Ghulam Husain Khan Tabatabai | |
---|---|
Native name | غلام حسین خان طباطبائی |
Born | 1727/28 Mughal India |
Died | 1797/98 |
Occupation | Historian, Subahdar, Noble |
Language | Persian |
Period | 18th century |
Notable works | Seir Mutaqherin (سیر المتاخرین; lit. 'Review of Modern Times') |
Relatives | Alivardi Khan, Siraj-ud-Daulah |
Ghulam Hussain Khan also known as Ghulam Husain Khan Tabatabai (1727/28-1797/98) (Arabic: غلام حسین خان طباطبائی) was an 18th century Indian historian and scholar-administrator from Delhi who later settled in Azimabad (Patna).[1][2][3] He is the writer of the famous book Seir Mutaqherin (سیر المتاخرین; lit. 'Review of Modern Times'), one of the notable contemporary historical accounts on the late Mughal Empire.
He is considered to be among a slew of Muslim nobles whose families had left Delhi and settled in Azimabad.[4]
Ghulam Husain's ancestors were originally from Iraq. His father Hidayat Khan accompanied the Nawab of Bengal, Alivardi Khan to Azimabad where he was appointed subadar.[5] Ghulam Hussain Khan left Delhi after Nader Shah's Sack of Delhi and moved to the court of his cousin, Alivardi Khan, the Nawab of Bengal, in Murshidabad.[6] Khan was also related to the next nawab, Siraj ud-Daulah, either through Siraj being Alivardi's grandson[7] or in another way.[8]
Charles W. J. Withers described him as a "high-born Bihari official" whose Persian father had served the Mughal Emperor and whose mother was related to Alivardi Khan."[9]