The company deposed mir jafar and made ______ the nawab of bengal
Answers
Answer:
Syed Mir Jafar Ali Khan Bahadur (Bengali: সৈয়দ মীর জাফর আলী খান বাহাদুর, Persian: سید میر جعفر علی خان بہادر; c. 1691 – 5 February 1765) was a military general who became the first dependent Nawab of Bengal of the British East India Company. His reign has been considered to be the start of British imperialism in Indian history and a key step in the eventual British domination of vast areas of the Indian subcontinent.
Jafar Ali Khan Bahadur
Nawab of Bengal
Mir Jafar (left) and Mir Miran (right).jpg
Mir Jafar (left) and his eldest son, Mir Miran (right).
6th Nawab Nazim of Bengal, Bihar and Orissa
1st reign
2 July 1757 – 20 October 1760
Predecessor
Siraj ud-Daulah
Successor
Mir Qasim
2nd reign
25 July 1763 – 5 February 1765
Predecessor
Mir Qasim
Successor
Najimuddin Ali Khan
Born
1691
Died
5 February 1765 (aged 73–74)
Bengal
Burial
Jafarganj Cemetery, Murshidabad
Spouse
Shah Khanum Sahiba (m. 1727, d. August 1779)
Munni Begum (noble) (m. 1746, d. 10 January 1813)
Rahat-un-nisa Begum (Mut'ah wife)
Babbu Begum (d. 1809)
Issue
Sadiq Ali Khan Bahadur (Mir Miran)
Najimuddin Ali Khan
Najabut Ali Khan (Mir Phulwari)
Ashraf Ali Khan
Mubaraq Ali Khan
Hadi Ali Khan Bahadur
Fatima Begum Sahiba
Misri Begum
Answer:
Mir Qasim
Since Mir Jafar engaged himself with the Dutch East India Company to assert independence, the British finally defeated Mir Jafar and the Dutch forces at Chinsura and made Mir Qasim the new Nawab of Bengal