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Daniyal Mirza

Shahzada Daniyal Mirza[2] (11 September 1572 – 19 March 1605[3]) was the shahzada of the Mughal Empire who served as the Viceroy of the Deccan. He was the third son of Emperor Akbar and the brother of Emperor Jahangir.

Daniyal Mirza
Shahzada of The Mughal Empire
Mirza[1]
Born(1572-09-11)11 September 1572
Ajmer, Mughal Empire
Died19 March 1605(1605-03-19) (aged 32)
Burhanpur, Mughal Empire
Burial
Spouse
  • (m. 1594)
  • Sultan Begum
    (m. 1604)
  • Five other wives
Issue
  • Tahmuras Mirza
  • Baysunghar Mirza
  • Hushang Mirza
  • Sa'adat Banu Begum
  • Mahi Begum
  • Bulaqi Begum
  • Burhani Begum
Names
Shahzada Sultan Daniyal Mirza
HouseMughal Dynasty
DynastyTimurid dynasty
FatherAkbar
Mother
ReligionSunni Islam

Daniyal was Akbar's favourite son, as well as an able general.[4][5] Like his father, he had fine taste in poetry and was an accomplished poet himself, writing in urdu, Persian and pre-modern Hindi.[6] He was extremely fond of guns and had named one of his guns 'Yaka u Janaza'. He was very fond of horses and elephants and had once requested Akbar for gifting him his favourite horse which Akbar obliged to. He died from problems relating to alcoholism at the age of thirty-two, predeceasing Akbar by seven months.

Early life

The youngest of Akbar's three sons, Daniyal Mirza was born on 11 September 1572. He was given to Mariam-uz-Zamani, the favorite wife of Akbar, for upbringing. The birth took place in the house of Shaikh Daniyal of Ajmer, a holy man whose blessings Akbar had sought and for whom the prince was subsequently named.[7][8] The emperor, at the time embarking on an expedition to Gujarat, sent the infant Daniyal to be cared for by the Queen of Raja Bharmal of Amber. [9]

When Akbar reached Sirohi on his return from Gujarat, he ordered that Madho Singh, son of Bhagwant Das and other men be sent to fetch Daniyal from Amber and sent along Mariam-uz-Zamani for the mourning of her brother, Kunwar Bhopat, who had fallen in Battle of Sarnal.[10] Akbar met his infant son when he reached Ajmer on 13 May 1573.[11]

When he later created the Mansabdar system, Akbar awarded each of his sons exalted ranks. Daniyal, at five years old, was given the rank of 6000, with his elder brothers Salim and Murad being given greater ranks on account of their age. These provided the princes, each with an experienced guardian, huge resources to create their households, military forces, and court factions. These ranks increased as they grew older and by 1584, Daniyal's mansab had risen to 7000.[12]

The Mughal Emperor Jahangir writes in the Tuzuk-i-Jahangiri:

"Daniyal was of pleasing figure, of exceedingly agreeable manners and appearance, he was very fond of elephants and horses. It was impossible for him to hear of anyone as having a good elephant or horse and not take it from him. He was fond of Hindi songs, and would occasionally compose verses with correct idiom in the language of the people of India, which were not bad."[13]

Career

The three princes, prone to quarrelling with each other, were kept separated through assignments by their father. In such circumstances, Daniyal was dispatched to the governorship of Allahabad in 1597.[12] The prince was initially disinterested in his duties, being described as associating with undesirable characters. However, when his guardian, his father-in-law Qulij Khan Andijani, returned to court in disgust, Daniyal became apprehensive of the emperor's resulting anger. He subsequently attempted to amend his behaviour and became more involved in his administrative role.[14]

Wars in the Deccan

 
Persian poet, Naw'i Khabushani prostrates himself before Prince Daniyal
 
Akbar being visited by his sons, Jahangir and Daniyal

In response to defiance displayed by the Sultan of Ahmadnagar, Burhan Nizam Shah II, Akbar launched an invasion of the Deccan in 1593. Extensive preparations were made, and Daniyal at twenty-two years old was given supreme command of the 70,000 strong army, with Abdul Rahim Khan-I-Khana and Raja Rai Singh of Bikaner as his advisors. Prince Murad was told to be prepared to march, Shah Rukh Mirza and Shahbaz Khan were dispatched to raise troops in Malwa and even Raja Man Singh I was summoned from his distant governorship in Bengal to lead an attack from the east. However, these elaborate plans came to nothing. After having dispatched Daniyal at the head of the army from Lahore in November, Akbar was incensed to learn that his son was still loitering in Sirhind-Fategarh over a month later. The prince's command was revoked, it instead being bestowed upon Khan-I-Khana, who recommended that the invasion be delayed until a more appropriate season.[15][16]

