Shahāb-ud-Dawla Mawdūd | |||||
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Ghaznavid Sultan Shahāb-ud-Dawla | |||||
Sultan of the Ghaznavid Empire | |||||
Reign | 19 March 1041 – 1050 | ||||
Predecessor | Muhammad of Ghazni | ||||
Successor | Mas'ud II | ||||
Born | ? Ghazni Ghaznavid Empire | ||||
Died | c. 1050 Ghazni Ghaznavid Empire | ||||
Burial | c. 1050 | ||||
Issue | Mas'ud II | ||||
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House | Ghaznavid Dynasty | ||||
Father | Mas'ud I | ||||
Religion | Sunni Islam |
Shahāb-ud-Dawla Mawdūd (Persian: شهابالدوله مودود; died 1050), known as Mawdud of Ghazni (مودود غزنوی), was a sultan of the Ghaznavids from 1041 – 1050. He seized the throne of the sultanate from his uncle, Muhammad of Ghazni, in revenge for the murder of his father, Mas'ud I of Ghazni. His brother Majdud in Lahore did not recognize him as sultan, but his sudden death paved the way for Mawdud to exercise control over the eastern portion of the Ghaznavid Empire.
Mawdud inherited an empire whose entire western half was overrun by the Seljuk Empire and was battling to continue existing. During his reign the further reaches of the Indian conquests and vassal states also broke away. Mawdud was able to hold on to his Afghan realms and Indus valley territories while pushing north into Central Asia and stabilizing his western front with the Seljuqs.
Keikavus, author of the Qabus nama, was a guest at Mawdud's court for seven to eight years.[1]