Mah Chuchak Begum
{{Short description|Mughal royal consort}}
{{refimprove|date=May 2024}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2024}}
{{Infobox royalty
| name = Mah Chuchak Begum
| title =
| image =
| caption =
| spouse = {{Marriage|Humayun|1546|27 September 1556|end= {{Abbr|d.|death}}}}
| issue = {{plainlist|
- Mirza Farrukh Fal
- Mirza Muhammad Hakim
- Bakht-un-Nissa Begum
- Sakina Banu Begum
- Amina Banu Begum}}
| father =
| mother =
| birth_date =
| birth_place = Afghanistan
| death_date = 28 March 1564
| death_place = Bala Hissar, Kabul, Mughal Empire
| burial_place = Kabul, Mughal Empire
| religion = Sunni Islam
}}
Mah Chuchak Begum ({{langx|ps|ماه چوچک بېګم}}, meaning moon flower;{{cite book|author=Annemarie Schimmel|title=The Empire of the Great Mughals: History, Art and Culture|publisher=Reaktion Books|year=2004|isbn=978-1-861-89185-3|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/empireofgreatmug00anne}} died 28 March 1564) was a wife of the second Mughal emperor Humayun.{{cite book|title=Akbarnama of Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak - Volume II|first=Henry|last=Beveridge|year=1907|pages=319|publisher=Asiatic Society, Calcutta}} She was an ambitious lady who threw out the Naib Subadar and ruled Kabul on her own, once leading her army in person and defeating at Jalalabad the Mughal general Munim Khan whom the Emperor Akbar had dispatched over Mah Chuchak's perceived transgression.{{cite book|author=Rekha Misra|title=Women in Mughal India, 1526–1748 A.D.|publisher=Munshiram Manoharlal|year=1967|pages=24}}
Early years
Mah Chuchak Begum's parentage is not mentioned in any of the contemporary chronicles. She was the sister of Bairam Oghlan of Arghun and Faridun Khan Kabuli.{{cite book|author=Begum, Gulbadan|author-link=Gulbadan Begum|title=The History of Humayun (Humayun-Nama)|publisher=Royal Asiatic Society|year=1902|pages=260}} Humayun married Mah Chuchak in 1546. She had two sons, Mirza Muhammad Hakim and Farrukh Fal Mirza, and three daughters, Bakht-un-Nissa Begum, Sakina Banu Begum, and Amina Banu Begum.{{cite book|author=Begum, Gulbadan|author-link=Gulbadan Begum|title=The History of Humayun (Humayun-Nama)|publisher=Royal Asiatic Society|year=1902|pages=186}}
As widow
She was one of the Mughal ladies who caused a lot of trouble to Akbar during the initial phase of his reign. In 1554, Humayun nominated his son with her, Mirza Muhammad Hakim, then three years old, as the governor of Kabul under the charge of Munim Khan. In 1566, Akbar confirmed the appointment. Munim Khan returned to Akbar's court in 1561 and his son Ghani took his place. Mah Chuchak was politically ambitious. She was advised by Fazli Beg and his son Abdulfath, who hated Ghani Khan, to close the doors of Kabul, when Ghani Khan was once temporarily absent at Faliz. Ghani Khan, not finding adherents to oppose her, went to India. Mah Chuchak Begum then appointed Fazli Beg as Vakil and Abdulfath as Naib (regent), but being dissatisfied with them, she killed them both, at the advice of Shah Wali, one of her nobles. When Akbar heard of this, he sent Munim Khan with an army against Mah Chuchak. Mah Chuchak met him and defeated Munim Khan at Jalalabad. Mah Chuchak ruled Kabul with the help of three advisers, two of whom were killed earlier. Now, even the third one was killed. In their place came Haidar Qasim Kohbur, whom Mah Chuchak Begum had made Vakil.{{citation needed|date=September 2020}} Munim fled to the Ghak'hars, and ashamed and hesitating he joined Akbar, who appointed him Commander at the fort of Agra.
Around this time a certain Shah Abul Maali, who belonged to the family from the great Sayyids of Termez (present-day Uzbekistan), who had escaped from the prison at Lahore, arrived at Kabul and approached Mah Chuchak Begum for refuge. The Begum welcomed him, was generous to him and gave her daughter Bakht-un-Nissa Begum in marriage to him.{{citation needed|date=September 2020}}
Death and aftermath
Shah Abul Maali soon grew tired of the dominating and interfering ways of Mah Chuchak Begum. He wanted Kabul for himself. So, he killed Mah Chuchak and Haidar Qasim in 1564. Akbar's half-brother and Mah Chuchak's son Mirza Hakim was luckily rescued by Mirza Sulaiman of Badakshan, who defeated Abdul Maali and helped Mirza Hakim keep his hold over Kabul. The activities of Mah Chuchak Begum and her political ambitions certainly proved to be a headache for Akbar and troubled him like a sore thumb, just when he was trying to consolidate his father's inherited, lost and finally gained empire in India. But he was soon freed of Mah Chuchak Begum and her ambitious ways.{{citation needed|date=September 2020}}
In popular culture
In 2013, a television series called Jodha Akbar aired on Zee TV, in which the role of Mah Chuchak Begum was played by actress Mita Vashisht.{{fact|date=July 2024}}