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Masuma Sultan Begum (Persian: معصومه سلطان بیگم; born c. 1508) was a Mughal princess and the daughter of the first Mughal emperor, Babur. She is frequently mentioned in the Humayun-nama by her sister, Gulbadan Begum , who calls her sister 'Elder sister Moon' ( mah chacha ).
Masuma Sultan Begum was born a Timurid princess as the fifth and youngest daughter of Sultan Ahmed Mirza, the King of Samarkand and Bukhara, and his fifth wife Habiba Sultan Begum, niece of Sultan Husain Aghun. She had four elder half-sisters, among whom one, Aisha Begum, was a former wife of her husband Babur, and two more became her sisters ...
Masuma Esmati-Wardak, Afghan writer and politician; Masuma Hasan, Pakistani diplomat, chairperson of Pakistan Institute of International Affairs; Masuma Rahman Nabila (born 1985), Bangladeshi television presenter, model and actress; Masuma Sultan Begum (?–c. 1509), the Queen consort of Ferghana Valley and Samarkand as the fourth wife of ...
Masuma Sultan Begum: Kamran Mirza (1512 –1557) Gulchehra Begum: Askari Mirza (1518 –1557) Hindal Mirza (1519 –1551) Gulbadan Begum: Gulrukh Begum: 3. Akbar (1542 –1605) Mirza Muhammad Hakim (1553 –1585) 4. Jahangir (1569 –1627) Shahzada Khanam: Shah Murad (1570- 1599) Daniyal (1572- 1604) Shakarunnisa Begum: Aram Banu Begum: Sultan ...
Sultanum Begum (Persian: سلطانم بیگم; (c. 1516 – 1593), also known as Kadam Ali Soltan Khanum, [1] was the first wife and chief consort [2] of the second Safavid king Tahmasp I. She was the mother of her husband's successor, Ismail II , and the mother of Mohammad Khodabanda , who reigned from 1578 until his overthrow in 1587.
Masuma Begum (8 October 1902 – 2 March 1990) was an Indian politician, social worker, and feminist. She was a member of the Indian National Congress party, serving as their deputy leader, and was active in politics in Andhra Pradesh, becoming a member of the cabinet in 1960.
Finally, the nobles selected Mahmud Khan, son of Bahadur's brother Latif Khan as his successor and he ascended to the throne as Mahmud Shah III on May 10, 1538. Then Muhammad Zaman Mirza made an agreement with the Portuguese in which he would yield Mangrol and Daman and a band of land along the entire coast, in return for their support but the ...
Bharat Ek Khoj (lit. ' India: An Exploration ') is a 53-episode Indian historical drama based on the book The Discovery of India (1946) by Jawaharlal Nehru [3] that covers a 5,000-year history of the Indian subcontinent from its beginnings to independence from the British in 1947.