Difference between revisions of "Shah Jahan" - New World Encyclopedia

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===Fate===
 
===Fate===
His son [[Aurangzeb]] led a rebellion when Shah Jahan became ill in 1657 C.E. (1067 AH) and publicly executed his brother and the heir apparent [[Dara Shikoh]]. Although Shah Jahan fully recovered from his illness, Aurangzeb declared him incompetent to rule and put him under [[house arrest]] in [[Agra Fort]].<ref>Asher, Architecture, p.171</ref>
+
His son [[Aurangzeb]] led a rebellion when Shah Jahan became ill in 1657 C.E. (1067 AH) and publicly executed his brother and the heir apparent [[Dara Shikoh]]. Although Shah Jahan fully recovered from his illness, Aurangzeb declared him incompetent to rule and put him under [[house arrest]] in [[Agra Fort]].<ref>Asher, Architecture, p.171</ref> [[Jahanara Begum Sahib]] voluntarily shared his 8-year confinement and nursed him in his dotage.
  
[[Jahanara Begum Sahib]] voluntarily shared his 8-year confinement and nursed him in his dotage. In January of 1666 C.E. (1076 AH), Shah Jahan fell ill with [[strangury]] and [[dysentery]]. Confined to bed, he became progressively weaker until, on January 22, he commanded the ladies of the imperial court, particularly his consort of later year Akrabadi Mahal, to the care of Jahanara. After reciting the [[Kalima]] and verses from the Qu'ran, he died. Jahana planned a state funeral which was to include a procession with Shah Jahan's body carried by eminent nobles followed by the notable citizens of Agra and officials scattering coins for the poor and needy. Aurangzeb refused to accommodate such ostentation and the body was washed in accordance with Islamic rites, taken by river in a sandalwood coffin to the Taj Mahal and was interred there next to the body of his beloved wife Mumtaz Mahal.<ref>Koch, Taj Mahal, p.101</ref>
+
In January of 1666 C.E. (1076 AH), Shah Jahan fell ill with [[strangury]] and [[dysentery]]. Confined to bed, he became progressively weaker until, on January 22, he commanded the ladies of the imperial court, particularly his consort of later year Akrabadi Mahal, to the care of Jahanara. After reciting the [[Kalima]] and verses from the Qu'ran, he died. Jahana planned a state funeral to include a procession with Shah Jahan's body carried by eminent nobles followed by the notable citizens of Agra and officials scattering coins for the poor and needy. Aurangzeb refused, washing his body in accordance with Islamic rites, taking his sandalwood coffin by river to the Taj Mahal and interred him next to the body of his beloved wife Mumtaz Mahal.<ref>Koch, Taj Mahal, p.101</ref>
  
 
== Legacy ==
 
== Legacy ==

Revision as of 17:08, 12 June 2008

Shah Jahan the Magnificient
Mughal Emperor
"Shah Jahan on a globe" from the Smithsonian Institution
"Shah Jahan on a globe" from the Smithsonian Institution
Reign 1628 - 1658
Full name Shabuddin Mohammed Shah Jahan
Born January 5, 1592
Lahore
Died January 31, 1666 (age 74)
Agra
Buried Taj Mahal
Predecessor Jehangir
Successor Aurangazeb
Issue Jahanara Begum, Dara Shukoh, Shah Shuja, Roshanara Begum, Aurangzeb, Murad Baksh, Gauhara Begum
Father Jehangir
Mother Princess Manmati[1]

Shabuddin Mohammed Shah Jahan (full title: Al-Sultan al-'Azam wal Khaqan al-Mukarram, Abu'l-Muzaffar Shihab ud-din Muhammad, Sahib-i-Qiran-i-Sani, Shah Jahan I Padshah Ghazi Zillu'llah [Firdaus-Ashiyani]) (also spelled Shah Jehan, Shahjehan. Urdu: شاه ‌جهان), (January 5, 1592 – January 31, 1666) ruled the Mughal Empire in the Indian subcontinent from 1628 until 1658. The name Shah Jahan comes from Persian meaning "King of the World." He stood as the fifth Mughal ruler after Babur, Humayun, Akbar, and Jahangir. While young, Akbar favored him.

