Mirza Agha Baqer

Muhammad Baqer
Faujdar and Jagirdar of Buzurg-Umedpur and Salimabad
In office
1742–1754
MonarchsMuhammad Shah
Ahmad Shah Bahadur
GovernorAlivardi Khan
Siraj ud-Daulah
Preceded byDayal Choudhury
Personal details
Died1754
Jahangir Nagar, Bengal Subah (modern-day Dhaka, Bangladesh)
ChildrenMirza Agha Sadeq
RelativesLutfullah Tabrizi (father-in-law)

Mirza Agha Muhammad Baqer (Persian: میرزا آغا محمد باقر, Bengali: মীর্জা আগা মুহম্মদ বাকের) was an aristocrat of the Mughal Empire and the Zamindar of Buzurg-Umedpur and Salimabad. In the Mughal period, these two parganas were spread over a large part of the greater Barisal region. Baker was the son-in-law of Murshid Quli Khan II (Lutfullah Tabrizi), the Naib Nazim of Orissa under Nawab Sarfaraz Khan. Baqer had an important role in the conflict between Tabrizi and Alivardi Khan regarding the inheritance of Orissa's Naib Nazimate. He also founded the port marketplace of Bakerganj, which later became the headquarters of the Backergunge District (now Barisal Division, Bangladesh). The legendary origin of the Bakarkhani bread is also attributed to him.