Expiry Aman ul-Mulk died very suddenly and all the circumstances of his death indicate that he succumbed in the ordinary course of nature to a sudden attack of illness but it is so unusual in Chitral for a Mehtar to come to a peaceful end, that most of the Chitralis believe that he was
poisoned.
Gravity By the time of Aman ul-Mulk's death in 1892, Chitrals primary importance was that it contained the series of valleys stretching from
Wakhan to British held India. Fear of this area as an
invasion route went back to 1874, amid the claim that
Russia could be in British territory within thirteen days with an army if held Chitral. During the Viceroyalty of
Lord Lytton, it was deemed expedient, in view of Russian military activity in
Central Asia, to obtain more effective control over the
passes of the
Hindu Kush. And it was the same menace, real or fanciful, which prompted the
Marquess of Lansdowne to re-establish the
Gilgit Agency in 1889. Until 1892 Mehtar Aman ul-Mulk had provided a sturdy bulwark to British interests, his death had jeopardised that security. The British preferred to conciliate Nizam ul-Mulk, as he was connected with
Umra Khan of Jandul and with the influential Mullah Shahu Baba of Bajaur through his maternal uncle Kokhan Beg. He also had connections in
Badakshan,
Hunza and
Dir.
Build-up to the siege of Chitral However, with Aman ul-Mulks death, all hell broke loose in Chitral, a three way struggle for succession broke out between two of his sons,
Nizam ul-Mulk and
Afzal ul-Mulk and their uncle
Sher Afzal. Having the fortune of being on the spot Afzal took control and proclaimed himself Mehtar. The first thing that Afzal did was to invite as many brothers as were within reach to a banquet where he murdered them.
Nizam ul-Mulk was away in
Yasin, of which he was the governor, when the Mehtarship was seized by his brother Afzal ul-Mulk. Anxious to consolidate his power Afzal asked the British that an officer might be sent to reside permanently in Chitral. Before, however, any arrangements could be made he was killed, after a short reign of a few months, by his uncle
Sher Afzal.
Nizam ul-Mulk at once hurried to Chitral and succeeded in ousting Sher Afzal. Nizam, like his brother, asked that a
political officer might reside in Chitral territory, and
Captain Youngshusband was accordingly sent to
Mastuj. Later probably not feeling himself very secure Nizam urged for the headquarters of the residence political officer who happened at that time to be Lieutenant Gurdon, to be shifted from
Mastuj to Chitral but while the question was still under determination the Mehtar was murdered by his brother
Amir ul-Mulk. Amir demanded
recondition from Lieutenant Gurdon who was acting as assistant
political agent in Chitral. When
Amir ul-Mulk came to him he very properly said that he had no power to grant recognition until instructed to do so by the Government of India but that in all probability he would be recognised.
Aftermath Amir ul-Mulk had shown himself quite unfit to rule. He had made himself hateful to the Chitralies and had been guilty of treachery to the English. Sir
George Robertson therefore declared that subject to the approval of the Government of India,
Shuja ul-Mulk his younger brother was recognised as Mehtar. The critical nature of the situation leading up to the siege of Chitral is brought out very clearly in the speech made by
Lord Elgin, the
Viceroy of India, on 29 March 1895, to the
Supreme Legislative Council. == Description ==