Javascript must be enabled to continue!
From Harems to Thrones: The Ascendancy of Women in Mughal Royalty
View through CrossRef
This Article delves into the diverse roles of women in Mughal Civilization, highlighting their significant contributions in the cultural, political, and administrative arenas. Using historical documents, Mughal-era literature, and academic articles, this study examines not just how women in Central Asian culture were educated, but also the Mughal dynasty's socio-cultural effect. They also have a significant impact on the landscape. These results show Mughal women's important roles in government and cultural dissemination, contradicting traditional narratives and demonstrating their frequently underappreciated importance in history. The major goal of this article is to illustrate the status of women in the royal family during the Mughal era in India and to demonstrate how crucial Mughal women played in both day-to-day state administration and long-term political and economic activities of the state. Planning This article will also include a list of cultural domains that Mughal women helped to develop, cultivate, and promote.
Title: From Harems to Thrones: The Ascendancy of Women in Mughal Royalty
Description:
This Article delves into the diverse roles of women in Mughal Civilization, highlighting their significant contributions in the cultural, political, and administrative arenas.
Using historical documents, Mughal-era literature, and academic articles, this study examines not just how women in Central Asian culture were educated, but also the Mughal dynasty's socio-cultural effect.
They also have a significant impact on the landscape.
These results show Mughal women's important roles in government and cultural dissemination, contradicting traditional narratives and demonstrating their frequently underappreciated importance in history.
The major goal of this article is to illustrate the status of women in the royal family during the Mughal era in India and to demonstrate how crucial Mughal women played in both day-to-day state administration and long-term political and economic activities of the state.
Planning This article will also include a list of cultural domains that Mughal women helped to develop, cultivate, and promote.
Related Results
Women in Australian Politics: Maintaining the Rage against the Political Machine
Women in Australian Politics: Maintaining the Rage against the Political Machine
Women in federal politics are under-represented today and always have been. At no time in the history of the federal parliament have women achieved equal representation with men. T...
Pregnant Prisoners in Shackles
Pregnant Prisoners in Shackles
Photo by niu niu on Unsplash
ABSTRACT
Shackling prisoners has been implemented as standard procedure when transporting prisoners in labor and during childbirth. This procedure ensu...
The Women Who Don’t Get Counted
The Women Who Don’t Get Counted
Photo by Hédi Benyounes on Unsplash
ABSTRACT
The current incarceration facilities for the growing number of women are depriving expecting mothers of adequate care cruci...
The Missing Link in Royalty Analysis: An Essay on Resolving Value-Based Royalty Disputes
The Missing Link in Royalty Analysis: An Essay on Resolving Value-Based Royalty Disputes
The oil and gas lease is intended to document a business transaction between the landowner and oil and gas developer. The developer obtains the right to enter the landowner's prope...
Jain Elites and the Mughal State under Shahjahan
Jain Elites and the Mughal State under Shahjahan
This article is an attempt to analyse the double-edged social relationship between the merchant communities and the state beyond the technicalities of the economic considerations. ...
ANALISIS PERHITUNGAN ROYALTY FEE FRANCHISE MENURUT KONSEP MUSYARAKAH: STUDI PADA JARIMATIKA DARUSSALAM
ANALISIS PERHITUNGAN ROYALTY FEE FRANCHISE MENURUT KONSEP MUSYARAKAH: STUDI PADA JARIMATIKA DARUSSALAM
This study aims to analyze the calculation of royalty fee at a franchise of Jarimatika in Darussalam Banda Aceh from musyarakah perspective and analyze the strategy employed in sol...
On the Succession of the Thrones in Early Ancient China
On the Succession of the Thrones in Early Ancient China
This essay argues that the succession of the thrones possibly originated from Confucius, then it was developed by his seventy famous disciples, and later it faded when confronted b...
Stylistic Influence of Mughal Architecture on Malaysian Mosques
Stylistic Influence of Mughal Architecture on Malaysian Mosques
Art and architectural historians categorize styles, such as Gothic, Roman and Greek, based on the perceptual similarity of distinguishable features repeatedly used by a group or an...

