Jaunpur Sultanate#Art and architecture

{{Short description|Medieval kingdom in India (c.1394–1479)}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2019}}

{{Use Indian English|date=March 2019}}

{{Infobox former country

| native_name = {{Nastaliq|سلطنت جونپور}}

| conventional_long_name = Sultanate of Jaunpur
(Sharqi dynasty)

| year_start = 1394

| year_end = 1493

| government_type = Monarchy

| capital = *Jaunpur (1394-1493)

  • Kahalgaon{{cite book |last1=Hussain |first1=Ejaz |title=Shiraz-i Hind: A History of Jaunpur Sultanate |date=2017 |publisher=Manohar |pages=76–78 |url=https://www.academia.edu/36986170}} (capital-in-exile) (1494-1505)

| p1 = Tughlaq dynasty

| flag_p1 = Delhi Sultanate Flag.svg

| s1 = Lodi dynasty

| flag_s1 = Delhi Sultanate Flag.svg

| s2 = Bengal Sultanate

| flag_s2 =

| today = India
Nepal

| common_languages = Persian (official)
Hindustani, Bhojpuri, Awadhi, Nepali (common)
Arabic (religious)
Sanskrit (literature)

| religion = Sunni Islam

| title_leader = Sultan

| leader1 = Malik Sarwar (first)

| year_leader1 = 1394–1399

| leader2 = Hussain Khan (last)

| year_leader2 = 1458–1493

| currency =

| image_map = {{Location map+

| South Asia

| overlay_image= Map of the Sharqi Dynasty of the Jaunpur Sultanate.png

| width=290

| float = center

| border = none

| nodiv = 1

| mini = 1

| relief = yes

| places =

{{Annotation|230|5|South-Asia
1475 CE|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|text-align=center|font-size=10|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|70|65|DELHI SULTANATE
(LODIS)
|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|text-align=center|font-size=8.5|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|10|20|TIMURID
EMPIRE
|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|text-align=center|font-size=9|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|100|40|SHAH MIR
SULTANATE
|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|text-align=center|font-size=6.5|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|170|50|PHAGMODRUPAS|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|text-align=center|font-size=7|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|50|95|SAMMAS|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|text-align=center|font-size=6|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|10|96|KALMAT|text-align=center|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|font-size=6|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|65|125|GUJARAT
SULTANATE
|text-align=center|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|font-size=6|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|110|155|BAHMANI
SULTANATE
|text-align=center|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|font-size=7|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|text-align=center|80|90|RAJPU-
TANA
|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|font-size=7|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|105|134|KHANDESH
SULTANATE
|text-align=center|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|font-size=6|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|110|95|TOMARAS|text-align=center|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|font-size=6|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|text-align=center|237|113|TRIPWA|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|font-size=6|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|165|145|EASTERN
GANGAS
|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|text-align=center|font-size=7|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|185|90|SUGAUNAS|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|text-align=center|font-size=6|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|189|105|CHEROS|text-align=center|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|font-size=6|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|250|94|AHOM|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|text-align=center|font-size=6|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|210|99|KAMATAS|text-align=center|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|font-size=6|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|260|85|CHUTIA|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|text-align=center|font-size=6|color=#000000}}{{Annotation|205|118|BENGAL
SULTANATE
|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|text-align=center|font-size=7|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|105|190|VIJAYANAGARA
EMPIRE
|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|text-align=center|font-size=7|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|text-align=center|115|115|MALWA
SULTANATE
|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|font-size=5|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|text-align=center|150|125|GONDWANA|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|font-size=7|color=#000000}}

