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Razia Sultana

Raziyyat-Ud-Dunya Wa Ud-Din (Persian: سلطان رضیه الدنیا والدین) (c. 1205 - 15 October 1240, r. 1236–1240), popularly known as Razia Sultana, was a ruler of the Delhi Sultanate in the northern part of the Indian subcontinent. She was the first female Muslim ruler of the subcontinent, and the only female Muslim ruler of Delhi.

Razia Sultana
Sultana, Padshah
Equestrian miniature painting of Razia Sultana, circa 18th century
5th Sultan of Delhi
Reign19 November 1236 − 20 April 1240
PredecessorRuknuddin Firuz
SuccessorMuizuddin Bahram
Bornc. 1205[1]
Died15 October 1240
Kaithal, Delhi Sultanate
Burial
Bulbuli Khana near Turkman Gate, Delhi
Spouse
(m. 1240)
Names
Raziyyat-Ud-Dunya Wa Ud-Din
Regnal name
Jalâlat-ud-Dîn Razia
HouseMamluk dynasty
FatherIltutmish
MotherTurkan Khatun
ReligionSunni Islam

A daughter of Mamluk Sultan Shamsuddin Iltutmish, Razia administered Delhi during 1231–1232 when her father was busy in the Gwalior campaign. According to a possibly apocryphal legend, impressed by her performance during this period, Iltutmish nominated Razia as his heir apparent after returning to Delhi. Iltutmish was succeeded by Razia's half-brother Ruknuddin Firuz, whose mother Shah Turkan planned to execute her. During a rebellion against Ruknuddin, Razia instigated the general public against Shah Turkan, and ascended the throne after Ruknuddin was deposed in 1236.

Razia's ascension was challenged by a section of nobles, some of whom ultimately joined her, while the others were defeated. The Turkic nobles who supported her expected her to be a figurehead, but she increasingly asserted her power. This, combined with her appointments of non-Turkic officers to important posts, led to their resentment against her. She was deposed by a group of nobles in April 1240, after having ruled for less than four years. She married one of the rebels – Ikhtiyaruddin Altunia – and attempted to regain the throne, but was defeated by her half-brother and successor Muizuddin Bahram in October that year, and was killed shortly after.

Names and titles edit

Razia's name is also transliterated as Raḍiyya[2] or Raziyya.[3] The term "Sultana", used by some modern writers, is a misnomer as it means "the king's wife" rather than "female ruler". Razia's own coins call her Sultan Jalalat al-Duniya wal-Din or as al-Sultan al-Muazzam Raziyat al-Din bint al-Sultan. The Sanskrit-language inscriptions of the Sultanate call her Jallaladina, while near-contemporary historian Minhaj calls her Sultan Raziyat al-Duniya wa'l Din bint al-Sultan[4] or Sultan Raziyat al-Duniya wa'l Din bint al-Sultan.[5] Another masculine title padshah(badshah) was also given to Razia.[6][7][8]

Early life edit

Razia was born to the Delhi Sultan Shamsuddin Iltutmish, a Turkic slave (mamluk) of his predecessor Qutb ud-Din Aibak. Razia's mother – Turkan Khatun was a daughter of Qutb ud-Din Aibak,[3][9] and the chief wife of Iltutmish.[2] Razia was the eldest daughter of Iltutmish, and probably his first-born child.[2]

Ascension to the throne edit

Iltutmish had groomed his eldest son Nasiruddin Mahmud to be his successor, but this son died unexpectedly in 1229.[10] According to historian Minhaj-i-Siraj, Iltutmish believed his other sons were absorbed in pleasurable activities, and would be incapable of managing the state affairs after his death. While leaving for his Gwalior campaign in 1231, Iltutmish left his daughter Razia as in-charge of Delhi's administration. Razia performed her duties so well that after returning to Delhi, Iltutmish decided to name her as his successor.[11] Iltutmish ordered his officer mushrif-i mamlakat Tajul Mulk Mahmud Dabir to prepare a decree naming Razia as the heir apparent.[10] When his nobles questioned this decision on the basis that he had surviving sons, Iltutmish replied that Razia was more capable than his sons.[12]

However, after Iltutmish's death, the nobles appointed his son Ruknuddin Firuz as the new king. Possibly, during his last years, Iltutmish had agreed to appoint a son as his successor. This is suggested by the fact that after becoming seriously ill, he had recalled Ruknuddin from Lahore to Delhi.[12] Another possibility is that the legend of Iltutmish nominating Razia as his successor is a false story circulated by Razia's supporters after her ascension. Minhaj is the only near-contemporary source that narrates this legend, and he did not witness the events or the alleged decree himself: he was in Gwalior at the time, and did not return to Delhi until 1238.[2]

Ruknuddin was not an able ruler, and left the control of administration to his mother Shah Turkan. The duo's blinding and execution of Iltutmish's popular son Qutubuddin, combined with Shah Turkan's high-handedness, led to rebellions by several nobles, and even the wazir (prime minister) Nizamul Mulk Junaidi joined the rebels.[13] This situation became worse, when the Turkic-origin slave officers close to Ruknuddin planned killings of the sultanate's Tazik (non-Turkic) officers. This led to the murders of several important Tazik officers, including Junaidi's son Ziyaul Mulk and Tajul Mulk Mahmud, who had drawn up the decree declaring Razia as the heir apparent.[14] While Ruknuddin marched towards Kuhram to fight the rebels, Shah Turkan planned to execute Razia in Delhi. At a congregational prayer, Razia instigated the general public against Shah Turkan. A mob then attacked the royal palace and detained Shah Turkan. Several nobles and the army pledged allegiance to Razia, and placed her on the throne,[15] making her the first female Muslim ruler in South Asia.[16] Ruknuddin marched back to Delhi, but Razia sent a force to arrest him: he was imprisoned and probably executed on 19 November 1236, having ruled for less than 7 months.[15]

