Mujahid Shah

[5] While he was crown prince, he broke the collar bone of Mubarak, The Royal Betel Leaf Bearer during a wrestling bout.

Mujahid decided to gain victory quickly by encircling the Kingdom's capital and ordered Safdar Khan Sistani to lay siege to the fort of Adoni.

[7] The King finding it untenable to oppose Mujahid's vast army left the capital and continued his struggle by waging a guerrilla war in the forest.

According to Ferishta, Mujahid then penetrated up to Rameshwaram and renovated the mosque built by Alauddin Khilji,[9] which had fallen into negligence over time but there are numerous problems with this narrative as other medieval Islamic historians do not mention such an event and as asserted by K S Lal and N Venkataramayya, there is no evidence that Malik Kafur, the general of Alauddin at that time, penetrated up to Rameshwaram to warrant construction of a mosque there.

[12][13] He along with one follower, Mahmud Afghan, crossed the lake with his black horse where he narrowly escaped a murder attempt by a Vijayanagara soldier by stabbing and killing him with his own sword.

[16] According to the Kunigal inscription dated 1380 AD, Chennapa Odeyar wrested 'from the hands of the Yavanas the territory they had seized, presented it as tribute to King Harihara'[17] The hope of victory was soon lost and the Sultanate army began to suffer from disease and famine.

[18] On 17 April 1378, the King reached the fort of Mudgal and crossed the Krishna for a fishing expedition, then the stage was set for the worst.

Masud Khan, the son of Mubarak The Royal Betel Leaf Bearer, whom Mujahid broke his collar bone when he was a crown prince and Daud Khan, whom the King reprimanded for his negligence towards his position during the military campaign, conspired to kill him and on that day they assassinated him in his tent and Daud himself ascended the throne after his death.

Coin issued during the rule of Mujahid Shah
Map showing Raichur Doab