{{Annotation|262|250| |text-align=center|font-weight=bold|font-style=normal|font-size=12|color=#000000}}

| caption =

}}

| image_map_caption = Territory of the Jaunpur Sultanate ("Sharqis" dynasty) circa 1475, with neighbouring polities.{{cite book |last1=Schwartzberg |first1=Joseph E. |title=A Historical atlas of South Asia |date=1978 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |location=Chicago |page=148, map XIV.4 (c)|isbn=0226742210 |url=https://dsal.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/reference/schwartzberg/query.py?object=186&display_type=image_display#gsc.tab=0}}

| image_coat = Jaunpur Sultante, Shams al-Din Ibrahim Shah, dated 1438.jpg

| coa_size = 300px

| symbol_type = Jaunpur Sultanate, coin of Shams al-Din Ibrahim Shah, dated 1438

}}

The Jaunpur Sultanate ({{langx|fa|{{Nastaliq|سلطنت جونپور}}}}) was a late medieval Indian Muslim state which ruled over much of what is now the Indian states of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar and southern Nepal between 1394 and 1494.For a map of their territory see: {{cite book |last1=Schwartzberg |first1=Joseph E. |title=A Historical atlas of South Asia |date=1978 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |location=Chicago |page=147, map XIV.4 (c)|isbn=0226742210 |url=https://dsal.uchicago.edu/reference/schwartzberg/pager.html?object=186}} It was founded in 1394 by Khwajah-i-Jahan Malik Sarwar, a eunuch slave and former wazir of Sultan Nasiruddin Muhammad Shah IV Tughluq, amidst the disintegration of the Delhi Sultanate's Tughlaq dynasty. Centred in Jaunpur, the Sultanate extended authority over a large part of the Ganges-Yamuna Doab. It reached its greatest height under the rule of Sultan Ibrahim Shah, who also vastly contributed to the development of Islamic education in the Sultanate. In 1494, Sultan Hussain Shah Sharqi was defeated by the forces of the Afghan ruler Bahlul Lodi, Sultan of the Lodi dynasty of the Delhi Sultanate at Benares at which point Hussain fled to Kahalgaon in modern-day Bihar where the Sultan of Bengal assigned him a pargana. Here he was allowed to mint his own coins and was promised help from Bengal in recovering his kingdom. He died in 1505.

Origin

The Sharqi dynasty was founded by Malik Sarwar, a eunuch slave of probably African origin.{{Cite book |last=Hawley |first=John C. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QMmu7gN8EwUC&dq=Malik+Sarwar+jaunpur+african&pg=RA1-PA237 |title=India in Africa, Africa in India: Indian Ocean Cosmopolitanisms |date=2008-06-25 |publisher=Indiana University Press |isbn=978-0-253-00316-4 |language=en}}{{Cite book |last=Behera |first=Maguni Charan |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Rd9mEAAAQBAJ&dq=african+slave+malik+sarwar&pg=PA91 |title=Tribe, Space and Mobilisation: Colonial Dynamics and Post-Colonial Dilemma in Tribal Studies |date=2022-03-25 |publisher=Springer Nature |isbn=978-981-19-0059-4 |language=en}}{{Cite book |last=Obeng |first=J. Pashington |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SAUAgglrRywC&dq=Malik+Sarwar+jaunpur+african&pg=PA9 |title=Shaping Membership, Defining Nation: The Cultural Politics of African Indians in South Asia |date=2007 |publisher=Lexington Books |isbn=978-0-7391-1428-5 |language=en}} He was succeeded by his adopted son, Malik Qaranfal, who was previously a Hindu slave-boy and water-bearer of Firoz Shah Tughlaq.{{cite book |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=ehJQAAAAMAAJ&q=malik+sarwar+indian+slave |author= Abha Narain Lambah, Alka Patel |title= The Architecture of the Indian Sultanates |date= 2006 |publisher= from:the University of Michigan |isbn= 9788185026756 }} However, according to a contemporary writer, Yahya Sarhindi, Malik Qaranfal was a member of the Sayyid dynasty.{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pXxDAAAAYAAJ&q=Malik+Qaranfal+,+who+was+the+nephew+of+... |title=A Comprehensive History of India: The Delhi Sultanat, A.D. 1206-1526 |date=1970 |publisher=Orient Longmans |pages=714 |language=en}} Malik Qaranfal became the next sultan with the title of Mubarak Shah. He was succeeded by his brother, Ibrahim Shah.Mahajan, V.D. (1991, reprint 2007) History of Medieval India, Part I, S.Chand& Co., New Delhi, {{ISBN|81-219-0364-5}}, pp.264-66

