Khairabad is a historic town known as Khairabad Awadh. It was a famous seat of learning during the Mughal period. The Indian freedom fighter Maulana
Fazl-e-Haq Khairabadi belonged to this town he was a kayasth before converting to Islam. The town has been the abode of many Urdu poets and writers. It has a famous madrasa for female education known as Jamia Fatima Zehra. Here also migrated an Afghan national named Bakshullah Khan, he was zamindar for 40 villages in khairabad elected by Britishers and his ascendants live there in a house names Bakshullah house. (PHATAK) The town is said to have been founded by Maharaja Khaira Pasi in the early 11th century. It was subsequently taken in possession by a
Kayasth family. In later years, many rent-free grants of land were made to Muslims who came in large numbers during the reigns of
Babur and
Akbar, but these grants were all resumed by the
Nawab of Oudh in the early 1800s. Before the above-mentioned Khaira Pasi's time, the place was known as Masichait (Masi Chitra) and was a place of pilgrimage as far back as the reign of the
Bikramajit. The name still exists at the appellation of a tank, the waters of which are said to possess healing properties, and which is called "Maswasi Talao". It was a big trading centre, where
Kashmiri shawls, jewels of Birmingham and elephants of Assam were traded. The
East India Company arranged to export the handloom clothes manufactured in Khairabad and Dariyabagh. During the 1857 Uprising, Maulana Fazl-e-Haq took an active part to get rid of the British from the country. Unfortunately, he was arrested and sentenced for life to the prison at
Kalapani (
Cellular Jail) on Andaman Island. == Present history ==