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Afterwards, Asaf Khan retained most of the spoils, including 800 of the thousand captured war elephants and many precious metals, for himself. He presented 200 war elephants to Akbar at [[Jaunpur Sultanate|Jaunpur]] on 13 July 1565, but soon feared retribution by the finance minister [[Muzaffar Khan]] and fled on 17 September 1565 to [[Ilahabad Subah]]. However, he soon submitted and was restored to his position. | Afterwards, Asaf Khan retained most of the spoils, including 800 of the thousand captured war elephants and many precious metals, for himself. He presented 200 war elephants to Akbar at [[Jaunpur Sultanate|Jaunpur]] on 13 July 1565, but soon feared retribution by the finance minister [[Muzaffar Khan]] and fled on 17 September 1565 to [[Ilahabad Subah]]. However, he soon submitted and was restored to his position. | ||
Parts of the annexed Garha kingdom were returned to [[Chandra Shah]], Rani Durgavati's brother-in-law, by Akbar in 1567, who saw little gain from retaining the kingdom. The remaining part, consisting of ten forts, was annexed into the [[Malwa Subah]] of the empire, which had recently been acquired in the [[Mughal conquest of Malwa]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Chandra |first1=Satish |title=Medieval India: From Sultanat To The Mughals-Mughal Empire (1526-1748) - Part II |date=2007 |pages= | Parts of the annexed Garha kingdom were returned to [[Chandra Shah]], Rani Durgavati's brother-in-law, by Akbar in 1567, who saw little gain from retaining the kingdom. The remaining part, consisting of ten forts, was annexed into the [[Malwa Subah]] of the empire, which had recently been acquired in the [[Mughal conquest of Malwa]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Chandra |first1=Satish |title=Medieval India: From Sultanat To The Mughals-Mughal Empire (1526-1748) - Part II |date=2007 |pages=105–106}}</ref> | ||
==References== | ==References== |