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Wadud of Swat

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Miangul Abdul Wadud
Wali of Swat (1926–1949)
PredecessorSyed Abdul Jabbar Shah
SuccessorJahan Zeb of Swat
Born1881
Saidu Sharif
DiedOctober 1, 1971
Aqba, Saidu Sharif, Swat

Miangul Abdul Wadud (Urdu:ميانگل عبد الودود) was the Wāli of Swat and grandson of the Akhund of Swat. He was elected Badshah Sahib (king) of Swat by a loya jirga held at Kabal in November 1918, and was recognized by the British authorities as ruler and formally installed as Wāli of Swat in Saidu Sharif on 3 May 1926. He ruled from 1918 to 1949, when he abdicated in favour of his eldest son, Miangul Jahan Zeb.[citation needed]

Early life and struggle for power

Miangul Sir Abdul Wadud was born in Saidu Sharif in 1881. He was the elder son of Miangul Abdul Khaliq, and grandson on the maternal side of Aman ul-Mulk, Mehtar of Chitral. He was educated privately. In 1915, when the tribes of Upper Swat elected Sayed Abdul Jabbar Shah as their king, he opposed the election and went into exile at Dalbar from 1915-1916. Abdul Jabbar could not defend the territory in a counterattack on Nawab of Dir in 1916.[1] Anarchy ensued. Abdul Wadud returned and took up arms against Abdul Jabbar in 1916. As a result, the Jirga of Swat decided to oust Abdul Jabbar king[2] and appointed Abdul Wadud, a grandson of the Akhund of Swat, to replace him in 1917. Abdul Wadud established his rule in Swat with the help of the Mandanr raider tribe, and annexed Buner and Chakesar to his dominion. By 1923, he controlled most of the Swat area.

Wāli of Swat

Abdul Wadud was proclaimed the Wāli of Swat in 1926 with an annual allowance of 10,000 rupees from the government of India.[1] He had three wives, eight daughters and four sons.

Though he was elected king and was locally known as "Bacha" or "Badshah", meaning "king," the British authorities only granted him the title of Wāli, which refers to a religious[dubiousdiscuss] ruler. Abdul Wadud wanted the title of king but was denied by the British political authorities on the basis that no ruler in India was a king, and that only the King-Emperor in Britain had the right to be styled in such a manner. Abdul Wadud acceded to Pakistan in late 1947.[1]

Abdul Wadud removed shades for Hindu pilgrims on Elum Ghar who believed it to be the location of Rām taḫt.[3]

He abdicated in favour of his eldest son, Miangul Jahan Zeb, on 12 December 1949. Jahan Zeb ruled Swat until its merger with Pakistan in 1969.[2]

Honours and awards

Death

Abdul Wadud died at the Royal Palace, Aqba (now Iqra Academy), on 1 October 1971 and was buried there at the Badshah Sahib Mausoleum.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Bangash, Yaqoob. "The Creation of Swat State". Khudi.pk. Retrieved 13 January 2014.
  2. ^ a b Aamir, Riaz (5 July 2009). "Malakand under Siege". Daily Jang ,Rawalpindi. Retrieved 20 April 2014.
  3. ^ Sultan-i-Rome (2012). "Religious Perspective of Pre-Muslim Swat". Journal of Asian Civilizations. 35 (2): 118–119.

Further reading

  • Muhammad Altaf Husain, The Story of Swat as told by the Founder, Miangul Abdul Wadud (Badshah Sahib), to Muhammad Asif Khan. Miangul Abdul Wadud (Badshah Sahib), Peshawar, 1963.
  • Sultan-i-Rome, Swat State, 1915–1969, From Genesis to Merger: An Analysis of Political, Administrative, Socio-Political, and Economic Development, Karachi: Oxford University Press (2008), ISBN 0-19-547113-X