Daniyal later was again given the opportunity to fight in the Deccan. In 1595, a succession struggle had erupted after the death of Burhan Nizam Shah. The new sultan, an infant named Bahadur Nizam Shah, was placed under the guardianship of his great-aunt, the dowager queen of Bijapur, Chand Bibi. Though an accord was eventually established between the Mughals and Ahmadnagar, skirmishes and intermittent fighting continued on both sides. After the death of his brother Murad in 1599, Daniyal was given his former command in the region.[17]

Akbar had by this point ordered a fresh attack on the Deccan. The prince first led his army to Burhanpur in January 1600, where the ruler of Khandesh, Bahadur Faruqi refused to leave the citadel and welcome him. Daniyal was furious at the insult and began summoning troops from surrounding camps to assist him in a fight against the ruler. Akbar, hearing of this, hastened to Burhanpur and ordered his son to continue his progress to the city of Ahmadnagar and to leave him to deal with the rebel himself.[18]

Hearing of the Mughal army's approach, a Nizam Shahi officer, Abhang Khan attempted to check the advance by occupying the Jaipur Kotly Ghat pass, but Daniyal took an alternate route, reaching the walls of Ahmadnagar unopposed. With the Mughals laying siege to the city, Chand Bibi was aware that her garrison would be unable to prevent an onslaught, particularly with the Mughal Emperor himself close by. However, the siege continued for several months due to the reluctance of the city officers to capitulate. Chand Bibi eventually chose to surrender, on the condition of the lives of the garrison, as well as her and the young sultan being allowed to retire safely to Junnar. Disagreeing with her, one of her advisers, Hamid Khan announced to the city that Chand Bibi was in league with the Mughals. A frenzied mob subsequently stormed her apartments and murdered her.[19] The ensuing confusion among the garrison rendered orderly defence impossible. On 18 August 1600, mines which Daniyal had planted under the city walls were detonated, resulting in the destruction of a large section, along with one of the towers. The Mughal troops assaulted and occupied the city, with all the royal children being sent to Akbar and Bahadur Nizam Shah himself being imprisoned in Gwalior.[20]

On 7 March 1601, Daniyal arrived at his father's camp and was received with honour due to his successful conquest. Khandesh, having by this point been incorporated into the empire, was renamed "Dandesh" in honour of the prince and was bestowed upon him. Afterwards, before returning to Agra, Akbar combined the provinces of Khandesh and Berar with the lands taken from Ahmadnagar to form the viceroyalty of the Deccan, which was then bestowed upon Daniyal, with Burhanpur being named his viceregal capital.[21][22]

Conflicts with Malik Ambar and Raju Deccani

The portions of the Ahmadnagar Sultanate which had remained unconquered rallied behind two nobles; the powerful regent Malik Ambar and the former minister Raju Deccani. The bitter rivalry between the two prevented the Mughals from concentrating their resources on one without giving the other an opportunity to restore his position. Daniyal therefore elected to divide the Mughal Deccan into two; Abu'l-Fazl, based in Ahmadnagar, was to lead the campaign against Raju while Khan-I-Khana, based in Berar and Telangana, headed operations against Ambar.[23]

When Ambar attacked in Telangana in 1602, Khan-I-Khana despatched his son Mirza Iraj against him. A fierce battle took place, with the Nizam Shahis being beaten back with heavy losses. Ambar, defeated and wounded, had barely avoided capture. He sued for peace with the Mughals, establishing set boundaries between their territories.[24]

Raju meanwhile refused to come out into the open, instead opting to plunder Mughal districts and harass Daniyal's army with his light cavalry. When the prince summoned Khan-I-Khana to send reinforcements, Raju was compelled to withdraw. However, his raids had demoralised the Mughal troops, forcing Daniyal to come to terms with him also. As a result, the districts contested between the two sides had their revenue split, with half going to the Mughals and half to Raju. However, this accord quickly broke down, and in spite of a subsequent defeat by the combined forces of Ambar and the Mughals, Raju would continue to conduct raids against Daniyal's Imperial forces.[25]

Death and fate of his sons

Daniyal, who suffered from severe alcoholism, died of delirium tremens on 19 March 1605, aged 32. Akbar had previously attempted to curb his addiction by restraining his access to alcohol. However, the prince's servants continued to smuggle it to him concealed in gun barrels. They were arrested afterwards by Khan-i Khana, who had them beaten and stoned to death. The emperor was deeply affected but unsurprised by his son's death, having gotten reports from the Deccan that prepared him for the news, which he received with resignation.[3][26] Akbar himself died soon after, in October of that year.[27]

