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Nur Jahan

Nur Jahan, born Mehr-un-Nissa (Persian: نورجهان, lit.'Sun Among Women'; c. 1577 – 18 December 1645)[1] was the twentieth wife and chief consort of the Mughal emperor Jahangir.

Nur Jahan
Empress consort of the Mughal Empire
Idealised portrait of the Mughal Empress Nur Jahan c. 1627
Padshah Begum
TenureJune 1620 – 28 October 1627
PredecessorSaliha Banu Begum
SuccessorMumtaz Mahal
BornMehr-un-Nissa
c. 1577
Kandahar, Safavid Empire (present-day Afghanistan)
Died17 December 1645(1645-12-17) (aged 68)
Lahore, Mughal Empire (present-day Pakistan)
Burial
Spouse
IssueLadli Begum
HouseTimurid (by marriage)
FatherMirza Ghiyas Beg
MotherAsmat Begum
ReligionShia Islam

More decisive and proactive than her husband, Nur Jahan is considered by certain historians to have been the real power behind the throne for more than a decade. Wielding a level of power and influence unprecedented for a Mughal empress, she was granted honours and privileges never enjoyed by any of her predecessors or successors, such as having coinage struck in her name. Her pre-eminence was in part made possible by her husband Jahangir's addiction to alcohol and opium and his frequent ill-health.

Birth and early life (1577–1594)

 
Kandahar (Kandahar), Nur Jahan's place of birth, is now southern Afghanistan

Nur Jahan was born as Mehr-un-Nissa (1577) in Kandahar, present-day Afghanistan, into a family of Persian nobility and was the second daughter and fourth child of the Persian aristocrat Mirza Ghiyas Beg and his wife Asmat Begum.[2] Both of Nur Jahan's parents were descendants of illustrious families – Ghiyas Beg from Muhammad Sharif and Asmat Begum from the Aqa Mulla clan.[3] Her paternal grandfather, Khwaja Muhammad Sharif, was first a wazir to Tatar Sultan the governor of Khurasan, and later was in the service of Shah Tahmasp, who made him the wazir of Isfahan,[1] in recognition of his excellent service.[4] For unknown reasons, Ghiyas Beg's family had suffered a reversal in fortunes in 1577 and soon found circumstances in their homeland intolerable. Hoping to improve his family's fortunes, Ghiyas Beg chose to relocate to India where the Emperor Akbar's court was said to be at the centre of the growing trade industry and cultural scene.[5]

Halfway along their route the family was attacked by robbers who took from them their remaining meager possessions.[6] Left with only two mules, Ghiyas Beg, his pregnant wife, and their two children (Muhammad Sharif, Asaf Khan) were forced to take turns riding on the backs of the animals for the remainder of their journey. When the family arrived in Kandahar, Asmat Begum gave birth to their second daughter. The family was so impoverished they feared they would be unable to take care of the newborn baby. Fortunately, the family was taken in by a caravan led by the merchant noble Malik Masud, who would later assist Ghiyas Beg in finding a position in the service of Emperor Akbar. Believing that the child had signaled a change in the family's fate, she was named Mehr-un-Nissa or ‘Sun among Women’.[7] Her father Ghiyas Beg began his career in India, after being given a mansab of 300 in 1577. Thereafter he was appointed diwan (treasurer) for the province of Kabul.[8] Due to his astute skills at conducting business, he quickly rose through the ranks of the high administrative officials. For his excellent work he was awarded the title of Itimad-ud-Daula or ‘Pillar of the State’ by the emperor.[6]

As a result of his work and promotions, Ghiyas Beg was able to ensure that Mehr-un-Nissa (the future Nur Jahan) would have the best possible education. She became well-versed in Arabic and Persian languages, art, literature, music and dance.[7] The poet and author Vidya Dhar Mahajan would later praise Nur Jahan as having a piercing intelligence, a volatile temper and sound common sense.[9]

Marriage to Sher Afgan (1594–1607)

In 1594, when Nur Jahan was seventeen years old, she married her first husband Ali Quli Istajlu (also known as Sher Afgan Khan).[10] Sher Afgan was an adventurous Persian who had been forced to flee his home in Persia after the demise of his first master Shah Ismail II.[11] He later joined the Mughal army and served under the Emperors Akbar and Jahangir. As a reward for his loyal service, Akbar arranged Nur Jahan's marriage with Sher Afgan.[5] Their only child together, a daughter, Mihr-un-Nissa Begum, popularly known as Ladli Begum, was born in 1605.[12] While participating in a military campaign in Mewar under Prince Salim, Ali Quli Istajlu was bestowed the title of Sher Afgan or "Tiger Tosser". Sher Afgan's role in the rout of the Rana of Udaipur inspired this reward, but his exact actions were not recorded by contemporaries. A popular explanation is that Sher Afgan saved Salim from an angry tigress.[13] The title has been sometimes misquoted in English history of the Mughals as 'Sher Afghan', which would have a different meaning.

In 1607, Sher Afgan was killed after it was rumoured he had refused to obey summons from the Governor of Bengal, took part in anti-state activities and attacked the governor when he came to escort Sher Afgan to court. Some have suspected Jahangir for arranging Sher Afgan's death because the latter was said to have fallen in love with Nur Jahan and had been denied the right to add her to his harem. The validity of this rumour is uncertain as Jahangir only married Nur Jahan in 1611, four years after she came to his court. Furthermore, contemporary accounts offer few details as to whether or not a love affair existed prior to 1611 and historians have questioned Jahangir's logic in bestowing honours upon Sher Afgan if he wished to see him removed from the picture.[14] The tomb, still in existence at Purana/Puratan Chawk in Bardhaman in present-day West Bengal, says that there was a battle between Sher Afgan and Qutubuddin Koka, the then Mughal Subahdar of Bengal and the foster brother of Jahangir in Burdwan in 1610 AD in which both of them died and were buried there at the tomb of Pir Baharam Sakka (died in 1563). Sher Afgan Khan was probably the appointed faujdar in Burdwan. This contradicts the fact that Sher Afgan was murdered in the year 1607.

As Mughal Empress

Lady-in-waiting to Ruqaiya Sultan Begum (1607–1611)

After her husband Sher Afgan was killed in 1607, Nur Jahan and her daughter, Ladli Begum, were summoned to Agra by Jahangir for their protection and acted as lady-in-waiting to the Ruqaiya Sultan Begum, who had been one of the chief wives of the late Emperor Akbar.[15][16] Given the precarious political connections of Sher Afgan before his death, his family would be in certain danger with him gone from those seeking to avenge Qutbuddin's murder. For her protection, then, Nur Jahan needed to be at the Mughal court in Agra, she was brought back in honour (presumably because of her father's position at court) was clear from her new post with Ruqaiya Sultan Begum.[17] It was under Ruqaiya's care that Nur Jahan was able to spend time with her parents and occasionally visit the apartments where the emperor's women lived.[17]

Nur Jahan served as lady-in-waiting to the Dowager Empress for four years.[15] The relationship that grew between Nur Jahan and Ruqaiya appears to have been an extremely tender one. The Dutch merchant and travel writer Pieter van den Broecke, described their relationship in his Hindustan Chronicle, "This Begum [Ruqaiya] conceived a great affection for Mehr-un-Nissa [Nur Jahan]; she loved her more than others and always kept her in her company."[17]

Marriage to Jahangir (1611–1627)

 
Jahangir and Prince Khurram with Nur Jahan, c. 1624. This scene is probably set in the Aram Bagh, Agra, which the empress Nur Jahan, a great patron of gardens, had re-modeled in 1621.