Razia's ascension to the throne of Delhi was unique not only because she was a woman, but also because the support from the general public was the driving force behind her appointment. According to the 14th century text Futuh-us-Salatin, she had asked the people to depose her if she failed to meet their expectations.[4]

Opposition to ascension edit

From the very beginning of her reign, Razia faced stiff opposition from nobles of Turkic origin. She had ascended the throne with the support of the general public of Delhi rather than that of the powerful Turkic-origin provincial governors. Razia attempted to offset the power of the Turkic nobility by creating a class of non-Turkic nobles, which led to further opposition from the Turkic nobles.[17]

Nizamul Mulk Muhammad Junaidi, a 'Tazik' (non-Turkic) officer who had held the post of the wazir (prime minister) since Iltutmish's time,[18] refused to accept her ascension. He was joined by four Turkic nobles, who had also rebelled against Razia's predecessor Ruknuddin. These nobles included Malik Izzuddin Muhammad Salari of Badaun, Malik Izzuddin Kabir Khan Ayaz of Multan, Malik Saifuddin Kuchi of Hansi, and Malik Alauddin Jani of Lahore.[19] When these nobles marched against Razia from different directions, she sought help from Malik Nusratuddin Taisi, whom she had appointed as the governor of Awadh. However, shortly after crossing the Ganges on his way to Delhi, Taisi was captured by Kuchi's forces and died in captivity. [17]

Razia then led an army out of the fortified city of Delhi to fight the rebels and set up a camp on the banks of the Yamuna River. After some indecisive skirmishes, the rebel leaders Muhammad Salari and Izzuddin Kabir Khan Ayaz decided to join Razia. They secretly met with Razia, and the group planned to arrest other rebel leaders, including Junaidi. [17] However, Junaidi and other rebel leaders learned about the plan, and escaped, pursued by Razia's forces. Saifuddin Kuchi and his brother Fakhruddin were captured, imprisoned, and later executed. Junaidi fled to the Sirmaur hills and died there. Alauddin Jani was killed at the Nakawan village, and his head was later brought to Delhi. [20]

Reign edit

 
Miniature painting of Razia Sultana holding durbar with identifying inscriptions, by Gulam Ali Khan, circa 19th century.

Immediately after ascending the throne, Razia made several important appointments.[21]She appointed Khwaja Muhazzabuddin as her new wazir (prime minister), and conferred the title Nizamul Mulk upon him. Muhazzabuddin had earlier served as deputy to the previous wazir Junaidi. Razia appointed Malik Saifuddin Aibek Bahtu as the in-charge of her army, and conferred the title Qutlugh Khan upon him. However, Saifuddin died soon after, and Razia appointed Malik Qutubuddin Hasan Ghuri to the newly created office of naib-i lashkar (in-charge of the army). Razia assigned the iqta' of Lahore, formerly held by the slain rebel Alauddin Jani, to Malik Izzuddin Kabir Khan Ayaz, the rebel who had joined her.[20] Razia appointed her loyalists to imperial household positions, including Malik-i Kabir Ikhtiyaruddin Aitigin as Amir-i Hajib and Malik Jamaluddin Yaqut as Amir-i Akhur.[22]

Minhaj mentions that soon, all the nobles from Lakhnauti in the east to Debal in the west acknowledged her authority.[20] Razia's first military campaign directed at non-rebels was an invasion of Ranthambore, whose Chahamana ruler had asserted his sovereignty after Iltutmish's death. Razia directed Malik Qutubuddin Hasan Ghuri to march to Ranthambore: he was able to evacuate the Turkic nobles and officers from the fort, but was unable to subjugate the Chahamanas. The Chahamanas, in alliance with the Mewatis, captured a large part of present-day north-eastern Rajasthan, and carried out guerilla war around Delhi. Razia also sent a force to re-assert Delhi's control over Gwalior, but this campaign had to be aborted.[20]

During Razia's reign,the Shias revolted against the Sultanate, but the rebellion was suppressed.[23] In a major incident, the Shia Qarmatians carried out an attack on the Jama masjid in Delhi. The Qarmatian leader Nuruddin Turk had earlier condemned the Sunni Shafi‘i and Hanafi doctrines, and had gathered nearly 1,000 supporters from Delhi, Gujarat, Sindh, and the Doab. On 5 March 1237, he and his supporters entered the mosque, and started killing the Sunnis assembled there for the Friday prayers, before being attacked by the citizens.[24]

In 1238, Malik Hasan Qarlugh, the former Khwarazmian governor of Ghazni, faced a threat from the Mongols, and sent his son to Delhi, probably to seek a military alliance against the Mongols. Razia received the prince courteously, assigned him the revenues of Baran for his expenses, but refused to form an alliance against the Mongols.[25]

