List of rulers of Bengal
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2013) |
This is a list of rulers of Bengal. For much of its history, Bengal was split up into several independent kingdoms, completely unifying only several times. In ancient times, Bengal consisted of the kingdoms of Pundra, Magadha, Suhma, Anga, Vanga, Samatata and Harikela.
Under the Mauryas, much of Bengal was conquered except for the far eastern Bengali kingdoms which continued to exist as tributary states before succumbing to the Guptas. With the fall of the Gupta Empire, Bengal was united under a single local ruler, Shashanka, for the first time. With the collapse of his kingdom, Bengal split up into petty kingdoms once more.
With the rise of Gopala in 750 AD, Bengal was united once more under the Buddhist Pala Empire until the 12th century then being succeeded by the Hindu Chandra dynasty, Sena dynasty and deva dynasty. After them, Bengal was ruled by the Hindu Maharajas of kingdoms such as Chandradwip and Cooch Behar. 13th-16th centuries under the regional power of Bengal sultanate who appointed various local Muslim officials- followed by the British. The position of the Prime Minister of Bengal was established in 1937, and served as the provincial chief executive in the British Raj, until 1947, when Bengal was partitioned, making West Bengal part of India and the East Bengal part of Pakistan. East Bengal then became an independent country, Bangladesh, following the Bangladesh Liberation War.
Legendary kings of Magadha: Brihadratha Dynasty (c. 1700–799 BCE)
- Brihadratha
- Jarasandha
- Sahadeva of Magadha
- Somadhi (1679–1618 BCE)
- Srutasravas (1618–1551 BCE)
- Ayutayus (1551–1515 BCE)
- Niramitra (1515–1415 BCE)
- Sukshatra (1415–1407 BCE)
- Brihatkarman (1407–1384 BCE)
- Senajit (1384–1361 BCE)
- Srutanjaya (1361–1321 BCE)
- Vipra (1321–1296 BCE)
- Suchi (1296–1238 BCE)
- Kshemya (1238–1210 BCE)
- Subrata (1210–1150 BCE)
- Dharma (1150–1145 BCE)
- Susuma (1145–1107 BCE)
- Dridhasena (1107–1059 BCE)
- Sumati (1059–1026 BCE)
- Subhala (1026–1004 BCE)
- Sunita (1004–964 BCE)
- Satyajit (964–884 BCE)
- Biswajit (884–849 BCE)
- Ripunjaya (849–799 BCE)
Pre-Pala dynasties
Haryanka Dynasty (568–413 BCE)
- Haryanka (568–544 BCE)
- Bhattiya (555–549 BCE)
- Bimbisara (549–491 BCE)
- Ajatashatru (491–461 BCE)
- Udayin (461-445)
- Anuruddha (445-440)
- Munda (440-437)
- Nagadasaka (437-413)
Shishunaga Dynasty (413–345 BCE)
- Shishunaga (413–395 BCE)
- Kakavarna (395–367 BCE)
- Mahanandin (367-345 BCE)
Nanda Dynasty (345–321 BCE)
- Mahapadma Nanda (from 345 BCE)
- Pandhuka
- Panghupati
- Bhutapala
- Rashtrapala
- Govishanaka
- Dashasidkhaka
- Kaivarta
- Dhana Nanda (Agrammes, Xandrammes) (until 321 BCE)
Maurya Dynasty (324–185 BCE)
- Chandragupta Maurya (Sandrakottos) (324–301 BCE)
- Bindusara Amitraghata (301–273 BCE)
- Ashoka Vardhana (Ashoka the Great) (273–232 BCE),
- Dasharatha (232–224 BCE)
- Samprati (224–215 BCE)
- Shalishuka (215–202 BCE)
- Devavarman (202–195 BCE)
- Shatadhanvan (195–187 BCE)
- Brihadratha (187–184 BCE)
Shunga Dynasty (185–73 BCE)
- Pushyamitra Shunga (185–149 BCE)
- Agnimitra (149–141 BCE)
- Vasujyeshtha (141–131 BCE)
- Vasumitra (131–124 BCE)
- Andhraka (124–122 BCE)
- Pulindaka (122–119 BCE)
- Ghosha
- Vajramitra
- Bhagabhadra
- Devabhuti (83–73 BCE)
Kanva Dynasty (73–43 BCE)
- Vasudeva Kanva (from 73 BCE)
- Bhumimitra
- Narayana
- Susharman (Until 43 BCE)
Gupta Empire (c. CE 240–550 )
- Sri-Gupta I (c. 240–280)
- Ghatotkacha (280–319)
- Chandra Gupta I (320–335)
- Samudra Gupta (335–380)
- Rama Gupta (?)
- Chandra Gupta II (Chandragupta Vikramaditya) (380–413/415)
- Kumara Gupta I (415–455)
- Skanda Gupta (455–467)
- Puru Gupta(467-473)
- Kumara Gupta II (473–476)
- Buddha Gupta (476–495)
- Narasimha Gupta(495-?)
- Kumara Gupta III (?)
- Vishnugupta (540–550)
- Vainya Gupta (550–?)
- Bhanu Gupta(?)