Nur Jahan and Jahangir have been the subject of much interest over the centuries and there are innumerable legends and stories about their relationship.[18] Many stories allege an early affection between Nur Jahan and Emperor Jahangir before Nur Jahan's first marriage in 1594. One variation recounts that they were in love when Nur Jahan was seventeen years old, but their relationship was blocked by Emperor Akbar. However more modern scholarship has led to doubts about the existence of a prior relationship between Nur Jahan and Jahangir.[19]

Jahangir's proposal and marriage

In 1611, Nur Jahan met Emperor Jahangir at the palace's meena bazaar during the spring festival of Nowruz which celebrated the coming of the new year, Jahangir proposed immediately and they were married on 25 May of the same year (Wednesday, 12th Rabi-ul-Awwal, 1020 AH/ 25 May 1611 AD). Nur Jahan was thirty-four years old at the time of her second marriage and she would be Jahangir's twentieth and last legal wife.[20] According to some accounts they had two children, while others report the couple remained childless.[12] Incomplete records and Jahangir's abundant number of children, obscure efforts to distinguish individual identities and maternity.[5] This confusion is shown by later sources mistakenly identifying Nur Jahan as the mother of Shah Jahan. Jahangir's wife, Jagat Gosain, a Rajput princess, was, in reality, Shah Jahan's mother.[21][22]

Jahangir gave her the title of Nur Mahal (lit.'Light of the Palace') upon their marriage in 1611 and Nur Jahan (lit.'Light of the World') five years later in 1616.[23][24] Jahangir's affection and trust in Nur Jahan led to her wielding a great deal of power in affairs of state. Jahangir's addiction to opium and alcohol made it easier for Nur Jahan to exert her influence. His trust in her was so great that he gave her the highest symbol of power and determination of the decrees of the empire – his imperial seal, implying that her perusal and consent were necessary before any document or order received legal validity. So for many years, she wielded imperial power and was recognized as the real force behind the Mughal throne.[25]

Jahangir entrusted her with Shah Jahan and Mumtaz Mahal's second son, Prince Shah Shuja, upon his birth in 1616. This new responsibility was given to her due to her high rank, political clout and Jahangir's affection for her. It was also an honour for the empress as Shuja was a special favourite of his grandfather.[26][27]

Family advancements and consolidating power

After Sher Afgan's death, Nur Jahan's family was again found in a less than honourable or desired position. Her father was at that time, a diwan to an Amir-ul-Umra, decidedly not a very high post. In addition, both her father and one of her brothers were surrounded by scandal as the former was accused of embezzlement and the latter of treason.[5] Her fortunes took a turn for the better when she married Jahangir. The Mughal state gave absolute power to the emperor, and those who exercised influence over the emperor gained immense influence and prestige. Nur Jahan was able to convince her husband to pardon her father and appoint him Prime Minister. To consolidate her position and power within the Empire, Nur Jahan placed various members of her family in high positions throughout the court and administrative offices.[28] Her brother Asaf Khan was appointed grand Wazir (minister) to Jahangir.

Furthermore, to ensure her continued connections to the throne and the influence which she could obtain from it, Nur Jahan arranged for her daughter Ladli to marry Jahangir's youngest son, Shahryar. This wedding ensured that one way or another, the influence of Nur Jahan's family would extend over the Mughal Empire for at least another generation.[29]

Administration of the Mughal Empire

 
Silver rupee coin minted under Jahangir, bearing the name of Nur Jahan. Dated AH 1037, regnal year 22 (1627/1628 CE), minted at Patna.

Nur Jahan was fond of hunting and often went on hunting tours with her husband and was known for her boldness in hunting ferocious tigers. She is reported to have slain four tigers with six bullets during one hunt.[13][30] According to Sir Syed Ahmad Khan this feat, inspired a poet to declaim a spontaneous couplet in her honor:[13]

"Though Nur Jahan be in form a woman,
In the ranks of men she's a tiger-slayer"

— Unknown Poet

Nur Jahan's administrative skills proved invaluable during her regency as she defended the Empire's borders in her husband's absence and navigated family feuds, rebel uprisings, and a war of succession brought on by the failure of Jahangir to name an heir before he died on 28 October 1627.[31]

 
Portrait of Nur Jahan holding a gun by Abu'l-Hasan.

In 1626, Emperor Jahangir was captured by rebels while on his way to Kashmir. The rebel leader Mahabat Khan had hoped to stage a coup against Jahangir. Riding into battle atop a war elephant, Nur Jahan intervened herself to get her husband released.[32] She ordered the ministers to organize an attack on the enemy in order to rescue the Emperor; she would lead one of the units by administering commands from on top of a war elephant.[33] During the battle Nur Jahan's mount was hit and the soldiers of the imperial army fell at her feet. Realizing her plan had failed Nur Jahan surrendered to Mahabat Khan and was placed in captivity with her husband. Unfortunately for the rebels, Mahabat Khan failed to recognize the creativity and intellect of Nur Jahan as she soon was able to organize an escape and raise an army right under his very nose.[34] Shortly after being rescued, Jahangir died on 28 October 1627.

Quest for retention of Power

In 1620, Nur Jahan in order to secure her power in the Mughal court after the decline of her husband, Jahangir's health, offered the marriage proposal of her daughter to the charismatic Khusrau Mirza with the affirmation of bringing him back to power. He was the first choice of Nur Jahan for the marriage of her daughter, Ladli Begum as he was the favorite of common people who desperately wanted to see him on the throne and was highly backed by the revered people of the Mughal Court owing to his exceptional capabilities and talent. However, the Prince in an effort to uphold the fidelity to his chief wife refused the marriage proposal though his wife begged him to accept the proposal and subsequently, this proposal was passed onto Prince Khurram upon whose refusal it was finally passed to and accepted by Shahryar Mirza.[35]

Tensions between Nur Jahan and Jahangir's third son, the crowned Prince Khurram and future Shah Jahan, had been uneasy from the start. Prince Khurram resented the influence Nur Jahan held over his father and was angered at having to play second fiddle to her favourite Shahryar, his half-brother and her son-in-law. When the Persians besieged Kandahar, Nur Jahan was at the helm of the affairs. She corresponded with Kösem Sultan, Valide Sultan and regent of the Ottoman Empire. Nur Jahan attempted, with the support of the Ottomans and the Uzbeks, to form a coalition against the Safavids. However, no significant progress was conducted.[36][37] She ordered Prince Khurram to march for Kandahar, but he refused. As a result of Prince Khurram's refusal to obey Nur Jahan's orders, Kandahar was lost to the Persians after a forty-five-day siege.[38] Prince Khurram feared that in his absence Nur Jahan would attempt to poison his father against him and convince Jahangir to name Shahryar the heir in his place. This fear brought Prince Khurram to rebel against his father rather than fight against the Persians.[39] In 1622 Prince Khurram raised an army and marched against his father and Nur Jahan. The rebellion was quelled by Jahangir's forces and the prince was forced to surrender unconditionally. Although he was forgiven for his errors in 1626, tensions between Nur Jahan and her stepson would continue to grow underneath the surface.