Overthrow edit

The nobles who supported Razia intended her to be a figurehead, but she increasingly asserted herself. For example, her initial coins were issued with her father's name, but by 1237–1238, she had started issuing coins solely in her own name.[26] Isami mentions that initially, she observed purdah: a screen separated her throne from the courtiers and the general public, and she was surrounded by female guards. However, later, she started appearing in public dressed in traditional male attire, wearing a cloak (qaba) and a hat (kulah). She rode on elephants through the streets of Delhi, making public appearances like the earlier Sultans.[22]

Razia's increasing assertiveness and her appointment of non-Turkic people to important posts created resentment among the Turkic nobles.[22] The post of Amir-i Akhur had previously been held by officers of Turkic origin, and Yaqut was of Abyssinian origin: therefore, Razia's Turkic officers resented this appointment.[22] Chroniclers such as Isami, Sirhindi, Badauni, Firishta, and Nizamuddin Ahmad attribute Razia's intimacy with Yaqut as a major cause of her downfall.[27]

In 1238–1239, Malik Izudin Kabir Khan Ayaz – the governor of Lahore – rebelled against Razia, and she marched against him, forcing him to flee to Sodhra. Because the area beyond Sodhra was controlled by the Mongols, and because Razia continued to pursue him, Izzuddin was forced to surrender and accept Razia's authority once again. Razia treated him leniently; she took away the iqta of Lahore from him, but assigned him the iqta of Multan, which Iltutmish had assigned to Ikhtiyaruddin Qaraqash Khan Aitigin.[28]

Razia had recalled Ikhtiyaruddin Aitigin, a Turkic slave purchased by Iltutmish, to her court in Delhi, and made him Amir-i Hajib. She had also bestowed favours upon another slave of Iltutmish – Ikhtiyaruddin Altunia, by assigning him first the iqta of Baran, and then, the iqta of Tabarhinda. However, these two officers conspired with other Turkic officers to overthrow her, while she was away on the Lahore campaign.[29] Razia arrived in Delhi on 3 April 1240, and learned that Altunia had rebelled against her in Tabarhinda. Unaware that other nobles in Delhi had joined Altunia in conspiring against her, Razia marched towards Tabarhinda ten days later. At Tabarhinda, the rebel forces killed her loyalist Yaqut, and imprisoned her.[30]

According to Minhaj, Razia ruled for 3 years, 6 months, and 6 days.[24]

Alliance with Altunia and death edit

When the news of Razia's arrest reached Delhi, the rebel nobles there appointed Muizuddin Bahram – a son of Iltutmish – on the throne.[30] He formally ascended the throne on 21 April 1240, and the nobles pledged allegiance to him on 5 May 1240.[31] The nobles expected the new king to be a figurehead, and intended to control the affairs of the state through the newly created office of naib-i mamlakat (equivalent to regent), which was assigned to Ikhtiyaruddin Aitigin. However, the new king had Ikhtiyaruddin Aitigin assassinated within 1–2 months.[32]

After deposing Razia, the nobles at Delhi had distributed important offices and iqtas among themselves, ignoring claims of Ikhtiyaruddin Altunia, who had arrested Razia at Tabarhinda. After Aitigin's death, Altunia lost all hope of realizing any benefits from Razia's overthrow, and decided to ally with her. Razia also saw this as an opportunity to win back the throne, and married Altunia in September 1240. The two were supported by some other disgruntled Turkic nobles, including Malik Qaraqash and Malik Salari.[30]

Altunia assembled an army, which according to Abdul Malik Isami, included Khokhars, Jats, and Rajputs. In September–October 1240, Sultan Muizuddin Bahram led an army against the forces of Altunia and Razia, and defeated them on 14 October 1240. Altunia and Razia were forced to retreat to Kaithal, where they were deserted by their soldiers, and were killed by a group of Hindus. Razia was killed on 15 October 1240. [33][30][34]

She remains the only woman to have sat upon the throne of Delhi.[35]

Tomb edit

 
Graves of Razia and her sister

The grave of Razia is located at Mohalla Bulbuli Khana near Turkman Gate in Old Delhi.[36] The 14th century traveler Ibn Batuta mentions that Razia's tomb had become a pilgrimage centre:[2] A dome had been built over it, and people sought blessings from it.[3]

Razia's grave is said to have been built by her successor and half-brother Bahram. Another grave, said to be of her sister Shazia, is located beside her grave. Razia was a devotee of the Sufi saint Shah Turkman Bayabani, and the place where she is buried is said to be his hospice (khanqah).[37][page needed]

Today, the site is largely neglected: the Archaeological Survey of India performs annual maintenance to it, but has been unable to beautify it further because it is surrounded by illegal construction, and is approachable only through a narrow, congested lane. In the late 20th century, the local residents constructed a mosque near it.[36]

A ruined building in Kaithal is purported to be the site of Razia's original grave.[38][39]

Coins edit

Coins of Razia are found in silver and billon; one gold coin of Bengal style is also known. Silver Tankas were issued from both Bengal (Lakhnauti) and Delhi. Initially she issued coins from Delhi in the name of her father Iltumish citing the title Nasrat i.e. female title of Nasir.[40]