Gauda Kingdom
Khadga kingdom
The Khadga dynasty was a line of Buddhist kings that ruled the areas of Vanga and later Samatata (modern Bangladesh).[1]
- Khadgodyama (625–640)
- Jatakhadga (640–658)
- Devakhadga (658–673)
- Rajabhata (673–690)
- Balabhata (690–705)
- Udirnakhadga (undetermined reign)
Mallabhum
Mallabhum was the kingdom ruled by the Mallas kings of Bishnupur primarily in the present Bankura district in the Indian state of West Bengal.[2][3][4]
- Adi Malla (694 - 710)
- Jay Malla (710 - 720)
- Benu Malla (720 - 733)
- Kinu Malla (733 - 742)
- Indra Malla (742 - 757)
- Kanu (Kau/Kalu) Malla (757 - 764)
- Dha (Jhau) Malla (764 - 775)
- Shur Malla (775 - 795)
- Kanak Malla (795 - 807)
- Kandarpa Malla (807 - 828)
- Sanatan Malla (828 - 841)
- Kharga Malla (841 - 862)
- Durjan (Durjay) Malla (862 - 906)
- Yadav Malla (906 - 919)
- Jagannath Malla (919 - 931)
- Birat Malla (931 - 946)
- Mahadev Malla (946 - 977)
- Durgadas Malla (977 - 994)
- Jagat Malla (994 - 1007)
- Ananta Malla (1007 - 1015)
- Rup Malla (1015 - 1029)
- Sundar Malla (1029 - 1053)
- Kumud Malla (1053 - 1074)
- Krishna Malla (1074 - 1084)
- Rup II (Jhap) Malla (1084 - 1097)
- Prakash Malla (1097 - 1102)
- Pratap Malla (1102 - 1113)
- Sindur Malla (1113 - 1129)
- Sukhomoy(Shuk) Malla (1129 - 1142)
- Banamali Malla (1142 - 1156)
- Yadu/Jadu Malla (1156 - 1167)
- Jiban Malla (1167 - 1185)
- Ram(Kshetra) Malla (1185 - 1209)
- Gobinda Malla (1209 - 1240)
- Bhim Malla (1240 - 1263)
- Katar(Khattar) Malla (1263 - 1295)
- Prithwi Malla (1295 - 1319)
- Tapa Malla (1319 - 1334)
- Dinabandhu Malla (1334 - 1345)
- Kinu/Kanu Malla II (1345 - 1358)
- Shur Malla II (1358 - 1370)
- Shiv Singh Malla (1370 - 1407)
- Madan Malla (1407 - 1420)
- Durjan Malla (1420 - 1437)
- Uday Malla (1437 - 1460)
- Chandra Malla (1460 - 1501)
- Bir Malla (1501 - 1554)
- Dhari Malla (1554 - 1565)
- Hambir Malla Dev (1565 - 1620)
- Dhari Hambir Malla Dev (1620 - 1626)
- Raghunath Singha Dev (1626 - 1656)
- Bir Singha Dev (1656 - 1682)
- Durjan Singha Dev(1682 - 1702)
- Raghunath Singha Dev II (1702 - 1712)
- Gopal Singha Dev (1712 - 1748)
- Chaitanya Singha Dev (1748 - 1801)
- Madhav Singha Dev (1801 - 1809)
- Gopal Singha Dev II (1809 - 1876)
- Ramkrishna Singha Dev (1876 - 1885)
- Dwhajamoni Devi (1885 - 1889)
- Nilmoni Singha Dev (1889 - 1903)
- No King (1903 - 1930)
- Kalipada Singha Thakur (1930 - 1983)
Pala and post-Pala dynasties
Pala Empire
Most of the Pala inscriptions mention only the regnal year as the date of issue, without any well-known calendar era. Because of this, the chronology of the Pala kings is hard to determine.[5] Based on their different interpretations of the various epigraphs and historical records, different historians estimate the Pala chronology as follows:[6]
RC Majumdar (1971)[7] | AM Chowdhury (1967)[8] | BP Sinha (1977)[9][failed verification] | DC Sircar (1975–76)[10] | D. K. Ganguly (1994)[5] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gopala I | 750–770 | 756–781 | 755–783 | 750–775 | 750–774 |
Dharmapala | 770–810 | 781–821 | 783–820 | 775–812 | 774–806 |
Devapala | 810–c. 850 | 821–861 | 820–860 | 812–850 | 806–845 |
Mahendrapala | NA (Mahendrapala's existence was conclusively established through a copper-plate charter discovered later.) | 845–860 | |||
Shurapala I | Deemed to be alternate name of Vigrahapala I | 850–858 | 860–872 | ||
Gopala II | NA (copper-plate charter discovered in 1995. Text of inscription published in 2009.) | ||||
Vigrahapala I | 850–853 | 861–866 | 860–865 | 858–60 | 872–873 |
Narayanapala | 854–908 | 866–920 | 865–920 | 860–917 | 873–927 |
Rajyapala | 908–940 | 920–952 | 920–952 | 917–952 | 927–959 |
Gopala III | 940–957 | 952–969 | 952–967 | 952–972 | 959–976 |
Vigrahapala II | 960–c. 986 | 969–995 | 967–980 | 972–977 | 976–977 |
Mahipala I | 988–c. 1036 | 995–1043 | 980–1035 | 977–1027 | 977–1027 |
Nayapala | 1038–1053 | 1043–1058 | 1035–1050 | 1027–1043 | 1027–1043 |
Vigrahapala III | 1054–1072 | 1058–1075 | 1050–1076 | 1043–1070 | 1043–1070 |
Mahipala II | 1072–1075 | 1075–1080 | 1076–1078/9 | 1070–1071 | 1070–1071 |
Shurapala II | 1075–1077 | 1080–1082 | 1071–1072 | 1071–1072 | |
Ramapala | 1077–1130 | 1082–1124 | 1078/9–1132 | 1072–1126 | 1072–1126 |
Kumarapala | 1130–1140 | 1124–1129 | 1132–1136 | 1126–1128 | 1126–1128 |
Gopala IV | 1140–1144 | 1129–1143 | 1136–1144 | 1128–1143 | 1128–1143 |
Madanapala | 1144–1162 | 1143–1162 | 1144–1161/62 | 1143–1161 | 1143–1161 |
Govindapala | 1158–1162 | NA | 1162–1176 or 1158–1162 | 1161–1165 | 1161–1165 |
Palapala | NA | NA | NA | 1165–1199 | 1165–1200 |
Note:[6]
- Earlier historians believed that Vigrahapala I and Shurapala I were the two names of the same person. Now, it is known that these two were cousins; they either ruled simultaneously (perhaps over different territories) or in rapid succession.
- AM Chowdhury rejects Govindapala and his successor Palapala as the members of the imperial Pala dynasty.
