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  1. Sultanum Begum ( Persian: سلطانم بیگم; ( c. 1516 – 1593), also known as Kadam Ali Soltan Khanum, [1] was the first wife and chief consort [2] of the second Safavid king Tahmasp I. She was the mother of her husband's successor, Ismail II, and the mother of Mohammad Khodabanda, who reigned from 1578 until his overthrow in 1587.

    • c. 1516
    • 23 May 1524 – 25 May 1576
  2. Sultanum Begum , also known as Kadam Ali Soltan Khanum, was the first wife and chief consort of the second Safavid king Tahmasp I. She was the mother of her husband's successor, Ismail II, and the mother of Mohammad Khodabanda, who reigned from 1578 until his overthrow in 1587.

  3. Sultanum Begum: Ismail II and Mohammad Khodabanda: Turcoman: Khayr al-Nisa Begum: Abbas I: Mazanderani: Dilaram Khanum: Shah Safi: Georgian: Anna Khanum: Abbas II: Circassian: Nakihat Khanum: Suleiman I of Persia: Circassian: Unknown Sultan Husayn: Circassian: Unknown Tahmasp II: Unknown Unknown Abbas III: Unknown Shahrbanu Begum ...

  4. Biografía. Primeros años y ascenso al trono. Ismaíl era hijo del shah Tahmasp I de una madre turcomana iraquí del área de Mosul, Sultanum Begum. 1 En 1547, fue nombrado gobernador de la provincia de Shirván, donde dirigió varias expediciones contra los otomanos.

    • Family and Lineage
    • Marriage to Akbar
    • Life
    • Death
    • In Popular Culture

    Ruqaiya Sultan Begum was born into the Timurid dynasty as a Mughal princess, and was the only daughter of Mughal prince Hindal Mirza, the youngest son of the first Mughal emperor Babur from his wife Dildar Begum. Ruqaiya's mother, Sultanam Begum, was the daughter of Muhammad Musa Khwaja and the younger sister of Mahdi Khwaja, who was the brother-in...

    On 20 November 1551, Hindal Mirza died fighting valorously for Humayun in a battle against their half-brother, Kamran Mirza's forces. Humayun was overwhelmed with grief upon the death of his youngest brother, who had expiated for his former disobedience by his blood, but his amirs consoled him by saying that his brother was blessed in having thus f...

    Ruqaiya became Empress consort of the Mughal Empire at the age of fourteen years following her husband's accession to the throne in 1556. She remained childless throughout her marriage but was entrusted the upbringing of Akbar and Mariam-uz-Zamani's grandson, Prince Khurram (the future emperor Shah Jahan). Jagat Gosain's son Khurram, considered to ...

    Ruqaiya died in 1626 in Agra, at the age of eighty-four. She was buried on the fifteenth level in the Gardens of Babur (Bagh-e-Babur) in Kabul, Afghanistan beside the grave of her father Hindal Mirzaas per her wish. The Gardens of Babur is the final resting place of her grandfather, Emperor Babur, as well as that of her father, Hindal Mirza.

    Ruqaiya plays an important role in Harold Lamb's historical novel, Nur Mahal(1935).
    Ruqaiya is a principal character in Indu Sundaresan's fictional novel, The Twentieth Wife (2002), as well as in its sequel, The Feast of Roses(2003).
    Ruqaiya is a pivotal character in Tanushree Podder's historical novel, Nur Jahan's Daughter, 2005.
    Ruqaiya was portrayed by Lavina Tandon/Smiley Suri in critically acclaimed Zee TV's fictional drama Jodha Akbar.
  5. Malika Sultan Begum. Sultan Ahmed Mirza ( Persian: سلطان احمد مرزا) was the eldest son of Abu Sa'id Mirza on whose death he became the Timurid ruler of Samarkand and Bukhara from 1469 until 1494.

  6. Ruqaiya Sultana Begum (en persa: رقیه سلطان بیگم ‎) (1542 - 19 de enero de 1626) fue una emperatriz consorte del Imperio mogol, como primera esposa del emperador Akbar. [1] [2] [3] Ella ostentó el título de emperatriz durante más de 49 años. [4] [5]