 21, 2019 · Tipu Sultan’s fourth son Sultan Muhinuddin, in a charcoal sketch by James Hickey, editor of India’s first newspaper, Hickey’s Bengal Gazette Seven of Tipu’s 12 sons had no surviving male heir. Of the five sons who did, record is found of only two: the princes Muniruddin and Ghulam Muhammad.

  7. Shahzada Sir Ghulam Muhammad Sultan Khan Sahib, KCSI (March 1795 in Seringapatam – 11 August 1872 in Russapagla, Calcutta) was the fourteenth son of Tipu Sultan.Deported to Calcutta in 1806 along with the remainder of his family seven years after the defeat and death of his father, he was eventually recognised by the Government of India as ...