- According to BP Sinha, the Gaya inscription can be read as either the "14th year of Govindapala's reign" or "14th year after Govindapala's reign". Thus, two sets of dates are possible.
Chandra Dynasty
- Traillokyachandra (900–930)
- Srichandra (930–975)
- Kalyanachandra (975–1000)
- Ladahachandra (1000–1020)
- Govindachandra (1020–1050)
Chola dynasty
- Rajendra Chola I (1019-1024)
Sena dynasty
- Hemanta Sena (1070–1096)
- Vijaya Sena (1096–1159)
- Ballala Sena (1159–1179)
- Lakshmana Sena (1179–1206)
- Vishvarupa Sena (1206–1225)
- Keshava Sena (1225–1230)
Deva Dynasty
- Purushottamadeva
- Madhusudanadeva
- Vasudeva
- Damodaradeva (1231–1243)
- Dasharathadeva (1281)
Delhi sultanates era
Khalji or Khilji dynasty (1204–1227)
Name | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|
Muhammad bin Bakhtiyar Khilji | 1204–1206 | |
Muhammad Shiran Khilji | 1206–1208 | |
Ghiyasuddin Iwaj Shah | 1208–1210 | |
Ali Mardan Khilji | 1210–1212 | |
Ghiyasuddin Iwaj Shah | 1212–1227 | second term as Husamuddin Iwaj Khilji |
Governors of Bengal under Mamluk Sultanate (1227–1281)
Name | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|
Nasiruddin Mahmud | 1227–1229 | |
Alauddin Daulat Shah Khalji | 1229–1230[11] | |
Malik Balkha Khilji | 1230–1231 | |
Alauddin Jani | 1232–1233 | |
Saifuddin Aibak | 1233–1236 | |
Awor Khan Aibak | 1236 | |
Tughral | 1236–1246 | |
Tughlaq Tamar Khan | 1246–1247 | |
Jalaluddin Masud Jani | 1247–1251 | |
Malik Ikhtiyaruddin Iuzbak | 1251–1257 | |
Ijjauddin Balban Iuzbaki | 1257–1259 | |
Tatar Khan | 1259–1268 | |
Sher Khan | 1268–1272 | |
Amin Khan | 1272–1272 | |
Tughral Tughan Khan | 1272–1281 | Second term as Mughisuddin Tughral |
Balban dynasty (1281–1324)
Name | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|
Nasiruddin Bughra Khan | 1281 –1291 | As governor of Lakhnauti in 1281–1287 and as independent Sultan in 1287–1291. |
Rukunuddin Kaikaus | 1291–1300 | First Muslim ruler to conquer Satgaon kingdom. Divided Bengal into two parts – Lakhnauti. |
Shamsuddin Firoz Shah | 1300–1322 | First Muslim ruler to conquer Sonargaon region. |
Ghiyasuddin Bahadur Shah | 1322–1324 | Lost independence of Bengal to Delhi Sultan Ghiyasuddin Tughlaq. |
Governors of Bengal under Tughlaq Sultanate (1324–1339)
Name | Region | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Ghiyasuddin Bahadur Shah | Sonargaon | 1324–1328 | |
Bahram Khan | Sonargaon | 1328–1338 | |
Qadar Khan | Lakhnauti | 1328–1336 | |
Mukhlis | Lakhnauti | 1336–1339 | |
Azam Khan | Satgaon | 1324–1328 | |
Izzuddin Yahya | Satgaon | 1328–1339 |
Bengal Sultanate Era
Independent Sultans of Bengal during Tughlaq Sultanate (1338–1352)
Name | Region | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Fakhruddin Mubarak Shah | Sonargaon | 1338–1349 | |
Ikhtiyaruddin Ghazi Shah | Sonargaon | 1349–1352 | |
Ilyas Shah | Satgaon | 1339–1342 | |
Alauddin Ali Shah | Lakhnauti | 1339–1342 | |
Ilyas Shah | Lakhnauti and Satgaon | 1342–1352 |
Ilyas Shahi dynasty (1352–1414)
Name | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|
Shamsuddin Ilyas Shah | 1352–1358 | Became the first sole ruler of whole Bengal comprising Sonargaon, Satgaon and Lakhnauti. |
Sikandar Shah | 1358–1390 | Killed in battle with his son and successor, Ghiyasuddin Azam Shah |
Ghiyasuddin Azam Shah | 1390–1411 | |
Saifuddin Hamza Shah | 1411–1412 | |
Shihabuddin Bayazid Shah | 1412–1414 |
House of Raja Ganesha (1414–1435)
Name | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|
Raja Ganesha | 1414–1415 | |
Jalaluddin Muhammad Shah | 1415–1416 | Son of Raja Ganesha and converted into Islam |
Raja Ganesha | 1416–1418 | Second Phase |
Jalaluddin Muhammad Shah | 1418–1433 | Second Phase |
Shamsuddin Ahmad Shah | 1433–1435 |
Restored Ilyas Shahi dynasty (1435–1487)
Name | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|
Nasiruddin Mahmud Shah | 1435–1459 | |
Rukunuddin Barbak Shah | 1459–1474 | |
Shamsuddin Yusuf Shah | 1474–1481 | |
Sikandar Shah II | 1481 | |
Jalaaluddin Fateh Shah | 1481–1487 |
Habshi rule (1487–1494)
Name | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|
Shahzada Barbak | 1487 | |
Saifuddin Firuz Shah | 1487–1489 | |
Mahmud Shah II | 1489–1490 | |
Shamsuddin Muzaffar Shah | 1490–1494 |
Hussain Shahi dynasty (1494–1538)
Name | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|
Alauddin Hussain Shah | 1494–1518 | |
Nasiruddin Nasrat Shah | 1518–1533 | |
Alauddin Firuz Shah | 1533 | |
Ghiyasuddin Mahmud Shah | 1533–1538 |
Governors of Bengal under Suri Empire (1532–1556)
Name | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|
Sher Shah Suri | 1532–1538 | Defeated Mughals and became the ruler of Delhi in 1540. |
