Literary contributions Apart from his political career, Kamran was a gifted poet who wrote extensively in Persian. His Diwan contains ghazals, rubaiyat, qata’at, and masnavis. He drew upon classical Persian poetic traditions and made skillful use of devices such as talmeeh (allusion), iste’ara (metaphor), tajnis (paronomasia), tashbih (simile), and eihaam (pun). Kamran’s poetic themes revolve around mysticism, divine love, and reflections on political downfall. In many ghazals, he indirectly references betrayal and longing—possibly mirroring his own life experiences. Two primary manuscripts of Kamran’s Diwan are preserved: one at the Khuda Bakhsh Oriental Library in Patna and another at the Raza Library in Rampur. Additional verses are found in literary anthologies such as Haft Iqlim, Makhzan-ul-Gharaib, Bayaz-ul-Ashaar, and Subh-e-Gulshan.
Architecture A significant architectural structure built for Kamran exists today in Lahore. It is called
Kamran ki Baradari.
Bara means twelve and
dar means doors. Kamran ki baradari was a twelve-door building on the bank of River Ravi. The river changed its course over time, with the result that the Baradari stands not on the bank but in the waters as an island while the gardens have deteriorated.
Family ;Consorts Kamran had seven wives: • Gulrukh Begum ( 1528), daughter of his maternal uncle, Amir Sultan Ali Mirza Taghai, a Begchik Mughal, and sister of Abdullah Khan Mughal; • Muhtarima Khanum (died 1584), daughter of Shah Muhammad Sultan Jagatai, Sultan of Kashghar, by his wife, Khadija Sultan Khanum, fourth daughter of
Sultan Ahmad Khan Jagatai; • Hazara Begum, niece of the Hazara chief, Khizr Khan; • Mah Begum, daughter of Sultan Wais, a Qibchaq Mughal, ruler of Kulab, and sister of Chakr Ali Beg, Haidar Beg and Haram Begum; • Mihr Afroz Bega, mother of Hajji Begum;{{cite book|first=Wheeler McIntosh|last=Thackston|title=Humāyūn'nāmah • Daulat Bakht Aghacha, mother of Aisha Sultan Begum; • Mah Chuchak Begum ( 1546; 1558), daughter of Shah Husayn
Arghun, ruler of Sindh, by his wife, Mah Chuchak Begum, daughter of Mirza Muhammad Muqim Beg Arghun; ;Sons Kamran had one son: • Ibrahim Sultan (Abu'l-Qasim) Mirza (killed 1568); ;Daughters Kamran had five daughters: • Habiba Sultan Begum, married in 1545 to Yasin Daulat Aq Sultan, son of
Aiman Khwajah Sultan, son of
Ahmad Alaq, the Khan of
Moghulistan, divorced in 1551–52; • Hajji Begum (died 1583) — with Mihr Afroz Bega, went on the pilgrimage to Mecca in October 1575; • Aisha Sultan Begum — with Daulat Bakht Aghacha, went to
Taloqan with her father in 1550. In 1551, she and her mother were in flight for
Kandahar, but were captured at the Khimar Pass, and brought in by Humayun's people; • Gulrukh Begum (died 1617), married to Ibrahim Husain Mirza, third son of Sultan Muhammad Mirza, of Azampur, sometime Governor of Sambhal. They had a son, Muzaffar Husain Mirza, who married
Shahzada Khanum, daughter of emperor
Akbar; and a daughter,
Nur-un-Nissa Begum, who married the emperor
Jahangir; • Gulizar Begum, went on the pilgrimage to Mecca in October 1575; == Notes ==