In popular culture edit

Films

Television

References edit

  1. ^ Smithsonian "TIMELINES OF EVERYONE" (1st ed.). U.S. U.K.: DK. 2020. p. 63. ISBN 9781465499967.
  2. ^ a b c d e Peter Jackson 2003, p. 46.
  3. ^ a b c Guida M. Jackson 1999, p. 341.
  4. ^ a b K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 237.
  5. ^ Minhaj-i-Siraj, Abu-'Umar-i-'Usman (1873). The Tabakat-i-Nasiri. Translated by Major H. G. Raverty. London: Asiatic Society of Bengal. p. 637.
  6. ^ Harwood, Philip, ed. (25 March 1876). "The Queen's Indian Title". Saturday Review: Politics, Literature, Science and Art. 41 (1, 065). Published at the Office, Southampton Street, Strand: 397 – via the Internet Archive. In the thirteenth century a woman, the celebrated Queen Raziya, ascended the throne of Delhi and reigned for the brief space of four years. She bore the title of Sultan and was sometimes called Badshah.
  7. ^ A. V. Williams Jackson, ed. (1907). "Raziya, The Mohammedan Empress of India". History of India. Vol. 5. Grolier Society. p. 104. It will be noted that Minhaj always speaks of the queen as "Sultan," since this title, or that of Padshah, "king," was given to her,
  8. ^ Henry Miers Elliot. John Dowson (ed.). The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians. Vol. 2. p. 332. The queen is always called "Sultán" and "Bádsháh," not Sultána, as by Briggs and Elphinstone.
  9. ^ Sudha Sharma 2016, p. 141 quote:"But as per Abu-Umar-i-Usman Minhaj-ud-din Siraj (Tabaqat-iNasiri), Turkan Khatun was the name of Razia's mother and not of this lady [Shah Turkan]."
  10. ^ a b K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 230.
  11. ^ K. A. Nizami 1992, pp. 230–231.
  12. ^ a b K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 231.
  13. ^ K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 235.
  14. ^ K. A. Nizami 1992, pp. 235–236.
  15. ^ a b K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 236.
  16. ^ Muzaffar Husain Syed 2011, p. 231.
  17. ^ a b c K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 238.
  18. ^ K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 225.
  19. ^ K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 235, 238.
  20. ^ a b c d K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 239.
  21. ^ K. A. Nizami 1992, pp. 239–240.
  22. ^ a b c d K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 240.
  23. ^ Guida M. Jackson 1999, p. 342.
  24. ^ a b K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 243.
  25. ^ K. A. Nizami 1992, pp. 243–244.
  26. ^ Peter Jackson 2003, p. 47.
  27. ^ Sudha Sharma 2016, p. 141.
  28. ^ K. A. Nizami 1992, pp. 240–241.
  29. ^ K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 241.
  30. ^ a b c d K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 242.
  31. ^ K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 244.
  32. ^ K. A. Nizami 1992, pp. 242–244.
  33. ^ Lyons 2022.
  34. ^ Gabbay, Alyssa (1 January 2011). "In Reality a Man: Sultan Iltutmish, His Daughter, Raziya, and Gender Ambiguity in Thirteenth Century Northern India" (PDF). Journal of Persianate Studies. 4 (1). Brill Publishers: 48. doi:10.1163/187471611X568285. eISSN 1874-7167. ISSN 1874-7094. LCCN 2008236337. Retrieved 11 July 2021 – via UNCG University Libraries. The troops accompanying the couple abandoned them, and both Raziya and her husband were killed near Kaithal on 25 Rabiʿ I 638/14 October 1240.
  35. ^ Srivastava, Ashirbadi Lal (1964). The Sultanate of Delhi (711-1526 A.D.) 4th edition. Agra: Shiva Lal Agarwala & Co. (P.) Ltd. pp. 105–106.
  36. ^ a b Syed Abdullah Zaini (9 August 2013). "A forgotten tomb".
  37. ^ Rana Safvi, The Forgotten Cities of Delhi. Quote: "The lanes leading to her tomb are very confusing and one has to ask for directions at Bhojala Pahari. There is an ASI board which leads into Bulbuli Khana. At the end of some narrow, dingy lanes is another stone sign by ASI, which announces the last resting place of South Asia's first female monarch."
  38. ^ "Tomb of Razia Sultan". Haryana Tourism. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  39. ^ Sukhbir Siwach (13 June 2014). "Kaithal farmer stands in way of Razia Sultan memorial | Chandigarh News - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
  40. ^ Stan Goron; J. P. Goenka (2001). The Coins of the Indian Sultanates. Munshiram Manoharlal. p. 26. ISBN 9788121510103.
  41. ^ Rajadhyaksha, Ashish; Willemen, Paul (1999). Encyclopaedia of Indian cinema. British Film Institute. ISBN 9780851706696. Retrieved 12 August 2012.
  42. ^ "Rachel Gill as Razia Sultana? The model has big shoes to fill in her debut film". Images by Dawn. 5 October 2016. Retrieved 15 April 2023.
  43. ^ PTI (4 February 2015). "TV show about women emperor Razia Sultan launched". Indian Express. Retrieved 18 January 2020.

Bibliography edit

  • Guida M. Jackson, ed. (1999). Women Rulers Throughout the Ages: An Illustrated Guide. ABC-Clio. p. 341. ISBN 978-1-57607-091-8.
  • Peter Jackson (2003). The Delhi Sultanate: A Political and Military History. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-54329-3.
  • Lyons, Mathew (2022). "Death of Sultan Razia". History Today. 72 (10): 26.
  • K. A. Nizami (1992). "The Early Turkish Sultans of Delhi". In Mohammad Habib; Khaliq Ahmad Nizami (eds.). A Comprehensive History of India: The Delhi Sultanat (A.D. 1206-1526). Vol. 5 (Second ed.). The Indian History Congress / People's Publishing House. OCLC 31870180.
  • Sudha Sharma (2016). The Status of Muslim Women in Medieval India. Sage. ISBN 978-93-5150-565-5.
  • Muzaffar Husain Syed, ed. (2011). Concise History of Islam. Vij Books. ISBN 978-93-82573-47-0.