Khidr Khan | 1538–1541 | |
Qazi Fazilat | 1541–1545 | |
Muhammad Khan Sur | 1545–1554 | |
Shahbaz Khan | 1555 |
Muhammad Shah dynasty (1554–1564)
Name | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|
Muhammad Khan Sur | 1554–1555 | Declared independence and styled himself as Shamsuddin Muhammad Shah |
Khizr Khan Suri | 1555–1561 | |
Ghiyasuddin Jalal Shah | 1561–1563 | |
Ghiyasuddin Shah III | 1563–1564[12] |
Karrani dynasty (1564–1576)
Name | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|
Taj Khan Karrani | 1564–1566 | |
Sulaiman Khan Karrani | 1566–1572 | |
Bayazid Khan Karrani | 1572 | |
Daud Khan Karrani | 1572–1576 |
Mughal Subahdars of Bengal Subah (1565–1717)
During the reign of Akbar
Name | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|
Munim Khan | 1574–1575 | Khan-i-Khanan |
Hussain Quli Khan | 1575–1578 | |
Muzaffar Khan Turbati | 1579–1580 | |
Mirza Aziz Koka | 1582–1583 | |
Wazir Khan Tajik | 1583–1583 | |
Shahbaz Khan Kamboh | 1583–1585 | |
Sadiq Khan | 1585–1586 | |
Wazir Khan Tajik | 1586–1587 | |
Sa'id Khan | 1587–1594 | |
Raja Man Singh I | 1597 – 1606[13] |
During the reign of Jahangir
Name | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|
Qutubuddin Koka | Sep 2, 1606 – 1607 | killed in a battle against Sher Afghan. (Local history of Burdwan, West Bengal, India says that Qutub-ud-din Kokah died in a battle against Ali Quli Istajlu alias Sher Afgan in 1610 CE. The tomb where both of them were buried is presently under the surveillance of Archaeological Survey of India.) |
Jahangir Quli Beg | 1607–1608 | In early life, a slave of Akbar's brother, Mirza Muhammad Hakim |
Islam Khan Chishti | 1608–1613 | first governor to transfer the Bengal capital to Dhaka in April 1612 |
Qasim Khan Chishti | 1613–1617 | younger brother of Islam Khan Chishti |
Ibrahim Khan Fath-i-Jang | 1617–1624 | died in an attack by Prince Shahjahan |
Mahabat Khan | 1625–1626 | |
Mukarram Khan | 1626–1627 | |
Fidai Khan | 1627–1628 |
During the reign of Shah Jahan
Name | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|
Qasim Khan Juvayni | 1628–1632 | |
Mir Muhammad Baqir | 1632–1635 | Known as Azam Khan |
Mir Abdus Salam | 1635–1639 | Known as Islam Khan Mashadi |
Prince Shah Shuja | 1639–1647 again 1652–1660 |
During the reign of Aurangzeb
Name | Reign | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
Mir Jumla II | 1660–1663 | ||
Shaista Khan | 1664–1678 | ||
Azam Khan Koka | 1678–1678 | Known as Fidai Khan II | |
Prince Muhammad Azam | 20 July 1678 – 6 October 1679[14] | ||
Shaista Khan | 1680–1688 | ||
Ibrahim Khan II | 1689–1697 | ||
Prince Azim-us-Shan | 1697–1712 |
Post Aurangzeb Subahdars
Name | Reign | Notes |
---|---|---|
Khan-i-Alam | 1712–1713 | |
Farrukh Siyar | 1713–1717 | |
Murshid Quli Khan | 1717–1727 |
The Nawabs of Bengal
Portrait | Titular Name | Personal Name | Birth | Reign | Death |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ala ud-Daula | Murshid Quli Jafar Khan | 1665 | 1717– 1727 | 30 June 1727 | |
Mirza Asadullah | Sarfaraz Khan Bahadur | ? | 1727–1727 | April 1740 | |
Shuja ud-Daula | Shuja-ud-Din Muhammad Khan | 1670 | July 1727 – 26 August 1739 | 26 August 1739 | |
Mirza Asadullah | Sarfaraz Khan Bahadur | ? | 13 March 1739 – April 1740 | April 1740 | |
Husam ud-Daula | Muhammad Alivardi Khan Bahadur | 10 May 1671 | 29 April 1740 – 16 April 1756 | 16 April 1756 | |
Siraj ud-Daulah | Mîrzâ Muhammad Sirâj-ud-Daulah | 1733 | April 1756 – 2 June 1757 | June 1757 | |
Ja'afar 'Ali Khan Bahadur | Mir Muhammed Jafar Ali Khan | 1691 | June 1757 – October 1760 | 17 January 1765 | |
Itimad ud-Daulah | Mir Kasim Ali Khan Bahadur | ? | 1760–1763 | 1777 | |
Ja'afar 'Ali Khan Bahadur | Mir Muhammed Jafar Ali Khan | 1691 | 25 July 1763 – 17 January 1765 | 17 January 1765 | |
Nazam-ud-Daulah | Najimuddin Ali Khan | 1750 | 5 February 1765 – 8 May 1766 | 8 May 1766 | |
Saif ud-Daulah | Najabut Ali Khan | 1749 | 22 May 1766 – 10 March 1770 | 10 March 1770 | |
Mubarak ud-Daulah | Ashraf Ali Khan | 1759 | 21 March 1770 – 6 September 1793 | 6 September 1793 | |
Azud ud-Daulah | Babar Ali Khan Bahadur | ? | 1793 – 28 April 1810 | 28 April 1810 | |
Ali Jah | Zain-ud-Din Ali Khan | ? | 5 June 1810 – 6 August 1821 | 6 August 1821 | |
Walla Jah | Ahmad Ali Khan | ? | 1810 – 30 October 1824 | 30 October 1824 | |
Humayun Jah | Mubarak Ali Khan | 29 September 1810 | 1824 – 3 October 1838 | 3 October 1838 | |
Feradun Jah | Mansur Ali Khan | 29 October 1830 | 29 October 1838 –1881 (abdicated) | 5 November 1884 |
Nawabs of Murshidabad
