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Mir Masjidi Khan : ウィキペディア英語版 | Mir Masjidi Khan ''Sahibzada'' Mir Masjidi Khan (died 1841) was a celebrated Afghan resistance leader who opposed the installation of Shuja Shah Durrani (or 'Shah Shujah') as Emir of Afghanistan by the Government of British India during the First Anglo-Afghan War. He kept up a fierce struggle against the occupation forces in and around Kabul and Northern Afghanistan, until his death.〔Lady Florentia Sale, ''Journal of the Disasters in Afghanistan', 1841-42'', Pub. 1843, pp.140-141〕 == Background == Mir Masjidi Khan was born in a saintly Sayyid family, resident in Khwaja Khizri village near Charikar, in the Kohistan region of Northern Afghanistan.〔Maj (R) Nur Muhammad Shah Kohistani, ''Nur i Kohistan'' (Urdu; Eng Trans. 'The Light of Kohistan') pub. Lahore: Ferozsons, 1957, p.46〕 His father, ''Sahibzada'' Ishaq Jan Khan, was a well-to-do landowner of the locality and the family were deeply venerated in the area for their Islamic learning, piety and integrity in public affairs.〔Nur Muhammad Shah, pp.46-47〕 Mir Masjidi's childhood years were spent in idyllic rural surroundings, in acquiring equestrian and martial skills, in addition to the study of the Quran and Shariah and of Persian literature.〔Including poets such as Hafiz Shirazi, Bedil and Rumi, of whose works he was especially fond. Nur Muhammad Shah, p.47〕 Since his family was an influential one, and he possessed an innate dignity and wisdom from early on, he rose to early prominence and in due course became one of the most respected of the Afghan chiefs and notables of the period.〔Shah, p.49〕
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