External links edit

  • Project Continua: Biography of Sultan Raziyya bint Iltutmish

razia, sultana, other, uses, disambiguation, raziyyat, dunya, persian, سلطان, رضیه, الدنیا, والدین, 1205, october, 1240, 1236, 1240, popularly, known, ruler, delhi, sultanate, northern, part, indian, subcontinent, first, female, muslim, ruler, subcontinent, on. For other uses see Razia Sultana disambiguation Raziyyat Ud Dunya Wa Ud Din Persian سلطان رضیه الدنیا والدین c 1205 15 October 1240 r 1236 1240 popularly known as Razia Sultana was a ruler of the Delhi Sultanate in the northern part of the Indian subcontinent She was the first female Muslim ruler of the subcontinent and the only female Muslim ruler of Delhi Razia SultanaSultana PadshahEquestrian miniature painting of Razia Sultana circa 18th century5th Sultan of DelhiReign19 November 1236 20 April 1240PredecessorRuknuddin FiruzSuccessorMuizuddin BahramBornc 1205 1 Died15 October 1240Kaithal Delhi SultanateBurialBulbuli Khana near Turkman Gate DelhiSpouseIkhtiyaruddin Altunia m 1240 wbr NamesRaziyyat Ud Dunya Wa Ud DinRegnal nameJalalat ud Din RaziaHouseMamluk dynastyFatherIltutmishMotherTurkan KhatunReligionSunni Islam A daughter of Mamluk Sultan Shamsuddin Iltutmish Razia administered Delhi during 1231 1232 when her father was busy in the Gwalior campaign According to a possibly apocryphal legend impressed by her performance during this period Iltutmish nominated Razia as his heir apparent after returning to Delhi Iltutmish was succeeded by Razia s half brother Ruknuddin Firuz whose mother Shah Turkan planned to execute her During a rebellion against Ruknuddin Razia instigated the general public against Shah Turkan and ascended the throne after Ruknuddin was deposed in 1236 Razia s ascension was challenged by a section of nobles some of whom ultimately joined her while the others were defeated The Turkic nobles who supported her expected her to be a figurehead but she increasingly asserted her power This combined with her appointments of non Turkic officers to important posts led to their resentment against her She was deposed by a group of nobles in April 1240 after having ruled for less than four years She married one of the rebels Ikhtiyaruddin Altunia and attempted to regain the throne but was defeated by her half brother and successor Muizuddin Bahram in October that year and was killed shortly after Contents 1 Names and titles 2 Early life 3 Ascension to the throne 4 Opposition to ascension 5 Reign 6 Overthrow 7 Alliance with Altunia and death 8 Tomb 9 Coins 10 In popular culture 11 References 11 1 Bibliography 12 External linksNames and titles editRazia s name is also transliterated as Raḍiyya 2 or Raziyya 3 The term Sultana used by some modern writers is a misnomer as it means the king s wife rather than female ruler Razia s own coins call her Sultan Jalalat al Duniya wal Din or as al Sultan al Muazzam Raziyat al Din bint al Sultan The Sanskrit language inscriptions of the Sultanate call her Jallaladina while near contemporary historian Minhaj calls her Sultan Raziyat al Duniya wa l Din bint al Sultan 4 or Sultan Raziyat al Duniya wa l Din bint al Sultan 5 Another masculine title padshah badshah was also given to Razia 6 7 8 Early life editRazia was born to the Delhi Sultan Shamsuddin Iltutmish a Turkic slave mamluk of his predecessor Qutb ud Din Aibak Razia s mother Turkan Khatun was a daughter of Qutb ud Din Aibak 3 9 and the chief wife of Iltutmish 2 Razia was the eldest daughter of Iltutmish and probably his first born child 2 Ascension to the throne editIltutmish had groomed his eldest son Nasiruddin Mahmud to be his successor but this son died unexpectedly in 1229 10 According to historian Minhaj i Siraj Iltutmish believed his other sons were absorbed in pleasurable activities and would be incapable of managing the state affairs after his death While leaving for his Gwalior campaign in 1231 Iltutmish left his daughter Razia as in charge of Delhi s administration Razia performed her duties so well that after returning to Delhi Iltutmish decided to name her as his successor 11 Iltutmish ordered his officer mushrif i mamlakat Tajul Mulk Mahmud Dabir to prepare a decree naming Razia as the heir apparent 10 When his nobles questioned this decision on the basis that he had surviving sons Iltutmish replied that Razia was more capable than his sons 12 However after Iltutmish s death the nobles appointed his son Ruknuddin Firuz as the new king Possibly during his last years Iltutmish had agreed to appoint a son as his successor This is suggested by the fact that after becoming seriously ill he had recalled Ruknuddin from Lahore to Delhi 12 Another possibility is that the legend of Iltutmish nominating Razia as his successor is a false story circulated by Razia s supporters after her ascension Minhaj is the only near contemporary source that narrates this legend and he did not witness the events or the alleged decree himself he was in Gwalior at the time and did not return to Delhi until 1238 2 Ruknuddin was not an able ruler and left the control of administration to his mother Shah Turkan The duo s blinding and execution of Iltutmish s popular son Qutubuddin combined with Shah Turkan s high handedness led to rebellions by several nobles and even the wazir prime minister Nizamul Mulk Junaidi joined the rebels 13 This situation became worse when the