Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Muhammad Sultan (Mughal prince)

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Burial
  
Qutb Shah, Delhi

Religion
  
Islam

Parents
  
Aurangzeb, Nawab Bai

Mother
  
Nawab Bai

House
  
Timurid dynasty


Father
  
Aurangzeb

Role
  
Aurangzeb's son

Issue
  
Masud Bakhsh

Name
  
Muhammad Sultan

Spouse
  
Padshah Bibi Gulrukh Banu Begum Dostdar Banu Begum Bai Bhut Devi Munawar Khanum (six wives)

Died
  
December 14, 1676, Salimgarh Fort, New Delhi

Cousins
  
Sulaiman Shikoh, Jahanzeb Banu Begum, Mumtaz Shikoh, Sipihr Shikoh

Similar People
  
Aurangzeb, Muhammad Azam Shah, Bahadur Shah I, Murad Bakhsh, Zeb‑un‑Nisa

Grandparents
  
Shah Jahan, Mumtaz Mahal

Shahzada Muhammad Sultan (30 December 1639 – 14 December 1676) was the eldest son of Mughal emperor Aurangzeb and his second wife Nawab Bai. His younger brother Muazzam later became Emperor Bahadur Shah I in 1707.

Contents

Life

April 1656, Muhammad Sultan was appointed as Heir Apparent by his father-in-law Abdullah Qutb Shah, Sultan of Golconda and Hyderabad.

After the succession war of the Mughal Empire began in 1657, he joined his father-in-law Shah Shuja, and was appointed as Chief-in-Commander and Principal Counsellor in 1659.

He rejoined his father on February 20, 1660 and was imprisoned at Salimgarh Fort in Delhi, 8 May 1660. He was transferred to and imprisoned at the Gwalior Fort on the orders of his father, from January 1661 to December 1672.

On December 14, 1676 he died in confinement at Salimgarh Prison.

Marriages

In 1656, during the siege of Golconda negotiations for peace were carried out between Aurangzeb and Abdullah Qutb Shah. For this reason Hayat Bakhshi Begum, the Queen mother of Golconda, visited Aurangzeb and personally entreat him to spare her son. Aurangzeb agreed to restore the kingdom on the payment of one crore of rupees as indemnity and arrears of tribute and the marriage of his daughter with his son. Abdullah objected that the amount was too large, and there was delay in making the final settlement. On 10 April Aurangzeb withdrew from Golconda on the orders of Shah Jahan. On 13 April 1656, Muhammad married, by proxy, the second daughter of Abdullah Qutb Shah, named Padishah Bibi. On 20 April, she was brought away from the fort to her husband's camp.

When Aurangzeb was still a prince, he and Prince Shah Shuja, in jealousy, had vowed to unite against their elder brother Prince Dara Shikoh on their father's death. The vow had been strengthened by each entertaining the other for a week at Agra and betrothing young Muhammad to Shuja's daughter Gulrukh Banu Begum also known as Mah Khanum. Their fathers' quarrel had broken off the match when the pair came of age. Shuja sent secret messages to Muhammad, offering him the throne and the hand of his daughter. On the night of 18 June 1659, Muhammad slipped out of Dogachi with five servants, some gold coins and jewels, and went over to Shuja's camp, and married Gulrukh Banu Begum. In 1660, she fled to Arakan with her father, and died in 1661.

On 26 December 1672, Aurangzeb ordered Darab Khan to bring Muhammad Sultan into his sleeping chamber. He had audience, and after interview, Muhammad Sultan married Dostar Banu Begum, daughter of Prince Murad Bakhsh. He was presented with a robe, a sword, a jewelled muttaka, and a horse with a jewelled saddle. In the khwabgah, Aurangzeb put a pearl chaplet on the prince's head and took him to the mosque. The Qazi-ul-Quzat Abdul Wahab, with Mulla Muhammad Yaqub as his agent, and Mir Sayyid Muhammad Qanauji and Mulla Auz Wajih as witnesses, tied the knot. Two lakh rupees settled as the marriage portion. Shuja'et Khan, Shaikh Nizam, Dirbar Khan, Bakhtawar Khan, and Khidmatgar Khan were present. Dostar Banu Begum died at Rustam Khan's palace on 4 March 1876.

On 12 January 1675, Shaikh Nizam married Muhammad Sultan to Bai Phup Devi, daughter of the Raja of Kishtwar. She was the mother of Prince Masa'ud Bakhsh Mirza born on 15 August 1676, and died on 18 June 1677. On 10 September 1676, he married the daughter of the brother of Daulatabadi Mahal.

References

Muhammad Sultan (Mughal prince) Wikipedia