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Malik Ambar, under his new official position as prime minister and regent, made Paranda the new capital and did much to restore stability to the kingdom.<ref name="ShyanP242"/> However, over the years the sultan began to chafe under the regency.<ref name=EatonP119>{{cite book|last=Eaton|first=Richard M. |title=A Social History of the Deccan, 1300-1761: Eight Indian Lives|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cGd2huLXEVYC&pg=PA119|year=2005|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-25484-7|page=119}}</ref> When a truce was established between Ahmadnagar and the Mughals, Murtaza became offended by the development. He endorsed a rival of Malik Ambar, Raju Daccani, which resulted in a lengthy war between the two nobles.<ref name=ShyamP254>{{harvtxt|Shyam|1966|p=254}}</ref> | Malik Ambar, under his new official position as prime minister and regent, made Paranda the new capital and did much to restore stability to the kingdom.<ref name="ShyanP242"/> However, over the years the sultan began to chafe under the regency.<ref name=EatonP119>{{cite book|last=Eaton|first=Richard M. |title=A Social History of the Deccan, 1300-1761: Eight Indian Lives|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cGd2huLXEVYC&pg=PA119|year=2005|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-25484-7|page=119}}</ref> When a truce was established between Ahmadnagar and the Mughals, Murtaza became offended by the development. He endorsed a rival of Malik Ambar, Raju Daccani, which resulted in a lengthy war between the two nobles.<ref name=ShyamP254>{{harvtxt|Shyam|1966|p=254}}</ref> | ||
Murtaza continued to intrigue and form factions against Malik Ambar, instigating a number of rebellions against him. Ambar grew frustrated with the Sultan's duplicity and sought the advice of Ibrahim Adil Shah II, who disapproved of having Murtaza deposed. Ibrahim intervened on behalf of the Sultan and restored relations between the two for a time. However, in 1610 another, more serious quarrel occurred when Murtaza's [[Persian people|Persian]] wife from an earlier marriage became embroiled in a verbal altercation with Malik Ambar's daughter. The former referred to her co-wife as a slave-girl to the Sultan, and the regent himself as a rebel. Ambar's daughter complained to her father, who in anger had both Murtaza and the wife poisoned by his secretary.<ref>{{harvtxt|Shyam|1966|p=261}}</ref | Murtaza continued to intrigue and form factions against Malik Ambar, instigating a number of rebellions against him. Ambar grew frustrated with the Sultan's duplicity and sought the advice of Ibrahim Adil Shah II, who disapproved of having Murtaza deposed. Ibrahim intervened on behalf of the Sultan and restored relations between the two for a time. However, in 1610 another, more serious quarrel occurred when Murtaza's [[Persian people|Persian]] wife from an earlier marriage became embroiled in a verbal altercation with Malik Ambar's daughter. The former referred to her co-wife as a slave-girl to the Sultan, and the regent himself as a rebel. Ambar's daughter complained to her father, who in anger had both Murtaza and the wife poisoned by his secretary.<ref name=EatonP119/><ref>{{harvtxt|Shyam|1966|p=261}}</ref> | ||
Murtaza's five-year-old son, who was either his child by the Persian wife or by Malik Ambar's daughter, was subsequently enthroned under the name Burhan Nizam Shah III.<ref name=EatonP119/><ref>{{harvtxt|Shyam|1966|p=312}}</ref> | Murtaza's five-year-old son, who was either his child by the Persian wife or by Malik Ambar's daughter, was subsequently enthroned under the name Burhan Nizam Shah III.<ref name=EatonP119/><ref>{{harvtxt|Shyam|1966|p=312}}</ref> |