Ali Adil Shah I
{{Short description|Sultan of Bijapur (1558–1580)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2018}}
{{More footnotes|date=March 2012}}
{{Infobox royalty
| name = Ali Adil Shah I
| title = Sultan
| image = Aliadilshah.jpg
| reign = 1558 – 1580
| full name = Abul Muzaffar Ali Adil Shah
| predecessor = Ibrahim Adil Shah I
| successor = Ibrahim Adil Shah II
| succession = 5th Sultan of Bijapur
| spouse = Chand Bibi
| issue = Ibrahim Adil Shah II the adopted son.
| royal house = House of Ali
| dynasty = Adil Shahi Empire
| father = Ibrahim Adil Shah I
| mother = Daughter of Asad Khan Lari (Khusrow)
| birth_place =
| death_date = 1580{{EI3|first=Deborah S.|title=ʿĀdil Shāhīs|date=2010|last=Hutton|url=https://referenceworks.brill.com/display/entries/EI3O/COM-23656.xml}}
| death_place = Bijapur
| date of burial =
| place of burial = Ali Ka Rouza
| religion = Shia Islam
}}
Ali Adil Shah I ({{langx|fa|{{Nastaliq|علی عادل شاه}}}}; 1558–1580) was the fifth Sultan of the Bijapur Sultanate.
On the day of his coronation Ali abandoned the Sunni practices and reintroduced the Shia Khutbah and other practices. The Persian doctors of religion were granted full freedom to preach the Shi’ah doctrine and were paid by the State for their missionary activities.
The new Sultan restored back to power the Afāqis while relegating the Deccanis to a position of insignificance. He subverted all the dogmatic experiments which his father had practiced.
Marriage
He married the famous woman warrior Chand Sultana, daughter of Nizam Shahis of Ahmadnagar.
Reign
During Ali's reign Bijapur and Vijayanagar came very close to each other and Ali actually paid a visit to Vijayanagar City, where Ramaraya received him with great pomp and honour. The greatest event of Ali's reign was the successful formation of the confederacy of the Deccan Sultans against Vijayanagar and their victory over the latter at the Battle of Rakkasagi – Tangadagi in Talikoti in 1565. As a result of this battle Bijapur’s southern boundary was extended right up to the city of Vijayanagar, and further it opened the gates for the future expansion of Bijapur further south. Consequently, at the end of Ali's reign, the Bijapur Kingdom extended up to port of Honavar on the west coast and southern boundary extended along the line of Varada and Tungabhadra rivers.
Developments
Succession
In 1580, Ali, having no son, appointed his nephew Ibrahim, son of his brother Tahamasif, as his successor. In the same year, Ali was assassinated by a eunuch,Tohfut-ul-mujahideen: An Historical Work in the Arabic Language By Zayn al-Dīn b. ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz al- Malībārī (Translated into English by Lt. M.J. Rowlandson) and was buried in Ali Ka Rouza near Sakaf Rouza in Bijapur.
See also
References
{{reflist}}
- Wakiyate Mamlakate Bijapur by Basheeruddin Dehelvi.
- Tareekhe Farishta by Kasim Farishta
- External Relation of Bijapur Adil Shahis.
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{{succession box|title=Adil Shahi Rulers of Bijapur|before=Ibrahim Adil Shah I|after=Ibrahim Adil Shah II|years=1558–1580}}
{{s-end}}
{{Wikiquote}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ali Adil Shah I}}
Category:16th-century Indian monarchs
Category:16th-century Indian Muslims
Category:Year of birth unknown
Category:Murdered Indian monarchs
Category:Converts to Shia Islam from Sunni Islam
Category:Critics of Sunni Islam