Jahangir died on 28 October 1627. Jahangir's death sparked a war of succession between his remaining sons, Prince Khurram who was proclaimed as Shah Jahan by Jahangir and Prince Shahryar who was backed by Nur Jahan being her son-in-law. Jahangir's eldest son Khusrau had rebelled against the Emperor, was partially blinded as a result and was later killed by Prince Khurram during an uprising in Deccan. Jahangir's second son, Parviz, was weak and addicted to alcohol. Afraid that if Shah Jahan was made emperor she would lose her powers and influence in the court, Nur Jahan favored Shahryar who she believed could be manipulated much more easily. During the first half of the war it appeared as though Shahryar and Nur Jahan might turn out to be the victors; however, the two were hindered by Nur Jahan's brother, Asaf Khan. Asaf Khan, who was also the father of Mumtaz Mahal, sided with Shah Jahan. While Asaf Khan forced Nur Jahan into confinement, Shah Jahan defeated Shahryar's troops and ordered his execution. In 1628, Shah Jahan became the new Mughal emperor.[40]

Later years and death (1628–1645)

Nur Jahan was put under house arrest by her brother on the orders of new Emperor Shah Jahan and spent the remainder of her life confined in Lahore with her young widowed daughter, Ladli Begum, and her granddaughter. The three of them lived a simple and austere life.

She was granted an annual amount of 2 lakhs rupees by Shah Jahan. During this period she oversaw the completion of her father's mausoleum in Agra, which she started in 1622 and is now known as Itmad- ud- daulah's tomb. The tomb served as the inspiration for the Taj Mahal, unarguably the zenith of Mughal architecture, the construction of which began in 1632 and which Nur Jahan must have heard about before she died. Nur Jahan died on 17 December 1645 at age 68. She is buried at her tomb in Shahdara Bagh in Lahore, which she had built herself. Upon her tomb is inscribed the epitaph "On the grave of this poor stranger, let there be neither lamp nor rose. Let neither butterfly’s wing burn nor nightingale sing".[40] Her brother Asaf Khan's tomb is also located nearby. Her daughter, Ladli Begum was buried beside her in her mausoleum after her death.

Patron of the arts and architecture

According to the Dutch traveller Pelaert her patronage of architecture was extensive, as he notes, "She erects very expensive buildings in all directions- "sarais", or halting places for travellers and merchants, and pleasure gardens and palaces such that no one has seen before" (Pelsaert, pp 50).[41] In 1620, Nur Jahan commissioned a large "sarai" in Jalandhar district twenty-five miles southeast of Sultanpur. It was such an important "sarai" that, according to Shujauddin, " 'Serai Noor Mahal' in local idiom meant some spacious and important edifice."[42]

Tomb of Itimaaduddaula

Itimaaduddaula died in January 1622, and his tomb has been generally attributed to Nur Jahan.[43][44] The tomb took six years to finish (1622-1628), and was built at an enormous cost.[45] It was built in Itimadaduddaula's own garden, on the eastern bank of the Yamuna across from Agra. The building is square measuring sixty nine feet on each side, with four octagonal towers rising up one at each corner. The central Vault inside the tomb contain the cenotaphs of Itimadduddaula and his wife, Nur Jahan's mother Asmat Begum. The walls in the central chamber are decorated with paintings set in deep niches. According to Vincent Smith the pietra dura of Itimadadudddaula's tomb was one of the earliest true examples of the technique in India.[46] Nur Jahan also built the Pattar Masjid at Srinagar, and her own tomb at Lahore.

Textiles

According to legend, Nur Jahan is purported to have made contributions to almost every type of fine and practical art. In many cases the attributions can be traced back to Khafi Khan, who according to Ellison Banks Findly, "seems to have been in the business of re-creating Nur Jahan's talents and accomplishments beyond all realistic possibility."[47] According to Findly, Nur Jahan is said to have contributed substantially by introducing a variety of new textiles, among them silver-threaded brocade (badla) and silver-threaded lace (kinari).

Nur Jahan was very creative and had a good fashion sense, and she is credited for many textile materials and dresses like nurmahali dress and fine cloths like Panchtoliya badla (silver-threaded brocade), kinari (silver-threaded lace), etc.[48][49][50]

In popular culture

Literature
  • Nur Jahan is   The Light of the Haram. in what is termed a light rhapsody in Thomas Moore's Lalla Rookh (1817).[51]
  • Nur Jahan is the subject of Letitia Elizabeth Landon's short sketch   A Scene in the Life of Nourmahal. with an illustration by H. Meadows in Heath's Book of Beauty, 1837.[52]
  • Nur Jahan is a prominent character in Alex Rutherford's novel The Tainted Throne which is the fourth book of the Empire of the Moghul series.
  • Novelist Indu Sundaresan has written three books revolving around the life of Nur Jahan. The Taj Mahal trilogy includes The Twentieth Wife (2002), The Feast of Roses (2003) and Shadow Princess (2010).[53]
  • Harold Lamb's historical novel Nur Mahal (1935) is based on the life of Nur Jahan.[54]
  • Nur Jahan's Daughter (2005) written by Tanushree Poddar, provides an insight into the life and journey of Nur Jahan from being a widow to the Empress and after, as seen from the perspective of her daughter.[55]
  • Nur Jahan is a character in Ruchir Gupta's historical novel Mistress of the Throne (2014, ISBN 978-1495214912).
  • Nur Jahan is a major character in 1636: Mission to the Mughals, by Eric Flint and Griffin Barber, (2017, ISBN 978-1481483018) a volume of the Ring of Fire alternate history hypernovel.
  • Nur Jahan is a character in the novel Taj, a Story of Mughal India by Timeri Murari.[56]
Films and Television

