Kaikaus ascended the throne after the abdication of his father
Nasiruddin Bughra Khan. During his reign, he had divided his kingdom into two parts -
Bihar and
Lakhnauti, and appointed Ikhtiyaruddin Firoz Itgin as the Governor of Bihar and Shahabuddin Zafar Khan Bahram Itgin as the Governor of Lakhnauti. Zafar Khan Itgin conquered
Satgaon in south-western
Bengal. His kingdom extended to Bihar in the west,
Devkot in the north and Satgaon in the south. He put a vast kingdom under his control. Delhi Sultan
Alauddin Khalji also accepted Kaikaus's independent dominance of Bengal. On Muharram 692 AH corresponding to 1292-1293 CE, Kaikaus ordered Ikhtiyaruddin Firuz Aitigin to construct a mosque north of Maheswar in
Bihar, on the banks of the
Burhi Gandak River. In mosque inscriptions he styled himself "the great Sultan, master of the necks of nations, the king of the kings of Turks and Persians, the lord of the crown, and the seal," as well as "the right hand of the vice regent of God"—that is, "helper of the
caliph." On another mosque he even styled himself the "shadow of God" Rukunuddin Kaikaus ruled
Bengal for nine years and died in 1300. It is assumed that he was childless. He was succeeded by his probable brother,
Shamsuddin Firoz Shah. ==See also==