Hazrat Begum was born a Mughal princess and was the daughter of Mughal emperor
Muhammad Shah and his wife
Sahiba Mahal. The princess was raised by her mother and the emperor's first consort
Badshah Begum, who was Sahiba Mahal's closest companian in the
harem. In April 1748, her father died, and her brother,
Ahmad Shah Bahadur, ascended the throne. His mother,
Qudsia Begum, gave pension to the Begums and the children of the late emperor not only from the government's purse but also from her own funds. On 26 May 1754, While running away from Sikandrabad, he took along with him Hazrat Begum, his mother
Qudsia Begum, his son
Mahmud Shah Bahadur, and his favourite wife Inayetpuri Bai, leaving all other empresses and princesses at the mercy of the enemies. At the age of sixteen in February 1756, she became so famous for her matchless beauty that the Mughal emperor
Alamgir II, who was then about sixty, used pressure and threats to force Sahiba Mahal and the princess' guardian and step-mother,
Badshah Begum, to give him Hazrat Begum's hand in marriage. The princess preferred death over marrying an old wreck of sixty and Alamgir II did not succeed in marrying her. As she was only 16 years old, Badshah Begum again resisted handing over her tender charge to an Afghan king 35 years old, but Shah forcibly wedded her on 5 April 1757 in Delhi. After the wedding celebrations, Ahmad Shah took his young wife back to his native place of
Afghanistan. The weeping bride was accompanied by Badshah Begum, Sahiba Mahal and a few ladies of note from the imperial Mughal harem. ==Ancestry==