History

=Malik Sarwar =

In 1389, Malik Sarwar received the title of Khwajah-i-Jahan. In 1394, he was appointed as the governor of Jaunpur and received his title of Malik-us-Sharq from Sultan Nasir-ud-Din Mahmud Shah Tughluq (1394–1413). Soon, he established himself as an independent ruler and took the title of Atabak-i-Azam. He then suppressed the rebellions in Etawah, Koil and Kanauj. He was also able to bring under his control Kara, Awadh, Dalmau, Bahraich and South Bihar. The Rai of Jajnagar and the ruler of Lakhnauti acknowledged his authority and sent him several elephants.{{Citation|first1=Muzaffar Husain Syed|last1=Syed Saud Akhtar|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eACqCQAAQBAJ&dq=malik+sarwar+rebellions&pg=PA267|title=Concise History of Islam|year=2011|publisher=Vij Books India Private Limited|isbn=9789382573470}}

==War with the Ujjainiyas of Bhojpur==

{{See also|Jaunpur-Bhojpur War}}

During the reign of Malik Sarwar, Jaunpur became embroiled in a 100-year war with the neighbouring Ujjainiyas of Bhojpur in modern-day Bihar. The Ujjainiya chieftain, Raja Harraj was initially successful in the forces of Malik Sarwar however the Ujjainiyas were defeated in subsequent battles and retreated into the forests and resorted to guerrilla warfare.{{cite journal | title=The Relation of Bhojpur and Jaunpur (From 1389 A.D. to 1519 A.D) | author= Md. Iftekhar Alam | journal=Proceedings of the Indian History Congress |volume = 44| year=1983 | pages= 213|jstor = 44139839}}

=Mubarak Shah=

Malik Sarwar was succeeded by his adopted son Malik Qaranfal after his death, who assumed the title of Mubarak Shah, ruled for three years, and issued coins in his own name.{{Citation|last=Elliot|first=Henry Miers|editor1-first=John|editor1-last=Dowson|title=Táríkh-i Mubárak Sháhí, of Yahyá bin Ahmad|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9781139507165.004|work=The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians|year=2013|pages=6–88|place=Cambridge|publisher=Cambridge University Press|doi=10.1017/cbo9781139507165.004|isbn=978-1-139-50716-5|access-date=2021-02-01|url-access=subscription}} After assuming power in 1399, Mubarak Shah struck coins in his own name and the Khutba was read in his name. During his reign, Mallu Iqbal tried to recover Jaunpur but failed. He was succeeded by his younger brother Ibrahim after he died in 1402, who took the title of Shams-ud-Din Ibrahim Shah.Majumdar, R.C. (ed.) (2006). The Delhi Sultanate, Mumbai: Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, pp.186-92

=Ibrahim Shah=

{{See also|Bengal Sultanate–Jaunpur Sultanate War}}

File:Silver_Coin_of_Ibrahim_Shah_of_Jaunpur.jpg

The Jaunpur Sultanate attained its greatest height under the younger brother of Mubarak Shah, who ruled as Shams ud-din Ibrahim Shah (ruled 1402–1440). To the east, his kingdom extended to Bihar, and to the west, to Kanauj; he even marched on Delhi at one point. Under the aegis of a Muslim holy man named Nur Qutb Alam, he threatened the Sultanate of Bengal under Raja Ganesha.Goron and Goenka, p. 343.