Picture | Titular Name | Personal Name | Birth | Reign | Death |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ali Kadir | Hassan Ali Mirza Khan Bahadur | 25 August 1846 | 17 February 1882 – 25 December 1906 | 25 December 1906 | |
Amir ul-Omrah | Wasif Ali Mirza Khan Bahadur | 7 January 1875 | December 1906–23 October 1959 | 23 October 1959 | |
Raes ud-Daulah | Waris Ali Mirza Khan Bahadur | 14 November 1901 | 1959 – 20 November 1969 ( no clear successor-post/title in dispute) | 20 November 1969 |
Hindu Dynasties in Bengal
Maharajas of Bankura
- Adi Malla (694 - 710)
- Jay Malla (710 - 720)
- Kalu Malla
- Kau Malla
- Jhau Malla
- Sur Malla
- Jagat Malla (994 - 1007)
- Prithwi Malla (1295 - 1319)
- Dinabandhu Malla (1334 - 1345)
- Shiv Singh Malla (1370 - 1407)
- Madan Malla (1407 - 1420)
- Durjan Malla (1420 - 1437)
- Uday Malla (1437 - 1460)
- Chandra Malla (1460 - 1501)
- Bir Malla (1501 - 1554)
- Dhari Malla (1554 - 1565)
- Hambir Malla Dev (1565 - 1620)
- Dhari Hambir Malla Dev (1620 - 1626)
- Raghunath Singha Dev (1626 - 1656)
- Bir Singha Dev (1656 - 1682)
- Bir Singha Dev II
- Durjan Singha Dev (1694)
- Raghunath Singha Dev II (1702 - 1712)
- Gopal Singha Dev (1712 - 1748)
- Chaitannya Singha Dev (1748 - 1801)
- Madhav Singh Dev (1801 - 1809)
- Gopal Singha Dev II (1809-1876)
- Ramkrishna Singha Dev(1876-1889)
- Nilmoni Singha Dev(1889-1930)
- Kalipada Singha Thakur(1930-1984)
Maharajas of Bhurshut
- Shivanarayan
- Maharaja Rudranarayan, Maharaja (16th century)
- Bhavashankari, Maharaja (16th century)
- Pratapnarayan, Maharaja (17th century)
- Naranarayan, Maharaja (17th century)
- Lakshminarayan, Maharaja (c.1695–1712)
Maharajas of Chandradwip
Many illustrious maharajas ruled much of East Bengal and the Sundarbans and conquered Jessore Their surname was Basu - they came to Bengal during the Sena Dynasty to conquer the Palas and take over from them. A famous literary novel was written about the Chandradwip Basu family by Tagore called Bou Thakuranis Haat and a film was made from this book.
Bhawal Estate
Rulers of Gazipur and Madhupur forest area, in central Bangladesh.
Maharajas of Koch kingdom
- Viswa Singha
- Nara Narayan
- Lakshmi Narayan
- Harendra Narayan
- Shivendra Narayan
- Narendra Narayan
- Nripendra Narayan
- Jitendra Narayan
- Jagaddipendra Narayan
Maharajas of Jessore Kingdom
Maharajas of Midnapore
Maharajas of Nadia
- Raja Bhabananda
- Raja Sri Krishna Ray
- Raja Gopal Ray
- Raja Raghab Ray
- Maharaja Rudra Ray
- Raja Ramjiban Ray
- Raja Ramjiban Ray II
- Raja Raghuram Ray
- Raja Krishnachandra Ray 1727-1772
Maharajas of Sripur
East India Company governors in Bengal
Governors of British East India Company in Bengal (1757–1793)
- Robert Clive 1757 – 1760
- Henry Vansittart 1760 – 1764
- Robert Clive (again) 1765 – 1766
- Harry Verelst 1767 – 1769
- John Cartier 1769 – 1772
- Warren Hastings 1772 – 1773 see below
As per the treaty of Allahabad in 1765, the British East India Company (BEIC) was given the right to collect revenue (Diwani right). From 1769, the company collected revenue from Bengal.
Governor-Generals of British East India Company in Bengal - Dual government (1773-1774)
Following the Regulating Act of 1773, the Governor of Bengal was officially called Governor-General of Fort William.
- Warren Hastings 1773 see above – 1774
- Charles Cornwallis 1786 – 1793
Governor-Generals of British East India Company in Bengal (1793–1854)
In 1793, the British East India Company abolished Nizamat, i.e. local rule by Mughal emperor- appointed Nawabs and annexed Bengal.
- Sir John Shore 1793 - 1798
- Richard Wellesley 1798 – 1805
- Charles Cornwallis 1805 – 1805
- Sir George Barlow, 1st Baronet 1805 - 1807
- Gilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, 1st Earl of Minto 1807 - 1813
- Francis Rawdon-Hastings, 1st Marquess of Hastings 1813 - 1823
- John Adam 1823 - 1823
- William Amherst, 1st Earl Amherst 1823 - 1828
- William Butterworth Bayley 1828 - 1828
- Lord William Bentinck 1828 - 1833
Governor-Generals of British East India Company (1833-1858)
As per Charter Act of 1833, the Governor-General of Bengal would be called Governor-General of India
- Lord William Bentinck 1833 - 1835
- Charles Metcalfe, 1st Baron Metcalfe 1835 - 1836
- George Eden 1836 - 1842
- Edward Law 1842 - 1844
- William Bird 1844 - 1844
- Henry Hardinge 1844 - 1848
- James Broun-Ramsay 1848 – 1856
- The Viscount Canning 1856 - 1858
British Raj Period
With the establishment of the Empire of India in 1858, the position of Governor-General was replaced with Governor-General and Viceroy of India. Calcutta, the capital of Bengal also became the capital of India. As a result, the position of Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal was established to look after provincial matters.
