Aurangabadi Mahal

{{Short description|Second wife of Aurangzeb}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2023}}

{{Use Indian English|date=March 2023}}

{{Infobox royalty

| name = Aurangabadi Mahal

| image = Ivory spittoon (cuspidor), decorated with depictions of four Wellcome L0058702.jpg

| caption = Aurangzeb and Arzani

| title =

| spouse = Aurangzeb

| spouse-type = Consort of

| issue = Mihr-un-Nissa Begum

| father =

| mother = Ladli Begum

| birth_date =

| birth_place =

| death_date = {{Circa}} 1688

| death_place = Bijapur, Mughal Empire

| burial_place = Aurangabadi Mahal Mausoleum, Bijapur

| burial_date =

| religion = Islam

}}

Aurangabadi Mahal{{cite book|first=Niccolò|last=Manucci|title=Storia Do Mogor: Or, Mogul India, 1653-1708 - Volume 2|url=https://archive.org/details/storiadomogororm02manuuoft/page/332/mode/1up?view=theater&q=Mahal|publisher=J. Murray|year=1907|pages=333}} (died 1688) was a consort (concubine) of the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb.{{cite book|last1=Mukerjee|first1=Soma|title=Royal Mughal ladies and their contributions|date=2001|publisher=Gyan Publishing House|page=23|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=v-2TyjzZhZEC&pg=PA23|isbn=9788121207607}}

Origins

Aurangabadi Mahal either belonged to Aurangabad,{{cite book|first=Rukhsana|last=Iftikhar|title=Indian Feminism: Class, Gender & Identity in Medieval Ages|publisher=Notion Press|date=6 June 2016|isbn=978-9-386-07373-0}} or had entered Aurangzeb's harem in the city of Aurangabad.{{cite book|first=Sir Jadunath|last=Sarkar|title=1618-1659|publisher=Orient Longman|date=1973|pages=34}} She was either Georgian or Circassian by origin (see Black Sea slave trade).{{cite book|first=Annie|last=Krieger-Krynicki|title=Captive Princess: Zebunissa, Daughter of Emperor Aurangzeb|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2005|pages=3, 41|isbn=978-0-195-79837-1}} Ever since from the reign of Emperor Akbar, it had been ordained that the names of the women of the imperial harem should not be mentioned in public, they should be designated by some epithet, derived either from the place of their birth or the city or country where they had entered the imperial harem.{{cite book|first=Abraham|last=Eraly|title=The Mughal World: Life in India's Last Golden Age|publisher=Penguin Book India|date=1 January 2007|pages=126|isbn=978-0-143-10262-5}}

According to some sources it is also said that Aurangzeb married Arzani Begum, Daughter of Prince Shahryar Mirza, Granddaughter of Jahangir and Nur Jahan. It is said that after the death of Noor Jahan and Ladli Begum, as Arzani Begum became alone Aurangzeb brought her from Lahore to Aurangabad and got married for her support. After the marriage she was to be named as Aurangabadi Mahal.{{cn|date=April 2022}}

Consort

On 28 September 1661, she gave birth to Aurangzeb's youngest daughter, Mihr-un-nissa Begum. She was the ninth child of her father, and the only child of her mother.{{sfn|Sarkar|1947|p=323}}

In March 1680, Yalangtosh Khan Bahadur was sent to bring Aurangabadi, and Princess Zeb-un-nissa Begum from Delhi to Ajmer.{{sfn|Sarkar|1947|p=117}} Both of them reached there in May, and were welcomed by Prince Muhammad Azam Shah Mirza, who conducted them to the imperial harem.{{sfn|Sarkar|1947|p=119}} However, in February 1681, when Prince Muhammad Akbar Mirza had initiated a rebellion against his father, Aurangzeb, Aurangabadi was sent back to Delhi. She was accompanied by Salima Banu Begum, wife of Prince Muhammad Akbar Mirza and daughter of Prince Sulaiman Shikoh Mirza. {{sfn|Sarkar|1947|p=126}}

In March 1686, before Aurangzeb's march to capture the fort of Bijapur, Khan Jahan Bahadur was sent to Burhanpur to bring Aurangabadi. An emerald smarani was made over to him for her. She reached Aurangzeb's camp at Sholapur from Delhi in May 1686, and was welcomed at the door of the fort near the deorhi by Prince Muhammad Kam Bakhsh Mirza.{{sfn|Sarkar|1947|pp=166–7}} She followed Aurangzeb to Bijapur, and remained there after its conquest in September 1686.{{fact|date=March 2023}}

Death

In November 1688, Aurangabadi was still living in Bijapur, when plague spread out in the city. The plague was the cause of death of a number of people, and one of its victims was Aurangabadi Mahal. After her death, Saqi Must'ad Khan, the author of the "Ma'asir-i-Alamgiri" described her as 'the Emperor's parastar, the old and devoted hand-maid.'{{sfn|Sarkar|1947|p=192}}

When Zeb-un-nissa Begum heard of her illness, she was deeply grieved, for she had always been nice to everybody.{{cite book|first=Annie|last=Krieger-Krynicki|title=Captive Princess: Zebunissa, Daughter of Emperor Aurangzeb|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2005|pages=175|isbn=978-0-195-79837-1}} Her death removed the last rival of Aurangzeb's youngest and most beloved concubine, Udaipuri Mahal, the mother of Prince Kam Bakhsh.{{cite book|first=Jadunath|last=Sarkar|title=History of Aurangzib mainly based on Persian sources: Volume 1 - Reign of Shah Jahan|publisher=M.C. Sarkar & sons, Calcutta|year=1912|pages=64}}

References

{{Reflist}}

Bibliography

  • {{cite book|first=Jadunath|last=Sarkar|title=Maasir-i-Alamgiri: A History of Emperor Aurangzib-Alamgir (reign 1658-1707 AD) of Saqi Mustad Khan|publisher=Royal Asiatic Society of Bengal, Calcutta|year=1947}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Aurangabadi Maal}}

Category:Year of birth unknown

Category:1688 deaths

Category:Concubines of Mughal emperors

Category:17th-century Indian women

Category:17th-century Mughal Empire people

Category:Indian people of Georgian descent

Category:Indian slaves

Category:17th-century slaves

Category:Slave concubines

Category:People from Aurangabad, Maharashtra