MarketJagat Gosain
Company Profile

Jagat Gosain

Manavati Bai, also spelled as Manvati Bai,, better known by her title, Jagat Gosain, was the second wife and the empress consort of the fourth Mughal emperor Jahangir and the mother of his successor, Shah Jahan.

Family
Born on 13 May 1573 as Manavati Bai, she was known popularly as Jodh Bai (the Jodhpur Princess). She was born to the Rathore clan of Rajputs and was the daughter of Raja Udai Singh, Udai Singh was popularly known by the sobriquet Mota Raja (the fat king). Her mother was Rajavat Kachvahi Manrang Devi, the principal consort of her father and daughter of Raja Askaran of Narwar (d.1599), who was also briefly Raja of Amber before being ousted in favor of his uncle, Bharmal. Her paternal grandfather was Maldeo Rathore, under whose rule Marwar turned into a strong Rajput Kingdom that resisted foreign rule and challenged the invaders for northern supremacy. Maldeo Rathore refused to ally with either the Sur Empire or the Mughal Empire after Humayun regained control of North India in 1555. This policy was continued by his son and successor, Chandrasen Rathore. After the death of Maldeo Rathore in 1562, a fratricidal war for succession started and Chandrasen crowned himself in the capital, Jodhpur. But his reign was short-lived as Emperor Akbar's army occupied Merta in the same year and the capital Jodhpur in 1563. After the death of Rao Chandrasen in January 1581, Marwar was brought under direct Mughal administration. In August 1583, Akbar restored the throne of Marwar to Udai Singh, who, unlike his predecessors, submitted to the Mughals and subsequently joined the Mughal service. ==Marriage to Jahangir==
Marriage to Jahangir
, both holding Bulbuls c.17th century According to Muni Lal, the young Jagat Gosain is said to have caught the eye of Prince Salim when he was attending a function with his mother and other senior women of the Mughal harem. He is said to have immediately proposed marriage. The Emperor was reluctant to give his consent and only agreed upon the intercession of Hamida Banu. She married the 16-year-old Prince Salim (later known as 'Jahangir' upon his accession) on 11 January 1586. The marriage settlement was fixed at seventy-five lakhs tankas. The marriage ceremony was lavish one, with both Hindu fire ceremonies in the presence of a priest chanting Sanskrit verses, and Muslim proprieties in presence of Qadi and an array of military and civilian dignitaries. According to Murārdān, her paternal cousin, Rana Kalyan Das Rathore took offence at this marriage and was angry at Mota Raja and had remarked – When the Mota Raja heard this remark, he informed Akbar who ordered him to kill Kalyan Das. Kalyan Das fled the Imperial Camp to Siwana. Udai Singh sent two of his sons, Bhopat and Jaisingh to Siwana. But the fort and opponent proved too strong for them and they were forced to retreat. In the face of this defeat, Mota Raja received permission from Akbar to leave the imperial camp. After his return to Marwar, he led a force against Siwana himself. Kalyan Das, realizing defeat was imminent, had his wives perform Jauhar and himself led his men to die fighting. After this victory, Siwana was handed over to Mota Raja. She was granted the title "Jagat Gosain" on account of her ability and learning. This marriage served very well for the cause of the house of Marwar. Marwar's alliance with Mughal would have broken down due to religious strain estrangement had Jahangir and Shah Jahan not been bound by blood ties. After this marriage, Udai Singh and brothers and nephews of Jodh bai succeeded in gaining the confidence of their contemporary rules and were recipients of Royal favors. Although the marriage was a political one, Jagat was known not only for her beauty, charm, and soft voice but for her wit, courage, and spontaneity of response, all of which greatly endeared her to her husband during the early years of their marriage. In 1590, she gave birth to her first child, a daughter, named Begum Sultan, who died at the age of one. On 5 January 1592, she gave birth to Salim's third son, who was named 'Khurram' ("joyous") by his grandfather, Emperor Akbar. The