Shah Jahan: 1628-1658
Prince Khurram was 35 years
old when he ascended the throne as Shah Jahan (King of the World). Succeeding
Jahangir in 1627, Shah Jahan enjoyed the support of experienced administrators
and advisors -- like his father-in-law Asaf Khan -- who were holdovers from the
previous reign.
Shah
Jahan, notes Hambly, revived Akbar's policy of pressing southward against the
independent Muslim Sultanate of the Deccan. But almost all of his expansion
expeditions were unsuccessful. The expenditures resulting from Shah Jahan's
failed attempts at frontier expansion, as well as his insatiable appetite for
new and grand architecture, were appreciable factors in the empire's eventual
financial crisis.
Early years of Shah
Jahan
Shah
Jahan preferred Agra to Delhi as a place of residence. This preference is
reflected in his selection of Agra as the site for a number of building
ventures including the world's most famous and beautiful mausoleum, Taj Mahal.
Many historians have -- perhaps unfairly -- accused Shah Jahan of building the
glorious tomb as a tribute to himself and his rule rather than as a tribute to
his wife.
Shah
Jahan was an exceedingly able man -- although less able than his father Akbar
and less conscientious than his son Aurangzeb. Still, Shah Jahan is in the
first rank of Indian rulers. Endowed with all the qualities required of a
medieval Muslim ruler, he was a brave and competent commander; a generous
master who treated his servants with respect, dignity and affability; and a
far-sighted leader with a strict sense of justice.
Shah
Jahan was an active patron of palaces and mosques. Blair and Bloom write that
upon Shah Jahan's accession, the fort at Agra was renovated to include three
major courts: Halls of Public and Private Audience (Diwan-i Khass wa 'Am); an
area for treasures and private audience (Machhi Bhavan); and a residential
court known as the Garden of Grapes (Anguri Bagh). The first court, note Bloom
and Blair, is close to the entrance, while the other two courts, which were
used by the emperor and his entourage, overlook the river.
Inside
the fort, write Blair and Bloom, is a congregational mosque known today as the
Moti (Pearl) Mosque because of the translucent white marble used on the
interior. The mosque, continue Blair and Bloom, comprises a rectangular prayer
hall, about 53 by 21 yards, divided by cruciform piers into three aisles of
seven bays supported on cusped arches and surmounted by three bulbous domes.
The additive system of vaulted bays used in the Moti Mosque at Agra is the type
of plan favored for smaller mosques constructed under imperial patronage.
Blair and Bloom:
According
to Blair and Bloom, the single-aisled plan that had been used for Shir Shah's
mosque in Delhi was preferred for large, urban congregational mosques which
have immense courtyards with narrow prayer halls fronted by pishtaq and
surmounted by three or five domes. The mosque of Vazir Khan at Lahore,
constructed by the court physician Hakim Ali of Chiniot in 1635, is but one
example of this group. The congregational mosque at Agra, continue Blair and
Bloom, was completed in 1648 under the patronage of the emperor's daughter
Jahanara. Constructed of red sandstone, the mosque used white marble sparingly
for calligraphic bands.
Shah Jahan, During 1638
Shah
Jahan moved his capital from Agra to a city in Delhi. Known as Shahjahanabad,
the new capital city was laid out under the emperor's auspices from 1639-1648.
According to Blair and Bloom, the massive project was designed by Ahmed Lahwari,
the chief architect of the Taj Mahal, and by the architect Hamid. Ghayrat Khan
and Makramat Khan, who also worked on the Taj Mahal, supervised the
construction. The walled city, note Bloom and Blair, included broad avenues
with water channels, souqs (markets), mosques, gardens, houses of the nobility,
and the fortified palace known as the Red Fort or Lal Qala. Twice the size of
the fort at Agra, the Red Fort was named for the high, red sandstone wall that
surrounded the white marble palaces.
From
Shah Jahan to the end of the Mughal line the famous Red Fort was heart of the
empire and the principal residence of the emperors. Hambly writes that in the
17th century, at the height of the Mughals' power, the Red Fort constituted not
only the esidence of the emperor and his court but also housed the central
dministrative machinery of the empire, a military garrison, an arsenal, the
imperial treasury, factories (karkhaneh) for the manufacture of luxury
commodities, and much more.
