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    |  |  Muhammad or Mehmud Shah |  |  
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				25-05-2014
			
			
			
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				Muhammad or Mehmud Shah 
 
 
 Muhammad or Mehmud Shah, generally called Muhammad bin Islam Shah is believed  to have been born in Daylam. He was almost ten years old when his father arrived  in Kahek in 798/1396. If this is a genuine tradition, it implies that he was  born possibly in 788/1386, and was about 17 years old while assuming the  Imamate. He mostly resided in Shahr-i Babak in Kirman.
 The Iranian Ismailis began to revert to their former settlements in different  villages. Most of them engaged in agriculture in Kohistan, Qain, Birjand,  Nishapur, Khorasan, Sirjan, Jabal-i Bariz, Mahallat and Yazd.
 Muhammad bin Islam Shah seems to have started communications from his  headquarters to different Ismaili communities, and also accepted the gifts of  the pilgrims. It is said that the Indian Ismaili pilgrims were invested the  title of "darwish" (daras).
 Taymur designated his grandson Pir Muhammad as his heir, who was about 22  years old in 807/1405. But, his cousin Khalil Sultan occupied Samarkand and was  proclaimed as sultan. He was overthrown in 811/1409. Meanwhile, Shah Rukh  (1409-1447), the fourth son of Taymur, the then governor of Herat, ascended as  the next Taymurid ruler of Iran and Central Asia. He died in 851/1447 and was  succeeded by his son Olugh Beg (1447-1449), who was in turn followed by Abu  Sa'id (1451-1469).
 
 
 
 One seminal point should not omitted here in discussion that the office of  the hujjat or pir in India from Pir Shams (d. 757/1356) to Pir Hasan Kabiruddin  (d. 853/1449) was almost hereditary, and then the office seemed to be revered  like the hereditary office of the Imams, and therefore, an effect was necessary  to enforce in the line of the pirs before the time it might become an ingrained  belief. Thus, after the death of Pir Hasan Kabiruddin, Imam Muhammad bin Islam  Shah designated his brother Pir Tajuddin, as a next hujjat or pir for Hind and  Sind instead of any son, and one can hardly deny the logic springs from such  designation.
 
 
 
 
				 
 
  
 
  
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