Mīrzā Ghulām Aḥmad (born c. 1835, Qadian, India—died May 26, 1908, Lahore [now in Pakistan]) was an Indian Muslim leader who founded an Islamic religious movement known as the Aḥmadiyyah.
The son of a prosperous family, Ghulām Aḥmad received an education in Persian and Arabic. He initially refused his father’s urgings that he go into British government service or practice law. However, because of his father’s persistence, he served as a government clerk in Sialkot from 1864 until 1868. Ghulām Aḥmad led a life of contemplation and religious study. He claimed to hear revelations and declared in 1889 that he had received one in which God had entitled him to receive bayʿat (an oath of allegiance). Soon he gathered a small group of devoted disciples. From then on his influence and following steadily increased, as did opposition from the mainstream Islamic community.
Ghulām Aḥmad claimed not only that he was the mahdi (a promised Muslim “saviour”) and a reappearance (burūz) of the Prophet Muhammad but also that he was Jesus Christ and the Hindu god Krishna returned to earth. A number of his rather unorthodox teachings were incorporated into the beliefs of the Aḥmadiyyah.
After Ghulām Aḥmad’s death, his followers disputed whether he had really claimed to be a prophet and, if so, what he meant by his prophethood. Nonetheless, his devotees formed a community of believers and elected a caliph to lead them. Ghulām Aḥmad’s most famous work is Barāhīn al-Aḥmadiyyah (“Proofs of the Ahmadi Faith”; 1880).