Shamsuddin Muzaffar Shah | |
---|---|
As-Sultan Azam Al-Adil al-Badil al-Fazil Ghawth al-Islam wa al-Muslimin Shams ad-Dunya wa ad-Din Abu an-Nasr Muzaffar Shah (The Great, Just, Pious, Generous Sultan, Helper of Islam and Muslims, Sun of the World and Religion, Patriarch of Triumph, Victorious King) | |
17th Sultan of Bengal | |
Reign | 1491–1493 |
Predecessor | Mahmud Shah II |
Successor | Alauddin Husain Shah |
Born | Sidi Badr |
Died | 1493 Bengal Sultanate |
House | Habshi |
Religion | Sunni Islam |
Sidi Badr, later known by his regnal name Shams ad-Dīn Muẓaffar Shāh (Persian: شمس الدین مظفر شاه, Bengali: শামসউদ্দীন মোজাফফর শাহ), was the Sultan of Bengal from 1491 to 1493. Described by the Indo-Persian historians as a tyrant, his cruelty was said to have alienated the nobles as well as his common subjects.[1]