Syed Salar Masud Ghazi | |
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Born | 10 February 1014 |
Died | 15 June 1034 | (aged 20)
Resting place | Banks of the sacred reservoir |
Other names | Ghazi Miyan |
Occupation | Military leader |
Known for | Military campaigns in India |
Parent | Gazi Saiyyed Salar Sahu(father) |
Relatives | Nephew of Mahmud of Ghazni |
Syed Salar Masud Ghazi or Ghazi Miyan (10 February 1014 – 15 June 1034) was a semi-legendary Muslim figure from India. By the 12th century, he had become reputed as a warrior, and his tomb (dargah) at Bahraich, Uttar Pradesh, India, had become a place of pilgrimage.
The main source of information about him is the chivalric romance Mirat-i-Masudi ("Mirror of Masud"), a Persian-language hagiography written by Abdur Rahman Chishti in the 1620s. According to this biography, he was a nephew of the Ghaznavid conqueror Mahmud, and accompanied his uncle in the conquest of India during the early 11th century. However, the Ghaznavid chronicles do not mention him, and other claims in Mirat-i-Masudi are also of doubtful historicity.