Daniyal left three sons and four daughters.[3] His nephew Shah Jahan, having seized the throne following the death of Jahangir, had Daniyal's two sons, Tahmuras and Hushang, sent "out of the world" on 23 January 1628. They were executed together with Daniyal's younger nephew Shahryar, who had been Queen Nur Jahan's favourite for the throne, and with the puppet emperor Dawar Bakhsh, whom the vizier Asaf Khan had crowned as a placeholder until Shah Jahan had arrived.[28][29]

Family

His mother

The name of Daniyal's mother is not stated in Akbar's biography, the Akbarnama.[30] But Akbarnama does mention the passing of Daniyal's mother in the year 1596.[31] The Tuzk-e-Jahangiri, the chronicle of his brother Jahangir, identifies her as a royal concubine. [32]

Orientalist Henry Beveridge believed, given that Daniyal was fostered with the wife of Raja Bharmal, that the prince was related to her through his mother.[30] He was raised by the mother of Salim, Mariam-uz-Zamani.[33] Daniyal's two marriages were held at the palace of his foster mother, Mariam-uz-Zamani.

Anarkali

William Finch, an English traveler to the Mughal Court in 1611, visited what he believed to be the tomb of Daniyal's mother, whom he referred to as Anarkali. Finch stated that after Anarkali, who was Akbar's favorite concubine, was discovered to be having an affair with the then Prince Selim (Jahangir), Akbar had her sealed alive within a wall as punishment. Finch then continued that upon coming to the throne, Jahangir had the tomb erected in her memory.[34] The following Persian couplet, composed by Jahangir is inscribed on her sarcophagus:[35]

Oh, could I behold the face of my beloved once more, I would give thanks to my God until the day of resurrection.

The story was later romanticized into the modern legend commonly referred to as Selim and Anarkali.

Alternatively, the 18th-century historian Abdullah Chaghtai states that the tomb belonged to Sahib i-Jamal, a wife of Jahangir who died in 1599. He further suggests that the tomb was mistakenly associated with Anarkali (literally meaning pomegranate blossom) due to the Bagh i-Anaran (Pomegranate Garden) that once grew around it.[36]

Marriages

 
Daniyal during his Deccan expedition in 1603

Daniyal's first wife was the daughter of Sultan Khwajah. The marriage took place on 10 June 1588 in the house of Daniyal's grandmother, Empress Hamida Banu Begum.[37] She was the mother of a daughter born on 26 May 1590,[38] and another daughter Sa'adat Banu Begum[3] born on 24 March 1592.[39]

His second wife was the daughter of Qulij Khan Andijani. Akbar had intended that Qulij's daughter should be married to Daniyal. On 27 October 1593 the grandees were assembled outside the city, and the marriage took place. It occurred to Qulij Khan that Akbar might visit his house. In gratitude for this great favor he arranged a feast. His request was accepted and on 4 July there was a time of enjoyment.[40] She was the mother of a son born on 27 July 1597 and died in infancy,[41] and a daughter Bulaqi Begum.[3] She died near Gwalior on 12 September 1599.[42]

His third wife was Janan Begum, the daughter of Abdurrahim Khan-i Khanan. The marriage took place in around 1594. Akbar gave a great feast, and received such a quantity of presents of gold, and all sorts of precious things, that he was able to equip the army there from.[43] She was the mother of a son born on 15 February 1602 and died soon after.[44] The prince was extremely fond of her, and after his death in 1604, she led a life full of sorrow.[3]

His fourth wife was the daughter of Rai Mal, the son of Rai Maldeo, ruler of Jodhpur. The marriage took place on the eve of 12 October 1595.[45]

Danyal's fifth wife was the daughter of Raja Dalpat Ujjainiya. She was the mother of Prince Hushang Mirza born in 1604,[46] and of Princess Mahi Begum.[3]

Another of his wives was the mother of Prince Tahmuras Mirza, Prince Baisungar Mirza born in 1604,[47] and Princess Burhani Begum.[3]

His seventh wife was Sultan Begum, the daughter of Ibrahim Adil Shah II, ruler of Bijapur.[48] He had requested that his daughter be married to Daniyal. His request was accepted, and on 19 March 1600, Mir Jamal-ud-din Hussain was sent off with the arrangements of the betrothal. When he came to Bijapur, Adil treated him with honor. After over three years he sent him away with his daughter, and Mustafa Khan as her vakil. When Abdul Rahim Khan heard of her arrival he sent his son Mirza Iraj to meet her. Mirza Iraj brought her to Ahmadnagar. Mir Jamal-ud-din hastened off from there and went to the prince in Burhanpur. Daniyal accompanied by Abdul Rahim, came to Ahmadnagar. The marriage took place on 30 June 1604.[47]

Daniyal's eldest son Tahmuras Mirza was married to Bahar Banu Begum, daughter of Jahangir, and his second son Hoshang Mirza was married to Hoshmand Banu Begum, the daughter of Khusrau Mirza.[49]

