Peer Ali Khan (1812 – July 7, 1857) was an Indian revolutionary and rebel, who participated in the Indian independence movement.[2] He was given capital punishment for participating in the freedom struggle of 1857.[3][4][5]

Peer Ali Khan
Born1812[1]
DiedJuly 7, 1857
Cause of deathCapital punishment
NationalityIndian
OccupationBookbinder
Known forIndian freedom movement, Indian Rebellion of 1857

Khan was a bookbinder by profession and he used to secretly distribute important leaflets, pamphlets and coded messages to freedom fighters. He conducted regular campaigns against the British government.[2]

He was arrested along with his 33 followers on July 4, 1857.[6]

On July 7, 1857, Khan was hanged in full public view by William Tayler, the then commissioner of Patna,[7] along with 14 other rebellions, include Ghasita Khalifa, Ghulam Abbas, Nandu Lal alias Sipahi, Jumman, Maduwa, Kajil Khan, Ramzani, Peer Bakhsh, Peer Ali, Wahid Ali, Ghulam Ali, Mahmood Akbar and Asrar Ali Khan.[3][8]

Commemoration edit

A road adjacent to the Patna Airport is named after him by Nitish Kumar's government in 2008. Also, Saheed Peer Ali Khan Park, a children's park in front of the District Magistrate's residence near the Gandhi Maidan in Patna, was named after him by the State Government of Bihar.[9]

Further reading edit

  • Khan Mohd. Sadiq Khan (2007). Excavation of Truth: Unsung Heroes of 1857 War of Independence. Kanishka Publishers. pp. 25, 45, 51. ISBN 9788173919763.
  • The History of the Indian Revolt, and of the Expeditions to Persia, China, and Japan, 1856-7-8. W. U. R. Chambers, Bavarian State Library. 1859. p. 153.
  • The Story of mahafuz Indian Mutiny (1857-58). W.P. Nimmo, Hay & Mitchell. 1885. p. 78.
  • Charles Ball (2005). The History of the Indian Mutiny: A Detailed Account of the Sepoy Insurrection in India ... Sang-e-Meel Publications. pp. 156, 158. ISBN 9789693516951.

References edit