*** Welcome to piglix ***

Zainab Sultan Begum

Zainab Sultan Begum
Timurid princess
Queen consort of Ferghana Valley
Queen consort of Kabul
Tenure 1504 – 1506
Died 1506-07
Spouse Babur
House House of Timur (by birth)
Father Sultan Mahmud Mirza
Mother Khanzada Begum
Religion Islam

Zainab Sultan Begum was Queen consort of Ferghana Valley and Kabul as the second wife of the first Mughal emperor Babur. She like two of his other wives Aisha Sultan Begum and Masuma Sultan Begum was a direct cousin of the Mughal emperor.

She was among one of the first Mughal cousins to marry among the own family, which later became a common practice, which would be especially be followed by Humayun, the second Mughal emperor who succeeded Babur after his death in 1530.

Zainab Sultan Begum was born a Timurid princess and was the fifth daughter of Sultan Mahmud Mirza, who was Babur's paternal uncle. Her mother was the granddaughter of Mir Buzurg, and the daughter of a brother of Khanzada Begum, her father's first wife. Her father was a son of Abu Sa'id Mirza, the Emperor of the Timurid Empire.

Zainab's paternal uncles included Umar Sheikh Mirza, the ruler of Ferghana Valley, who later became her father-in-law as well while her first cousins included her future husband, Babur, and his elder sister, Khanzada Begum. Her sister Ak Begum, who was married to Babur's brother Jahangir Mirza, became her sister-in-law.

Babur married her after annexing Kabul in 1504. However she was not a favourite wife of the emperor because she was too proud of her parentage and failed to win Babur's affection. He also did not remember the year of her death correctly.

Babur has written about the marriage of Sultan Mahmud Mirza to Khanzadeh Begum who was the daughter of Mir of Tirmiz. After she died, he married her late wife's niece Khandaza Begum through whom he fathered five daughters and a son. This created Babur's hatred for his uncle, and subsequently he was reluctant to marry Zainab. It was due to the repeated pleas and insistence of Babur's mother that he married her as he could not resist the "good offers" of his mother for this marriage. Babur did not want to marry her, because according to him, she was "not very congenial".


...
Wikipedia

...