Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. He was the younger son of Gorakh Shah, the Gond ruler of Deogarh. [5] To regain his throne from his brother, Bakht Buland went to Mughal capital of Delhi in 1686 and reluctantly accepted Islam, in order to get military assistance from the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb. [10] [7] In exchange, he was recognized as the Raja of Deogarh. [7]

  2. Portrait of Bakht Buland Shah, the greatest Gond ruler of Deogarh. The Gonds of Deogarh were a Gond royal house that ruled large parts of the Vidarbha region and parts of present-day southern Madhya Pradesh. Their Kingdom consisted of the area which later became the Nagpur Kingdom.

  3. Portrait of Bakht Buland Shah, the greatest Gond ruler of Deogarh. Establishment. The Gauli princes (Yadav) were the predecessors to the Gond house of Deogarh, ruling for 70 years from 1472 to 1542. The Gond dynasty of Deogarh was founded by a Gond named Jatba.

  4. Bakht Buland Shah was a ruler of the Rajgond dynasty. He added to his kingdom, the territories of Chanda and Mandla, and portions of Nagpur, Balaghat, Seoni, Bhandara and the adjoining Rajput kingdom of Kherla/Khedla.

  5. Aug 30, 2023 · Founder of Nagpur Bakht Buland Shah: Bakht Buland Shah, the ruler of the Deogarh dynasty, established Nagpur more than 300 years ago. By combining twelve separate hamlets, he founded and constructed a city.

    • Shams Ur Rehman Alavi
  6. Oct 1, 2014 · One of his successors, Bakht Buland Shah, converted to Islam to win the favour of emperor Aurangzeb. However, he did not demand conversion from his subjects and married a Gond woman. He fell into disfavour in Delhi after he plundered some Muslim kingdoms of Deccan.

  7. Bakht Buland Shah was a ruler of the Rajgond dynasty. He added to his kingdom, the territories of Chanda and Mandla, and portions of Nagpur, Balaghat, Seoni, Bhandara and the adjoining Rajput kingdom of Kherla/Khedla. [4]