en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nur_Jahan
Begum
Nur Jahan (Persian/Urdu: نور جہاں ) (alternative spelling Noor Jahan,
Nur Jehan, Nor Jahan, etc.) (1577–1645), also known as Mehr-un-Nisaa,
was an Empress of the Mughal Dynasty, of Persian origin whose tomb lies
in Lahore, Pakistan.
Begum Nur Jahan was the twentieth and favourite
wife of Mughal Emperor Jahangir, who was her second husband - and the
most famous Empress of the Mughal Empire. The story of the couple's
infatuation for each other and the relationship that abided between them
is the stuff of many (often apocryphal) legends. She remains
historically significant for the sheer amount of imperial authority she
wielded - the true "power behind the throne," as Jehangir was battling
serious addictions to alcohol and opium throughout his reign - and is
known as one of the most powerful women who ruled India with an iron
fist.
Begum Nur Jahan (Persian/Urdu: نور جہاں ) (alternative
spelling Noor Jahan, Nur Jehan, Nor Jahan, etc.) (1577–1645), also known
as Mehr-un-Nisaa, was an Empress of the Mughal Dynasty, of Persian
origin whose tomb lies in Lahore, Pakistan.
Begum Nur Jahan was the
twentieth and favourite wife of Mughal Emperor Jahangir, who was her
second husband - and the most famous Empress of the Mughal Empire. The
story of the couple's infatuation for each other and the relationship
that abided between them is the stuff of many (often apocryphal)
legends. She remains historically significant for the sheer amount of
imperial authority she wielded - the true "power behind the throne," as
Jehangir was battling serious addictions to alcohol and opium throughout
his reign - and is known as one of the most powerful women who ruled
India with an iron fist.
Marriage with Sher Afghan
Mehr-Un-Nisaa
was married to Sher Afghan Quli Khan when she was seventeen in 1594,
the marriage arranged by Akbar. In 1605, Mehr-Un-Nisaa gave birth to a
daughter, also called Mehr-Un-Nisaa (later at court she was named
Ladli), Mehr-Un-Nisaa was the one and only child she ever had. In 1607,
Sher Afghan Quli Khan was killed during a misunderstanding. During this
time Sher Afghan Quli Khan had held the title of Sher Afghan, granted to
him by Jahangir as Quli saved his life from an angry tigress. Also
notice, during this time, Jahangir may have been asking Sher Afghan Quli
Khan to give Mehr-Un-Nisaa to him, for his harem, although the truth of
this is incertain, as Jahangir married her in 1611, after she had been
at court (see below) for four years.
Marriage with Jahangir
The
emperor Akbar died in 1605 and was succeeded by prince Salim, who took
the regal name Jahangir. After her husband Sher Afghan (who was
appointed as jagirdar of Bardhaman, a city in Bengal) was killed in
1607, Mehr-un-Nisaa became a lady-in-waiting to one of the Jahangir's
stepmothers, Ruqayya Sultana Begum. Ruqayya was the most senior woman in
the harem and had been Akbar's first and principal wife and was also
the daughter of Mirza Hindal. The father of Mehr-un-Nisaa was, at that
time, a diwan to an amir-ul-umra, decidedly not a very high post.
The
year 1607 had not been particularly good for Mehr-un-Nisaa. Her family
had fallen into disgrace. Her father, who had been holding important
posts under Akbar and Jahangir, had succumbed to his only weakness,
money, and had been charged with embezzlement. Moreover, due to possible
involvement in the pro-Khusrau assassination attempt on Jahangir in
1607, two of Mehr-un-Nisaa's family members (one brother named Muhammad
Sharif and her mother's cousin) were executed on the orders of the
Emperor.
In March 1611, her fortune took a turn for the better. She
met the emperor Jahangir at the palace meena bazaar during the spring
festival Nowruz new year. Jahangir grew so infatuated by her beauty that
he proposed immediately and they were married on May 25 of the same
year becoming his twentieth wife.
Mehr-un-Nisaa received the name Nur
Mahal (Light of the Palace), upon her marriage in 1611 and was
conferred the title Nur Jahan (Light of the world) in 1616. Jahangir's
actual name was Nur-ud-din Muhammad, and thus the name that he gave to
his wife was his own first name combined with the first part of his
regal name.
Mughal empress: For Mehr-un-Nisaa's own immediate family,
marriage to Jahangir became a great boon with several members receiving
sizeable endowments and promotions as a result. This affection led to
Nur Jahan wielding a great deal of actual power in affairs of state. The
Mughal state gave absolute power to the emperor, and those who
exercised influence over the emperor gained immense influence and
prestige. Jahangir's addiction to opium and alcohol made it easier for
Nur Jahan to exert her influence. For many years, she effectively
wielded imperial power and was recognized as the real force behind the
Mughal throne. She even gave audiences at her palace and the ministers
consulted with her on most matters. Indeed, Jahangir even permitted
coinage to be struck in her name, something that traditionally defined
sovereignty.
Through Nur Jahan's influence, her family, including her
brother Asaf Khan, consolidated their position at court. Asaf Khan was
appointed grand Wazir (minister) to Jahangir, and his daughter Arjumand
Banu Begum (later known as Mumtaz Mahal) was wed to Prince Khurram (the
future Shah Jahan), the third son of Jahangir, born by the Rajput
princess, Jagat Gosaini. Jahangir's eldest son Khusrau had rebelled
against the Emperor and was blinded as a result. The second son, Parviz,
was weak and addicted to alcohol. The fourth son was Prince Shahryar,
born by a royal concubine. Khurram rebelled against his father and a war
of succession broke out. Due to Khurram's intransigence, Nur Jahan
shifted her support to his younger brother, Shahryar. She arranged the
marriage of her own daughter Ladli Begum, born of her first marriage, to
her stepson Shahryar [a]. The two weddings ensured that one way or
another, the influence of Nur Jahan's family would extend over the
Mughal Empire for at least another generation.
Jahangir was captured
by rebels in 1626 while he was on his way to Kashmir. Nur Jahan
intervened to get her husband released. Jahangir was rescued but died on
October 28, 1627. After Jahangir's death, Nur Jahan devoted some of her
life to the making of perfume, particularly using falanja, an art form
her mother had passed down.
Death
When Jahangir died in
1628, Nur Jahan's brother Asaf Khan took the side of his son-in-law
Khurrum against his sister. It was Khurram who became the new Mughal
emperor under the regal name Shah Jahan. Nur Jahan was confined to a
comfortable mansion for the rest of her life.
During this period, she
paid for and oversaw the construction of her father's mausoleum in
Agra, known now as Itmad-Ud-Daulah's Tomb, and occasionally composed
Persian poems under the assumed name of Makhfi [a].
Nur Jahan died in
1645 at age 68, and is buried at Shahdara Bagh in Lahore, Pakistan in a
tomb she had built herself, near the tomb of Jahangir. Her brother Asaf
Khan's tomb is also located nearby. The tomb attracts many visitors,
both Pakistani and foreign, who come to enjoy pleasant walks in its
beautiful gardens. All had been personally laid out and designed by Nur
Jahan herself.
Nur Jahan in Pop Culture
•Novelist Indu Sundaresan
has written two books revolving around the life of Nur Jahan, The
Twentieth Wife and The Feast of the Roses
•Nur Jahan's Daughter by
Tanushree Podder also 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.