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  1. Razia Sultan. (film) Razia Sultan is a 1983 Indian period biographical film, written and directed by Kamal Amrohi, and starring Hema Malini, Parveen Babi and Dharmendra in lead roles. Upon release, it was a box office disaster, mainly due to its high production value. [3] [1] It was the most expensive Indian film made until then.

  2. Razia Sultana is an Indian politician and was a cabinet minister in the Government of Punjab. She represented Malerkotla in the Punjab Legislative Assembly of which she was the only Muslim member. [2] [3] She has been elected three times in the Punjab Assembly, in 2002, 2007 and 2017.

  3. Razia Sultana. Razia Sultana was the first woman Sultanate of India, and ruled the court of Delhi from the end of 1236 to 1240. The only ever woman to do so, she defied all odds to occupy the throne, including overcoming conflicts over her gender and her slave ancestry. During her reign, she proved her mettle as a just and capable ruler, and ...

  4. Oct 12, 2017 · By winning over the army, governors and the public, Razia deposed her brother and seized the throne for herself on 19th November 1236 CE and assumed the title of Raziyat-ud-din. Interestingly, Razia’s accession to the throne was not opposed by the religious ‘Ulema’ or orthodoxy, but the Mamluk nobility and close associates of Iltutmish.

  5. He died in 1236 and was succeeded by his daughter Razia Sultana as he did not consider his sons equal to the task. Razia Sultana (Reign: 1236 – 1240) Born in 1205 as Iltutmish’s daughter. Was given a sound education by her father. She was the first and last Muslim woman to rule over Delhi. Also known as Razia al-Din.

  6. Razia Sultana of Delhi (1205-1240) Contributed by Prof. Dr. Nazeer Ahmed, PhD. Islam liberated men and women from the shackles of slavery and made them masters of the world. The history of the Mamlukes illustrates this observation. In the 9th and 10th centuries, there was a brisk slave trade down the Volga River, near the…

  7. The ruler with ‘a talent for war’ was murdered by her captors on 13 October 1240. Sultan Razia, 18th century. Alamy. Like much of her reign, the accession of Razia to the sultanate of Delhi is shrouded in mystery. The only contemporary chronicle is the Tabaqat-i-Nasiri of Minhaj Siraj Juzjani, whose career had thrived during her brief ...