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  1. Portrait of Kam Baksh. Mirza Muhammad Kam Bakhsh (Persian: محمد کامبخش; 7 March 1667 – 14 January 1709) was the youngest son of Mughal emperor Aurangzeb, born to his wife Udaipuri Mahal.

  2. Muhammad Kam Baksh, the son of Emperor Aurangzeb, and the ruler of Bijapur, and killed in a battle by his brother Bahadur Shah I, was born today in 1667.

  3. Bahadur Shah's half-brother, Muhammad Kam Bakhsh, marched to Bijapur in March 1707 with his soldiers. When the news of Aurangzeb's death spread through the city, the city's monarch, King Sayyid Niyaz Khan surrendered the fort to Baksh without a fight.

  4. Muhammad Kam Bakhsh (Persian: محمد کامبخش‎; 7 March 1667 – 14 January 1709) was the youngest son of Emperor Aurangzeb, born to his concubine Udaipuri Mahal.

  5. May 1, 2023 · After the death of Aurangzeb, there were three official contenders to the Mughal throne – Prince Muhammad Azam, Muhammad Muazzam, also called Shah Alam and Bahadur Shah I, and Kam Bakhsh. It was Prince Muhammad Azam who conveyed his father’s body for burial to Khuldabad.

  6. Zulfikhar Ali Khan was briefly joined by Aurangzeb's son Prince Muhammad Kam Bakhsh. On one occasion when the Mughal encampments around Jinji fort were surrounded by the Maratha rebels, he actually decided to defect.

  7. Muhammad Kam Bakhsh declared himself ruler in Bijapur, making strategic appointments and conquests but faced internal conspiracies and external challenges. He was accused of harshly dealing with dissent and was ultimately defeated by Bahadur Shah I, dying a prisoner after a failed rebellion.

  8. After Muhammad Azam Shah, Crown Prince of the Mughal Empire and favorite son of the Emperor Aurangzeb, was overthrown and killed by his half-brother, Emperor Shah Alam-Bahadur Shah, Aurangzeb's younger son Muhammad Kam Bakhsh rose up in rebellion.

  9. Muhammad Kam Bakhash was the youngest son of Emperor Aurangzeb. He reigned as the emperor for a very short period of just two years (1707-1709)!

  10. Nov 23, 2023 · After the death of Aurangzeb in c. 1707 CE, a war of succession broke out among his three sons – Muazzam (the governor of Kabul), Muhammad Kam Baksh (the governor of Deccan) and Muhammad Azam Shah (the governor of Gujarat).