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Shah Shuja (Mughal prince)

Mirza Shah Shuja (Persian: میرزا شاه شجاع) (23 June 1616 – 7 February 1661)[1] was the second son of the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan and Empress Mumtaz Mahal. He was the governor of Bengal and Odisha and had his capital at Dhaka, in present day Bangladesh.

Shah Shuja
شاه شجاع
Shahzada of Mughal Empire
Painting of Shah Shuja, by Balchand Circa 1640
Born(1616-06-23)23 June 1616
Ajmer
Died7 February 1661(1661-02-07) (aged 44)
Spouse
  • Bilqis Banu Begum
    (m. 1633; d. 1634)
  • Piari Banu Begum
  • Daughter of Raja Tamsen of Kishtwar
Issue
  • Dilpazir Banu Begum
  • Zain-ud-Din Mirza
  • Zain-ul-Abidin Mirza
  • Buland Akhtar Mirza
  • Gulrukh Banu Begum
  • Roshan Ara Begum
  • Amina Banu Begum
House House of Babur
Dynasty Timurid dynasty
FatherShah Jahan
MotherMumtaz Mahal
ReligionSunni Islam

Early life and family

 
Shah Shuja in his childhood, 1650

Shah Shuja was born on 23 June 1616, in Ajmer. He was the second son and fourth child of the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan and his queen Mumtaz Mahal. Shah Jahan's step-mother, empress Nur Jahan adopted Prince Shah Shuja upon his birth. 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, emperor Jahangir.[2]

Shuja's siblings were the eldest sister Jahanara Begum, Dara Shikoh, Roshanara Begum, Aurangzeb, Murad Baksh, Gauhara Begum and others. He had three sons - Sultan Zain-ul-Din (Bon Sultan or Sultan Bang), Buland Akhtar and Zainul Abidin; and four daughters - Gulrukh Banu, Roshanara Begum and Amina Begum.[3][verification needed]

Personal life

Shah Shuja first married Bilqis Banu Begum, the daughter of Rustam Mirza (son of Murad Mirza & grandson of Akbar), on the night of Saturday, 5 March 1633. The marriage was arranged by Princess Jahanara Begum. Rupees 1,60,000 in cash and goods worth one lakh were sent as sachak to the mansion of Mirza Rustam. On 23 February 1633, the wedding presents worth Rupees 10 lakhs were displayed by Jahanara Begum and Sati-un-nissa Khanum.[4] The following year, she gave birth to a daughter and died in childbirth. She was buried in a separate mausoleum named Kharbuza Mahal, at Burhanpur.[5] Her daughter was named Dilpazir Banu Begum by Shah Jahan,[6]  who died as an infant.

 
Shuja, Mughal prince

On the death of his first wife, he married Piari Banu Begum,[7] daughter of Azam Khan, the second governor of Bengal during Shah Jahan's reign.[8][9] She was the mother of two sons and three daughters,[10] namely, Prince Zain-ud-din Mirza, born on 28 October 1639; Prince Zain-ul-Abidin Mirza, born on 20 December 1645; Gulrukh Banu Begum (wife of Prince Muhammad Sultan), Raushan Ara Begum and Amina Banu Begum.[11] In 1660, she fled to Arakan with her husband, sons and daughters. Shuja was murdered in 1661. His sons were put to death. Piari Banu Begum and two of her daughters committed suicide. The remaining daughter, Amina Banu Begum, was brought to the palace, where, from grief, she died an early death.[12][13] According to another source, one of Shuja's daughters was married to King Sanda Thudhamma. A year later, he scented a plot and starved all of them to death, while his wife was in an advanced stage of pregnancy by himself.[14]

 
Prince Shah-Shuja’s barat wedding procession arriving at the Agra Fort on 4 March 1633. He is accompanied by his brothers princes Aurangzeb and Murad Baksh.