Ibrahim Shah was a patron of Islamic learning and established several colleges for this purpose. A large number of scholarly works on Islamic theology and law were produced during his reign, which include the Hashiah-i-Hindi, the Bahar-ul-Mawwaj and the Fatwa-i-Ibrahim Shahi. He constructed several monuments in a new regional style of architecture known as the Sharqi. During his reign, Sultan Nasiruddin Mahmud Shah II Tughluq took refuge in Jaunpur to get rid of the control of Mallu Iqbal over him. But he did not treat Sultan Mahmud Shah well.{{explain|date=March 2019}} As a result, his relations with the Sultan became bitter and Mahmud Shah occupied Kanauj. In 1407, he tried to recover Kanauj but failed. His attempt to conquer Bengal also failed. He was succeeded by his eldest son Mahmud Shah after his death.

=Mahmud Shah Sharqi=

File:Jaunpur Sultanat, J15, Hussain Shah, Double Falus.jpg

Mahmud Shah Sharqi was successful in conquering Chunar, but failed to capture Kalpi. He also conducted campaigns against Bengal and Odisha. The monarch of Odisha at that time was the legendary Kapilendra Deva Gajapati. The Odia forces defeated the Jaunpur Sultanate comprehensively. In 1452, he invaded Delhi but was defeated by Bahlul Lodi. Later, he made another attempt to conquer Delhi and marched into Etawah. Finally, he agreed to a treaty which accepted the right of Bahlul Lodi over Shamsabad. But when Bahlul tried to take possession of Shamsabad, he was opposed by the forces of Jaunpur. At this juncture, Mahmud Shah Sharqi died and he was succeeded by his son Bhikhan, who assumed the title of Muhammad Shah.Mahajan, V.D. (1991, reprint 2007) History of Medieval India, Part I, S.Chand & Co., New Delhi, {{ISBN|81-219-0364-5}}, pp.247-49

=Muhammad Shah=

File:Jaunpur Sultanat,J20 Muhammad Shah, BiIlon Tanka.jpg

On assuming power in 1457, Muhammad Shah made peace with Bahlul Lodi and recognised his right over Shamsabad. He picked up a quarrel with his nobles. In 1458, after his brother Hasan was executed on his order, his other brother Hussain revolted and proclaimed himself as the sultan of Jaunpur, under the title of Hussain Shah. Muhammed Shah was soon killed by Hussain's army in Kanauj.

=Hussain Shah=

File:Jaunpur Sultante. Husain Shah. 1458-1479 CE.jpg

The last ruler Hussain Shah signed a four years' peace treaty with Bahlul Lodi in 1458. Later, in order to invade Delhi reached the banks of the Yamuna with a very large army in 1478. Sultan Bahlul Lodi tried to secure peace by offering to retain only Delhi and govern it as a vassal of Hussain Shah but he rejected the offer.

File:The flight of Sultan Hussain Sharki of Jaunpur, A.D. 1479.jpg

As a result, Sultan Bahlul crossed the Yamuna and defeated him. Hussain Shah agreed for truce but again captured Etawah and marched towards Delhi with a huge army and he was again defeated by Bahlul Lodi. He was able to make peace this time also. In March 1479, he again arrived at the banks of Yamuna. He was again defeated by Bahlul Lodi and lost the Parganas of Kampil, Patiali, Shamsabad, Suket, Koil, Marhara and Jalesar to the advancing army of the Delhi Sultan. After the successive defeats in the battles of Senha, Rapri and Raigaon Khaga, he was finally defeated on the banks of the Rahab, after which Bahlul Lodi appointed Mubarak Khan to Jaunpur. Hussain Shah re-assembled his forces, expelled Mubarak Khan and re-occupied Jaunpur, until Bahlul drove him out again.{{cite book |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=UyAhAAAAMAAJ&q=re-assembled |title= Muslim India

|author= John Allan |page= 205 |publisher= the University of Michigan |date= 1958 }} As a result of the Sharqi's being pushed back by Bahlul Lodi's advance, the last Sharqi-dated inscriptions in the region of Uttar Pradesh are from 1476 and 1479 in Kannauj and Jaunpur respectively while Sharqi inscriptions in Bihar continued until 1505.{{cite journal |last1=Khan |first1=Zahoor Ali |title=Geography of the Sharqi Kingdom of Jaunpur |journal=Proceedings of the Indian History Congress |date=2004 |volume=65 |pages=408–410 |jstor=44144758 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/44144758}}