Lieutenant-Governors (1858–1912)
- Frederick James Halliday 1858–1859
- John Grant 1859–1862
- Sir Cecil Beadon 1862–1866
- Sir William Grey 1866–1871
- George Campbell 1871–1874
- Sir Richard Temple 1874–1877
- Sir Ashley Eden 1877–1879
- Steuart Bayley 1879–1882
- Sir Augustus Thompson 1882–1885
- Horace Cockerell 1885–1887
- Sir Steuart Bayley 1887–1890
- Charles Eliott 1890–1893
- Anthony MacDonnell 1893–1895
- Alexander Mackenzie 1895–1897
- Charles Cecil Stevens 1897–1898
- Sir John Woodburn 1898–1902
- James Bourdillon 1902–1903
- Sir Andrew Fraser 1903–1906
- Lancelot Hare 1906–1906
- Francis Slacke 1906–1908
- Sir Edward Baker 1908–1911
- Sir William Duke 1911–1912
Governors (1912–1947)
In late 1911, the Indian Government decided to move the capital to New Delhi. As a result, the Governorship of Bengal Presidency was now necessary.
- Thomas Gibson-Carmichael, 1st Baron Carmichael 1912–1917
- Lawrence Dundas, 2nd Marquess of Zetland as Earl of Ronaldshay 1917–1922
- Victor Bulwer-Lytton, 2nd Earl of Lytton 1922–1927
- Sir Stanley Jackson 1927–1932
- Sir John Anderson 1932–1937
- Michael Knatchbull, 5th Baron Brabourne 1937–1939
- John Arthur Herbert 1939–1943
- Sir Richard Casey 1944–1946
- Sir Frederick Burrows 1946–1947
Prime Minister of Bengal (1937–1947)
The Government of India Act 1935 introduced provincial autonomy in India and the position of Chief Minister or Premier of Bengal became very prominent.
No | Name | Term(s)[15] | Party |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Sher-e-Bangla A. K. Fazlul Huq |
1 April 1937 - 1 December 1941 12 December 1941 - 29 March 1943 |
Krishak Praja Party |
2 | Sir Khawaja Nazimuddin | 29 April 1943 - 31 March 1945 | All India Muslim League |
3 | H. S. Suhrawardy | 23 April 1946 - 14 August 1947 | All India Muslim League |
Subsequently, all three Bengali chief ministers moved to East Pakistan, where they continued to be influential statesmen. Nazimuddin and Suhrawardy became Prime Ministers of Pakistan, while Huq served as the Chief Minister and Governor of East Pakistan.
After Independence of India and Pakistan
British colonial period ended when India and Pakistan became independent nations in 1947. Bengal fell into two parts – one in India, named West Bengal and the other part in Pakistan as East Bengal, later renamed to East Pakistan in 1955.
Pakistani (east) Bengal (1947–1971)
Governors of East Bengal (1947–1955)
Tenure | Governor of East Bengal[16][self-published source?] |
---|---|
15 August 1947 - 31 March 1950 | Sir Frederick Chalmers Bourne |
31 March 1950 - 31 March 1953 | Sir Feroz Khan Noon |
31 March 1953 - 29 May 1954 | Chaudhry Khaliquzzaman |
29 May 1954 - May 1955 | Iskandar Ali Mirza |
May 1955 - June 1955 | Muhammad Shahabuddin (acting) |
June 1955 - 14 October 1955 | Amiruddin Ahmad |
Chief Minister of East Bengal (1947–1955)
Tenure | Chief Minister of East Bengal | Political Party |
---|---|---|
August 1947 – September 1948 | Sir Khwaja Nazimuddin | Muslim League |
September 1948 – April 1954 | Nurul Amin | Muslim League |
April 1954 – 1955 | Abul Kasem Fazlul Huq | Muslim League |
Governors of East Pakistan (1955–1971)
In late 1954, prime minister Muhammad Ali Bogra initiated the One Unit policy which resulted in East Bengal province to be renamed to East Pakistan.
Tenure | Governor of East Pakistan[16][self-published source?] | Political Affiliation |
---|---|---|
14 October 1955 – March 1956 | Amiruddin Ahmad | Muslim League |
March 1956 – 13 April 1958 | A. K. Fazlul Huq | Muslim League |
13 April 1958 – 3 May 1958 | Hamid Ali (acting) | Awami League |
3 May 1958 – 10 October 1958 | Sultanuddin Ahmad | Awami League |
10 October 1958 – 11 April 1960 | Zakir Husain | Muslim League |
11 April 1960 – 11 May 1962 | Lieutenant-General Azam Khan, PA | Military Administration |
11 May 1962 – 25 October 1962 | Ghulam Faruque | Independent |
25 October 1962 – 23 March 1969 | Abdul Monem Khan | Civil Administration |
23 March 1969 – 25 March 1969 | Mirza Nurul Huda | Civil Administration |
25 March 1969 – 23 August 1969 | Major-General Muzaffaruddin,[17] PA | Military Administration |
23 August 1969 – 1 September 1969 | Lieutenant-General Sahabzada Yaqub Khan, PA | Military Administration |
1 September 1969 – 7 March 1971 | Vice-Admiral Syed Mohammad Ahsan, PN | Military Administration |
7 March 1971 – 6 April 1971 | Lieutenant-General Sahabzada Yaqub Khan, PA | Military Administration |
6 April 1971 – 31 August 1971 | Lieutenant-General Tikka Khan, PA | Military Administration |
31 August 1971 – 14 December 1971 | Abdul Motaleb Malik | Independent |
14 December 1971 – 16 December 1971 | Lieutenant-General Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi, PA | Military Administration |
Chief Minister of East Pakistan (1955–1971)
Tenure | Chief Minister of East Pakistan | Political Party |
---|---|---|
August 1955 – September 1956 | Abu Hussain Sarkar | Krishan Sramik Party |
September 1956 – March 1958 | Ata-ur-Rahman Khan | Awami League |
March 1958 | Abu Hussain Sarkar | Krishan Sramik Party |
March 1958 – 18 June 1958 | Ata-ur-Rahman Khan | Awami League |
18 June 1958 – 22 June 1958 | Abu Hussain Sarkar | Krishan Sramik Party |
22 June 1958 – 25 August 1958 | Governor's Rule | |
25 August 1958 – 7 October 1958 | Ata-ur-Rahman Khan | Awami League |
On 7 October 1958, the post of Chief Minister of East Pakistan was abolished. And after the independence of Bangladesh on 16 December 1971, the Province of East Pakistan was dissolved.