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Banks Findly 1993, p. 8.
  2. ^ Lal, Ruby (2018). Empress : The Astonishing Reign of Nur Jahan. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 9780393239348. Besides her parentage and her name, only one thing is certain about Mihr's birth: She entered the world outside Kandahar in the winter of 1577, on the road to India
  3. ^ Banks Findly 1993, p. 9
  4. ^ Nath 1990, p. 64
  5. ^ a b c d Gold 2008, p. 148
  6. ^ a b Pant 1978, p. 4
  7. ^ a b Nath 1990, p. 66
  8. ^ Banks Findly 1993, p. 12.
  9. ^ Mahajan 1970
  10. ^ Renuka Nath (1 January 1990). Notable Mughal and Hindu women in the 16th and 17th centuries A.D. Inter-India Publications. p. 67. ISBN 978-81-210-0241-7.
  11. ^ Nath 1990, p. 67
  12. ^ a b Banks Findly 1993, p. 18
  13. ^ a b c Banks Findly 1993, p. 16
  14. ^ Nath 1990, pp. 71–72
  15. ^ a b Mohammad Shujauddin, Razia Shujauddin (1967). The Life and Times of Noor Jahan. Caravan Book House. p. 25.
  16. ^ Pant 1978, p. 45
  17. ^ a b c Banks Findly 1993, p. 32
  18. ^ Banks Findly 1993, p. 4
  19. ^ Banks Findly 1993, pp. 13–16
  20. ^ Tillotson, Giles (2008). Taj Mahal. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. p. 22. ISBN 9780674063655.
  21. ^ Manuel, Paul Christopher; Lyon, Alynna; Wilcox, Clyde, eds. (2012). Religion and Politics in a Global Society Comparative Perspectives from the Portuguese-Speaking World. Lanham: Lexington Books. p. 68. ISBN 9780739176818.
  22. ^ Eraly, Abraham (2007). Emperors of the Peacock Throne, The Saga of the Great Mughals. Penguin Books India. p. 299. ISBN 978-0141001432.
  23. ^ Banks Findly 1993, p. 94
  24. ^ Nath 1990, p. 72
  25. ^ Pant 1978, p. 46
  26. ^ Banks Findly 1993, p. 98
  27. ^ Banks Findly 1993, p. 87
  28. ^ Nath 1990, p. 73
  29. ^ Gold 2008, p. 150
  30. ^ Mahajan 1970, p. 140
  31. ^ Pant 1978, p. 27
  32. ^ What'sHerName and Dr. Ruby Lal (19 November 2018). "THE EMPRESS Nur Jahan". What'shername. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
  33. ^ Nath 1990, p. 83
  34. ^ Pant 1978, p. 72
  35. ^ Findly, Ellison Books (1993). Nur Jahan. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195074888.
  36. ^ Carr, K.E. The Mughal Empire – History of India. Quatr.us Study Guides, July 19, 2017. Web. January 11, 2022.
  37. ^ Sungarso 2021, p. 111.
  38. ^ Nath 1990, p. 79
  39. ^ Mahajan 1970, p. 141
  40. ^ a b Gold 2008, p. 151
  41. ^ Moreland, W.H. Jahangir's India, the Remonstrantie of Francisco Pelsaert. Cambridge: W.heffer &Sons Ltd., 1925.
  42. ^ Banks Findly 1993, p. 229.
  43. ^ Brown, Percy. Indian Architecture (Islamic Period) (5th ed.). Bombay: Taraporevala's Treasure House of Books. p. 100.
  44. ^ Smith, Vincent (1930). A History of Fine Art in India &Ceylon (2nd ed.). Oxford:Clarendon Press, 1930. p. 180. ISBN 9788120620049.
  45. ^ Banks Findly 1993, p. 230.
  46. ^ Smith, Vincent (1930). A History of Fine Art in India&Ceylon (2nd ed.). Oxford:Clarendon Press. p. 198.
  47. ^ Banks Findly 1993, p. 219.
  48. ^ Mukherjee, Soma (2001). Royal Mughal Ladies and Their Contributions. Gyan Books. p. 223. ISBN 978-81-212-0760-7.
  49. ^ "Role of Nur Jahan: The Mughal Empress of India. - Free Online Library". www.thefreelibrary.com. Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  50. ^ RAWAT, DR SUGANDHA (20 July 2020). THE WOMEN OF MUGHAL HAREM. Evincepub Publishing. p. 83. ISBN 978-93-90197-41-5.
  51. ^ Moore, Thomas (1817). Lalla Rookh. Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown.
  52. ^ Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (1836). "picture and story". Heath's Book of Beauty, 1837. Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman.
  53. ^ . Archived from the original on 30 May 2018. Retrieved 8 March 2017.
  54. ^ Lamb, Harold (1935). Nur Mahal. Doubleday, Doran & Co. ISBN 978-1299983229.
  55. ^ Podder, Tanushree (2005). Nur Jahan's daughter. New Delhi: Rupa & Co. ISBN 9788129107220.
  56. ^ Murari, Timeri (2004). Taj, a Story of Mughal India. Penguin.
  57. ^ Nurjehan at IMDb
  58. ^ "Noorjahan". PAKfilms. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  59. ^ Pandya, Haresh (3 September 2002). "Naseem Banu". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 March 2017.
  60. ^ Jaswantlal, Nandlal (1 January 2000). "Anarkali". IMDb. Retrieved 13 April 2017.
  61. ^ "Veena". IMDb. Retrieved 12 April 2017.
  62. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 May 2018. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  63. ^ "Pooja Batra to miss Taj Mahal premiere in Pak". The Hindustan Times. 27 April 2006. Retrieved 8 March 2017.
  64. ^ "Girl, you'll be a queen soon". The Times of India. 29 February 2000. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  65. ^ Majumdar, Payel (3 January 2015). . The Sunday Guardian. Archived from the original on 15 September 2017. Retrieved 8 March 2017.
  66. ^ Maheshwril, Neha (2 July 2013). "Hollywood actress Charu Shankar to make her television debut - Times of India". The Times of India. No. The Times of India. Retrieved 8 March 2017.

Further reading

  • Islamic Republic News Agency, "Iran India relations span centuries marked by meaningful interactions". 2014. irna.ir
  • Nur Jahan: Empress of Mughal India, by Ellison Banks Findly, Oxford University Press US. 2000. ISBN 0-19-507488-2.excerpts online
  • Chopra, R. M., "Eminent Poetesses of Persian", 2010, Iran Society, Kolkata.
  • Sundaresan, I. (2002). The twentieth wife. New York: Pocket Books. ISBN 9780743427142
  • Sundaresan, I. (2002). Power behind the veil.
  • Lal, R. (2018). Empress: The Astonishing Reign of Nur Jahan. New York: W W Norton. ISBN 9780393239348
  • What'sHerName Podcast (2018). THE EMPRESS: Interview with Nur Jahan biographer Ruby Lal.
  • Banks Findly, Ellison (11 February 1993). Nur Jahan: Empress of Mughal India. Oxford, UK: Nur Jahan : Empress of Mughal India. ISBN 9780195074888.
  • Gold, Claudia (2008). Queen, Empress, Concubine: Fifty Women Rulers from Cleopatra to Catherine the Great. London: Quercus. ISBN 978-1-84724-542-7.
  • Lal, Ruby (2018). Empress: The Astonishing Reign of Nur Jahan. W. W. Norton. ISBN 9780393239348
  • Mahajan, Vidya Dhar (1970). "Jahangir". Muslim Rule in India (5th ed.). Delhi: S. Chand. OCLC 33267592.
  • Nath, Renuka (1990). Notable Mughal and Hindu women in the 16th and 17th centuries A.D. New Delhi: Inter-India Publ. ISBN 9788121002417.
  • Pant, Chandra (1978). Nur Jahan and Her Family. Dandewal Publishing House. OCLC 4638848.