Turkic origin slave officers close to Ruknuddin planned killings of the sultanate s Tazik non Turkic officers This led to the murders of several important Tazik officers including Junaidi s son Ziyaul Mulk and Tajul Mulk Mahmud who had drawn up the decree declaring Razia as the heir apparent 14 While Ruknuddin marched towards Kuhram to fight the rebels Shah Turkan planned to execute Razia in Delhi At a congregational prayer Razia instigated the general public against Shah Turkan A mob then attacked the royal palace and detained Shah Turkan Several nobles and the army pledged allegiance to Razia and placed her on the throne 15 making her the first female Muslim ruler in South Asia 16 Ruknuddin marched back to Delhi but Razia sent a force to arrest him he was imprisoned and probably executed on 19 November 1236 having ruled for less than 7 months 15 Razia s ascension to the throne of Delhi was unique not only because she was a woman but also because the support from the general public was the driving force behind her appointment According to the 14th century text Futuh us Salatin she had asked the people to depose her if she failed to meet their expectations 4 Opposition to ascension editFrom the very beginning of her reign Razia faced stiff opposition from nobles of Turkic origin She had ascended the throne with the support of the general public of Delhi rather than that of the powerful Turkic origin provincial governors Razia attempted to offset the power of the Turkic nobility by creating a class of non Turkic nobles which led to further opposition from the Turkic nobles 17 Nizamul Mulk Muhammad Junaidi a Tazik non Turkic officer who had held the post of the wazir prime minister since Iltutmish s time 18 refused to accept her ascension He was joined by four Turkic nobles who had also rebelled against Razia s predecessor Ruknuddin These nobles included Malik Izzuddin Muhammad Salari of Badaun Malik Izzuddin Kabir Khan Ayaz of Multan Malik Saifuddin Kuchi of Hansi and Malik Alauddin Jani of Lahore 19 When these nobles marched against Razia from different directions she sought help from Malik Nusratuddin Taisi whom she had appointed as the governor of Awadh However shortly after crossing the Ganges on his way to Delhi Taisi was captured by Kuchi s forces and died in captivity 17 Razia then led an army out of the fortified city of Delhi to fight the rebels and set up a camp on the banks of the Yamuna River After some indecisive skirmishes the rebel leaders Muhammad Salari and Izzuddin Kabir Khan Ayaz decided to join Razia They secretly met with Razia and the group planned to arrest other rebel leaders including Junaidi 17 However Junaidi and other rebel leaders learned about the plan and escaped pursued by Razia s forces Saifuddin Kuchi and his brother Fakhruddin were captured imprisoned and later executed Junaidi fled to the Sirmaur hills and died there Alauddin Jani was killed at the Nakawan village and his head was later brought to Delhi 20 Reign edit nbsp Miniature painting of Razia Sultana holding durbar with identifying inscriptions by Gulam Ali Khan circa 19th century Immediately after ascending the throne Razia made several important appointments 21 She appointed Khwaja Muhazzabuddin as her new wazir prime minister and conferred the title Nizamul Mulk upon him Muhazzabuddin had earlier served as deputy to the previous wazir Junaidi Razia appointed Malik Saifuddin Aibek Bahtu as the in charge of her army and conferred the title Qutlugh Khan upon him However Saifuddin died soon after and Razia appointed Malik Qutubuddin Hasan Ghuri to the newly created office of naib i lashkar in charge of the army Razia assigned the iqta of Lahore formerly held by the slain rebel Alauddin Jani to Malik Izzuddin Kabir Khan Ayaz the rebel who had joined her 20 Razia appointed her loyalists to imperial household positions including Malik i Kabir Ikhtiyaruddin Aitigin as Amir i Hajib and Malik Jamaluddin Yaqut as Amir i Akhur 22 Minhaj mentions that soon all the nobles from Lakhnauti in the east to Debal in the west acknowledged her authority 20 Razia s first military campaign directed at non rebels was an invasion of Ranthambore whose Chahamana ruler had asserted his sovereignty after Iltutmish s death Razia directed Malik Qutubuddin Hasan Ghuri to march to Ranthambore he was able to evacuate the Turkic nobles and officers from the fort but was unable to subjugate the Chahamanas The Chahamanas in alliance with the Mewatis captured a large part of present day north eastern Rajasthan and carried out guerilla war around Delhi Razia also sent a force to re assert Delhi s control over Gwalior but this campaign had to be aborted 20 During Razia s reign the Shias revolted against the Sultanate but the rebellion was suppressed 23 In a major incident the Shia Qarmatians carried out an attack on the Jama masjid in Delhi The Qarmatian leader Nuruddin Turk had earlier condemned the Sunni Shafi i and Hanafi doctrines and had gathered nearly 1 000 supporters from Delhi Gujarat Sindh and the Doab On 5 March 1237 he and his supporters entered the mosque and started killing the Sunnis assembled there for the Friday prayers before being attacked by the citizens 24 In 1238 Malik Hasan Qarlugh the former Khwarazmian governor of Ghazni faced a threat from the Mongols and sent his son to Delhi probably to seek a military alliance