He fled to Kahalgaon in modern-day Bihar, where he was granted asylum by sultan Alauddin Husain Shah and spent his last days there. In 1486, Bahlul Lodi placed his eldest surviving son Barbak Shah Lodi on the throne of Jaunpur. It was during Hussain Shah' rule that a claimant to be the mahdi of all Muslims, Muhammad Jaunpuri, appeared and Hussain Shah was an admirer of him.

Military

Over the course of the fourteenth century, the Jaunpur Sultanate appeared to have been numerically superior to its neighbours when it came number of troops. It has been posited that this was because Jaunpur had many Rajput vassals under the sultans who paid tribute with levies of peasant war-bands. Among the contemporary Rajput clans who were situated in the territory or the peripheries of the Jaunpur Sultans, were the Baghelas of Rewa, the Bachgotis of Sultanpur in Uttar Pardesh, Ujjainiyas of Bhojpur as well as the Tomars of Gwalior.{{cite book |last1=Hussain |first1=Ejaz |title=Shiraz-i Hind: A History of Jaunpur Sultanate |date=2017 |publisher=Manohar |pages=96–99 |url=https://www.academia.edu/36986170}}

The support of these Rajput levies were what allowed the last sultan, Hussain Shah, to continue to challenge the Sultans of Delhi. One contemporary source, which may have exaggerated, advises of Juga, the chief of the Bachgoti clan of Rajputs, who is said to have assembled a huge band of army consisting of 200,000 infantry and 15,000 cavalry to support the Sultan.

Arts and architecture

File:Main arcade facade, Atala Masjid, Jaunpur.jpg]]

File:Devananda's Fourteen Auspicious Dreams Foretelling the Birth of Mahavira. Folio from a Kalpasutra Manuscript Master of the Jaunpur Kalpasutra, ca. 1465 India, Jaunpur Sultanate.jpg

The Sharqi rulers of Jaunpur were known for their patronage of learning and architecture. Jaunpur was known as the Shiraz of India during this period. Most notable examples of Sharqi style of architecture in Jaunpur are the Atala Masjid, the Lal Darwaza Masjid and the Jama Masjid. Though the foundation of the Atala Masjid was laid by Firuz Shah Tughluq in 1376, it was completed only during the rule of Ibrahim Shah in 1408. Another mosque, the Jhanjhari Masjid was also built by Ibrahim Shah in 1430. The Lal Darwaja Masjid (1450) was built during the reign of the next ruler Mahmud Shah. The Jama Masjid was built in 1470, during the rule of the last ruler Hussain Shah.

File:Atala Masjid.jpg|Atala Masjid

File:Entrance interior, Atala Masjid, Jaunpur.jpg|Entrance interior, Atala Masjid, Jaunpur.

=Music=

The last ruler Hussain Shah assumed the title of Gandharva and contributed significantly in the development of Khayal, a genre of Hindustani classical music. He also composed several new ragas (melodies). Most notable among these are {{IAST|Malhār-śyāma}}, {{IAST|Gaur-śyāma}}, {{IAST|Bhopāl-śyāma}}, Hussaini- or {{IAST|Jaunpurī-āśāvari}} (presently known as Jaunpuri) and Jaunpuri-basant.