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jahan, other, people, named, noor, jahan, noor, jahan, disambiguation, born, mehr, nissa, persian, نورجهان, among, women, 1577, december, 1645, twentieth, wife, chief, consort, mughal, emperor, jahangir, empress, consort, mughal, empireidealised, portrait, mug. For other people named Noor Jahan see Noor Jahan disambiguation Nur Jahan born Mehr un Nissa Persian نورجهان lit Sun Among Women c 1577 18 December 1645 1 was the twentieth wife and chief consort of the Mughal emperor Jahangir Nur JahanEmpress consort of the Mughal EmpireIdealised portrait of the Mughal Empress Nur Jahan c 1627Padshah BegumTenureJune 1620 28 October 1627PredecessorSaliha Banu BegumSuccessorMumtaz MahalBornMehr un Nissac 1577 Kandahar Safavid Empire present day Afghanistan Died17 December 1645 1645 12 17 aged 68 Lahore Mughal Empire present day Pakistan BurialTomb of Nur Jahan LahoreSpouseSher Afgan Khan m 1594 d 1607 wbr Jahangir m 1611 d 1627 wbr IssueLadli BegumHouseTimurid by marriage FatherMirza Ghiyas BegMotherAsmat BegumReligionShia IslamMore decisive and proactive than her husband Nur Jahan is considered by certain historians to have been the real power behind the throne for more than a decade Wielding a level of power and influence unprecedented for a Mughal empress she was granted honours and privileges never enjoyed by any of her predecessors or successors such as having coinage struck in her name Her pre eminence was in part made possible by her husband Jahangir s addiction to alcohol and opium and his frequent ill health Contents 1 Birth and early life 1577 1594 2 Marriage to Sher Afgan 1594 1607 3 As Mughal Empress 3 1 Lady in waiting to Ruqaiya Sultan Begum 1607 1611 3 2 Marriage to Jahangir 1611 1627 3 3 Jahangir s proposal and marriage 3 4 Family advancements and consolidating power 3 5 Administration of the Mughal Empire 3 6 Quest for retention of Power 4 Later years and death 1628 1645 5 Patron of the arts and architecture 5 1 Tomb of Itimaaduddaula 5 2 Textiles 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBirth and early life 1577 1594 Edit Kandahar Kandahar Nur Jahan s place of birth is now southern Afghanistan Nur Jahan was born as Mehr un Nissa 1577 in Kandahar present day Afghanistan into a family of Persian nobility and was the second daughter and fourth child of the Persian aristocrat Mirza Ghiyas Beg and his wife Asmat Begum 2 Both of Nur Jahan s parents were descendants of illustrious families Ghiyas Beg from Muhammad Sharif and Asmat Begum from the Aqa Mulla clan 3 Her paternal grandfather Khwaja Muhammad Sharif was first a wazir to Tatar Sultan the governor of Khurasan and later was in the service of Shah Tahmasp who made him the wazir of Isfahan 1 in recognition of his excellent service 4 For unknown reasons Ghiyas Beg s family had suffered a reversal in fortunes in 1577 and soon found circumstances in their homeland intolerable Hoping to improve his family s fortunes Ghiyas Beg chose to relocate to India where the Emperor Akbar s court was said to be at the centre of the growing trade industry and cultural scene 5 Halfway along their route the family was attacked by robbers who took from them their remaining meager possessions 6 Left with only two mules Ghiyas Beg his pregnant wife and their two children Muhammad Sharif Asaf Khan were forced to take turns riding on the backs of the animals for the remainder of their journey When the family arrived in Kandahar Asmat Begum gave birth to their second daughter The family was so impoverished they feared they would be unable to take care of the newborn baby Fortunately the family was taken in by a caravan led by the merchant noble Malik Masud who would later assist Ghiyas Beg in finding a position in the service of Emperor Akbar Believing that the child had signaled a change in the family s fate she was named Mehr un Nissa or Sun among Women 7 Her father Ghiyas Beg began his career in India after being given a mansab of 300 in 1577 Thereafter he was appointed diwan treasurer for the province of Kabul 8 Due to his astute skills at conducting business he quickly rose through the ranks of the high administrative officials For his excellent work he was awarded the title of Itimad ud Daula or Pillar of the State by the emperor 6 As a result of his work and promotions Ghiyas Beg was able to ensure that Mehr un Nissa the future Nur Jahan would have the best possible education She became well versed in Arabic and Persian languages art literature music and dance 7 The poet and author Vidya Dhar Mahajan would later praise Nur Jahan as having a piercing intelligence a volatile temper and sound common sense 9 Marriage to Sher Afgan 1594 1607 EditIn 1594 when Nur Jahan was seventeen years old she married her first husband Ali Quli Istajlu also known as Sher Afgan Khan 10 Sher Afgan was an adventurous Persian who had been forced to flee his home in Persia after the demise of his first master Shah Ismail II 11 He later joined the Mughal army and served under the Emperors Akbar and Jahangir As a reward for his loyal service Akbar arranged Nur Jahan s marriage with Sher Afgan 5 Their only child together a daughter Mihr un Nissa Begum popularly known as Ladli Begum was born in 1605 12 While participating in a military campaign in Mewar under Prince Salim Ali Quli Istajlu was bestowed the title of Sher Afgan or Tiger Tosser Sher Afgan s role in the rout of the Rana of Udaipur inspired this reward but his exact actions were not recorded by contemporaries A popular explanation is that Sher Afgan saved Salim from an angry tigress 13 The title has been sometimes misquoted in English history of the Mughals as Sher Afghan which would have a different meaning In 1607 Sher Afgan was killed after it was rumoured he had refused to obey summons from the Governor of Bengal took part in anti state activities and attacked the governor when he came to escort Sher Afgan to court Some have suspected Jahangir for arranging Sher Afgan s death because the latter was said to have fallen in love with Nur Jahan and had been denied the right to add her to his harem The validity of this rumour is uncertain as Jahangir only married Nur Jahan in 1611 four years after she came to his court Furthermore contemporary accounts offer few details as to whether or not a love affair existed prior to 1611 and historians have questioned Jahangir s logic in bestowing honours upon Sher Afgan if he wished to see him removed from the picture 14 The tomb still in existence at Purana Puratan Chawk in Bardhaman in present day West Bengal says that there was a battle between Sher Afgan and Qutubuddin Koka the then Mughal Subahdar of Bengal and the foster brother of Jahangir in Burdwan in 1610 AD in which both of them died and were buried there at the tomb of Pir Baharam Sakka died in 1563 Sher Afgan Khan was probably the appointed faujdar in Burdwan This contradicts the fact that Sher Afgan was murdered in the year 1607 As Mughal Empress EditLady in waiting to Ruqaiya Sultan Begum 1607 1611 Edit After her husband Sher Afgan was killed in 1607 Nur Jahan and her daughter Ladli Begum were summoned to Agra by Jahangir for their protection and acted as lady in waiting to the Ruqaiya Sultan Begum who