against the Mongols Razia received the prince courteously assigned him the revenues of Baran for his expenses but refused to form an alliance against the Mongols 25 Overthrow editThe nobles who supported Razia intended her to be a figurehead but she increasingly asserted herself For example her initial coins were issued with her father s name but by 1237 1238 she had started issuing coins solely in her own name 26 Isami mentions that initially she observed purdah a screen separated her throne from the courtiers and the general public and she was surrounded by female guards However later she started appearing in public dressed in traditional male attire wearing a cloak qaba and a hat kulah She rode on elephants through the streets of Delhi making public appearances like the earlier Sultans 22 Razia s increasing assertiveness and her appointment of non Turkic people to important posts created resentment among the Turkic nobles 22 The post of Amir i Akhur had previously been held by officers of Turkic origin and Yaqut was of Abyssinian origin therefore Razia s Turkic officers resented this appointment 22 Chroniclers such as Isami Sirhindi Badauni Firishta and Nizamuddin Ahmad attribute Razia s intimacy with Yaqut as a major cause of her downfall 27 In 1238 1239 Malik Izudin Kabir Khan Ayaz the governor of Lahore rebelled against Razia and she marched against him forcing him to flee to Sodhra Because the area beyond Sodhra was controlled by the Mongols and because Razia continued to pursue him Izzuddin was forced to surrender and accept Razia s authority once again Razia treated him leniently she took away the iqta of Lahore from him but assigned him the iqta of Multan which Iltutmish had assigned to Ikhtiyaruddin Qaraqash Khan Aitigin 28 Razia had recalled Ikhtiyaruddin Aitigin a Turkic slave purchased by Iltutmish to her court in Delhi and made him Amir i Hajib She had also bestowed favours upon another slave of Iltutmish Ikhtiyaruddin Altunia by assigning him first the iqta of Baran and then the iqta of Tabarhinda However these two officers conspired with other Turkic officers to overthrow her while she was away on the Lahore campaign 29 Razia arrived in Delhi on 3 April 1240 and learned that Altunia had rebelled against her in Tabarhinda Unaware that other nobles in Delhi had joined Altunia in conspiring against her Razia marched towards Tabarhinda ten days later At Tabarhinda the rebel forces killed her loyalist Yaqut and imprisoned her 30 According to Minhaj Razia ruled for 3 years 6 months and 6 days 24 Alliance with Altunia and death editWhen the news of Razia s arrest reached Delhi the rebel nobles there appointed Muizuddin Bahram a son of Iltutmish on the throne 30 He formally ascended the throne on 21 April 1240 and the nobles pledged allegiance to him on 5 May 1240 31 The nobles expected the new king to be a figurehead and intended to control the affairs of the state through the newly created office of naib i mamlakat equivalent to regent which was assigned to Ikhtiyaruddin Aitigin However the new king had Ikhtiyaruddin Aitigin assassinated within 1 2 months 32 After deposing Razia the nobles at Delhi had distributed important offices and iqtas among themselves ignoring claims of Ikhtiyaruddin Altunia who had arrested Razia at Tabarhinda After Aitigin s death Altunia lost all hope of realizing any benefits from Razia s overthrow and decided to ally with her Razia also saw this as an opportunity to win back the throne and married Altunia in September 1240 The two were supported by some other disgruntled Turkic nobles including Malik Qaraqash and Malik Salari 30 Altunia assembled an army which according to Abdul Malik Isami included Khokhars Jats and Rajputs In September October 1240 Sultan Muizuddin Bahram led an army against the forces of Altunia and Razia and defeated them on 14 October 1240 Altunia and Razia were forced to retreat to Kaithal where they were deserted by their soldiers and were killed by a group of Hindus Razia was killed on 15 October 1240 33 30 34 She remains the only woman to have sat upon the throne of Delhi 35 Tomb edit nbsp Graves of Razia and her sister The grave of Razia is located at Mohalla Bulbuli Khana near Turkman Gate in Old Delhi 36 The 14th century traveler Ibn Batuta mentions that Razia s tomb had become a pilgrimage centre 2 A dome had been built over it and people sought blessings from it 3 Razia s grave is said to have been built by her successor and half brother Bahram Another grave said to be of her sister Shazia is located beside her grave Razia was a devotee of the Sufi saint Shah Turkman Bayabani and the place where she is buried is said to be his hospice khanqah 37 page needed Today the site is largely neglected the Archaeological Survey of India performs annual maintenance to it but has been unable to beautify it further because it is surrounded by illegal construction and is approachable only through a narrow congested lane In the late 20th century the local residents constructed a mosque near it 36 A ruined building in Kaithal is purported to be the site of Razia s original grave 38 39 Coins editCoins of Razia are found in silver and billon one gold coin of Bengal style is also known Silver Tankas were issued from both Bengal Lakhnauti and Delhi Initially she issued coins from Delhi in the name of her father Iltumish citing the title Nasrat i