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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mir_JafarMir Jafar - Wikipedia

    Mir Qasim formed an alliance to force the East India Company out of East India. The company soon went to war with him and his allies. The Battle of Buxar was fought on 22 October 1764 between the forces under the command of the East India Company led by Hector Munro , and the combined armies of Mir Qasim the Nawab of Bengal, Shuja-ud-Daula the Nawab of Awadh, and the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II .

  2. Nawab Mir Qasim, grand son of Syud Imtiaz, Subahdar of Gujrat, was put on the throne of Murshidabad by the East India Company, replacing his father-in-law Mir Jafar, on 20th October 1760. Able and ambitious, Mir Qasim was determined to assert his independence at the earliest opportunity, and he embodied the Indian reaction to the English ...

  3. Dasht Me IBNE HASAN (AS) Par Waqt Kaisa Aagaya...2. Baap Ka Tawiz Tha Bete Ke Bazu Par Bandha...2. Isliye Pehchan Me QASIM (AS) Ka Lasha Aagaya. Dasht Me IBNE HASAN (AS) Par Waqt Kaisa Aagaya...2. Matami Ke Ghar Me Akbar Jab Koi Dulha Bana...2. Yaad Sab Ko Karbala Wale Ka Sahra Aagaya.

  4. 18 de may. de 2017 · Mir Qasim’s soldiers met the English army troops directed by Major Munro in 1764. The joint armies of Mir Qasim were defeated by the British. Mir Qasim absconded from the battle and the other two surrendered to the English army. The battle of Buxar ended with the Treaty of Allahabad in 1765.

  5. 6. Mir Qasim and the British. The British started preparing for war thinking of removing Mir Qasim from the throne and installing another Nawab. In this connection munitions were being sent from Calcutta to Patna by a boat. Mir Qasim seized that boat by stopping it in Munger. On this, the defiant English general Alice, based in Patna, captured ...

  6. 31 de mar. de 2024 · Mīr Jaʿfar (born 1691?—died Feb. 5, 1765, Bengal, India) was the first Bengal ruler (1757–60; 1763–65) under British influence, which he helped bring about by working for the defeat of Mughal rule there. An Arab by birth, Mīr Jaʿfar assisted his brother-in-law, Gen. ʿAlī Vardī Khan, in seizing the government of Bengal in 1740.

  7. But Mir Qasim's independent spirit eventually raised British suspicions. Mir Jafar was reinstalled as Nawab in 1763. Mir Qasim continued opposing the British and his father-in-law. He set up his capital in Munger and raised an independent army. Mir Qasim attacked British positions in Patna, overrunning the company's offices and killing its ...