Even while a child, many pointed him out as the successor to the Mughal throne after the death of Jahangir. He succeeded to the throne upon his father's death in 1627. Considered one of the greatest Mughals, his reign has been called the Golden Age of Mughals. Like Akbar, he eagerly expanded his empire. The destruction of the kingdom of Ahmadnagar (1636), the loss of Kandahar to the Persians (1653), and a second war against the Deccan princes (1655) stood out as the chief events of his reign. In 1658, when he fell ill, his son Aurangzeb confined him in the citadel of Agra until his death in 1666.

During the period of his reign, Mughal architecture experienced a golden age. Shah Jahan erected many splendid monuments, the Taj Mahal at Agra built, as a tomb for his wife Mumtaz Mahal (birth name Arjumand Banu Begum), by far the most famous. The Pearl Mosque at Agra and the palace and great mosque at Delhi also commemorate him. The celebrated Peacock Throne, worth millions of dollars by modern estimates, also dates from his reign. He founded Shahjahanabad, now known as 'Old Delhi'. The important buildings of Shah Jahan include the Diwan-i-Am and Diwan-i-Khas in the fort of Delhi, the Jama Masjid, the Moti Masjid and the Taj. The Palace of Delhi has been proclaimed by many as the most magnificent in the East.[2]

Biography

Birth And Early Years

Shah Jahan, born as Prince Khurram Shihab-ud-din Muhammad in 1592 in Lahore, had been the third and favorite son of the emperor Jahangir.[3] His mother Rathore Rajput Princess, known as Princess Manmati, Jahangir's wife. His grandfather, Akbar, gave him the name Khurram (Persian for 'joyful'). His early years saw him receive a cultured, broad education and he distinguished himself in the martial arts and as a military commander while leading his father's armies in numerous campaigns: Mewar (1615 C.E., 1024 AH), the Deccan (1617 and 1621 C.E., 1026 and 1030 AH), Kangra (1618 C.E., 1027AH). He had been responsible for most of the territorial gains during his father's reign.[4] He also demonstrated a precocious talent for building, impressing his father at the age of 16 when he built his quarters within Babur's Kabul fort and redesigned buildings within Agra fort.[5]

Marriage

Emperor Jahangir weighing his son, 'Prince Khurram' in gold in 1607, Tuzk-e-Jahangiri (Jahangirnama).

In 1607 C.E. (1025 AH) Khurrum married Arjumand Banu Begum, the grand daughter of a Persian noble, just 14 years old at the time. She became the unquestioned love of his life. They had to wait five years before they marrying in 1612 C.E. (1021 AH). After their wedding celebrations, Khurram "finding her in appearance and character elect among all the women of the time," gave her the title Mumtaz Mahal (Jewel of the Palace).[6]

The intervening years had seen Khurrum take two other wives, Akbarabadi Mahal (d.1677 C.E., 1088 AH), and Kandahari Mahal (b. c1594 C.E., c1002 AH), (m.1609 C.E., 1018 AH). By all accounts, Khurrum loved Mumtaz dearly, showing little interest in exercising his polygamous rights with the two earlier wives, other than dutifully siring a child with each. According to the official court chronicler Qazwini, the relationship with his other wives "had nothing more than the status of marriage. The intimacy, deep affection, attention and favor which His Majesty had for the Cradle of Excellence [Mumtaz] exceeded by a thousand times what he felt for any other."[7]

Accession

A 19th century illustration of Jahan.

Princely sons competing to achieve military successes and consolidating their power at court determined inheritance of power and wealth in the Mughal empire rather than primogeniture. That often led to rebellions and wars of succession. As a result, a complex political climate surrounded the Mughal court in Khurram's formative years. In 1611, his father married Nur Jahan, the widowed daughter of a Persian immigrant.[8] She rapidly became an important member of Jahangir's court and, together with her brother Asaf Khan, wielded considerable influence. Arjumand, Asaf Khan's daughter, consolidated Nur Jahan and Asaf Khan's positions at court through her marriage to Khurrum.

