Malik amber an Ethiopian who ruled in India as prime minister

By Madubuike ikenna 1 hour ago
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Malik Ambar, the Ethiopian who ruled in India as prime minister in the late 1500s. Born in the late 16th century in what is now Ethiopia, Malik Ambar was captured as a child and sold through the Indian Ocean slave trade. He was taken to India, where Africans—often referred to as Habshis or Sidis—were commonly recruited into military service. After gaining his freedom, Malik Ambar distinguished himself through intelligence, discipline, and leadership. By around 1600, he had risen to become the prime minister and regent of the Ahmadnagar Sultanate, effectively ruling the state on behalf of its young sultan. Malik Ambar reorganized the kingdom’s administration, reformed its revenue system, strengthened defenses, and founded cities, including the settlement that would later become Aurangabad. He is especially remembered for his use of guerrilla warfare, which repeatedly frustrated and stalled the expansion of the powerful Mughal Empire. Mughal emperors wrote about him with open hostility—because they could not defeat him. Despite being born enslaved, Malik Ambar became a kingmaker, general, and statesman whose authority reshaped politics in the Deccan for more than two decades. He ruled until his death in 1626, leaving behind a legacy that challenges narrow ideas about African history and global power. Malik Ambar’s life is a reminder that African influence has never been confined to the continent—and that leadership can emerge from the most unlikely beginnings.
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