Chitor from Rana
Bickermagit. Rana threw himself under the pro∣tection of Humaioon; but the
emperor, for what reason is not known, having advanced as far as Gualier,
encamped there for two months, and returned, without effecting any thing, to
Agra. Rana Bickermagit, despairing of relief, sent a crown, and a
considerable sum of money, to Bahadur, which induced him to raise the
siege.
Sultan Bahadur, whose
affairs were now in a very prosperous situ∣ation, by the reduction of
Mendu, and other places, began to shew his contempt of Humaioon, by advancing
the conspirator Mahum∣mud to great honors. He also prompted Sultan Alla ul
Dien, the son of the emperor Beloli Lodi, to attempt to possess
himself of the throne of Delhi.
He,
for this purpose, made Tatar Chan, the son of Sultan Alla ul Dien, his
general, and dispatched him, with forty thousand men, against Humaioon,
with which he subdued Biana, and advanced to the environs of Agra.
This pressing danger awaked the king from his lethargy. He
im∣mediately sent Mirza Hindal, with a force, to oppose Tatar Chan. When
the armies approached one another, there was so great a de∣sertion from
Tatar's troops, that, in the space of ten days, ten thousand horse
scarce remained to him. He however resolved, with these, to stand his
ground, and give battle to the imperial army,
but he was
totally overthrown, lost the most of his troops, three hundred officers of
distinction, and his own life. Mirza Hindal, after this victory, retook
Biana, and all the other places which had before fallen into the hands of the
enemy, and returned in triumph to Agra.
Sultan
Bahadur, in the year nine hundred and forty, marched, a second time, towards
Chitor; and, in the mean time, Humaioon ordered a fort to be built in Delhi, on
the banks of the Jumna, which he called Dien Panna. He, soon after, marched
towards