References

  1. ^ Mughal title Mirza, the title of Mirza and not Khan or Padshah, which were the titles of the Mongol rulers.
  2. ^ Beni Prasad (1922). History of Jahangir. p. 496.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Abu'l-Fazl (1973), p. 1254.
  4. ^ Conder (1830), p. 273.
  5. ^ Schimmel & Welch (1983), p. 32.
  6. ^ Quddusi (2002), p. 137.
  7. ^ Allan, Haig & Dodwel (1934), p. 352.
  8. ^ Haig (1971), p. 102.
  9. ^ Agrawal (1986), p. 28.
  10. ^ Fazl, Abul. The Akbarnama. Vol. III. p. 49.
  11. ^ Fazl, Abul. The Akbarnama. Vol. III. p. 54.
  12. ^ a b Fisher (2019), p. 144.
  13. ^ Jahangir, Emperor of Hindustan, 1569-1627; Rogers, Alexander; Beveridge, Henry (1909–1914). Tuzuk-i-Jahangiri. London Royal Asiatic Society. p. 36.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date format (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ Sinha (1974), p. 33.
  15. ^ Khan (1971), p. 61.
  16. ^ Haig (1971), p. 141.
  17. ^ Richards (1995), p. 54.
  18. ^ Haig (1971), p. 146.
  19. ^ Shyam (1966), p. 230.
  20. ^ Shyam (1966), p. 231.
  21. ^ Haig (1971), p. 148.
  22. ^ Quddusi (2002), p. 86.
  23. ^ Ali (1996), p. 67.
  24. ^ Ali (1996), p. 68.
  25. ^ Shyam (1966), pp. 253–54.
  26. ^ Haig (1971), p. 151.
  27. ^ Brown (1977), p. 37.
  28. ^ Elliot & Dowson (1875), p. 438.
  29. ^ Majumdar, Chaudhuri & Chaudhuri (1974), pp. 197–98.
  30. ^ a b Abu'l-Fazl (1907), p. 543.
  31. ^ Fazl, Abul. The Akbarnama. Vol. III. Translated by Beveridge, Henry. Calcutta: ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL. p. 1063. At the end of that day the great lady of the family of chastity, the mother of Prince Sulṭān Daniel, died.
  32. ^ Jahangir (1999), p. 37.
  33. ^ Ahmad, Aziz (1964). Studies of Islamic culture in the Indian Environment. p. 315.
  34. ^ Purchas (1905), p. 57.
  35. ^ Latif (1892), p. 187.
  36. ^ Hasan (2001), p. 117.
  37. ^ Abu'l-Fazl (1973), p. 806.
  38. ^ Abu'l-Fazl (1973), p. 875.
  39. ^ Abu'l-Fazl (1973), p. 937.
  40. ^ Abu'l-Fazl (1973), p. 995.
  41. ^ Abu'l-Fazl (1973), p. 1090.
  42. ^ Abu'l-Fazl (1973), p. 1139.
  43. ^ Badayuni (1884), p. 403.
  44. ^ Abu'l-Fazl (1973), p. 1200.
  45. ^ Abu'l-Fazl (1973), p. 1040.
  46. ^ Abu'l-Fazl (1973), p. 1238.
  47. ^ a b Abu'l-Fazl (1973), pp. 1239–40.
  48. ^ Nazim (1936), p. 10.
  49. ^ Jahangir (1999), p. 436.

