Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Jahanara Begum (23 March 1614 – 16 September 1681) was a princess of the Mughal Empire. She was the second and the eldest surviving child of Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan and Mumtaz Mahal. After Mumtaz Mahal's untimely death in 1631, the 17-year-old Jahanara was entrusted with the charge of the royal seal and conferred the title of Padshah Begum (First lady) of the Mughal Empire, despite the fact that her father had three surviving wives. She was Shah Jahan's favorite daughter and she wielded ...

  2. May 24, 2019 · A writer, poet, painter and the architect of Delhi’s famous Chandni Chowk, Jahanara was a Mughal princess like no other. Portraits of Jahanara Begum. Source: Wikimedia Commons. This is her story. The eldest child of Emperor Shah Jahan and his favourite wife, Mumtaz Mahal, Jahanara was born in Ajmer in 1614. Growing up in one of the richest ...

  3. Jahanara Begum was born in Ajmer and brought up in Agra. She was taught by many tutors, including Mumtaz Mahal’s secretary, Sati-un Nissa, who was known for her knowledge of the Qur’an and Persian literature. She was often found playing chess with her father Shah Jahan. Jahanara was her father’s preferred child and he bestowed upon her titles such as ‘Begum Sahib ...

  4. Mar 9, 2020 · Jahanara Begum notably showed major emboldened high profile commissions in ordering other women builders when Shahjahanabad was constructed. Jahanara Begum did not function in a vacuum without influences or resistance. A prevailing interest informed the poetry she wrote of the Moghul court. For the Moghul warrior- aesthete, poetry to them provided decency to the treachery and savagery experienced both in the courts and the battlefields.

  5. Sep 17, 2018 · Portrait of Jahanara Begum (Source: Wikipedia Commons) The narrow lanes of the famous Chandni Chowk, one of the oldest and busiest markets of Old Delhi (earlier known as Shahjahanabad), receive thousands of shoppers and tourists every day. Just eight kilometres away, at Hazrat Nizamuddin Dargah, rests its architect, unknown and hardly visited by anybody, in a tiny open grave — Jahanara Begum, the eldest daughter of Mughal emperor Shah Jahan and his beloved wife Mumtaz Mahal. ...

  6. Sep 11, 2020 · Princess Jahanara Begum, born on 23 rd March 1614 at the Akbari Fort of Ajmer, was the second daughter of Emperor Shah Jahan and the first with his favourite wife, Mumtaz Mahal. At the age of seventeen, losing her mother untimely, Jahanara Begum rose to the title of Padshah Begum or empress, in the year 1630. Her patronage of Sufism, and commissioning buildings like the Jama Masjid at Agra or the Chandni Chowk of Delhi, as well as her charity, are some of her achievements as the Empress of ...

  7. Jan 26, 2020 · Jahanara Begum. The eldest daughter of the fifth Mughal King, Shah Jahan and his beloved wife Mumtaz Mahal, Jahanara Begum lived a very comfortable life. She was born into one of the wealthiest kingdom’s in the world, the mighty Mughal Empire. But unknown to most at the time, including her own family, she was clearly way ahead of most, who existed in and around her lifetime.

  8. indianculture.gov.in › timeless-trends › jahanaraJahanara | INDIAN CULTURE

    Jahanara Begum was the daughter of Shah Jahan and Mumtaz Mahal, who later became the Padshah Begum (First Lady) of the Mughal Empire from 1631-1658 CE and 1668-1681 CE. During Shah Jahan's reign, she commissioned important works such as commentaries on Rumi's Mathnawi and made various charitable contributions. She also wrote Munis al arwah (Confidant of Spirits), a biography of Shaikh Muinuddin Chisti. ...

  9. Dec 15, 2008 · JAHĀNĀRĀ BEGUM, (1614-81) the eldest surviving daughter of the Mughal Emperor Šāh Jahān and his favorite wife, Momtāz Mahal, for whom Šāh Jahān commissioned the Tāj Mahal.Born in 1614, Jahānārā became the head of the imperial harem when her mother died in 1631, and she played a pivotal role in Mughal domestic politics throughout her life.

  10. Jan 1, 2018 · Jahānārā Begum (1614–1681) was the eldest daughter of Mughal Emperor Shāh Jahān and his favorite wife, Mumtāz Mahal. She received extensive education in Arabic, Quranic studies, and Persian prose and poetry (1, 2).Upon the death of Mumtāz in 1631, Jahānārā took the place of her mother as head of the imperial zenana and effectively became First Lady of the empire ().She played a central role in Mughal domestic politics throughout her life and is most known for her Ṣūfī ...