ظفر إبهام لايد جـ أظفار - vertaling naar Engels
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ظفر إبهام لايد جـ أظفار - vertaling naar Engels

MUGHAL EMPEROR
Bahadur Shah Zafar II; Bahadur Shah 2; Bahadurshah Zafar; Bahadur Shah “Zafar”; Siraj Uddin “Zafar”; Abu Zafar Sirajuddin Muhammad Bahadur Shah Zafar; ابو ظفر سِراجُ الْدین محمد بُہادر شاہ ظفر; Bahadhur Shah Zafar; Muhammad Bahadur Shah II; Mirza Farkhunda Shah; Bahadur Shah II of India; Mirza Quaish; Bahadur Shah II; Shah Zafar; بهادرشاه ظفر; Kulsum Zamani Begum
  • A panorama showing the imperial procession to celebrate the feast of the ''[[Eid ul-Fitr]]'', with the emperor on the elephant to the left and his sons to the right (24 October 1843)
  • Police in Delhi during the reign of Bahadur Shah II, 1842
  • 25px

ظفر إبهام لايد جـ أظفار      

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ظفر إبهام لايد جـ أظفار
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أبهام; الإبهام; Thumb; إبهام اليد
obscurity, vagueness, transcendentalism

Wikipedia

Bahadur Shah Zafar

Bahadur Shah II, usually referred to by his poetic title Bahadur Shah Zafar (Persian pronunciation: [bahɑːduɾ ʃɑːh zafaɾ]; Zafar lit. Victory) was born Mirza Abu Zafar Siraj-ud-din Muhammad (24 October 1775 – 7 November 1862) and was the twentieth and last Mughal Emperor of India as well as an Urdu poet. He was the second son and the successor to his father, Akbar II, who died on 28 September 1837. He was a titular Emperor, as the Mughal Empire existed in name only and his authority was limited only to the walled city of Old Delhi (Shahjahanbad). Following his involvement in the Indian Rebellion of 1857, the British exiled him to Rangoon in the British-controlled Burma in 1858, after convicting him on several charges.

Bahadur Shah Zafar's father, Akbar II, had been imprisoned by the British and he was not his father's preferred choice as his successor. One of Akbar Shah's queens pressured him to declare her son, Mirza Jahangir, as his successor. However, the East India Company exiled Jahangir after he attacked their resident in the Red Fort, paving the way for Bahadur Shah to assume the throne.