had been one of the chief wives of the late Emperor Akbar 15 16 Given the precarious political connections of Sher Afgan before his death his family would be in certain danger with him gone from those seeking to avenge Qutbuddin s murder For her protection then Nur Jahan needed to be at the Mughal court in Agra she was brought back in honour presumably because of her father s position at court was clear from her new post with Ruqaiya Sultan Begum 17 It was under Ruqaiya s care that Nur Jahan was able to spend time with her parents and occasionally visit the apartments where the emperor s women lived 17 Nur Jahan served as lady in waiting to the Dowager Empress for four years 15 The relationship that grew between Nur Jahan and Ruqaiya appears to have been an extremely tender one The Dutch merchant and travel writer Pieter van den Broecke described their relationship in his Hindustan Chronicle This Begum Ruqaiya conceived a great affection for Mehr un Nissa Nur Jahan she loved her more than others and always kept her in her company 17 Marriage to Jahangir 1611 1627 Edit Jahangir and Prince Khurram with Nur Jahan c 1624 This scene is probably set in the Aram Bagh Agra which the empress Nur Jahan a great patron of gardens had re modeled in 1621 Nur Jahan and Jahangir have been the subject of much interest over the centuries and there are innumerable legends and stories about their relationship 18 Many stories allege an early affection between Nur Jahan and Emperor Jahangir before Nur Jahan s first marriage in 1594 One variation recounts that they were in love when Nur Jahan was seventeen years old but their relationship was blocked by Emperor Akbar However more modern scholarship has led to doubts about the existence of a prior relationship between Nur Jahan and Jahangir 19 Jahangir s proposal and marriage Edit In 1611 Nur Jahan met Emperor Jahangir at the palace s meena bazaar during the spring festival of Nowruz which celebrated the coming of the new year Jahangir proposed immediately and they were married on 25 May of the same year Wednesday 12th Rabi ul Awwal 1020 AH 25 May 1611 AD Nur Jahan was thirty four years old at the time of her second marriage and she would be Jahangir s twentieth and last legal wife 20 According to some accounts they had two children while others report the couple remained childless 12 Incomplete records and Jahangir s abundant number of children obscure efforts to distinguish individual identities and maternity 5 This confusion is shown by later sources mistakenly identifying Nur Jahan as the mother of Shah Jahan Jahangir s wife Jagat Gosain a Rajput princess was in reality Shah Jahan s mother 21 22 Jahangir gave her the title of Nur Mahal lit Light of the Palace upon their marriage in 1611 and Nur Jahan lit Light of the World five years later in 1616 23 24 Jahangir s affection and trust in Nur Jahan led to her wielding a great deal of power in affairs of state Jahangir s addiction to opium and alcohol made it easier for Nur Jahan to exert her influence His trust in her was so great that he gave her the highest symbol of power and determination of the decrees of the empire his imperial seal implying that her perusal and consent were necessary before any document or order received legal validity So for many years she wielded imperial power and was recognized as the real force behind the Mughal throne 25 Jahangir entrusted her with Shah Jahan and Mumtaz Mahal s second son Prince Shah Shuja upon his birth in 1616 This new responsibility was given to her due to her high rank political clout and Jahangir s affection for her It was also an honour for the empress as Shuja was a special favourite of his grandfather 26 27 Family advancements and consolidating power Edit After Sher Afgan s death Nur Jahan s family was again found in a less than honourable or desired position Her father was at that time a diwan to an Amir ul Umra decidedly not a very high post In addition both her father and one of her brothers were surrounded by scandal as the former was accused of embezzlement and the latter of treason 5 Her fortunes took a turn for the better when she married Jahangir The Mughal state gave absolute power to the emperor and those who exercised influence over the emperor gained immense influence and prestige Nur Jahan was able to convince her husband to pardon her father and appoint him Prime Minister To consolidate her position and power within the Empire Nur Jahan placed various members of her family in high positions throughout the court and administrative offices 28 Her brother Asaf Khan was appointed grand Wazir minister to Jahangir Furthermore to ensure her continued connections to the throne and the influence which she could obtain from it Nur Jahan arranged for her daughter Ladli to marry Jahangir s youngest son Shahryar This wedding ensured that one way or another the influence of Nur Jahan s family would extend over the Mughal Empire for at least another generation 29 Administration of the Mughal Empire Edit Silver rupee coin minted under Jahangir bearing the name of Nur Jahan Dated AH 1037 regnal year 22 1627 1628 CE minted at Patna Nur Jahan was fond of hunting and often went on hunting tours with her husband and was known for her boldness in hunting ferocious tigers She is reported to have slain four tigers with six bullets during one hunt 13 30 According to Sir Syed Ahmad Khan this feat inspired a poet to declaim a spontaneous couplet in her honor 13 Though Nur Jahan be in form a woman In the ranks of men she s a tiger slayer Unknown Poet Nur Jahan s administrative skills proved invaluable during her regency as she defended the Empire s borders in her husband s absence and navigated family feuds rebel uprisings and a war of succession brought on by the failure of Jahangir to name an heir before he died on 28 October 1627 31 Portrait of Nur Jahan holding a gun by Abu l Hasan In 1626 Emperor Jahangir was captured by rebels while on his way to Kashmir The rebel leader Mahabat Khan had hoped to stage a coup against Jahangir Riding into battle atop a war elephant Nur Jahan intervened herself to get her husband released 32 She ordered the ministers to organize an attack on the enemy in order to rescue the Emperor she would lead one of the units by administering commands from on top of a war elephant 33 During the battle Nur Jahan s mount was hit and the soldiers of the imperial army fell at her feet Realizing her plan had failed Nur Jahan surrendered to Mahabat Khan and was placed in captivity with her husband Unfortunately for the rebels Mahabat Khan failed to recognize the creativity and intellect of Nur Jahan as she soon was able to organize an escape and raise an army right under his very nose 34 Shortly after being rescued Jahangir died on 28 October 1627 Quest for retention of Power Edit In 1620 Nur Jahan in order to secure her power in the Mughal court after the decline of her husband Jahangir s health offered the marriage proposal of her daughter to the charismatic Khusrau Mirza with the affirmation of bringing him back to power He was the first choice of Nur Jahan for the marriage of her daughter Ladli Begum as he was the favorite of common people who desperately wanted to see him on the throne and was highly