His third wife was the daughter of Raja Tamsen of Kishtwar.[15] She was the mother of Shahzada Buland Akhtar, who was born in August 1645.[16]

Governor of Bengal

Shazada Muhammad Shah Shuja was appointed by Shah Jahan as the Subahdar of Bengal and Bihar from 1641 and of Orissa from 25 July 1648 until 1661. His father, Shah Jahan, appointed as his deputy, the Rajput prince of Nagpur, Kunwar Raghav Singh (1616-1671).[1] During his governorship, he built the official residence, Bara Katra, in the capital Dhaka.[17]

After the illness of Shah Jahan in September 1657, a power crisis occurred among the brothers. Shah Shuja proclaimed himself as Emperor, but Aurangzeb ascended the throne of Dehli and sent Mir Jumla to subjugate Shuja.[18] Shuja was defeated in the Battle of Khajwa on 5 January 1659.[1] He retreated, first to Tanda and then to Dhaka, on 12 April 1660.[1] He left Dhaka on 6 May and boarded ships near present-day Bhulua on 12 May heading to Arakan.[1] Mir Jumla reached Dhaka on 9 May 1660 and was then appointed by Aurangzeb as the next Subahdar of Bengal.[18]

Construction projects in Dhaka

Mughal war of succession

 
The Mughal armies of Aurangzeb and Shah Shuja confront each other.

When Shah Jahan fell ill, a struggle for the throne started among his four sons - Dara Shikoh, Shah Shuja, Aurangzeb and Murad Baksh. Shuja immediately crowned himself the emperor and took the imperial titles in November 1657. Out of the 22 nobles in the service of the prince Shah Shuja, 10 were Barha Sayyids.[19] Indian Shi'as were his staunchest adherents.[20]

He marched with a large army, backed by a good number of war-boats in the river Ganges. However, he was beaten by Dara's army in the hotly contested Battle of Bahadurpur, near Banares (in modern Uttar Pradesh, India). Shuja turned back to Rajmahal to make further preparations. He signed a treaty with his elder brother, Dara, which left him in control of Bengal, Orissa and a large part of Bihar, on 17 May 1658.

In the meantime, Aurangzeb defeated Dara twice (at Dharmat and Samugarh), caught him, executed him on a charge of heresy and ascended the throne. Shuja marched to the capital again, this time against Aurangzeb. A battle took place on 5 January 1659 at the Battle of Khajwa (Fatehpur district, Uttar Pradesh, India), where Shuja was defeated.[21]

 
Sayyid from Saadat-e Barah

After his defeat, Shuja retreated towards Bengal. He was pursued by the imperial army under Mir Jumla. Shuja put up a good fight against them. However, he was finally defeated in the last battle in April 1660. After each defeat, he had to face desertions in his own army, but he did not lose heart. Rather, he reorganised the army with renewed vigor. But when he was surrounded at Tanda and found that reorganisation of the army was no longer possible, he decided to leave Bengal for good and take shelter in Arakan.

Military promotions

  • 1636 - 5000(20)
  • 1641 - 30,000(25)
  • 1646 - 36,000(30)
  • 1653 - 40,000(37)
  • 1655 - 43,000(39)

Asylum in Arakan

En route to Arakan

 
A painting from circa 1637 shows the brothers (left to right) Shuja, Aurangzeb and Murad Baksh in their younger years

Shuja left Tanda with his family and retinue in the afternoon of 6 April 1660 and reached Dhaka on 12 April. After staying for a month, they departed from the city and boarded Arakanese ships on 12 May at Bhulua (near present-day Noakhali, Bangladesh). The party first arrived at Chittagong and remained for some time. From here, they took the land route to Arakan, which is still called Shuja Road. Thousands of palanquins were used to carry Shuja's harem and he performed Eid prayers at an Eidgah in Dulahzara.[22]

Death and aftermath

Shuja and his entourage arrived in Arakan on 26 August 1660,[23] and were greeted at the capital, Mrauk U, with courtesy. The Arakanese king, the powerful Sanda Thudhamma, had previously agreed to provide ships for Shuja and his family to travel to Mecca, where the prince had planned to spend the remainder of his life. The half dozen camel-loads of gold and jewels that the Mughal royals had brought with them was beyond anything that had previously been seen in Arakan.[24]

