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Ch. 4: The Famous Koh-I-Nor Diamond

Ch. 4: The Famous Koh-I-Nor Diamond Page of 278 Ch. 4: The Famous Koh-I-Nor Diamond Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
92                              THE KOH-I-NUR.
Mohammed Shah, a feeble irresolute man, was appointed by Fate to hold the sceptre of India at the moment when she was to meet her fiercest foe. Thamas Kouli Khan, better known as Nadir Shah, had raised himself to the throne of Persia and, like all usurpers, felt the need of strengthening himself at home by a successful foreign war. He accordingly invaded India, at the head of a small force of hardy fighters, who, in the words of Nadir's grandilo­quent Persian biographer, " threw the shadow of their sabers across the existence of their foes." In short they killed all before them and entered the Punjaub early in the year 1739, by pretty much the same route as that followed by Baber, the ancestors of the Moguls. But the Moguls were changed since the days of Baber. Mohammed Shah was completely defeated the moment he encountered Nadir Shah.
However, booty, rather than territory, was the object of the invader, so he did not dethrone Mohammed, but only levied tribute from him.
Ch. 4: The Famous Koh-I-Nor Diamond Page of 278 Ch. 4: The Famous Koh-I-Nor Diamond
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