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External links

daniyal, mirza, this, article, about, mughal, prince, daniyal, other, uses, prince, daniel, disambiguation, shahzada, september, 1572, march, 1605, shahzada, mughal, empire, served, viceroy, deccan, third, emperor, akbar, brother, emperor, jahangir, shahzada, . This article is about the Mughal prince Daniyal For other uses see Prince Daniel disambiguation Shahzada Daniyal Mirza 2 11 September 1572 19 March 1605 3 was the shahzada of the Mughal Empire who served as the Viceroy of the Deccan He was the third son of Emperor Akbar and the brother of Emperor Jahangir Daniyal MirzaShahzada of The Mughal EmpireMirza 1 Born 1572 09 11 11 September 1572Ajmer Mughal EmpireDied19 March 1605 1605 03 19 aged 32 Burhanpur Mughal EmpireBurialSikandra AgraSpouseJanan Begum m 1594 wbr Sultan Begum m 1604 wbr Five other wivesIssueTahmuras Mirza Baysunghar Mirza Hushang Mirza Sa adat Banu Begum Mahi Begum Bulaqi Begum Burhani BegumNamesShahzada Sultan Daniyal MirzaHouseMughal DynastyDynastyTimurid dynastyFatherAkbarMotherConcubine biological Mariam uz Zamani foster ReligionSunni IslamDaniyal was Akbar s favourite son as well as an able general 4 5 Like his father he had fine taste in poetry and was an accomplished poet himself writing in urdu Persian and pre modern Hindi 6 He was extremely fond of guns and had named one of his guns Yaka u Janaza He was very fond of horses and elephants and had once requested Akbar for gifting him his favourite horse which Akbar obliged to He died from problems relating to alcoholism at the age of thirty two predeceasing Akbar by seven months Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Wars in the Deccan 2 2 Conflicts with Malik Ambar and Raju Deccani 3 Death and fate of his sons 4 Family 4 1 His mother 4 1 1 Anarkali 4 2 Marriages 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksEarly life EditThe youngest of Akbar s three sons Daniyal Mirza was born on 11 September 1572 He was given to Mariam uz Zamani the favorite wife of Akbar for upbringing The birth took place in the house of Shaikh Daniyal of Ajmer a holy man whose blessings Akbar had sought and for whom the prince was subsequently named 7 8 The emperor at the time embarking on an expedition to Gujarat sent the infant Daniyal to be cared for by the Queen of Raja Bharmal of Amber 9 When Akbar reached Sirohi on his return from Gujarat he ordered that Madho Singh son of Bhagwant Das and other men be sent to fetch Daniyal from Amber and sent along Mariam uz Zamani for the mourning of her brother Kunwar Bhopat who had fallen in Battle of Sarnal 10 Akbar met his infant son when he reached Ajmer on 13 May 1573 11 When he later created the Mansabdar system Akbar awarded each of his sons exalted ranks Daniyal at five years old was given the rank of 6000 with his elder brothers Salim and Murad being given greater ranks on account of their age These provided the princes each with an experienced guardian huge resources to create their households military forces and court factions These ranks increased as they grew older and by 1584 Daniyal s mansab had risen to 7000 12 The Mughal Emperor Jahangir writes in the Tuzuk i Jahangiri Daniyal was of pleasing figure of exceedingly agreeable manners and appearance he was very fond of elephants and horses It was impossible for him to hear of anyone as having a good elephant or horse and not take it from him He was fond of Hindi songs and would occasionally compose verses with correct idiom in the language of the people of India which were not bad 13 Career EditThe three princes prone to quarrelling with each other were kept separated through assignments by their father In such circumstances Daniyal was dispatched to the governorship of Allahabad in 1597 12 The prince was initially disinterested in his duties being described as associating with undesirable characters However when his guardian his father in law Qulij Khan Andijani returned to court in disgust Daniyal became apprehensive of the emperor s resulting anger He subsequently attempted to amend his behaviour and became more involved in his administrative role 14 Wars in the Deccan Edit Persian poet Naw i Khabushani prostrates himself before Prince Daniyal Akbar being visited by his sons Jahangir and Daniyal In response to defiance displayed by the Sultan of Ahmadnagar Burhan Nizam Shah II Akbar launched an invasion of the Deccan in 1593 Extensive preparations were made and Daniyal at twenty two years old was given supreme command of the 70 000 strong army with Abdul Rahim Khan I Khana and Raja Rai Singh of Bikaner as his advisors Prince Murad was told to be prepared to march Shah Rukh Mirza and Shahbaz Khan were dispatched to raise troops in Malwa and even Raja Man Singh I was summoned from his distant governorship in Bengal to lead an attack from the east However these elaborate plans came to nothing After having dispatched Daniyal at the head of the army from Lahore in November Akbar was incensed to learn that his son was still loitering in Sirhind Fategarh over a month later The prince s command was revoked it instead being bestowed upon Khan I