Discover Bengal · Unfolded
❦Richard M. Eaton
Creator / Contributor
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Related Events
13
1204-1205
Bakhtiyar Khalji's Conquest of Nadia
Ikhtiyar al-Din Muhammad Bakhtiyar Khalji's capture of Nadia, associated with 1204-1205, marked a major turning point in Bengal's political history. The fall of the Sena capital center and subsequent movement toward Lakhnauti/Gaur shifted the region's ruling structure and opened a new phase of Turkic-led state formation in Bengal.
1,352
Bengal Sultanate Independence and Unification
By the mid-fourteenth century, Bengal came under a unified and effectively sovereign sultanate polity, commonly associated with the consolidation of Shamsuddin Ilyas Shah. This marked a major shift from fragmented regional authority to a distinct Bengal state with its own political center and durable institutional identity.
1,414
Raja Ganesha Seizes Power in Bengal
In 1414, Raja Ganesha, a powerful Hindu zamindar from north Bengal, captured effective control of the Bengal Sultanate during a period of dynastic weakness. His rise marked the start of the House of Ganesha period, which briefly interrupted Ilyas Shahi rule and reshaped court politics before the Ilyas Shahi restoration.
1,494
Alauddin Husain Shah Begins Hussain Shahi Rule in Bengal
In 1494, Alauddin Husain Shah took power in Bengal and founded the Hussain Shahi dynasty. His accession marked a major dynastic transition in the Bengal Sultanate and initiated a period often associated with administrative consolidation, territorial ambition, and expanded courtly patronage in Bengali and Persian cultural spheres.
15th century
Khan Jahan Ali and Bagerhat-Khalifatabad
Khan Jahan Ali is associated with the development of Khalifatabad, now Bagerhat, where a dense concentration of mosques, roads, tanks, and civic works emerged in the fifteenth century. The Historic Mosque City of Bagerhat is now recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage site.
1576 (July 12)
Battle of Rajmahal
On July 12, 1576, Mughal forces defeated Daud Khan Karrani at the Battle of Rajmahal. The victory marked the collapse of the Karrani regime, often treated as the terminal phase of independent Bengal Sultanate power, and accelerated Bengal's incorporation into the Mughal imperial framework.
1599 (c.)
Baro-Bhuyans Resistance in Bhati
By around 1599, the Baro-Bhuyans network in Bengal's Bhati region represented the strongest organized local resistance to Mughal incorporation after the Rajmahal transition. Under Isa Khan's leadership, river-based warfare, fortified nodes, and shifting alliances repeatedly disrupted imperial consolidation.
1,612
Mughal Conquest Phase in Bengal Largely Completed
By 1612, the long Mughal conquest phase in Bengal was largely complete after sustained campaigns against regional resistance networks, including the Baro-Bhuiyan bloc. While local variation remained, the balance of power had shifted decisively toward Mughal provincial rule after the post-Rajmahal era.
1704-1717
Murshid Quli Khan Shifts the Capital to Murshidabad
In the early eighteenth century, Murshid Quli Khan shifted Bengal's effective administrative center from Dhaka to Makhsudabad, later known as Murshidabad. The move strengthened centralized revenue management, aligned court and banking networks around a new political hub, and reoriented the province's governing geography before Plassey.
1,757
Battle of Plassey
The Battle of Plassey in 1757 marked a decisive shift in Bengal's political destiny. A short military encounter became a structural transfer of power as the East India Company worked through court conspiracy, military defection, and financial alliance to break Siraj ud-Daulah's position. The aftermath reshaped governance, revenue extraction, and sovereignty, laying the foundation for long-term colonial rule.
1,538
Humayun Enters Bengal and Occupies Gaur
In 1538, Humayun's campaign reached Bengal and occupied Gaur, signaling the first major Mughal intervention into Bengal's power structure. Although temporary, the move tied Bengal directly to the Mughal-Afghan contest in the east.
1,610
Capital Shift to Dhaka (Jahangirnagar)
In 1610, Islam Khan Chishti transferred the Mughal provincial capital of Bengal from Rajmahal to Dhaka and renamed it Jahangirnagar in official use. The move aligned administration with the Bhati frontier where major resistance networks operated.
1,303
Conquest of Sylhet
The conquest of Sylhet is commonly associated with the expansion of Muslim political and spiritual networks into the Sylhet region around 1303, with Shah Jalal central to later memory. The event is historically important, but details of chronology and military sequence depend on later traditions as well as regional histories.