After eight months and numerous excuses, Sanda Thudhamma's promise of ships did not materialise. Finally, the latter demanded the hand of Shuja's daughter in marriage, which the prince refused. Sanda Thudhamma responded by ordering the Mughals to leave within three days. Unable to move and being refused provisions at the bazaars, Shuja resolved to attempt to overthrow the king. The prince had two hundred soldiers with him, as well as the support of the local Muslims, giving him a good chance at success. However, Sanda Thudhamma was forewarned of the coup attempt. Shuja was, therefore, forced to set fire to the city, hoping to cut his way out in the confusion. Much of his entourage was captured and though he himself initially escaped into the jungle, he was later captured and executed.[25]

Shuja's wealth was taken and melted down by Sanda Thudhamma, who took the Mughal princesses into his harem. He married the eldest, an event that was subsequently celebrated in song and poetry. The following year however, suspicious of another coup, Sanda Thudhamma had Shuja's sons decapitated and his daughters (including the pregnant eldest) starved to death. Aurangzeb, angered by the deaths, ordered a campaign against the kingdom. After an intensive siege, the Mughals captured Chittagong and thousands of Arakanese were taken into slavery. Arakan was unable to return to its previous dominance and Sanda Thudhamma's eventual death was followed by a century of chaos.[26]

Ancestry

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Abdul Karim (2012). "Shah Shuja". In Islam, Sirajul; Miah, Sajahan; Khanam, Mahfuza; Ahmed, Sabbir (eds.). Banglapedia: the National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Online ed.). Dhaka, Bangladesh: Banglapedia Trust, Asiatic Society of Bangladesh. ISBN 984-32-0576-6. OCLC 52727562. Retrieved 3 March 2023.
  2. ^ Findly, Ellison Banks (1993). Nur Jahan, empress of Mughal India. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 98. ISBN 978-0-19-536060-8.
  3. ^ Stanley Lane-Pool, 1971, Aurangzeb, vol.1.
  4. ^ Mukherjee, Soma (2001). Royal Mughal Ladies and Their Contributions. Gyan Books. p. 106. ISBN 978-8-121-20760-7.
  5. ^ Haidar, Navina Najat; Sardar, Marika (13 April 2015). Sultans of Deccan India, 1500–1700: Opulence and Fantasy. Metropolitan Museum of Art. pp. 285. ISBN 978-0-300-21110-8.
  6. ^ Jain, Simi (2003). Encyclopaedia of Indian Women Through the Ages: The middle ages. Gyan Publishing House. p. 73. ISBN 978-8-178-35173-5.
  7. ^ Kr Singh, Nagendra (2001). Encyclopaedia of women biography: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Volume 3. A.P.H. Pub. Corp. p. 51. ISBN 978-8-176-48264-6.
  8. ^ Journal of the Pakistan Historical Society - Volumes 1-2. Pakistan Historical Society. 1953. p. 338.