Khurram's military successes of 1617 C.E. (1026 AH) against the Lodi in the Deccan effectively secured the southern border of the empire. His grateful father rewarded him with the prestigious title 'Shah Jahan Bahadur' (Lord of the World) which implicitly sealed his inheritance.[9] Court intrigues, including Nur Jahan's decision to have her daughter from her first marriage wed Shah Jahan's youngest brother and her support for his claim to the throne led Khurram, supported by Asaf Khan, fostered open revolt against his father in 1622.

Jahangir's forces quelled the rebellion in 1626, forcing Khurram to submit unconditionally.[10] Upon the death of Jahangir in 1627, Khurram succeeded to the Mughal throne as Shah Jahan, King of the World and Lord of the Auspicious Conjunctions, the latter title alluding to his pride in his Timurid roots.[11]

Despite her frequent pregnancies, Mumtaz Mahal traveled with Shah Jahan's entourage throughout his earlier military campaigns and the subsequent rebellion against his father. Mumtaz Mahal utterly devoted herself to Khurrum; she served as his constant companion and trusted confidante; they enjoyed an intense love for each other.[12] Shah Jahan's chroniclers portrayed her as the perfect wife, free of aspirations to political power. Nur Jahan had been perceived as completely opposite, craving political power.[13]

Rule

Shah Jahan's court

Although generally peaceful during his father's rule, the empire experienced challenges by the end of his reign. Shah Jahan reversed that trend by putting down a Islamic rebellion in Ahmednagar, repulsing the Portuguese in Bengal, capturing the Rajput kingdoms of Baglana and Bundelkhand to the west and the northwest beyond the Khyber Pass. Under his rule, the state became a powerful military machine and the nobles and their contingents multiplied almost fourfold, placing crushing demands for more revenue on the peasantry. General stability prevailed through a centralized administration and well-regulated court affairs. Historiography and the arts increasingly became instruments of propaganda, where beautiful artworks or poetry expressed specific state ideologies which held that central power and hierarchical order would create balance and harmony. The empire continued to expand moderately during his reign but the first signs of an imperial decline appeared in the later years.[14]

His political efforts encouraged the emergence of large centers of commerce and crafts—such as Lahore, Delhi, Agra, and Ahmedabad—linked by roads and waterways to distant places and ports. He moved the capital from Agra to Delhi. Under Shah Jahan's rule, Mughal artistic and architectural achievements reached their zenith. Shah Jahan engaged in prolific building with a highly refined aesthetic. He built the legendary Taj Mahal in Agra as a tomb for his beloved wife, Mumtaz Mahal. Other surviving buildings include the Red Fort and Jama Masjid in Delhi, the Shalimar Gardens of Lahore, sections of the Lahore Fort (such as Sheesh Mahal, and Naulakha pavilion), and his father's mausoleum.

Legend states that Shah Jahan wanted to build a black Taj Mahal for himself, to match the white one he reportedly loved much more.[15] Scholarship fails to support that speculation.[16][17][18]

Fate

His son Aurangzeb led a rebellion when Shah Jahan became ill in 1657 C.E. (1067 AH) and publicly executed his brother and the heir apparent Dara Shikoh. Although Shah Jahan fully recovered from his illness, Aurangzeb declared him incompetent to rule and put him under house arrest in Agra Fort.[19] Jahanara Begum Sahib voluntarily shared his 8-year confinement and nursed him in his dotage.