Indian (west) Bengal (1947–present)
Governors of West Bengal
# | Name | Took Office | Left Office |
1 | Chakravarthi Rajagopalachari | 1947 | 1948 |
2 | Kailash Nath Katju | 1948 | 1951 |
3 | Harendra Coomar Mookerjee | 1951 | 1956 |
4 | Phani Bhusan Chakraborty | 1956 | 1956 |
5 | Padmaja Naidu | 1956 | 1967 |
6 | Dharma Vira | 1967 | 1969 |
7 | Deep Narayan Sinha | 1969 | 1969 |
8 | Shanti Swaroop Dhavan | 1969 | 1971 |
9 | Anthony Lancelot Dias | 1971 | 1979 |
10 | Tribhuvana Narayana Singh | 1979 | 1981 |
11 | Bhairab Dutt Pande | 1981 | 1983 |
12 | Anant Prasad Sharma | 1983 | 1984 |
13 | Satish Chandra | 1984 | 1984 |
14 | Uma Shankar Dikshit | 1984 | 1986 |
15 | Nurul Hasan | 1986 | 1989 |
16 | T. V. Rajeshwar | 1989 | 1990 |
17 | Nurul Hasan | 1990 | 1993 |
18 | B. Satyanarayan Reddy | 1993 | 1993 |
19 | K.V. Raghunatha Reddy | 1993 | 1998 |
20 | A.R. Kidwai | 1998 | 1999 |
21 | Shyamal Kumar Sen | 1999 | 1999 |
22 | Viren J. Shah | 1999 | 2004 |
23 | Gopalkrishna Gandhi | 2004 | 2009 |
24 | Devanand Konwar | 2009 | 2010 |
25 | Mayankote Kelath Narayanan | 2010 | 2014 |
26 | Keshari Nath Tripathi | 2014 |
Chief Ministers of West Bengal
Key: | INC Indian National Congress |
BC-UF Bangla Congress |
CPI(M) Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
TMC All India Trinamool Congress |
---|
# | Name | Took Office | Left Office | Political Party |
1 | Prafulla Chandra Ghosh | 15 August 1947 | 14 January 1948 | Indian National Congress |
2 | Bidhan Chandra Roy | 14 January 1948 | 1 July 1962 | Indian National Congress |
President's rule | 1 July 1962 | 8 July 1962 | ||
3 | Prafulla Chandra Sen | 8 July 1962 | 15 March 1967 | Indian National Congress |
4 | Ajoy Kumar Mukherjee | 15 March 1967 | 2 November 1967 | Bangla Congress in United Front |
5 | Prafulla Chandra Ghosh | 2 November 1967 | 20 February 1968 | Nonparty in Progressive Democratic Alliance Front |
President's rule | 20 February 1968 | 25 February 1969 | ||
6 | Ajoy Kumar Mukherjee | 25 February 1969 | 19 March 1970 | Bangla Congress in United Front |
President's rule | 19 March 1970 | 2 April 1971 | ||
7 | Ajoy Kumar Mukherjee | 2 April 1971 | 28 June 1971 | Indian National Congress in coalition |
President's rule | 28 June 1971 | 19 March 1972 | ||
8 | Siddhartha Shankar Ray | 19 March 1972 | 21 June 1977 | Indian National Congress |
9 | Jyoti Basu | 21 June 1977 | 6 November 2000 | Communist Party of India (Marxist) in Left Front |
10 | Buddhadeb Bhattacharya | 6 November 2000 | 13 May 2011 | Communist Party of India (Marxist) in Left Front |
11 | Mamata Banerjee | 20 May 2011 | Incumbent | All India Trinamool Congress |
After independence of Bangladesh
East Pakistan seceded from West Pakistan on 16 December 1971 after the end of Bangladesh Liberation War and was named Bangladesh as an independent nation.
The President was the executive Head of state of Bangladesh during Presidential system of government from 1975 to 1991. Thereafter, the Prime Minister is the executive head of government of this parliamentary republic while the President is the ceremonial Head of state, elected by the parliament.