  9. ^ Abdul Karim (1993). History of Bengal: The Reigns of Shah Jahan and Aurangzib. Institute of Bangladesh Studies, University of Rajshahi, 1995 - Bengal (India). p. 363.
  10. ^ Singh, Nagendra Kr (2001). Encyclopaedia of Muslim Biography: Muh-R. A.P.H. Pub. Corp. p. 402. ISBN 978-8-176-48234-9.
  11. ^ Kānunago, Sunīti Bhūshaṇa (1988). A History of Chittagong: From ancient times down to 1761. Dipankar Qanungo. p. 304.
  12. ^ Phayre, Arthur P. (17 June 2013). History of Burma: From the Earliest Time to the End of the First War with British India. Routledge. pp. 178–9. ISBN 978-1-136-39841-4.
  13. ^ Journal of the Asiatic Society of Pakistan. Asiatic Society of Pakistan. 1967. p. 251.
  14. ^ Rap, Edward James; Heg, Sir Wolseley; Burn, Sir Richard (1928). The Cambridge History of India, Volume 3. CUP Archive. p. 481.
  15. ^ Hangloo, Rattan Lal (1 January 2000). The State in Medieval Kashmir. Manohar. p. 130.
  16. ^ Khan, Inayat; Begley, Wayne Edison (1990). The Shah Jahan name of 'Inayat Khan: an abridged history of the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan, compiled by his royal librarian: the nineteenth-century manuscript translation of A.R. Fuller (British Library, add. 30,777). Oxford University Press. p. 327.
  17. ^ Ayesha Begum. "Bara Katra". Banglapedia. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  18. ^ a b Abdul Karim. "Mir Jumla". Banglapedia. Retrieved 30 January 2013.
  19. ^ Henry Blochmann. Ain-i Akbari. Asiatic Society of Bengal. p. 395.
  20. ^ Ramesh Chandra Majumdar (1943). The History of Bengal. University of Dacca. p. 335.
  21. ^ Battle of Khajwa 29 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ Sunīti Bhūshaṇa Kānunago, A History of Chittagong: From ancient times down to 1761 (1988), p. 305
  23. ^ Niccolao Manucci, Storia do Mogor or History of Mughal India, translator William Irvine
  24. ^ Rapson, Edward James; Haig, Wolseley; Burn, Richard (1937). The Cambridge History of India Vol. IV: The Mughal Period. p. 480.
  25. ^ Rapson, Haig & Burn 1937, p. 481
  26. ^ Rapson, Haig & Burn 1937, pp. 481–2
  27. ^ Sarker, Kobita (2007). Shah Jahan and his paradise on earth: the story of Shah Jahan's creations in Agra and Shahjahanabad in the golden days of the Mughals. p. 187.
  28. ^ Sarker 2007, p. 187.
  29. ^ a b Mehta, Jl (1986). Advanced Study in the History of Medieval India. p. 418.
  30. ^ a b Frank W. Thackeray, John E. Findling, Events That Formed the Modern World (2012), p. 254
  31. ^ a b Mehta 1986, p. 374.
  32. ^ Soma Mukherjee, Royal Mughal Ladies and Their Contributions (2001), p. 128
  33. ^ Mukherjee 2001, p. 128
  34. ^ Subhash Parihar, Some Aspects of Indo-Islamic Architecture (1999), p. 149
  35. ^ Shujauddin, Mohammad; Shujauddin, Razia (1967). The Life and Times of Noor Jahan. Caravan Book House. p. 1.
  36. ^ Ahmad, Moin-ud-din (1924). The Taj and Its Environments: With 8 Illus. from Photos., 1 Map, and 4 Plans. R. G. Bansal. p. 101.

