Taj Mahal Tours - Visit Taj Mahal, get well-packaged tours
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Taj Mahal travel itineraries, and get to know
the real cultural heritage of India with the Taj Mahal,
the ultimate monument of love, is India's gift to the monumental legacy of
the world.

The year 1607 was a
momentous year for Prince Khurram, the eldest son of Emperor Jahangir and
his father's favourite. He was a young handsome prince accustomed
to luxury and refinement. As he made his way to the Meena bazaar, the
private market attached to the harem, he was surrounded by a string of
fawning companions, all eager to catch his eye. Even at 15, young Khurram
cut a dashing figure with his father's aristocratic nose, high forehead and
large languid eyes. Every maid at the bazaar carried a torch for him.

Arjumand
Banu sat with her silks and glass beads at her shop. She was the daughter of
Asaf Khan, the brother of the emperor Jahangir's consort, Noorjahan.
Exquisitely pretty, Khurram was drawn to her. He saw a piece of glass at her
stall and asked its worth. When she saucily replied that it was diamond and
not glass he gave her ten thousand rupees (a sum she boldly said he could
not afford), picked up the piece of glass and left carryimg with him her
image in his mind.
Flamming Passions The next day Khurram
boldly presented his case before the Emperor seeking Arjumand's hand in
marriage. The Emperor raised his hand in assent, perhaps recalling his own
love for Noorjahan.
However, five years were to pass before Khurram
was to marry his beloved. Meanwhile, he was married to Quandari
Begum, a Persian princess, for political reasons.
A
Royal Marriage The astrologers chose 1612 as auspicious
for Khurranb's union with Arjumand. By now he was 20, and she, 19.
It was a grand wedding, as befits an Emperor's son. Jahangir and Khurram
went in procession, surrounded by nobles, musicians and dancers, acrobats,
rare animals in cages, slaves and priests. Jahangir himself adorned Khurram
with the wedding wreath of pearls. On the bride, he bestowed great honours.
A Perfect Match Deeply
influenced by her aunt, Noorjahan, Arjumand Banu was, unlike her aunt,
compassionate, generous and demure. Court poets woud celebrate her
beauty saying the moon hid in shame before her. She was inseparable from
Khurram and often accompanied him with an entourage when he went to fight
wars. In her 19 years of marriage, she bore him 14 children, 7 of whom died
in infancy.
Mumtaz Mahal
After
Jahangir's death, Khurram became Shah Jahan and Arjumand Banu, Mumtaz Mahal.
He built sumptuous palaces for her, for instance, the Khas Mahal in Agra
fort. She daily rose in his confidence eventually giving her the
royal seal, Muhr Uzah. She continually interceded on behalf of petitioners
and gave allowances to widows and orphans. Like many royal ladies, she also
had nerves of steel. She is said to have enjoyed the spectacle of men in
combat with animals. Shah Jahan is believed to have persecuted the
Portuguese at Hooghly at her behest.
Death of a Dream Mumtaz Mahal
died in childbirth in 1630 ib the Deccan where she had gone accompanying
Shah Jahan as he went to war with Khan Jahanb Lodi. As she lay on
her deathbed, it is said that she whispered to him to build for her a
monument that would symbolize the beauty of their love. For a week Shah
Jahan remained behind closed doors. When he emerged his hair had turned
white, his back was bent, his face worn with despair. The entire kingdom was
ordered into mourning for two years.
Tribute to
Beauty
As
a tribute to a beautiful woman and as a monument to enduring love, the Taj
reveals its subtleties at leisure. The rectangular base of Taj is
in itself symbolic of the different sides from which to view a beautiful
woman. The main gate is like a veil to a woman's face which should be lifted
delicately, gently and without haste on the wedding night. Shah Jahan surely
had his chaste and exquisite bride in mind when he planned the Taj Mahal.