backed by the revered people of the Mughal Court owing to his exceptional capabilities and talent However the Prince in an effort to uphold the fidelity to his chief wife refused the marriage proposal though his wife begged him to accept the proposal and subsequently this proposal was passed onto Prince Khurram upon whose refusal it was finally passed to and accepted by Shahryar Mirza 35 Tensions between Nur Jahan and Jahangir s third son the crowned Prince Khurram and future Shah Jahan had been uneasy from the start Prince Khurram resented the influence Nur Jahan held over his father and was angered at having to play second fiddle to her favourite Shahryar his half brother and her son in law When the Persians besieged Kandahar Nur Jahan was at the helm of the affairs She corresponded with Kosem Sultan Valide Sultan and regent of the Ottoman Empire Nur Jahan attempted with the support of the Ottomans and the Uzbeks to form a coalition against the Safavids However no significant progress was conducted 36 37 She ordered Prince Khurram to march for Kandahar but he refused As a result of Prince Khurram s refusal to obey Nur Jahan s orders Kandahar was lost to the Persians after a forty five day siege 38 Prince Khurram feared that in his absence Nur Jahan would attempt to poison his father against him and convince Jahangir to name Shahryar the heir in his place This fear brought Prince Khurram to rebel against his father rather than fight against the Persians 39 In 1622 Prince Khurram raised an army and marched against his father and Nur Jahan The rebellion was quelled by Jahangir s forces and the prince was forced to surrender unconditionally Although he was forgiven for his errors in 1626 tensions between Nur Jahan and her stepson would continue to grow underneath the surface Jahangir died on 28 October 1627 Jahangir s death sparked a war of succession between his remaining sons Prince Khurram who was proclaimed as Shah Jahan by Jahangir and Prince Shahryar who was backed by Nur Jahan being her son in law Jahangir s eldest son Khusrau had rebelled against the Emperor was partially blinded as a result and was later killed by Prince Khurram during an uprising in Deccan Jahangir s second son Parviz was weak and addicted to alcohol Afraid that if Shah Jahan was made emperor she would lose her powers and influence in the court Nur Jahan favored Shahryar who she believed could be manipulated much more easily During the first half of the war it appeared as though Shahryar and Nur Jahan might turn out to be the victors however the two were hindered by Nur Jahan s brother Asaf Khan Asaf Khan who was also the father of Mumtaz Mahal sided with Shah Jahan While Asaf Khan forced Nur Jahan into confinement Shah Jahan defeated Shahryar s troops and ordered his execution In 1628 Shah Jahan became the new Mughal emperor 40 Later years and death 1628 1645 Edit Tomb of Nur Jahan in Shahdara Bagh Nur Jahan was put under house arrest by her brother on the orders of new Emperor Shah Jahan and spent the remainder of her life confined in Lahore with her young widowed daughter Ladli Begum and her granddaughter The three of them lived a simple and austere life She was granted an annual amount of 2 lakhs rupees by Shah Jahan During this period she oversaw the completion of her father s mausoleum in Agra which she started in 1622 and is now known as Itmad ud daulah s tomb The tomb served as the inspiration for the Taj Mahal unarguably the zenith of Mughal architecture the construction of which began in 1632 and which Nur Jahan must have heard about before she died Nur Jahan died on 17 December 1645 at age 68 She is buried at her tomb in Shahdara Bagh in Lahore which she had built herself Upon her tomb is inscribed the epitaph On the grave of this poor stranger let there be neither lamp nor rose Let neither butterfly s wing burn nor nightingale sing 40 Her brother Asaf Khan s tomb is also located nearby Her daughter Ladli Begum was buried beside her in her mausoleum after her death Patron of the arts and architecture EditAccording to the Dutch traveller Pelaert her patronage of architecture was extensive as he notes She erects very expensive buildings in all directions sarais or halting places for travellers and merchants and pleasure gardens and palaces such that no one has seen before Pelsaert pp 50 41 In 1620 Nur Jahan commissioned a large sarai in Jalandhar district twenty five miles southeast of Sultanpur It was such an important sarai that according to Shujauddin Serai Noor Mahal in local idiom meant some spacious and important edifice 42 Tomb of Itimaaduddaula Edit Itimaaduddaula died in January 1622 and his tomb has been generally attributed to Nur Jahan 43 44 The tomb took six years to finish 1622 1628 and was built at an enormous cost 45 It was built in Itimadaduddaula s own garden on the eastern bank of the Yamuna across from Agra The building is square measuring sixty nine feet on each side with four octagonal towers rising up one at each corner The central Vault inside the tomb contain the cenotaphs of Itimadduddaula and his wife Nur Jahan s mother Asmat Begum The walls in the central chamber are decorated with paintings set in deep niches According to Vincent Smith the pietra dura of Itimadadudddaula s tomb was one of the earliest true examples of the technique in India 46 Nur Jahan also built the Pattar Masjid at Srinagar and her own tomb at Lahore Textiles Edit According to legend Nur Jahan is purported to have made contributions to almost every type of fine and practical art In many cases the attributions can be traced back to Khafi Khan who according to Ellison Banks Findly seems to have been in the business of re creating Nur Jahan s talents and accomplishments beyond all realistic possibility 47 According to Findly Nur Jahan is said to have contributed substantially by introducing a variety of new textiles among them silver threaded brocade badla and silver threaded lace kinari Nur Jahan was very creative and had a good fashion sense and she is credited for many textile materials and dresses like nurmahali dress and fine cloths like Panchtoliya badla silver threaded brocade kinari silver threaded lace etc 48 49 50 In popular culture EditLiteratureNur Jahan is The Light of the Haram in what is termed a light rhapsody in Thomas Moore s Lalla Rookh 1817 51 Nur Jahan is the subject of Letitia Elizabeth Landon s short sketch A Scene in the Life of Nourmahal with an illustration by H Meadows in Heath s Book of Beauty 1837 52 Nur Jahan is a prominent character in Alex Rutherford s novel The Tainted Throne which is the fourth book of the Empire of the Moghul series Novelist Indu Sundaresan has written three books revolving around the life of Nur Jahan The Taj Mahal trilogy includes The Twentieth Wife 2002 The Feast of Roses 2003 and Shadow Princess 2010 53 Harold Lamb s historical novel Nur Mahal 1935 is based on the life of Nur Jahan 54 Nur Jahan s Daughter 2005 written by Tanushree Poddar provides an insight into the life and journey of Nur Jahan from being a widow to the Empress and after as seen from the perspective of her daughter 55 Nur Jahan is a character in Ruchir Gupta s historical novel Mistress of the Throne 2014 ISBN 978 1495214912 Nur Jahan