Further reading

  • JN Sarkar (ed), History of Bengal, vol II, Dhaka, 1948
  • JN Sarkar, History of Aurangzib, vol II, New Delhi, 1972–74
  • A Karim, History of Bengal, Mughal Period, vol II, Rajshahi, 1995

shah, shuja, mughal, prince, other, uses, shuja, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, shah, shuja, mughal. For other uses see Shuja This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Shah Shuja Mughal prince news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Mirza Shah Shuja Persian میرزا شاه شجاع 23 June 1616 7 February 1661 1 was the second son of the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan and Empress Mumtaz Mahal He was the governor of Bengal and Odisha and had his capital at Dhaka in present day Bangladesh Shah Shuja شاه شجاعShahzada of Mughal EmpirePainting of Shah Shuja by Balchand Circa 1640Born 1616 06 23 23 June 1616AjmerDied7 February 1661 1661 02 07 aged 44 SpouseBilqis Banu Begum m 1633 d 1634 wbr Piari Banu BegumDaughter of Raja Tamsen of KishtwarIssueDilpazir Banu BegumZain ud Din MirzaZain ul Abidin MirzaBuland Akhtar MirzaGulrukh Banu BegumRoshan Ara BegumAmina Banu BegumHouseHouse of BaburDynastyTimurid dynastyFatherShah JahanMotherMumtaz MahalReligionSunni Islam Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Personal life 3 Governor of Bengal 3 1 Construction projects in Dhaka 4 Mughal war of succession 5 Military promotions 6 Asylum in Arakan 6 1 En route to Arakan 6 2 Death and aftermath 7 Ancestry 8 See also 9 References 10 Further readingEarly life and family Edit Shah Shuja in his childhood 1650 Shah Shuja was born on 23 June 1616 in Ajmer He was the second son and fourth child of the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan and his queen Mumtaz Mahal Shah Jahan s step mother empress Nur Jahan adopted Prince Shah Shuja upon his birth 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 emperor Jahangir 2 Shuja s siblings were the eldest sister Jahanara Begum Dara Shikoh Roshanara Begum Aurangzeb Murad Baksh Gauhara Begum and others He had three sons Sultan Zain ul Din Bon Sultan or Sultan Bang Buland Akhtar and Zainul Abidin and four daughters Gulrukh Banu Roshanara Begum and Amina Begum 3 verification needed Personal life EditShah Shuja first married Bilqis Banu Begum the daughter of Rustam Mirza son of Murad Mirza amp grandson of Akbar on the night of Saturday 5 March 1633 The marriage was arranged by Princess Jahanara Begum Rupees 1 60 000 in cash and goods worth one lakh were sent as sachak to the mansion of Mirza Rustam On 23 February 1633 the wedding presents worth Rupees 10 lakhs were displayed by Jahanara Begum and Sati un nissa Khanum 4 The following year she gave birth to a daughter and died in childbirth She was buried in a separate mausoleum named Kharbuza Mahal at Burhanpur 5 Her daughter was named Dilpazir Banu Begum by Shah Jahan 6 who died as an infant Shuja Mughal prince On the death of his first wife he married Piari Banu Begum 7 daughter of Azam Khan the second governor of Bengal during Shah Jahan s reign 8 9 She was the mother of two sons and three daughters 10 namely Prince Zain ud din Mirza born on 28 October 1639 Prince Zain ul Abidin Mirza born on 20 December 1645 Gulrukh Banu Begum wife of Prince Muhammad Sultan Raushan Ara Begum and Amina Banu Begum 11 In 1660 she fled to Arakan with her husband sons and daughters Shuja was murdered in 1661 His sons were put to death Piari Banu Begum and two of her daughters committed suicide The remaining daughter Amina Banu Begum was brought to the palace where from grief she died an early death 12 13 According to another source one of Shuja s daughters was married to King Sanda Thudhamma A year later he scented a plot and starved all of them to death while his wife was in an advanced stage of pregnancy by himself 14 Prince Shah Shuja s barat wedding procession arriving at the Agra Fort on 4 March 1633 He is accompanied by his brothers princes Aurangzeb and Murad Baksh His third wife was the daughter of Raja Tamsen of Kishtwar 15 She was the mother of Shahzada Buland Akhtar who was born in August 1645 16 Governor of Bengal EditShazada Muhammad Shah Shuja was appointed by Shah Jahan as the Subahdar of Bengal and Bihar from 1641 and of Orissa from 25 July 1648 until 1661 His father Shah Jahan appointed as his deputy the Rajput prince of Nagpur Kunwar Raghav Singh 1616 1671 1 During his governorship he built the official residence Bara Katra in the capital Dhaka 17 After the illness of Shah Jahan in September 1657 a power crisis occurred among the brothers Shah Shuja proclaimed himself as Emperor but Aurangzeb ascended the throne of Dehli and sent Mir Jumla to subjugate Shuja 18 Shuja was