Khana who recommended that the invasion be delayed until a more appropriate season 15 16 Daniyal later was again given the opportunity to fight in the Deccan In 1595 a succession struggle had erupted after the death of Burhan Nizam Shah The new sultan an infant named Bahadur Nizam Shah was placed under the guardianship of his great aunt the dowager queen of Bijapur Chand Bibi Though an accord was eventually established between the Mughals and Ahmadnagar skirmishes and intermittent fighting continued on both sides After the death of his brother Murad in 1599 Daniyal was given his former command in the region 17 Akbar had by this point ordered a fresh attack on the Deccan The prince first led his army to Burhanpur in January 1600 where the ruler of Khandesh Bahadur Faruqi refused to leave the citadel and welcome him Daniyal was furious at the insult and began summoning troops from surrounding camps to assist him in a fight against the ruler Akbar hearing of this hastened to Burhanpur and ordered his son to continue his progress to the city of Ahmadnagar and to leave him to deal with the rebel himself 18 Hearing of the Mughal army s approach a Nizam Shahi officer Abhang Khan attempted to check the advance by occupying the Jaipur Kotly Ghat pass but Daniyal took an alternate route reaching the walls of Ahmadnagar unopposed With the Mughals laying siege to the city Chand Bibi was aware that her garrison would be unable to prevent an onslaught particularly with the Mughal Emperor himself close by However the siege continued for several months due to the reluctance of the city officers to capitulate Chand Bibi eventually chose to surrender on the condition of the lives of the garrison as well as her and the young sultan being allowed to retire safely to Junnar Disagreeing with her one of her advisers Hamid Khan announced to the city that Chand Bibi was in league with the Mughals A frenzied mob subsequently stormed her apartments and murdered her 19 The ensuing confusion among the garrison rendered orderly defence impossible On 18 August 1600 mines which Daniyal had planted under the city walls were detonated resulting in the destruction of a large section along with one of the towers The Mughal troops assaulted and occupied the city with all the royal children being sent to Akbar and Bahadur Nizam Shah himself being imprisoned in Gwalior 20 On 7 March 1601 Daniyal arrived at his father s camp and was received with honour due to his successful conquest Khandesh having by this point been incorporated into the empire was renamed Dandesh in honour of the prince and was bestowed upon him Afterwards before returning to Agra Akbar combined the provinces of Khandesh and Berar with the lands taken from Ahmadnagar to form the viceroyalty of the Deccan which was then bestowed upon Daniyal with Burhanpur being named his viceregal capital 21 22 Conflicts with Malik Ambar and Raju Deccani Edit The portions of the Ahmadnagar Sultanate which had remained unconquered rallied behind two nobles the powerful regent Malik Ambar and the former minister Raju Deccani The bitter rivalry between the two prevented the Mughals from concentrating their resources on one without giving the other an opportunity to restore his position Daniyal therefore elected to divide the Mughal Deccan into two Abu l Fazl based in Ahmadnagar was to lead the campaign against Raju while Khan I Khana based in Berar and Telangana headed operations against Ambar 23 When Ambar attacked in Telangana in 1602 Khan I Khana despatched his son Mirza Iraj against him A fierce battle took place with the Nizam Shahis being beaten back with heavy losses Ambar defeated and wounded had barely avoided capture He sued for peace with the Mughals establishing set boundaries between their territories 24 Raju meanwhile refused to come out into the open instead opting to plunder Mughal districts and harass Daniyal s army with his light cavalry When the prince summoned Khan I Khana to send reinforcements Raju was compelled to withdraw However his raids had demoralised the Mughal troops forcing Daniyal to come to terms with him also As a result the districts contested between the two sides had their revenue split with half going to the Mughals and half to Raju However this accord quickly broke down and in spite of a subsequent defeat by the combined forces of Ambar and the Mughals Raju would continue to conduct raids against Daniyal s Imperial forces 25 Death and fate of his sons EditDaniyal who suffered from severe alcoholism died of delirium tremens on 19 March 1605 aged 32 Akbar had previously attempted to curb his addiction by restraining his access to alcohol However the prince s servants continued to smuggle it to him concealed in gun barrels They were arrested afterwards by Khan i Khana who had them beaten and stoned to death The emperor was deeply affected but unsurprised by his son s death having gotten reports from the Deccan that prepared him for the news which he received with resignation 3 26 Akbar himself died soon after in October of that year 27 Daniyal left three sons and four daughters 3 His nephew Shah Jahan having seized the throne following the