Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Message
- Message
- Preface
- CHAPTER 1 The Dancing Girl
- CHAPTER 2 The Vedic Age
- CHAPTER 3 The Middle Path
- CHAPTER 4 Greeks at the Door
- CHAPTER 5 The Science of Government
- CHAPTER 6 Remorse at Kalinga
- CHAPTER 7 Martyrdom at Mylapore
- CHAPTER 8 Valley of Blood
- CHAPTER 9 The Nine Gems
- CHAPTER 10 The Giver of Knowledge
- CHAPTER 11 Arab Storm
- CHAPTER 12 The Reformation
- CHAPTER 13 The Gates of Somnath
- CHAPTER 14 Beacon of Civilization
- CHAPTER 15 Sovereign Lord
- CHAPTER 16 A Slave's Slave
- CHAPTER 17 The Shadow of Allah
- CHAPTER 18 Thousand Dinar Kafur
- CHAPTER 19 Delhi Woes
- CHAPTER 20 The Bulwark
- CHAPTER 21 For Christians and Spices
- CHAPTER 22 Matchlocks and Cannons
- CHAPTER 23 The Afghan
- CHAPTER 24 The Last Maharajah of Delhi
- CHAPTER 25 The Death of a City
- CHAPTER 26 The Divine Religion
- CHAPTER 27 The Book
- CHAPTER 28 The Light of the World
- CHAPTER 29 Splendour Amidst Misery
- CHAPTER 30 The Seizer of the Universe
- Select Bibliography
- Further Reading
- Photo Credits
- Index
- About the Author
CHAPTER 28 - The Light of the World
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Message
- Message
- Preface
- CHAPTER 1 The Dancing Girl
- CHAPTER 2 The Vedic Age
- CHAPTER 3 The Middle Path
- CHAPTER 4 Greeks at the Door
- CHAPTER 5 The Science of Government
- CHAPTER 6 Remorse at Kalinga
- CHAPTER 7 Martyrdom at Mylapore
- CHAPTER 8 Valley of Blood
- CHAPTER 9 The Nine Gems
- CHAPTER 10 The Giver of Knowledge
- CHAPTER 11 Arab Storm
- CHAPTER 12 The Reformation
- CHAPTER 13 The Gates of Somnath
- CHAPTER 14 Beacon of Civilization
- CHAPTER 15 Sovereign Lord
- CHAPTER 16 A Slave's Slave
- CHAPTER 17 The Shadow of Allah
- CHAPTER 18 Thousand Dinar Kafur
- CHAPTER 19 Delhi Woes
- CHAPTER 20 The Bulwark
- CHAPTER 21 For Christians and Spices
- CHAPTER 22 Matchlocks and Cannons
- CHAPTER 23 The Afghan
- CHAPTER 24 The Last Maharajah of Delhi
- CHAPTER 25 The Death of a City
- CHAPTER 26 The Divine Religion
- CHAPTER 27 The Book
- CHAPTER 28 The Light of the World
- CHAPTER 29 Splendour Amidst Misery
- CHAPTER 30 The Seizer of the Universe
- Select Bibliography
- Further Reading
- Photo Credits
- Index
- About the Author
Summary
The Emperor Jahangir was a capricious despot, addicted to alcohol and opium, whose ambition for the throne caused him to rebel against his father and imprison and blind his son. He could not trust his other sons or his nobles. The Timurid emperors maintained large harems. Akbar had 5,000 women in his harem with many of his wives taken for political purposes to create alliances. Jahangir considered himself a connoisseur and collected women for their beauty. In Mughal India, women became marriageable and sexually active upon puberty. By the age of thirty, they were considered past their prime. Jahangir realized his own limitations and his need for a trusted consul who would not pose a danger to his power. He turned to the capable thirty-five year old Mihrunnisa to fulfil this role. She was declared Empress in 1611 at the Red Fort in Agra. They had no children together. She proved a capable governing partner, ruling the kingdom and protecting his throne especially during the periods when he was indisposed through addiction or illness. She struck coins and sent royal commands in their joint name, a rare phenomena in the male dominated Islamic political power structure.
Mihrunnisa was the daughter of a well-educated Persian official, who having suffered a reversal of fortunes in his own country, decided to migrate to Mughal India with his family in 1577. They joined a caravan on its way to India but had the misfortune of being robbed along the way. They were in such dire straits that when Mihrunnisa was born, they considered abandoning her. Eventually, through the kindness of the caravan chief, the family including Mihrunnisa reached Agra intact. Educated Persian officials were in demand in Akbar's court and her father secured an appointment. He must have performed his duties well as he was soon appointed the Imperial treasurer in Kabul.
Mihrunnisa would have visited Agra several times and tradition has it that Prince Salim (the future Jahangir) was enchanted by her. He was known for his roving eye and lack of restraint. He had a liaison with one of his father's favourite concubines, Anakali, that led to the execution of the unfortunate beauty. In 1594, the growing interest of Salim in the seventeen-year-old Mihrunnisa, induced Emperor Akbar to betroth her to a successful Persian adventurer, Sher Afghan, who had performed good service during a military campaign.
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- Information
- The Dancing GirlA History of Early India, pp. 270 - 281Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2011