TAJ MAHAL As Symbol Of Love BUT

maniieee

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Sep 29, 2010
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this is an e mail i got.so i just shared only. i think the one who made this has done a good research about king shahjahan.. so don't blame on me....


We All Know TAJ MAHAL As Symbol Of Love


But The Other Lesser Known Facts are:

1. Mumtaz Was Shahjahan's 4th Wife Out Of His 7 Wives.

2. Shahjahan Killed Mumtaz's Husband To Marry Her !

3. Mumtaz Died In Her 14th Delivery !

4. He Then Married Mumtaz's Sister !
Question Arises Where The HELL IS LOVE.?? J

Give rep if u like diz!!
 
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rishoban

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  • Dec 30, 2008
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    Small correction.

    Mumtaz Mahal was Shah-Jahan's 3rd wife, not fourth

    what you say is true;
    Mumtaz Mahal, died during the birth of their fourteenth child, Gauhara Begum

    But, Shah Jahan had a deep love towards Mumtaz than any of his other wives.

    When Shah Jahan married Mumtaz, she was just 14 years old;
    so, this is also probably not true:
    Shahjahan Killed Mumtaz's Husband To Marry Her !
    The name Mumtaz Mahal was given by her husband, Shah Jahan during their wedding

    He Then Married Mumtaz's Sister !
    This is a complete fake information!
    Shah Jahan never married anyone else after Mumtaz's death
     
    Last edited:

    rishoban

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  • Dec 30, 2008
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    So, Out of the 5 points you have presented;
    1. True, Mumtaz was his 3rd wife
    2. False! Shah Jahan was Mumtaz's one and only spouse
    3. True
    4. False! Shah Jahan never married anyone after Mumtaz


    And better if you do a research on the information you get before posting it to a public forum.
     

    Flyboy

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  • Oct 15, 2007
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    So, Out of the 5 points you have presented;
    1. True, Mumtaz was his 3rd wife
    2. False! Shah Jahan was Mumtaz's one and only spouse
    3. True
    4. False! Shah Jahan never married anyone after Mumtaz


    And better if you do a research on the information you get before posting it to a public forum.

    :yes::yes::yes::yes::yes::yes:
     

    Java00

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  • Jun 22, 2008
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    Shah Jahan and Mumtaz Mahal :

    The actual name of Mumtaz Mahal was Arjumand Banu Begum; Mumtaz Mahal, which means 'The Chosen One of the Palace', was an affectionate title. She was the daughter of Asif Khan and the grand-daughter of Mirza Ghiyas Beg, both of whom held high positions in the Mughal Court.

    According to a popular story, Arjumand Banu, as a young girl, captivated Shah Jahan when he confronted her for having released one of his two prized fantail pigeons. He angrily demanded how she could have done something like this, upon which she released the other one as well and said, "Like this!"

    During the long years of their married life, she stood by him through political and personal ups and downs, and often accompanied him during military campaigns. It was on one of these – against Khan-i-Jehan Lodi at Burhanpur – that she delivered their fourteenth child and died shortly afterwards on 17 June 1631. The grief-stricken Emperor aged almost over-night – according to legend, his beard and hair turned snow-white – and, for the next two years, he remained in deep mourning for her.

    The Idea of the Taj Mahal:

    After his wife's death, Shah Jahan gave up most of the pleasures and comforts that his royal position brought him. He had always had an avid interest in architecture, and now thought of erecting a commemorative monument in his queen's memory. A one of a kind monument of such remarkable beauty that it would last over the centuries and awe all lookers.

    After her death, Anjuman Banu had been buried temporarily in Burhanpur's Zainabad Garden. Six months later she was taken to Agra (then called Dar-ul Khilafat Akbarabad) and reburied on the banks of the Yamuna.

    The piece of land chosen for the burial belonged to Raja Jai Singh, the grand-son of Raja Man Singh, who gladly offered it to the Emperor, and was compensated with another piece of land elsewhere.

    The Building of the Taj Mahal :

    Initially, many wooden models for the proposed tomb were prepared and, after much consulting between the Emperor and his designers, the final design was approved.

    There is considerable debate between historians on who the actual designers were. Was it the Turkish or Persian designer Ustad Muhammad Isa Effendi or the Venetian Adventurer Geronimo Veroneo? Or was it a collaboration between them? Both are known to have been employed by Shah Jehan around this time.

    In any case, the building of the Taj Mahal began in 1632 and the main mausoleum was deemed finished in 1643. The work on the outer buildings continued for a considerable time after this, until 1653. So overall the project took around twenty-two years to complete.

    According to Tavernier, who saw both the commencement and the completion of the Taj Mahal, over 20,000 workers, Hindu as well as Muslim, from around India and from abroad, particularly from Persia, were employed in the building work. Some of these workmen and craftsmen are mentioned in contemporary accounts, and so we know, for example, that a certain Amanat Khan Shirazi was the Tughra-Navis (Calligrapher) and a certain Ismail Khan was the dome-builder.

    Shah Jahan was determined not to be held back by any financial considerations and so no expense was spared in the building. The total cost is said to have been roughly 411 lakhs, 48 thousand, 826 rupees, seven annas, six pies.

    This probably includes the cost of the building materials like marble, red sand-stone, precious gems, and so on, procured both from the State Treasury and from donations by Vassal States.

    Shah Jahan's End:

    Shah Jahan had planned to built a tomb for himself that would be a twin to the Taj Mahal, only in black marble, on the exact opposite side of the Yamuna and connected to the Taj with a marble bridge. But before this project was launched, he was over-thrown from power by his son Aurangzeb and imprisoned. He spent his last years in confinement in the Red Fort from where he could gaze at the Taj Mahal.


    By Sonal Panse
     

    Mystery

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    what you say is true;
    Mumtaz Mahal, died during the birth of their fourteenth child, Gauhara Begum

    But, Shah Jahan had a deep love towards Mumtaz than any of his other wives.
    it isn't love its better defined as polygamy
    interesting information though :lol: