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The mosque was built by Empress Maryam Zamani, an empress of the Mughal Emperor Akbar and the mother of Emperor Jahangir.It was constructed during the early period of Jahangir, in 1023 A.H./1614 A.D., as recorded in a Persian inscription fixed on the facade of the northern gate.
Mariam-uz-Zamani was born in 1542 as the daughter of Raja Bharmal of Amer by his wife Rani Champavati, daughter of Rao Ganga Solanki. [32] [33] [34] Her paternal grandparents were Raja Prithviraj Singh I and Apurva Devi, a daughter of Rao Lunkaran of Bikaner.
Aijaz Aslam as Jahangir [7] Sumbul Shahid as Nasreen (Late) Ayaz Samoo as Hasan; Minsa Malik as Afshan; Aamna Malick as Gul Rukh, Hasan's second wife; Sabiha Hashmi as Jahangir's mother, Rabi's mother-in-law; Saima Qureshi as Naima, Gul Rukh's mother; Tipu Shareef as Rabi's brother (dead) Mehwish Qureshi as Muneeza Bhabhi, Rabi's sister-in-law
According to Ruby Lal (2008), "The only document that names the mother of Jahangir is a later edict issued by Mariam-uz-Zamani. The seal on the edict reads 'Wali Nimat Begum, Walideh Nur al-Din Jahangir', thus clearly identifying Mariam-uz-Zamani with Wali Nimat Begum and unequivocally declaring her to be Jahangir's mother".
Manavati Bai, also spelled Manvati Bai, (13 May 1573 – 8 April 1619), better known by her title, Jagat Gosain (lit. ' Saint of the World '), was the second wife and the empress consort of the fourth Mughal emperor Jahangir and the mother of his successor, Shah Jahan.
Jahangir's Jade hookah, National Museum, New Delhi. Jahangir took his connoisseurship of art very seriously. He also preserved paintings from Emperor Akbar's period. An excellent example of this is the painting done by Ustad Mansur of Musician Naubat Khan, son-in-law of legendary Tansen. In addition to their aesthetic qualities, paintings ...
Mihr-un-nissa Begum [1] (Persian: مهرالنساء بیگم; born c. 1605 [2]), also known as Banu Begum [1] (Persian: بانو بیگم) and Bahu Begum (Persian: بہو بیگم), [1] and better known as Ladli Begum [1] [3] (Persian: لاڈلی بیگم), was the daughter of Empress Nur Jahan and her first husband Sher Afgan of the Mughal Empire.
The emperor was deeply attached to his foster mother, as reflected by the following paragraph in the Jahangir's memoirs: In the month Ẕi-l-qa‘da the mother of Qutbu-d-dīn Khān Koka, who had given me her milk and was as a mother to me or even kinder than my own kind mother ... was committed to the mercy of God. I placed the feet of her ...