A 15th-century Sufi of the Suhrawardi-Bukhari sayyids of Gujarat (d. 880/1475); son of Qutb-e-Alam, he is titled "Shah-e-Alam" (Wikipedia, "Shah Alam, Ahmedabad"). He was active in Ahmedabad under the early Gujarat Sultanate. His tomb complex in Ahmedabad (Shah Alam Roza / Rasulabad Dargah) was begun after his death and completed in 888/1483-84 by Taj Khan Nariali, a noble of Mahmud Begada's court. Note: Wikipedia gives the death year as 880/1475, while a different date (1495) appears in the TDV context; since 880 AH corresponds to 1475, this record adopts 1475 and treats 1495 as disputed. Accounts of his precociously memorizing the Qur'an as a child are hagiographic (transparency note).