defeated in the Battle of Khajwa on 5 January 1659 1 He retreated first to Tanda and then to Dhaka on 12 April 1660 1 He left Dhaka on 6 May and boarded ships near present day Bhulua on 12 May heading to Arakan 1 Mir Jumla reached Dhaka on 9 May 1660 and was then appointed by Aurangzeb as the next Subahdar of Bengal 18 Construction projects in Dhaka Edit Bara Katra Dhanmondi Eidgah Hussaini Dalan An etching of Bara Katra by Sir Charles D Oyly in 1823Mughal war of succession Edit The Mughal armies of Aurangzeb and Shah Shuja confront each other When Shah Jahan fell ill a struggle for the throne started among his four sons Dara Shikoh Shah Shuja Aurangzeb and Murad Baksh Shuja immediately crowned himself the emperor and took the imperial titles in November 1657 Out of the 22 nobles in the service of the prince Shah Shuja 10 were Barha Sayyids 19 Indian Shi as were his staunchest adherents 20 He marched with a large army backed by a good number of war boats in the river Ganges However he was beaten by Dara s army in the hotly contested Battle of Bahadurpur near Banares in modern Uttar Pradesh India Shuja turned back to Rajmahal to make further preparations He signed a treaty with his elder brother Dara which left him in control of Bengal Orissa and a large part of Bihar on 17 May 1658 In the meantime Aurangzeb defeated Dara twice at Dharmat and Samugarh caught him executed him on a charge of heresy and ascended the throne Shuja marched to the capital again this time against Aurangzeb A battle took place on 5 January 1659 at the Battle of Khajwa Fatehpur district Uttar Pradesh India where Shuja was defeated 21 Sayyid from Saadat e Barah After his defeat Shuja retreated towards Bengal He was pursued by the imperial army under Mir Jumla Shuja put up a good fight against them However he was finally defeated in the last battle in April 1660 After each defeat he had to face desertions in his own army but he did not lose heart Rather he reorganised the army with renewed vigor But when he was surrounded at Tanda and found that reorganisation of the army was no longer possible he decided to leave Bengal for good and take shelter in Arakan Military promotions Edit1636 5000 20 1641 30 000 25 1646 36 000 30 1653 40 000 37 1655 43 000 39 Asylum in Arakan EditEn route to Arakan Edit A painting from circa 1637 shows the brothers left to right Shuja Aurangzeb and Murad Baksh in their younger years Shuja left Tanda with his family and retinue in the afternoon of 6 April 1660 and reached Dhaka on 12 April After staying for a month they departed from the city and boarded Arakanese ships on 12 May at Bhulua near present day Noakhali Bangladesh The party first arrived at Chittagong and remained for some time From here they took the land route to Arakan which is still called Shuja Road Thousands of palanquins were used to carry Shuja s harem and he performed Eid prayers at an Eidgah in Dulahzara 22 Death and aftermath Edit Shuja and his entourage arrived in Arakan on 26 August 1660 23 and were greeted at the capital Mrauk U with courtesy The Arakanese king the powerful Sanda Thudhamma had previously agreed to provide ships for Shuja and his family to travel to Mecca where the prince had planned to spend the remainder of his life The half dozen camel loads of gold and jewels that the Mughal royals had brought with them was beyond anything that had previously been seen in Arakan 24 After eight months and numerous excuses Sanda Thudhamma s promise of ships did not materialise Finally the latter demanded the hand of Shuja s daughter in marriage which the prince refused Sanda Thudhamma responded by ordering the Mughals to leave within three days Unable to move and being refused provisions at the bazaars Shuja resolved to attempt to overthrow the king The prince had two hundred soldiers with him as well as the support of the local Muslims giving him a good chance at success However Sanda Thudhamma was forewarned of the coup attempt Shuja was therefore forced to set fire to the city hoping to cut his way out in the confusion Much of his entourage was captured and though he himself initially escaped into the jungle he was later captured and executed 25 Shuja s wealth was taken and melted down by Sanda Thudhamma who took the Mughal princesses into his harem He married the eldest an event that was subsequently celebrated in song and poetry The following year however suspicious of another coup Sanda Thudhamma had Shuja s sons decapitated and his daughters including the pregnant eldest starved to death Aurangzeb angered by the deaths ordered a campaign against the kingdom After an intensive siege the Mughals captured Chittagong and thousands of Arakanese were taken into slavery