The Tihaanpuri branch produced several high-ranking nobles, including Nawab Abdullah Khan I. The branch began with Sayyid Jalal Khan Emir, an 8th-generation descendant of Abdullah al Wasiti. Khan Emir left Tihanpur and settled in Dharsi, located in the pargana (an administrative district) of Jauli. He had four sons, of whom the eldest, Umar Shahid, settled in Jansath. The second son, Chaman, settled in Chitaura; a third son, Hassan, settled in Bihari, and a fourth, Ahmad, made his home in Kawal, in the pargana of Jansath.
Jansath , a Mughal nobleman. played an important role during the
decline of the Mughal Empire. Upon his arrival, Umar found
Jansath already occupied by
Jat and
Brahmin communities. However, during the branch's ascendancy in the late Mughal era, its influence grew so significantly that Jansath was administratively separated from the Jauli pargana. It was also from this branch that
Nawab Abdullah Khan I emerged, better known in places like Ajmer as
Sayyid Mian. The branch benefited from Aurangzeb's reign. By the time Aurangzeb died, the branch had considerable influence, with Sayyid Mian's sons - Nawab Hussain Ali Khan and Nawab Abdullah Khan II - attached to the future emperor Bahadur Shah.
Nawab Hussain Ali Khan and
Nawab Abdullah Khan II, also known as the
Sayyid Brothers, were positioned such that when Bahadur Shah I ascended to the throne with the brothers' assistance, he granted the former the government of Patna and the latter the government of Allahabad. In 1709, Sayyid Ahmad, Sayyid Khan, Sayyid Hussain Khan, and Sayyid Ghairat Khan participated in suppressing a rebellion of Hindu princes along the Narbada River. They fought in the vanguard and were killed along with their followers. The Tihaanpuris remained active in campaigns in Punjab, Gujarat, and along the Indus. Their influence increased during this period, though later declined with the fall of the Sayyid Brothers. In 1712, the sons of Sayyid Mian, having found themselves in a dangerous position and distrustful of other ministers at Delhi, took it upon themselves to raise Prince Furrukhsiyar to the throne as Emperor. The sons of Sayyid Mian participated in the battles of Sarai Alam Chand (Allahabad) and Agra. Sayyid Nurudin Ali Khan was killed in action at Allahabad. Nawab Sayyid Hassan Ali Khan, who thereafter became known as Abdullah Khan II, was appointed as Grand Vezier with the title of Qutb al Mulk, while Nawab Sayyid Hussain Ali Khan was appointed as Commander-in-Chief with the title of Amir ul Mammalik. With the demise of the Sayyid Brothers, many other notable Sayyids fell - beginning with the assassination of Hussain Ali Khan and later with the capture of Abdullah Khan II at the Battle of Hasanpur. The Tihanpur branch declined significantly following this, as many of its leaders were killed or captured in conflicts with rival nobles such as Muhammad Amin Khan and Qamar ud din Khan.
Chaman The Chaman branch came next in line to the Jansath branch. Descended from Sayyid Chaman, who settled in Chitura, this branch gained much influence during the reign of Shah Jahan when Sayyid Jalal became a high-ranking Mansabdar. He was given possession of Kharwa Jalalpur in the Sardhan pargana of Meerut. However, the branch fell into decline when Sayyid Shams, son of Sayyid Jalal, left the Imperial service. He had two sons, Sayyid Asghar Ali and Sayyid Asad Ali. The former died childless, while the descendants of the latter remained in Chitura until the British era.
Hassan Sayyid Hassan had six sons, many of whom rose in imperial service and later became
Zamindars.
Ahmad The descendants of Sayyid Ahmad, who had settled in Kawal, gained much acclaim during the reign of Aurangzeb when Tatar Khan and Diwan Muhammad Yar Khan became distinguished in imperial service.
Khan Jahan Sayyid Nasirudin, the sixth son of Sayyid Hasan, earned fame as Sayyid Khanjahan-i-Shahjahanil. He attained power under the emperor Shahjahan and was consequently granted forty villages in the parganas of Khatauli and Sarwat, along with several bighas of land in free revenue for perpetuity with the title of Abul Muzaffar. He began construction of a new town, which was completed by his son and named
Muzaffarnagar. == Chatrauri branch ==