INDIA - SURI SULTANATE - SHER SHAH - 1 PAISA - AH 951 (1544) RARE
REF: D#929, DENOMINATION: 1 PAISA, DATE: AH 951 / 1544 AD, COMPOSITION: COPPER, WEIGHT: 20.30 GRAM, DIAMETER: 22.83 MM
RULER: SHER SHAH > AH 945-952 /1538-1545 AD
The Suri Empire was established by a Muslim dynasty of Afghan origin who ruled a vast territory in the Indian subcontinent between 1540 to 1557, with Delhi serving as its capital. It was founded by Sher Shah Suri , an ethnic Pashtun ( Pathan ) of the house of Sur , who supplanted the Mughal dynasty as rulers of North India during the reign of the relatively ineffectual second Mughal emperor Humayun . Sher Shah defeated Humayun in the Battle of Chausa (June 26, 1539) and again in the Battle of Bilgram (May 17, 1540). The Sur dynasty held control of nearly all the Mughal territories, between what is now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in Pakistan to the Bengals in the east in what is now Bangladesh . The Mughals retreated west to Persia, while most of what is now eastern Afghanistan , all of Pakistan and northern India formed the Suri Empire . During the almost 17 year rule of the Sur dynasty, the region of the Indian subcontinent witnessed much economic development and administrative reforms. A systematized relationship was created between the people and the ruler, minimizing corruption and the oppression of the public. Their rule came to an end by a defeat that led to restoration of the Mughal Empire . Today, the Sur are part of the Pashtun tribal system and belong to the sub-groups of the Ghilzais .
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