Born on 17 June 1631, the day her mother Mumtaz Mahal died, Gauhar Ara Begum appears to have kept a fairly low profile throughout the reigns of her father and brother. She was primarily raised and educated by her mother's lady-in-wating
Sati-al-Nesāʾ. Evidence vaguely indicates that she may have supported her fourth brother
Murad Bakhsh's bid for the throne during the War of Succession. Were this to be true, this role was unlikely to have been particularly active since, unlike her father and sister
Jahanara, she was not imprisoned afterwards by her victorious brother
Aurangzeb. Following her father's downfall, she involved herself in the organising of the marriages of her relatives. When
Sipihr Shikoh, son of her eldest brother
Dara married Aurangzeb's daughter
Zubdat-un-Nissa in 1673, Gauhar Ara and her maternal cousin Hamida Banu Begum arranged the wedding ceremony. She had taken a greater role in 1672 with the marriage of Dara's granddaughter Salima Banu Begum (whom Gauhar Ara had adopted and raised) and Aurangzeb's fourth son, Prince
Muhammad Akbar. She took the place of the bride's mother, with the wedding being described as a gala event: "On both sides of the road from the Delhi gate to the mansion of the Begum (i.e. Gauhar Ara), wooden structures were set up for illumination." ==Death==