Presidents of Bangladesh
Key: | Awami League / BAKSAL | Bangladesh Nationalist Party | Jatiya Party | Independent |
---|
# | Name | Took Office | Left Office | Party |
1 | Sheikh Mujibur Rahman | 17 April 1971 | 12 January 1972 | Awami League |
— | Syed Nazrul Islam Acting | 17 April 1971 | 12 January 1972 | Awami League |
2 | Abu Sayeed Chowdhury | 12 January 1972 | 24 December 1973 | Awami League |
3 | Mohammad Mohammadullah | 24 December 1973 | 25 January 1975 | Awami League |
4 | Sheikh Mujibur Rahman | 25 January 1975 | 15 August 1975 (assassinated) | BAKSAL |
5 | Khondaker Mostaq Ahmad | 15 August 1975 | 6 November 1975 | Awami League |
6 | Abu Sadat Mohammad Sayem | 6 November 1975 | 21 April 1977 | Awami League |
7 | Ziaur Rahman | 21 April 1977 | 30 May 1981 (assassinated) | Military / Bangladesh Nationalist Party |
8 | Abdus Sattar | 30 May 1981 | 24 March 1982 (deposed) | Bangladesh Nationalist Party |
— | Hussain Muhammad Ershad | 24 March 1982 | 27 March 1982 | Military Administration |
9 | Ahsanuddin Chowdhury | 27 March 1982 | 10 December 1983 | Independent |
10 | Hussain Muhammad Ershad | 11 December 1983 | 6 December 1990 | Military / Jatiya Party |
— | Shahabuddin Ahmed Acting | 6 December 1990 | 10 October 1991 | Independent |
11 | Abdur Rahman Biswas | 10 October 1991 | 9 October 1996 | Bangladesh Nationalist Party |
12 | Shahabuddin Ahmed | 9 October 1996 | 14 November 2001 | Independent |
13 | Badruddoza Chowdhury | 14 November 2001 | 21 June 2002 | Bangladesh Nationalist Party |
— | Muhammad Jamiruddin Sircar Acting | 21 June 2002 | 6 September 2002 | Bangladesh Nationalist Party |
14 | Iajuddin Ahmed | 6 September 2002 | 12 February 2009 | Independent |
15 | Zillur Rahman | 12 February 2009 | 20 March 2013 (died) | Awami League |
16 | Abdul Hamid | 14 March 2013 | Incumbent | Awami League |
Prime Ministers of Bangladesh
Key: | Awami League / BAKSAL | Bangladesh Nationalist Party | Jatiya Party | Independent |
---|
# | Name | Took Office | Left Office | Party | |
1 | Tajuddin Ahmed | 10 April 1971 | 13 January 1972 | Awami League | |
2 | Sheikh Mujibur Rahman | 13 January 1972 | 26 January 1975 | Awami League | |
3 | Mohammad Mansoor Ali | 26 January 1975 | 15 August 1975 | BAKSAL | |
Post abolished (15 August 1975 – 29 June 1978) | |||||
— | Mashiur Rahman (Senior Minister) | 29 June 1978 | 12 March 1979 | Bangladesh Nationalist Party | |
4 | Shah Azizur Rahman | 15 April 1979 | 24 March 1982 | Bangladesh Nationalist Party | |
Post abolished (24 March 1982 – 30 March 1984) | |||||
5 | Ataur Rahman Khan | 30 March 1984 | 9 July 1986 | Jatiya Party | |
6 | Mizanur Rahman Chowdhury | 9 July 1986 | 27 March 1988 | Jatiya Party | |
7 | Moudud Ahmed | 27 March 1988 | 12 August 1989 | Jatiya Party | |
8 | Kazi Zafar Ahmed | 12 August 1989 | 6 December 1990 | Jatiya Party | |
Post abolished (6 December 1990 – 20 March 1991) | |||||
9 | Khaleda Zia, 1st Term | 20 March 1991 | 16 February 1996 | Bangladesh Nationalist Party | |
10 | Khaleda Zia, 2nd Term | 16 March 1996 | 30 March 1996 | Bangladesh Nationalist Party | |
— | Muhammad Habibur Rahman (Chief Adviser) | 30 March 1996 | 23 June 1996 | Independent | |
11 | Sheikh Hasina, 1st Term | 23 June 1996 | 15 July 2001 | Awami League | |
— | Latifur Rahman (Chief Adviser) | 15 July 2001 | 10 October 2001 | Independent | |
12 | Khaleda Zia, 3rd Term | 10 October 2001 | 29 October 2006 | Bangladesh Nationalist Party | |
— | Iajuddin Ahmed (President and Chief Adviser) | 29 October 2006 | 11 January 2007 | Independent | |
— | Fakhruddin Ahmed (Chief Adviser) | 12 January 2007 | 6 January 2009 | Independent | |
13 | Sheikh Hasina, 2nd Term | 6 January 2009 | 5 January 2014 | Awami League | |
14 | Sheikh Hasina, 3rd term | 5 January 2014 | Incumbent | Awami League |
References
- ^ Ray, Krishnendu (2012). "Khadga Dynasty". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
- ^ Dasgupta 2009, p. 30.
- ^ Malabhum, Bishnupur-Chandra, Manoranjan; 2004; Kolkata. Deys Publishing ISBN 8129500442
- ^ Mallik, Abhaya Pada (1921). History of Bishnupur-Raj: An Ancient Kingdom of West Bengal (the University of Michigan ed.). Calcutta. pp. 128–130. Retrieved 11 March 2016.
- ^ a b Dilip Kumar Ganguly (1994). Ancient India, History and Archaeology. Abhinav. pp. 33–41. ISBN 978-81-7017-304-5.
- ^ a b Susan L. Huntington (1984). The "Påala-Sena" Schools of Sculpture. Brill Archive. pp. 32–39. ISBN 90-04-06856-2.
- ^ R. C. Majumdar (1971). History of Ancient Bengal. G. Bharadwaj. p. 161–162.
- ^ Abdul Momin Chowdhury (1967). Dynastic history of Bengal, c. 750-1200 CE. Asiatic Society of Pakistan. pp. 272–273.
- ^ Bindeshwari Prasad Sinha (1977). Dynastic History of Magadha, Cir. 450–1200 A.D. Abhinav Publications. pp. 253–. ISBN 978-81-7017-059-4.
- ^ Dineshchandra Sircar (1975–1976). "Indological Notes - R.C. Majumdar's Chronology of the Pala Kings". Journal of Ancient Indian History. IX: 209–10.
- ^ Ahmed, ABM Shamsuddin (2012). "Iltutmish". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
- ^ Encyclopaedia Of Bangladesh (Set Of 30 Vols.) By Nagendra Kr. Singh
- ^ Sarkar, Jadunath (1984, reprint 1994). A History of Jaipur, New Delhi: Orient Longman ISBN 81-250-0333-9, pp.86–87
- ^ Karim, Abdul (2012). "Muhammad Azam, Prince". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
- ^ http://wbassembly.gov.in/html/permiersOfBen.html
- ^ a b Ben Cahoon, WorldStatesmen.org. "Bangladesh". Retrieved 3 October 2007.
- ^ (acting martial law administrator and governor as he was the GOC 14th Infantry Division)
Sources and external links
- Dasgupta, Gautam Kumar; Biswas, Samira,; Mallik, Rabiranjan, (2009), Heritage Tourism: An Anthropological Journey to Bishnupur, A Mittal Publication, p. 21, ISBN 8183242944
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Islam, Sirajul (2012). "Subahdar". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
- KingListsFarEast
- WorldStatesmen.org - Bangladesh