death of Jahangir had Daniyal s two sons Tahmuras and Hushang sent out of the world on 23 January 1628 They were executed together with Daniyal s younger nephew Shahryar who had been Queen Nur Jahan s favourite for the throne and with the puppet emperor Dawar Bakhsh whom the vizier Asaf Khan had crowned as a placeholder until Shah Jahan had arrived 28 29 Family EditHis mother Edit The name of Daniyal s mother is not stated in Akbar s biography the Akbarnama 30 But Akbarnama does mention the passing of Daniyal s mother in the year 1596 31 The Tuzk e Jahangiri the chronicle of his brother Jahangir identifies her as a royal concubine 32 Orientalist Henry Beveridge believed given that Daniyal was fostered with the wife of Raja Bharmal that the prince was related to her through his mother 30 He was raised by the mother of Salim Mariam uz Zamani 33 Daniyal s two marriages were held at the palace of his foster mother Mariam uz Zamani Anarkali Edit William Finch an English traveler to the Mughal Court in 1611 visited what he believed to be the tomb of Daniyal s mother whom he referred to as Anarkali Finch stated that after Anarkali who was Akbar s favorite concubine was discovered to be having an affair with the then Prince Selim Jahangir Akbar had her sealed alive within a wall as punishment Finch then continued that upon coming to the throne Jahangir had the tomb erected in her memory 34 The following Persian couplet composed by Jahangir is inscribed on her sarcophagus 35 Oh could I behold the face of my beloved once more I would give thanks to my God until the day of resurrection The story was later romanticized into the modern legend commonly referred to as Selim and Anarkali Alternatively the 18th century historian Abdullah Chaghtai states that the tomb belonged to Sahib i Jamal a wife of Jahangir who died in 1599 He further suggests that the tomb was mistakenly associated with Anarkali literally meaning pomegranate blossom due to the Bagh i Anaran Pomegranate Garden that once grew around it 36 Marriages Edit Daniyal during his Deccan expedition in 1603 Daniyal s first wife was the daughter of Sultan Khwajah The marriage took place on 10 June 1588 in the house of Daniyal s grandmother Empress Hamida Banu Begum 37 She was the mother of a daughter born on 26 May 1590 38 and another daughter Sa adat Banu Begum 3 born on 24 March 1592 39 His second wife was the daughter of Qulij Khan Andijani Akbar had intended that Qulij s daughter should be married to Daniyal On 27 October 1593 the grandees were assembled outside the city and the marriage took place It occurred to Qulij Khan that Akbar might visit his house In gratitude for this great favor he arranged a feast His request was accepted and on 4 July there was a time of enjoyment 40 She was the mother of a son born on 27 July 1597 and died in infancy 41 and a daughter Bulaqi Begum 3 She died near Gwalior on 12 September 1599 42 His third wife was Janan Begum the daughter of Abdurrahim Khan i Khanan The marriage took place in around 1594 Akbar gave a great feast and received such a quantity of presents of gold and all sorts of precious things that he was able to equip the army there from 43 She was the mother of a son born on 15 February 1602 and died soon after 44 The prince was extremely fond of her and after his death in 1604 she led a life full of sorrow 3 His fourth wife was the daughter of Rai Mal the son of Rai Maldeo ruler of Jodhpur The marriage took place on the eve of 12 October 1595 45 Danyal s fifth wife was the daughter of Raja Dalpat Ujjainiya She was the mother of Prince Hushang Mirza born in 1604 46 and of Princess Mahi Begum 3 Another of his wives was the mother of Prince Tahmuras Mirza Prince Baisungar Mirza born in 1604 47 and Princess Burhani Begum 3 His seventh wife was Sultan Begum the daughter of Ibrahim Adil Shah II ruler of Bijapur 48 He had requested that his daughter be married to Daniyal His request was accepted and on 19 March 1600 Mir Jamal ud din Hussain was sent off with the arrangements of the betrothal When he came to Bijapur Adil treated him with honor After over three years he sent him away with his daughter and Mustafa Khan as her vakil When Abdul Rahim Khan heard of her arrival he sent his son Mirza Iraj to meet her Mirza Iraj brought her to Ahmadnagar Mir Jamal ud din hastened off from there and went to the prince in Burhanpur Daniyal accompanied by Abdul Rahim came to Ahmadnagar The marriage took place on 30 June 1604 47 Daniyal s eldest son Tahmuras Mirza was married to Bahar Banu Begum daughter of Jahangir and his second son Hoshang Mirza was married to Hoshmand Banu Begum the daughter of Khusrau Mirza 49 References Edit Mughal title Mirza the title of Mirza and not Khan or Padshah which were the titles of the Mongol rulers Beni Prasad 1922 History of Jahangir p 496 a b c d e f g h Abu l Fazl 1973 p 1254 Conder 1830 p 273 Schimmel amp Welch 1983 p 32 Quddusi 2002 p 137 Allan Haig amp Dodwel 1934 p 352 Haig 1971 p 102 Agrawal 1986 p 28 Fazl Abul The Akbarnama Vol III p 49 Fazl Abul The Akbarnama Vol III p 54 a b Fisher 2019 p 144 Jahangir Emperor of Hindustan 1569 1627 Rogers Alexander Beveridge Henry 