MAHMUD GAWAN, 1411-1481 A.D.
Imaduddin Mahmud Gawan ( mehmUd gavAn) (ಮೆಹ್ಮೂದ್
ಗವಾನ್) belongs to that rare breed of administrators who rendered
great service to the community they live in with out wielding any royal power. His
life is a saga dedicated to education, art and scholarship. He worked under three
monarchs belonging to the Bahmani dynasty that ruled from Bidar. They were Allauddin
Ahmed-2, Mubarak Humayun and Shamsuddin Muhammed Shah-3. He was the prime minister
during the rule of the last two. His ancestors hailed from
However there was an undercurrent
of hatred against him because he was treated as a foreigner by local Muslim communities
and his rise to power was not tolerated. Some of the reforms brought in by him were
detrimental to the interest of the Governors from Dakhan. Consequently a conspiracy
was hatched against him. He was held responsible for a compromising letter with
his forged signature and he was executed by the king Mehmud-3 in 1481, for alleged
treason. The King realized his folly later and that of no consequence.
Gawan is well known for his
contribution to education. He built a Madrassah (School / place of learning) in
Bidar the capital city of the Bahmani kingdom in the year 1472 A.D. He was familiar with the renowned colleges at Samarkhand
and Khorasan in
In subsequent centuries, the madrasa
suffered as Bidar witnessed a series of political struggles. In 1656, it was appropriated
by Aurangzeb for use as a military barrack. Rooms near the southeast minaret were
used for gun-powder storage. An explosion resulted in damage to one-fourth of the
edifice of the tower and the entrance. Whatever remains now is not even a pale shadow
of its former self.
Gawan is credited with two books namely
‘Riyaad al-Insha’ (Rauzat Ul Inshaa?) (A book on epistolology) and ‘Dewan E Ashar’.
(?) A couple of long poems written by him in Persian have survived. He lead a simple
life. He slept on a mattress and his food was cooked in earthen vessels. However
his achievements are more meritorious than those of many a monarch.
Further
1.
Image
results for Mahmud Gawan (Some Images of the Madrassah)
2.
Mahmud Gawan, the Great Bahmani Wazir by Haroon Khan Sherwani,
1942,
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