is a major character in 1636 Mission to the Mughals by Eric Flint and Griffin Barber 2017 ISBN 978 1481483018 a volume of the Ring of Fire alternate history hypernovel Nur Jahan is a character in the novel Taj a Story of Mughal India by Timeri Murari 56 Films and TelevisionPatience Cooper essayed the role of the empress in the biographical drama film Nurjehan 1923 by J J Madan 57 Jillo Bai portrayed Nur Jahan in the 1931 silent movie Noor Jahan 58 Nur Jahan was portrayed by Naseem Banu in Sohrab Modi s film Pukar 1939 59 Actress Noor portrayed Empress Nur Jahan in Nandlal Jaswantlal s film Anarkali 1953 60 Mehrunnissa Nur Jahan was portrayed by actress Veena in M Sadiq s film Taj Mahal 1963 61 Meena Kumari portrayed Noor Jahan Meharunnisa in the 1967 movie Noor Jahan a dream project of Sheikh Mukhtar directed by M Sadiq 62 Pooja Batra portrayed Empress Nur Jahan in the 2005 historical film Taj Mahal An Eternal Love story 63 Gauri Pradhan played the title role of Nur Jahan in the television series Noorjahan which aired on DD National during 2000 2001 64 Siyaasat 2015 a historical drama which aired on The EPIC Channel depicted the love story of Nur Jahan and Jahangir It was based on the novel The Twentieth Wife by Indu Sundaresan Jannat Zubair Rahmani and Charu Shankar portrayed Mehrunnissa Nur Jahan 65 66 Sauyma Setia portrayed the role of a young Mehrunnisa in ZEE5 s web series Taj Divided by Blood See also EditAchabal Gardens Serai Nurmahal Tomb of I timad ud Daulah Panchtoliya Nurmahali DressReferences Edit a b Banks Findly 1993 p 8 Lal Ruby 2018 Empress The Astonishing Reign of Nur Jahan New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 9780393239348 Besides her parentage and her name only one thing is certain about Mihr s birth She entered the world outside Kandahar in the winter of 1577 on the road to India Banks Findly 1993 p 9 Nath 1990 p 64 a b c d Gold 2008 p 148 a b Pant 1978 p 4 a b Nath 1990 p 66 Banks Findly 1993 p 12 Mahajan 1970 Renuka Nath 1 January 1990 Notable Mughal and Hindu women in the 16th and 17th centuries A D Inter India Publications p 67 ISBN 978 81 210 0241 7 Nath 1990 p 67 a b Banks Findly 1993 p 18 a b c Banks Findly 1993 p 16 Nath 1990 pp 71 72 a b Mohammad Shujauddin Razia Shujauddin 1967 The Life and Times of Noor Jahan Caravan Book House p 25 Pant 1978 p 45 a b c Banks Findly 1993 p 32 Banks Findly 1993 p 4 Banks Findly 1993 pp 13 16 Tillotson Giles 2008 Taj Mahal Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press p 22 ISBN 9780674063655 Manuel Paul Christopher Lyon Alynna Wilcox Clyde eds 2012 Religion and Politics in a Global Society Comparative Perspectives from the Portuguese Speaking World Lanham Lexington Books p 68 ISBN 9780739176818 Eraly Abraham 2007 Emperors of the Peacock Throne The Saga of the Great Mughals Penguin Books India p 299 ISBN 978 0141001432 Banks Findly 1993 p 94 Nath 1990 p 72 Pant 1978 p 46 Banks Findly 1993 p 98 Banks Findly 1993 p 87 Nath 1990 p 73 Gold 2008 p 150 Mahajan 1970 p 140 Pant 1978 p 27 What sHerName and Dr Ruby Lal 19 November 2018 THE EMPRESS Nur Jahan What shername Retrieved 7 January 2019 Nath 1990 p 83 Pant 1978 p 72 Findly Ellison Books 1993 Nur Jahan Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195074888 Carr K E The Mughal Empire History of India Quatr us Study Guides July 19 2017 Web January 11 2022 Sungarso 2021 p 111 sfn error no target CITEREFSungarso2021 help Nath 1990 p 79 Mahajan 1970 p 141 a b Gold 2008 p 151 Moreland W H Jahangir s India the Remonstrantie of Francisco Pelsaert Cambridge W heffer amp Sons Ltd 1925 Banks Findly 1993 p 229 Brown Percy Indian Architecture Islamic Period 5th ed Bombay Taraporevala s Treasure House of Books p 100 Smith Vincent 1930 A History of Fine Art in India amp Ceylon 2nd ed Oxford Clarendon Press 1930 p 180 ISBN 9788120620049 Banks Findly 1993 p 230 Smith Vincent 1930 A History of Fine Art in India amp Ceylon 2nd ed Oxford Clarendon Press p 198 Banks Findly 1993 p 219 Mukherjee Soma 2001 Royal Mughal Ladies and Their Contributions Gyan Books p 223 ISBN 978 81 212 0760 7 Role of Nur Jahan The Mughal Empress of India Free Online Library www thefreelibrary com Retrieved 28 January 2021 RAWAT DR SUGANDHA 20 July 2020 THE WOMEN OF MUGHAL HAREM Evincepub Publishing p 83 ISBN 978 93 90197 41 5 Moore Thomas 1817 Lalla Rookh Longman Hurst Rees Orme and Brown Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1836 picture and story Heath s Book of Beauty 1837 Longman Rees Orme Brown Green and Longman The Taj Mahal Trilogy Archived from the original on 30 May 2018 Retrieved 8 March 2017 Lamb Harold 1935 Nur Mahal Doubleday Doran amp Co ISBN 978 1299983229 Podder Tanushree 2005 Nur Jahan s daughter New Delhi Rupa amp Co ISBN 9788129107220 Murari Timeri 2004 Taj a Story of Mughal India Penguin Nurjehan at IMDb Noorjahan PAKfilms Retrieved 28 May 2018 Pandya Haresh 3 September 2002 Naseem Banu The Guardian Retrieved 8 March 2017 Jaswantlal Nandlal 1 January 2000 Anarkali IMDb Retrieved 13 April 2017 Veena IMDb Retrieved 12 April 2017 NOOR JEHAN Meena Kumari Pradip Kumar Archived from the original on 29 May 2018 Retrieved 28 May 2018 Pooja Batra to miss Taj Mahal premiere in Pak The Hindustan Times 27 April 2006 Retrieved 8 March 2017 Girl you ll be a queen soon The Times of India 29 February 2000 Retrieved 28 May 2018 Majumdar Payel 3 January 2015 The reigning queen of Siyaasat Charu Shankar on playing Noor Jehan The Sunday Guardian Archived from the original on 15 September 2017 Retrieved 8 March 2017 Maheshwril Neha 2 July 2013 Hollywood actress Charu Shankar to make her television debut Times of India The Times of India No The Times of India Retrieved 8 March 2017 Further reading EditIslamic Republic News Agency Iran India relations span centuries marked by meaningful interactions 2014 irna ir Nur Jahan Empress of Mughal India by Ellison Banks Findly Oxford University Press US 2000 ISBN 0 19 507488 2 excerpts online Chopra R M Eminent Poetesses of Persian 2010 Iran Society Kolkata Sundaresan I 2002 The twentieth wife New York Pocket Books ISBN 9780743427142 Sundaresan I 2002 Power behind the veil Lal R 2018 Empress The Astonishing Reign of Nur Jahan New York W W Norton ISBN 9780393239348 What sHerName Podcast 2018 THE EMPRESS Interview with Nur Jahan biographer Ruby Lal Banks Findly Ellison 11 February 1993 Nur Jahan Empress of Mughal India Oxford UK Nur Jahan Empress of Mughal India ISBN 9780195074888 Gold Claudia 2008 Queen Empress Concubine Fifty Women Rulers from Cleopatra to Catherine the Great London Quercus ISBN 978 1 84724 542 7 Lal Ruby 2018 Empress The Astonishing Reign of Nur Jahan W W Norton ISBN 9780393239348 Mahajan Vidya Dhar 1970 Jahangir Muslim Rule in India 5th ed Delhi S Chand OCLC 33267592 Nath Renuka 1990 Notable Mughal and Hindu women in the 16th and 17th centuries A D New Delhi Inter India Publ ISBN 9788121002417 Pant Chandra 1978 Nur Jahan and Her Family Dandewal Publishing House OCLC 4638848 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nur Jahan Wikiquote has quotations related to Nur Jahan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nur Jahan amp oldid 1146273389, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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