Who has historically been the most repressed king?

 THE King who Die in prison.



The last Indian ruler, Bahadur Shah Zafar, was then loaded onto the Mackinnon Mackenzie vessel. Rangoon was reached by this ship on October 17, 1858. Along with the Crown Prince of India, there were 35 other members of the royal family. The captain in charge of Rangoon was Nelson Davis. When he arrived at the dock, he saw the king and his subjects, wrote the receipt, and then took the final emperor of the third-largest kingdom in the world to his home. 



There was a king present, and Davies' morality forbade him from imprisoning the ailing and elderly king, but there was nowhere in Rangoon where Bahadur Shah Zafar could be confined. The first exiled person was Bahadur Shah Zafar.After giving the issue some attention, Davies came up with a peculiar answer. He cleared out his garage and locked up the last of Tajdar Hind, Zil Subhani, and Timuri Blood there. Death came to Bahadur Shah Zafar on October 17, 1858. He entered the garage and remained there until November 7, 1862, serving a four-year sentence.



In the renowned Zaman ghazal, "Lagta nahi hai dil mera ajde diyar mein," Bahadur Shah Zafar sings, "Kis ki bani hai alam e nepaidaar mein."

Furthermore, "how bad is it for Zafardfan"? "Not even two yards of land was found in Koyaar," was written in the same garage. The year was 1862, and it was a chilly day on November 7.



In the well-known Zaman ghazal "Lagta nahi hai dil mera ajde diyar mein," Bahadur Shah Zafar Alam e nepaidaar mein kis ki bani hai

Furthermore, "how bad is it for Zafardfan"? "Not even two yards of land was found in Koyaar," was written in the same garage. The year was 1862, and it was a chilly day on November 7. The unhappy King's servant came to Captain Davis' door in great despair. The orderly inside inquired in Burmese as to the cause of this impoliteness. replied in Burmese, "Zil Subhani is taking a breath."

The maid began sobbing loudly when the orderly said, "Sir is combing the dog. I can't disturb him. Despite the orderly's best efforts, her voice was heard by Nelson, who walked out of the room indignantly. She immediately dropped at Nelson's feet and said, "I want to open the garage window for the dying king."

Nelson grabbed his gun, led the guards into the garage, and wanted one more breath of free and fresh air before he passed out.

The odour, quiet, and blackness of death were present within the king's final resting place.

By the king's head, the orderly seized the lantern and assumed a position. Nelson took a step forward. Half of the king-sized blanket was on the bed and the other half was on the floor. His neck was bent, yet his bare head was on the pillow. Flies buzzed on her dry, yellow lips, and the veins in her neck were bulging.

Nelson Davis had seen tens of thousands of faces during his life, but he had never seen a face with such extreme poverty and destitution.

It was not a king's face; rather, it was the face of the world's greatest beggar, and there was free air on that face.

Yes. There was only a request for a free breath written, and this request captivated every viewer's attention like moss does to an old well's wall.

The King's neck was touched by Captain Nelson.

The caravan of life hasn't recently traversed the network of veins.

The final Indian king had reached the end of his life. Nelson Davis gave the instruction to contact the family.

He gave the king a bath, put on the shroud, and recited the third king's funeral prayer. There was no land available for the final crown prince of India in all of Rangoon when the time for the grave came. buried in the earth donated as a gift

When rose petals and water were being placed on the tomb on September 30, 1837, Ustad Hafiz Ibrahim Dehlvi's autumnal memories began to replay those events.

Thousands of visitors came to Delhi to welcome the new king of India when the 62-year-old Bahadur Shah Zafar was crowned in the Red Fort of Delhi. The king was dressed in opulent attire, had a lavish crown placed on his head, andThe entire heart echoed with praise when Jahangiri hung his swords and entered the public court. Shah Zafar's coronation festivities lasted for seven days.

And throughout those seven days, the royal palace provided food for the citizens of Delhi, but on this chilly morning on November 7, 1862, when it wasn't yet sealed, not even a joyful reader was allowed to visit the king's grave. Teacher Hafiz Muhammad Ibrahim Dehlvi started crying. He stood at the foot of the king's grave, took off his shoes, and began reciting Surah Towba.

It was a miracle of the Holy Quran being recited or the swelling of Ustad Ibrahim Dehlvi's neck that caused tears to spring up in his eyes.He saluted the impoverished people's cemetery with his hand up, and with that, the Mughal The empire's sun has finally set for all time.



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