Family:
Shah
Jahan, like his father Jahangir, was a notable patron of gardens, write Blair
and Bloom. Jahangir had developed Kashmir as a summer residence for the court
where he constructed a garden around the natural spring at Vernag south of
Srinagar. Shah Jahan received an order from his father to dam the stream around
Shalimar on Lake Dal at Srinagar. This garden, known as Farah Bakhsh (Joy
Giving), became the lower garden of Shah Jahan's famed Shalimar Garden. In
1634, Shah Jahan, note Blair and Bloom, added another quadri-partite garden named
Fazd Bakhsh (Bounty Giving) to the northeast. Water was supplied by a canal
linking the Ravi River to the city. The canal was dug by Ali Mardan Khan, an
Iranian nobleman and engineer who had defected to the Mughal court in 1638.
Lahore
is also another site of the greatest of the Mughal water gardens known as
Shalimar (Abode of Bliss), Brend (1991) notes. The garden was constructed in
1642 . Water flows under the bluster-legged throne and into the tank, whose
edge is treated with a lotus ornament. The patform in the center of the tank,
called a mahtabi or place for viewing moonlight, might be used
for musicians. The gangways from it lead to pavilions on graceful sandstone
columuns.
According
to Blair and Bloom, these gardens contained more than a hundred species of
plants, including evergreens, screwpines and other trees, roses, violets,
sunflowers, cockscombs, and several varieties of jasmines. The gardens were not
only enchanting places of repose but also yielded a substantial revenue in
roses and musk mallow. In the eyes of contemporary French travelers these
gardens were the equal of Versailles.
During
Shah Jahan's reign, the Mughals penetrated deeper into the Deccan and the
successful campaign in 1636 forced the state ruled by Adil Shah to acknowledge
Mughal dominance. Shah Jahan returned north to concentrate on his new capital
at Shahjahanabad, while his son, the young prince Aurangzeb, was appointed
viceroy and commander-in-chief of Mughal forces in the Deccan.
During
the following two decades, note Blair and Bloom, the Adil Shahis at Bijabur
enjoyed peace, and the dynasty's prosperity in the mid-17th century is
exemplified by the tomb built for Mohammed Adil Shah. The tomb, known as the
Gol Gumbaz, is famous for its formal simplicity, write Blair and Bloom. The
tomb has a gigantic hemispherical dome (with an exterior diameter of 46 yards)
and rests on an almost cubical mass with a staged octagonal turret at each
corner. The dome is supported internally by arches set in intersecting squares.
The floor area covered 1,725 square yards, exceeding that of the Pantheon in
Rome. At the time of its construction, the tomb was the largest space in the
world covered by a single dome, continue Blair and Bloom.
From
an early age, Shah Jahan's four sons, Dara Shukoh, Shah Shuja, Aurangzeb, and
Murad Bakhsh, grew up in an atmosphere of bitter rivalry, writes Hambly, even
though they were all children of the same mother, Mumtaz Mahal. In 1657, Shah
Jahan became seriously ill. The expectation of an early death provoked the four
sons into making a desperate bid for the throne. Only two candidates, writes
Hambly, stood much chance of success -- Dara Shukoh, who was 42 years old, and
Aurangzeb, who was 39.
Dara
Shukoh, Shah Jahan's favorite and his heir, was a man of broad intellectual
interests, writes Hambly. He was a Sufi and a religious eclectic who had
translated the Upanishads into Persian.
Intro to Aurangzeb
Aurangzeb,
notes Hambly, was well educated, knowledgeable in the traditional spectrum of
Islamic studies, and strict in his religious orthodoxy. Aurangzeb had an acute
sense of political realism and a fierce appetite for power. Although
Aurangzeb's personality was considered less attractive than that of Dara
Shukoh, writes Hambly, Aurangzeb was the superior in both military talent and administrative
skills.
Aurangzeb
easily outclassed his brothers in the bid for power. In the summer of 1658,
Aurangzeb held a coronation durbar, or reception, in the Shalimar-Bagh outside
Delhi on the Karnal road. This probably was done in order to strengthen the
morale of his supporters. It was not until the summer of 1659 that a second and
more glorious ceremony was performed in the Red Fort at which time Aurangzeb
became the new emperor and assumed the title of Alamgir (World Conqueror).
During
his 30-year reign, Shah Jahan had never expected that his last days would be so
utterly tragic. With his old age and his poor health, Shah Jahan could only
helplessly watch the serious outbreak of hostility among his sons. Shah Jahan
was a mere spectator at the savage contest. The emergence of Aurangzeb as the
undisputed victor led to the father's imprisonment in the Agra fort.
Tended
by Jahanara, his eldest daughter, Shah Jahan was confined to the fort for eight
years. According to legend, writes Hambly, when Shah Jahan was on his
death-bed, he kept his eyes fixed on the Taj Mahal which was clearly visible
from his place of confinement. After his death, Shah Jahan was buried there
beside his dead queen, Mumtaz Mahal.
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