prince, who was to become the future emperor Shah Jahan. whereas according to S. S. Gupta, she was the favorite wife of Jahangir till the arrival of her arch-rival in the imperial harem, Nur Jahaṇ, of whom Jagat was scornful. Jahangir had married her in 1611 and from the time of their marriage until his death, Nur Jahan was indisputably his favorite wife. Even before his marriage with Nur Jahan, Jahangir's chief consort and Padshah Begum was his wife Saliha Banu Begum, who held this position from the time of their marriage till her death in 1620, after which this honorable title was passed on to Nur Jahan. The West side of the quadrangle, surrounded by oblong niches with portraits of Hindu deity, was her temple. The Kanch Mahal, sometimes called Jodh Bai's Mahal, located at Sikandra, is said to have been built by Jahangir for Jagat Gosain. Also the area called 'Taj Ganj' in Agra is said to be named in her honor. She is also said to have founded a village named Sohagpura, which is wholly dedicated to the manufacturing of glass bangles. ==Death==
Death
In 1619, during her stay at Fatehpur Sikri, Jagat Gosain became ill and the treatment she received had no effect. Finally, she died on 8 April 1619 at Akbarabad (present-day Agra). Jahangir noted the death: Shah Jahan, as noted by Jahangir, was inconsolable and According to Muni Lal, Shah Jahan was so indulged in grief on the death of his mother that "For twenty-one days he attended no public entertainment and subsisted on simple vegetarian meals" and Arjumand Banu "personally supervised the distribution of food to the poor during the three - week mourning period and led the recitation of the Holy Quran every morning" and "gave her husband many a lesson on the substance of life and death, and begged him not to grieve". After her death, Jahangir ordered that she be called Bilqis Makani ("the Lady of Pure Abode") in all official documents. Her death, along with the retirement of Mariam-uz-Zamani, led to the decline of Rajput influence on the Mughal court. All of this was blown up in 1832 with gunpowder, for the sake of its site and material, stone and brick, which the British needed. In 1921, a chhatri was constructed marking the site of her tomb using a design made in the Archeological Superintendent Office. The Chhatri is built exactly on the site of the original crypt chamber. The construction of the Chhatri was funded by the Maharajadhiraja of Burdwan and cost about Rs 200(in 1921). The Chhatri is known as '' 'Chhatri making the site of the Empress Jodhbai's Tomb or simply Jodhbai Ki Chhatri'''. ==Issue==
Issue
With Jahangir, Jagat had three children: • Begum Sultan Begum (9 October 1590, Lahore, Mughal Empire – September 1591, Mughal Empire); • Muhammad Khurram (5 January 1592, Lahore, Mughal Empire – 22 January 1666, Agra Fort, Agra, Mughal Empire, buried in Taj Mahal, Agra), succeeded Jahangir as the 5th Emperor as Shah Jahan; • Luzzat-un-Nissa Begum ( 23 September 1597, Kashmir, Mughal Empire – , Allahabad, Mughal Empire). ==In popular culture==
In popular culture
• Jagat Gosain is a principal character in Indu Sundaresan's award-winning historical novel The Twentieth Wife (2002) as well as in its sequel The Feast of Roses (2003). • Nayani Dixit portrayed Jagat Gosain in EPIC channel's historical drama Siyaasat. (based on Twentieth Wife) • Jagat Gosain is a character in novel ''Nur Jahan's Daughter'' (2005) written by Tanushree Poddar. • Jagat Gosain is a principal character in the novel Nurjahan: A historical novel by Jyoti Jafa. • Jagat Gosain is a character in the novel Beloved Empress Mumtaz Mahal: A Historical Novel by Nina Consuelo Epton. • Jagat Gosain as Jodh Bai is a character in Alex Rutherford's novel Ruler of the World(2011) as well as in its sequel The Tainted Throne (2012) of the series Empire of the Moghul. • Jagat Gosain as Jodi Bai is a character in the novel Taj, a Story of Mughal India by Timeri Murari. • Jagat Gosain was character in Doordarshan's 2001 TV series, Noorjahan. • In the 2023 ZEE5's web series Taj: Divided by Blood, Jagat Gossain is portrayed by Tanvi Negi. ==Ancestry==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com