In January of 1666 C.E. (1076 AH), Shah Jahan fell ill with strangury and dysentery. Confined to bed, he became progressively weaker until, on January 22, he commanded the ladies of the imperial court, particularly his consort of later year Akrabadi Mahal, to the care of Jahanara. After reciting the Kalima and verses from the Qu'ran, he died. Jahana planned a state funeral to include a procession with Shah Jahan's body carried by eminent nobles followed by the notable citizens of Agra and officials scattering coins for the poor and needy. Aurangzeb refused, washing his body in accordance with Islamic rites, taking his sandalwood coffin by river to the Taj Mahal and interred him next to the body of his beloved wife Mumtaz Mahal.[20]

Legacy

Shah Jahan built Taj Mahal over the tomb of his wife Mumtaz Mahal

Shah Jahan's legacy was one of the most profound of all the Mughals. A patron of the fine arts, he continued the Mughal patronage of painting, although his passion was architecture, with the highlight being undoubtedly the Taj Mahal. Painting during his reign reflected the serene prosperity that the Mughals enjoyed with many scenes reflecting Shah Jahan's interest in romance.

Notable structures associated with Shah Jahan

Shah Jahan has left behind a grand legacy of structures constructed during his reign. The most famous of these is the Taj Mahal in Agra built to hold the tomb for his favorite wife, Mumtaz Mahal. Upon his death, his son Aurangazeb had him interred in it next to Mumtaz Mahal. Among his other constructions are Delhi Fort also called the Red Fort or Lal Quila (Hindi) in Delhi, large sections of Agra Fort, the Jama Masjid (Grand Mosque), Delhi, the Wazir Khan Mosque, Lahore, Pakistan, the Moti Masjid (Pearl Mosque), Lahore, the Shalimar Gardens in Lahore, sections of the Lahore Fort, Lahore, the Jahangir mausoleum—his father's tomb, the construction of which was overseen by his stepmother Nur Jahan and the Shahjahan Mosque, Thatta, Pakistan. He also had the Peacock Throne, Takht e Taus, made to celebrate his rule.

There is a crater named after Shah Jahan on the minor planet 433 Eros. Craters on Eros are named after famous fictional and real-life lovers.

European accounts of Shah Jahan's personal life

Numerous accounts of Shah Jahan's personal life were recounted by contemporary European writers.

Shah Jahan's family

Like all his ancestors, Shah Jahan's court included many wives, concubines, and dancing girls. Several European chroniclers have noted this. Niccolao Manucci wrote that "it would seem as if the only thing Shah Jahan cared for was the search for women to serve his pleasure" and "for this end he established a fair at his court. No one was allowed to enter except women of all ranks that is to say, great and small, rich and poor, but all handsome."[21] When he was detained in the Red Fort at Agra, Aurangzeb permitted him to retain "the whole of his female establishment, including the singing and dancing women."[22] Manucci notes that Shah Jahan didn't lose his "weakness for the flesh" even when he had grown very old[23]. However, most of the European travellers in India had access to such information primarily through bazaar gossip.

Preceded by:
Jahangir
Mughal Emperor
1628–1658
Succeeded by:
Aurangzeb

See also

  • Agra
  • Delhi
  • Lahore
  • Mughal architecture
  • Muhammad Saleh Kamboh
  • Nur Jahan

Notes

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Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
  1. Shah Jahan. Britannica Concise.
  2. Vidya Dhar Mahajan, Muslim rule in India (Delhi: S. Chand, 1970).
  3. Neria Harish Hebbar, King of the World: Shah Jahan. History of Islam in India (Boloji Media Inc)
  4. Catherine Ella Blanshard Asher, Architecture of Mughal India. The New Cambridge history of India, I, 4. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992), p.170
  5. Asher, Architecture
  6. Ebba Koch and Richard André Barraud, The complete Taj Mahal: and the riverfront gardens of Agra. (London: Thames & Hudson 2006), p. 18
  7. Sheila S. Blair and Jonathan M. Bloom, The art and architecture of Islam 1250-1800. The Pelican history of art (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995)
  8. Encyclopedia of World Biography on Shah Jahan
  9. Koch, Taj Mahal, p. 19
  10. Encyclopedia Britannica Online - Rebellion of Khurram
  11. Asher, Architecture, p.170
  12. Koch, Taj Mahal, p. 19
  13. Koch, Taj Mahal, p. 19
  14. Asher, Architecture, p.171
  15. History of Taj Mahal
  16. Black Taj Mahal Myths
  17. Black Taj Mahal Story
  18. Black Taj Mahal Spirituality
  19. Asher, Architecture, p.171
  20. Koch, Taj Mahal, p.101
  21. Niccolao Manucci and William Irvine, Storia do Mogor, or, Mogul India, 1653-1708. The Indian texts series (London: John Murray, 1906), p.195
  22. François Bernier, Irving Brock, Archibald Constable, and Vincent Arthur Smith, Travels in the Mogul Empire, AD 1656-1668 (Delhi: Low Price Publications. Bernier, 1999), pp.166, 21
  23. Manucci, Mogul India, I p. 240

