Muhammad Khan of Ganja
Muhammad Khan, Mammad Khan or Muhammad II of Ganja (Azerbaijani: Məhəmməd xan Ziyadoğlu-Qacar, 1738–1780) was the third Khan of Ganja from 1768 to 1780 from the Ziyadoglu branch of the Qajar clan who ruled the Beylerbeylik of Karabakh as hereditary governors.[3][4]
Muhammad Khan | |
---|---|
Khan of Ganja | |
Reign | 1778 - 1780 |
Predecessor | Muhammad Hasan Khan |
Successor | Title next held by Hajji Khan |
Born | 1738 |
Died | 1780 (aged 41–42)[1] or 1785 (aged 46–47)[2] |
Noble family | Ziyadoghlu Qajar |
Father | Shahverdi Khan of Ganja |
Mother | Gulgoncha |
Life
He was born in 1738[1] to Shahverdi Khan and his wife Sharafjahan in Ganja. He deposed his elder brother Muhammad Hasan in 1778 and usurped the throne.[5] Once came to power he eliminated all his relatives who could somehow interfere with him in state affairs. His younger brothers were forced to take refuge outside the khanate - Javad beg submitted to Ibrahim Khalil Khan of Karabakh, and Rahim beg went to Heraclius II.[6] Mammad Khan then ordered his uncle Reza Qoli Khan, who recently arrived from Iran in 1779, to be blinded.[5]
Deposition
Taking advantage of the situation in Ganja, Heraclius and Ibrahim Khalil made a pact and attacked Ganja on behalf of their puppet princes. Thus, at the beginning of 1780, the allied troops surrounded the Ganja fortress. The garrison of the fortress, led by Mammad Khan, could not resist for a long time and surrendered to the allied forces. Mammad Khan himself, with his entire family, was taken prisoner and then blinded by Ibrahim Khalil.[7] Having conquered Ganja, the victors appointed their representatives to manage the khanate. Hazrat Qoli beg (himself an ethnic Georgian) was the Karabakh governor while Prince Kaikhosro Andronikashvili, mdivanbegi ("High Court judge") of Georgia was appointed as Heraclius' governor. Prince Andronikashvili had up to 3000 soldiers at his disposal. However, this dual power, formed in Ganja, did not last long. Already by 1783, the situation had changed after Heraclius' treaty with Russia.[5] Ibrahim Khalil soon funded an uprising in 1783 led by Hajji Khan against Georgian troops. However, it ended up that the raging people expelled both foreign rulers from the city at the end of 1783.
According to some sources, he was executed by Ibrahim Kalil in 1785 in Shusha.[2]
Family
He was married to a sister of Surkhai Khan (1680–1748) of Qazikumukh - Huri Bike.[1] His first daughter Bilqayis was married to her cousin Shukur agha Javanshir, son of Mammad Hasan agha Javanshir, second daughter Sharafjahan begüm was also married to her cousin, Ughurlu Khan, son of Javad Khan.
References
- Berge, Adolf (1875). Акты, собранные Кавказской археографической комиссией [Acts collected by the Caucasian Archaeographic Commission]. Tbilisi. p. 905.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Butkov, Pyotr (1869). Материалы для новой истории Кавказа, с 1722 по 1803 год [Materials for the new history of the Caucasus, from 1722 to 1803] (in Russian). Saint Petersburg. p. 159.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Tapper, Richard (1997). Frontier nomads of Iran : a political and social history of the Shahsevan. New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press. pp. 114–115. ISBN 0-585-03973-9. OCLC 42854663.
- Russian embassies to the Georgian kings, 1589-1605. Volume 1. W. E. D. Allen, Sergeĭ Alekseevich Belokurov, Anthony Mango. Farnham, Surrey, England: Ashgate. 2010. p. 72. ISBN 978-1-4094-3246-3. OCLC 759159970.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - Bournoutian, George A. (2021). From the Kur to the Aras : a military history of Russia's move into the South Caucasus and the first Russo-Iranian war, 1801-1813. Leiden. p. 252. ISBN 978-90-04-44516-1. OCLC 1233024208.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Babayev 2003, p. 22.
- Babayev 2003, p. 25.
Sources
- Babayev, Elgun (2003). Из истории Гянджинского ханства [From the history of the Ganja Khanate] (PDF) (in Russian). Baku: Nurlan.