e female title of Nasir 40 Razia s jaital s Billon coins nbsp Budayun Type nbsp Delhi Type nbsp Delhi Type nbsp Billon jital coin of RaziaIn popular culture editFilms Razia Begum 1924 was an Indian silent film by Nanubhai B Desai and Bhagwati Prasad Mishra Devendra Goel directed Razia Sultana a 1961 Indian Hindi language film which starred Nirupa Roy in the titular role A notable portrayal was by Hema Malini in the 1983 biopic Razia Sultan by Kamal Amrohi 41 Rachel Gill portrayed a character of the same name inspired by the empress in 2016 Pakistani film Saya e Khuda e Zuljalal 42 Television In 2015 amp TV aired Razia Sultan a TV series on the life of Razia starring Pankhuri Awasthy as Razia and Rohit Purohit as Altunia 43 References edit Smithsonian TIMELINES OF EVERYONE 1st ed U S U K DK 2020 p 63 ISBN 9781465499967 a b c d e Peter Jackson 2003 p 46 a b c Guida M Jackson 1999 p 341 a b K A Nizami 1992 p 237 Minhaj i Siraj Abu Umar i Usman 1873 The Tabakat i Nasiri Translated by Major H G Raverty London Asiatic Society of Bengal p 637 Harwood Philip ed 25 March 1876 The Queen s Indian Title Saturday Review Politics Literature Science and Art 41 1 065 Published at the Office Southampton Street Strand 397 via the Internet Archive In the thirteenth century a woman the celebrated Queen Raziya ascended the throne of Delhi and reigned for the brief space of four years She bore the title of Sultan and was sometimes called Badshah A V Williams Jackson ed 1907 Raziya The Mohammedan Empress of India History of India Vol 5 Grolier Society p 104 It will be noted that Minhaj always speaks of the queen as Sultan since this title or that of Padshah king was given to her Henry Miers Elliot John Dowson ed The History of India as Told by Its Own Historians Vol 2 p 332 The queen is always called Sultan and Badshah not Sultana as by Briggs and Elphinstone Sudha Sharma 2016 p 141 quote But as per Abu Umar i Usman Minhaj ud din Siraj Tabaqat iNasiri Turkan Khatun was the name of Razia s mother and not of this lady Shah Turkan a b K A Nizami 1992 p 230 K A Nizami 1992 pp 230 231 a b K A Nizami 1992 p 231 K A Nizami 1992 p 235 K A Nizami 1992 pp 235 236 a b K A Nizami 1992 p 236 Muzaffar Husain Syed 2011 p 231 a b c K A Nizami 1992 p 238 K A Nizami 1992 p 225 K A Nizami 1992 p 235 238 a b c d K A Nizami 1992 p 239 K A Nizami 1992 pp 239 240 a b c d K A Nizami 1992 p 240 Guida M Jackson 1999 p 342 a b K A Nizami 1992 p 243 K A Nizami 1992 pp 243 244 Peter Jackson 2003 p 47 Sudha Sharma 2016 p 141 K A Nizami 1992 pp 240 241 K A Nizami 1992 p 241 a b c d K A Nizami 1992 p 242 K A Nizami 1992 p 244 K A Nizami 1992 pp 242 244 Lyons 2022 Gabbay Alyssa 1 January 2011 In Reality a Man Sultan Iltutmish His Daughter Raziya and Gender Ambiguity in Thirteenth Century Northern India PDF Journal of Persianate Studies 4 1 Brill Publishers 48 doi 10 1163 187471611X568285 eISSN 1874 7167 ISSN 1874 7094 LCCN 2008236337 Retrieved 11 July 2021 via UNCG University Libraries The troops accompanying the couple abandoned them and both Raziya and her husband were killed near Kaithal on 25 Rabiʿ I 638 14 October 1240 Srivastava Ashirbadi Lal 1964 The Sultanate of Delhi 711 1526 A D 4th edition Agra Shiva Lal Agarwala amp Co P Ltd pp 105 106 a b Syed Abdullah Zaini 9 August 2013 A forgotten tomb Rana Safvi The Forgotten Cities of Delhi Quote The lanes leading to her tomb are very confusing and one has to ask for directions at Bhojala Pahari There is an ASI board which leads into Bulbuli Khana At the end of some narrow dingy lanes is another stone sign by ASI which announces the last resting place of South Asia s first female monarch Tomb of Razia Sultan Haryana Tourism Retrieved 10 January 2020 Sukhbir Siwach 13 June 2014 Kaithal farmer stands in way of Razia Sultan memorial Chandigarh News Times of India The Times of India Retrieved 26 April 2022 Stan Goron J P Goenka 2001 The Coins of the Indian Sultanates Munshiram Manoharlal p 26 ISBN 9788121510103 Rajadhyaksha Ashish Willemen Paul 1999 Encyclopaedia of Indian cinema British Film Institute ISBN 9780851706696 Retrieved 12 August 2012 Rachel Gill as Razia Sultana The model has big shoes to fill in her debut film Images by Dawn 5 October 2016 Retrieved 15 April 2023 PTI 4 February 2015 TV show about women emperor Razia Sultan launched Indian Express Retrieved 18 January 2020 Bibliography edit Guida M Jackson ed 1999 Women Rulers Throughout the Ages An Illustrated Guide ABC Clio p 341 ISBN 978 1 57607 091 8 Peter Jackson 2003 The Delhi Sultanate A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 54329 3 Lyons Mathew 2022 Death of Sultan Razia History Today 72 10 26 K A Nizami 1992 The Early Turkish Sultans of Delhi In Mohammad Habib Khaliq Ahmad Nizami eds A Comprehensive History of India The Delhi Sultanat A D 1206 1526 Vol 5 Second ed The Indian History Congress People s Publishing House OCLC 31870180 Sudha Sharma 2016 The Status of Muslim Women in Medieval India Sage ISBN 978 93 5150 565 5 Muzaffar Husain Syed ed 2011 Concise History of Islam Vij Books ISBN 978 93 82573 47 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Razia Sultana Project Continua Biography of Sultan Raziyya bint Iltutmish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Razia Sultana amp oldid 1221771139, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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