Mumtaz
Mahal
The eldest son of Emperor Jahangir
and his father's favourite. He was a young handsome prince accustomed to
luxury and refinement. As he made his way to the Meena bazaar, the private
market attached to the harem, he was surrounded by a string of fawning
companions, all eager to catch his eye. Even at 15, young Khurram cut a
dashing figure with his father's aristocratic nose, high forehead and large
languid eyes.
Arjumand Banu sat with her silks and glass beads at
her shop. She was the daughter of Asaf Khan, the brother of the emperor
Jahangir's consort, Noorjahan. Exquisitely pretty, Khurram was drawn to her.
He saw a piece of glass at her stall and asked its worth. When she saucily
replied that it was diamond and not glass he gave her ten thousand rupees (a
sum she boldly said he could not afford), picked up the piece of glass and
left carryimg with him her image in his mind.
But After Jahangir's death, Khurram
became Shah Jahan and Arjumand Banu, Mumtaz Mahal. He built sumptuous
palaces for her, for instance, the Khas Mahal in Agra fort. She daily rose
in his confidence eventually giving her the royal seal, Muhr Uzah. She
continually interceded on behalf of petitioners and gave allowances to
widows and orphans. Like many royal ladies, she also had nerves of steel.
She is said to have enjoyed the spectacle of men in combat with animals.
Shah Jahan is believed to have persecuted the Portuguese at Hooghly at her
behest.
Mumtaz Mahal died in childbirth in 1630 ib the Deccan
where she had gone accompanying Shah Jahan as he went to war with Khan
Jahanb Lodi. As she lay on her deathbed, it is said that she whispered to
him to build for her a monument that would symbolize the beauty of their
love. For a week Shah Jahan remained behind closed doors. When he emerged
his hair had turned white, his back was bent, his face worn with despair.
The entire kingdom was ordered into mourning for two years.