Badi Masjid jaunpur. Miracle on Qaber e Ibrahim suri..The Sharqi dynasty was a medieval Shiite Muslim dynasty of North India, one of the many kingdoms that came up following the disintegration of the Delhi Sultanate.

Malik Sarwar was a prominent noble in the court of Feroz Shah Tughlaq, the Delhi sultan. During the time of Feroz's weak successors, he rose to become the "wazir" and got the title "Malik ur Sharq" meaning "Lord of the East". The pillage of Delhi by Timur in 1398 CE effectively ended the Delhi sultanate for the time being, and in the absence of any central authority, the regional vassals began to assert their independence one by one.

Following Malik Shah's death, his adopted son Mubarak Qaranfal succeeded him. He was an Abyssinian slave who once served as the water bearer of Feroz Shah Tughlaq. He struck coins in his name, consolidated the sultanate, suppressed local rebellions, established law and order and provided stability in the midst of turbulent political struggle for dominance in North India. The strong Sharqi state prevented the sultan of Bengal from becoming the dominant political force in North India.
The Sharqi sultanate reached the zenith of its glory during the reigns of Mubarak Qaranfals' two successors, Shamsuddin Ibrahim Shah and Mahmud Shah. These sultans patronized learning and culture, and with the desolation Timur wrecked upon Delhi, Jaunpur became the center of Muslim culture in North India. Many scholars, men of letters, poets, wandering mystics, and learned men, from places as far as Persia and Arabia flocked to the Sharqi court, and Jaunpur soon came to be known as "The Shiraz of the East". Kabir, the widely acclaimed poet of the era and Shah Madder, a mystic Sufi were two famous personalities who settled in Jaunpur during this time.
Ibrahim Shah established many centers of learning. This legacy still survives, and today Jaunpur is famous for its many colleges. Traces of the cultural tradition that the Sharqis established still lingers on, the legacy passed on to modern day through the later day Nawabs of Awadh.
However, the most remarkable contribution of the Sharqi sultans was in the realm of architecture.

The Sharqi sultans adorned Jaunpur with many magnificent palaces, mosques and mausoleums.