Coinage

The coin hoards of the Jaunpur Sultan's have mainly been found in the territory of the modern states of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar in India indicating the circulation of Sharqi coins in these regions.{{cite journal |last1=Ejaz Hussain |first1=Syed |title=Currency Pattern and Money Supply: A Study of Coinage and Mint of Jaunpur Sultanate |journal=Proceedings of the Indian History Congress |date=2005 |volume=66 |pages=363–378 |jstor=44145853 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/44145853}}

The first two rulers of the Sultanate, Malik Sarwar and Mubarak Shah did not declare their independence from the Delhi Sultanate hence neither struck coins in their own name. Ibrahim Shah of Jaunpur was the first of the sultans to issue his own coins when he came to rule in 1402. The known coins were issued in gold, silver and copper. On the obverse of the coins is written:

"Fi zaman al-Imam nai'b Amir al-mominin Abulfath khulidat Khilafatahu"

English translation: "In the time of the Imam, the Deputy of the Commander of the faithful, the father of victory, may the caliphate perpetuate".

His successors, Mahmud Shah and Hussain Shah also continued to mint coins in their own names with billon and copper.

List of Sharqi rulers

{{Jaunpur Sultanate}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! style="background-color:#F0DC82" | Titular Name

! style="background-color:#F0DC82" | Personal Name

! style="background-color:#F0DC82" | Reign

colspan="4" align="center" | Independence from Sultan of Delhi, Nasir ud din Muhammad Shah III.
align="center"|Khwajah-i-Jahan
{{Nastaliq| خواجہ جہاں}}
Malik-us-Sharq
{{Nastaliq| ملک الشرق}}
Atabeg-i-Azam
{{Nastaliq|اتابک اعظم}}

|align="center"| Malik Sarwar

|align="center"|1394–1399

align="center"| Mubarak Shah
{{Nastaliq| مبارک شاہ }}

|align="center"| Malik Qaranfal

|align="center"|1399–1402

align="center"|Shams-ud-Din Ibrahim Shah
{{Nastaliq| شمس الدین ابراہیم شاہ }}

|align="center"| Ibrahim Khan

|align="center"|1402–1440

align="center"| Nasir-ud-Din Mahmud Shah
{{Nastaliq| ناصر الدین محمود شاہ }}

|align="center"| Mahmud Khan

|align="center"|1440–1457

align="center"|Muhammad Shah
{{Nastaliq| محمد شاہ }}

|align="center"| Bhi Khan

|align="center"| 1457–1458

align="center"|Hussain Shah
{{Nastaliq| حسین شاہ }}

|align="center"| Husain Khan

|align="center"| 1458–1479

colspan="4" align="center" | Reabsorbed in Delhi Sultanate under Lodi Dynasty

Family tree

{{Chart top|width=100%|collapsed=yes|Sharqi Dynasty}}

{{Tree chart/start|align=center|collapsed=yes|style=font-size:90%}}

{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | | | A01 | | | | | | | | | |A01=Malik Sarwar
?-1399
Sultan of Jaunpur
R.1394-1399 |boxstyle_ A01=border-color:#FFD700}}

{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |}}

{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | | | A01 | | | | | | | | | |A01=Unnamed}}

{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | |,|-|^|-|.| | | | | | | | |}}

{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | A01 | | A02 | | | | | | | |A01=Mubarak Shah
?-1402
Sultan of Jaunpur
R.1399-1402 |A02=Ibrahim Shah
?-1440
Sultan of Jaunpur
R.1402-1440 |boxstyle_ A01=border-color:#FFD700 |boxstyle_ A02=border-color:#FFD700}}

{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | | | | | |!| | | | | | | | |}}

{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | | | | | A01 | | | | | | | |A01=Mahmud Shah
?-1457
Sultan of Jaunpur
R.1440-1457 |boxstyle_ A01=border-color:#FFD700}}

{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | |,|-|-|-|(| | | | | | | | |}}

{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | A01 | | A02 | | | | | | | |A01=Muhammad Shah
?-1458
Sultan of Jaunpur
R.1457-1458 |A02=Hussain Shah
Sultan of Jaunpur
R.1458-1479 |boxstyle_ A01=border-color:#FFD700 |boxstyle_ A02=border-color:#FFD700}}

{{Tree chart/end}}

{{Chart bottom}}

Notes

{{reflist}}