1909 1914 Tuzuk i Jahangiri London Royal Asiatic Society p 36 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date format link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Sinha 1974 p 33 Khan 1971 p 61 Haig 1971 p 141 Richards 1995 p 54 Haig 1971 p 146 Shyam 1966 p 230 Shyam 1966 p 231 Haig 1971 p 148 Quddusi 2002 p 86 Ali 1996 p 67 Ali 1996 p 68 Shyam 1966 pp 253 54 Haig 1971 p 151 Brown 1977 p 37 Elliot amp Dowson 1875 p 438 Majumdar Chaudhuri amp Chaudhuri 1974 pp 197 98 a b Abu l Fazl 1907 p 543 Fazl Abul The Akbarnama Vol III Translated by Beveridge Henry Calcutta ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL p 1063 At the end of that day the great lady of the family of chastity the mother of Prince Sulṭan Daniel died Jahangir 1999 p 37 Ahmad Aziz 1964 Studies of Islamic culture in the Indian Environment p 315 Purchas 1905 p 57 Latif 1892 p 187 Hasan 2001 p 117 Abu l Fazl 1973 p 806 Abu l Fazl 1973 p 875 Abu l Fazl 1973 p 937 Abu l Fazl 1973 p 995 Abu l Fazl 1973 p 1090 Abu l Fazl 1973 p 1139 Badayuni 1884 p 403 Abu l Fazl 1973 p 1200 Abu l Fazl 1973 p 1040 Abu l Fazl 1973 p 1238 a b Abu l Fazl 1973 pp 1239 40 Nazim 1936 p 10 Jahangir 1999 p 436 Bibliography EditAbu l Fazl 1907 The Akbarnama of Abu l Fazl Vol II Translated by Henry Beveridge Calcutta The Asiatic Society Abu l Fazl 1973 1907 The Akbarnama of Abu l Fazl Vol III Translated by Henry Beveridge Delhi Rare Books Agrawal C M 1986 Akbar and his Hindu Officers A Critical Study ABS Publications Ali Shanti Sadiq 1996 The African Dispersal in the Deccan From Medieval to Modern Times New Delhi Orient Blackswan ISBN 978 81 250 0485 1 Allan John Haig Wolseley Dodwel Henry Herbert 1934 Dodwell Henry Herbert ed The Cambridge Shorter History of India Cambridge Cambridge University Press Badayuni Abd al Qadir 1884 Muntakhab ut Tawarikh Vol II Translated by W H Lowe Calcutta Baptist Mission Press Brown C 1977 Central Provinces and Berar District Gazetteers Akola District Vol A Calcutta Baptist Mission Press Conder Josiah 1830 The Modern Traveller A Popular Description Geographical Historical and Topographical of the Various Countries of the Globe Vol VII London J Duncan Elliot Henry Miers Dowson John 1875 Dowson John ed The History of India as Told by Its Own Historians The Muhammadan Period Vol VI London Trubner and Co Fisher Michael H 2019 2016 A Short History of the Mughal Empire London Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 350 12753 1 Haig Wolseley 1971 1937 Burn Richard ed The Cambridge History Of India Vol IV New Delhi S Chand amp Co Hasan Shaikh Khurshid 2001 The Islamic Architectural Heritage of Pakistan Funerary Memorial Architecture Royal Book Company ISBN 978 969 407 262 3 Jahangir 1829 Memoirs of the Emperor Jahangueir Translated by David Prince London Oriental Translation Committee Jahangir 1914 Beveridge Henry ed The Tuzuk i Jahangiri or Memoirs of Jahangir Vol II Translated by Alexander Rogers London Royal Asiatic Society Jahangir 1999 The Jahangirnama memoirs of Jahangir Emperor of India Translated by Wheeler McIntosh Thackston New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512718 8 Khan Yar Muhammad 1971 The Deccan Policy of the Mughuls Lahore United Book Corporation Latif Syad Muhammad 1892 Lahore Its History Architectural Remains and Antiquities Lahore New Imperial Press Majumdar R C Chaudhuri J N Chaudhuri S 1974 The Mughal Empire Bombay Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan Moosvi Shireen 1997 Data on Mughal Period Vital Statistics A Preliminary Survey of Usable Information Proceedings of the Indian History Congress Proceedings of the Indian History Congress Vol 58 58 342 353 JSTOR 44143926 Nazim M 1936 Bijapur Inscriptions Memoirs of the Archaeological Society of India Delhi Manager of Publications Purchas Samuel 1905 Hakluytus posthumus or Purchas his Pilgrimes in twenty volumes Vol IV Glasgow James Maclehose amp Sons Quddusi Mohd Ilyas 2002 Khandesh Under the Mughals 1601 1724 A D Mainly Based on Persian Sources Islamic Wonders Bureau ISBN 978 81 87763 21 5 Richards John F 1995 The New Cambridge History of India Part I Volume 5 The Mughal Empire Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 56603 2 Schimmel Annemarie Welch Stuart Cary 1983 Anvari s Divan A Pocket Book for Akbar New York Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 0 87099 331 2 Sinha Surendra Nath 1974 Subah of Allahabad Under the Great Mughals 1580 1707 New Delhi Jamia Millia Islamia ISBN 9780883866030 Shyam Radhey 1966 The Kingdom of Ahmadnagar Motilal Banarsidass Publ ISBN 978 81 208 2651 9 Smith Edmund W 1909 Akbar s tomb Sikandarah near Agra Archaeological Survey of India Vol XXXV Allahabad F Luker Supdt Gov Press United Provinces External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Daniyal Mirza Prince Daniyal pictured with a bow and arrow c 1600 1650 at National Gallery of Canada Prince Daniyal Accompanies the Young Hindu Girl to the Funeral Pyre at Walters Art Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Daniyal Mirza amp oldid 1137047075, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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