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
  • Asher, Catherine Ella Blanshard. 1992. Architecture of Mughal India. The New Cambridge history of India, I, 4. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521267281
  • Begley, W. E. 1985. Monumental Islamic calligraphy from India. Villa Park, Ill: Islamic Foundation, pp. 7-18. ISBN 9780932815002
  • Bernier, François, Irving Brock, Archibald Constable, and Vincent Arthur Smith. 1999. Travels in the Mogul Empire, AD 1656-1668. Delhi: Low Price Publications. ISBN 9788175361850.
  • Blair, Sheila S., and Jonathan M. Bloom. 1995. The art and architecture of Islam 1250-1800. The Pelican history of art. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300058888.
  • Gemelli Careri, Giovanni Francesco, J. P. Guha, John Ovington, and Jean de Thevenot. 1979. India in the seventeenth century: being an account of the two voyages to India. New Delhi: Associated Pub. House. OCLC 221708403.
  • 'Inayat Khan, W. E. Begley, and Ziyaud-Din A. Desai. 1990. The Shah Jahan nama 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). Delhi: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195624892.
  • Koch, Ebba, and Richard André Barraud. 2006. The complete Taj Mahal: and the riverfront gardens of Agra. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 9780500342091.
  • Lāhawrī, ʻAbd al-Ḥamīd, ʻAbdurraḥīm, Kabīruddīn Aḥmad, and W. Nassau Lees. 1983. The Bádsháh Námah. Bibliotheca Indica, v. 56. Osnabrück: Biblio Verlag. OCLC 13787935.
  • Laet, Joannes de, Francisco Polsaert, Pieter van den Broecke, and John Somervell Hoyland. 1928. The empire of the great Mogol. Bombay: Taraporevala Sons. OCLC 220856823.
  • Lal, Kishori Saran. 1988. The Mughal harem. New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan. ISBN 9788185179032
  • Mahajan, Vidya Dhar. 1970. Muslim rule in India. Delhi: S. Chand. OCLC 33267592.
  • Manucci, Niccolao, and William Irvine. 1906. Storia do Mogor, or, Mogul India, 1653-1708. The Indian texts series. London: John Murray. OCLC 187488522.
  • Mundy, Peter, and Richard Carnac Temple. 1914. The travels of Peter Mundy in Europe and Asia: 1608 - 1667 2. Travels in Asia, 1628 - 1634. - 1914. - LXXIX, 437 S. OCLC 163462150.
  • Tavernier, Jean-Baptiste, and V. Ball. 1889. Travels in India. London: Macmillan and Co. OCLC 6072000.


External links


Red Fort, Delhi by alexfurr (2).jpg      Mughal Empire (1526 - 1857)     Taj Mahal in March 2004.jpg
Emperors: Babur - Humayun - Akbar - Jahangir - Shah Jahan - Aurangzeb - Lesser Mughals
Events: First battle of Panipat - Second battle of Panipat - Third battle of Panipat
Architecture: Humayun's Tomb - Agra Fort - Badshahi Mosque - Lahore Fort - Red Fort - Taj Mahal - Shalimar Gardens - Pearl Mosque - Bibi Ka Maqbara - See also
Adversaries: Ibrahim Lodhi - Sher Shah Suri - Hemu - Shivaji - Guru Gobind Singh

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