Arakan was unable to return to its previous dominance and Sanda Thudhamma s eventual death was followed by a century of chaos 26 Ancestry EditAncestors of Shah Shuja Mughal prince 8 Jalal ud din Muhammad Akbar Mughal Emperor 31 4 Nur ud din Muhammad Jahangir Mughal Emperor 29 9 Mariam uz Zamani 31 2 Shahab ud din Muhammad Shah Jahan I Mughal Emperor 27 10 Udai Singh Raja of Marwar 32 5 Jagat Gosain 29 11 Manrang Devi of Gwalior 33 1 Shah Shuja12 I timad ud Daulah 34 6 Abu l Hasan Asaf Khan 30 13 Asmat Begam 35 3 Mumtaz Mahal 28 14 Ghias ud din Ali Asaf Khan 36 7 Diwanji Begum 30 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shah Shuja Battle of Khajwa History of Bengal Mughal EmpireReferences Edit a b c d e Abdul Karim 2012 Shah Shuja In Islam Sirajul Miah Sajahan Khanam Mahfuza Ahmed Sabbir eds Banglapedia the National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh Online ed Dhaka Bangladesh Banglapedia Trust Asiatic Society of Bangladesh ISBN 984 32 0576 6 OCLC 52727562 Retrieved 3 March 2023 Findly Ellison Banks 1993 Nur Jahan empress of Mughal India New York Oxford University Press p 98 ISBN 978 0 19 536060 8 Stanley Lane Pool 1971 Aurangzeb vol 1 Mukherjee Soma 2001 Royal Mughal Ladies and Their Contributions Gyan Books p 106 ISBN 978 8 121 20760 7 Haidar Navina Najat Sardar Marika 13 April 2015 Sultans of Deccan India 1500 1700 Opulence and Fantasy Metropolitan Museum of Art pp 285 ISBN 978 0 300 21110 8 Jain Simi 2003 Encyclopaedia of Indian Women Through the Ages The middle ages Gyan Publishing House p 73 ISBN 978 8 178 35173 5 Kr Singh Nagendra 2001 Encyclopaedia of women biography India Pakistan Bangladesh Volume 3 A P H Pub Corp p 51 ISBN 978 8 176 48264 6 Journal of the Pakistan Historical Society Volumes 1 2 Pakistan Historical Society 1953 p 338 Abdul Karim 1993 History of Bengal The Reigns of Shah Jahan and Aurangzib Institute of Bangladesh Studies University of Rajshahi 1995 Bengal India p 363 Singh Nagendra Kr 2001 Encyclopaedia of Muslim Biography Muh R A P H Pub Corp p 402 ISBN 978 8 176 48234 9 Kanunago Suniti Bhushaṇa 1988 A History of Chittagong From ancient times down to 1761 Dipankar Qanungo p 304 Phayre Arthur P 17 June 2013 History of Burma From the Earliest Time to the End of the First War with British India Routledge pp 178 9 ISBN 978 1 136 39841 4 Journal of the Asiatic Society of Pakistan Asiatic Society of Pakistan 1967 p 251 Rap Edward James Heg Sir Wolseley Burn Sir Richard 1928 The Cambridge History of India Volume 3 CUP Archive p 481 Hangloo Rattan Lal 1 January 2000 The State in Medieval Kashmir Manohar p 130 Khan Inayat Begley Wayne Edison 1990 The Shah Jahan name of Inayat Khan an abridged history of the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan compiled by his royal librarian the nineteenth century manuscript translation of A R Fuller British Library add 30 777 Oxford University Press p 327 Ayesha Begum Bara Katra Banglapedia Retrieved 24 January 2013 a b Abdul Karim Mir Jumla Banglapedia Retrieved 30 January 2013 Henry Blochmann Ain i Akbari Asiatic Society of Bengal p 395 Ramesh Chandra Majumdar 1943 The History of Bengal University of Dacca p 335 Battle of Khajwa Archived 29 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine Suniti Bhushaṇa Kanunago A History of Chittagong From ancient times down to 1761 1988 p 305 Niccolao Manucci Storia do Mogor or History of Mughal India translator William Irvine Rapson Edward James Haig Wolseley Burn Richard 1937 The Cambridge History of India Vol IV The Mughal Period p 480 Rapson Haig amp Burn 1937 p 481 Rapson Haig amp Burn 1937 pp 481 2 Sarker Kobita 2007 Shah Jahan and his paradise on earth the story of Shah Jahan s creations in Agra and Shahjahanabad in the golden days of the Mughals p 187 Sarker 2007 p 187 a b Mehta Jl 1986 Advanced Study in the History of Medieval India p 418 a b Frank W Thackeray John E Findling Events That Formed the Modern World 2012 p 254 a b Mehta 1986 p 374 Soma Mukherjee Royal Mughal Ladies and Their Contributions 2001 p 128 Mukherjee 2001 p 128 Subhash Parihar Some Aspects of Indo Islamic Architecture 1999 p 149 Shujauddin Mohammad Shujauddin Razia 1967 The Life and Times of Noor Jahan Caravan Book House p 1 Ahmad Moin ud din 1924 The Taj and Its Environments With 8 Illus from Photos 1 Map and 4 Plans R G Bansal p 101 Further reading EditJN Sarkar ed History of Bengal vol II Dhaka 1948 JN Sarkar History of Aurangzib vol II New Delhi 1972 74 A Karim History of Bengal Mughal Period vol II Rajshahi 1995 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shah Shuja Mughal prince amp oldid 1141947049, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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