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Humayun's Tomb, where the remains of Dara Shikoh were interred. The exact burial location of Dara Shikoh remained a mystery for over two centuries until 2020, when Sanjeev Kumar Singh, an engineer at the South Delhi Municipal Corporation (SDMC), identified the grave among several marked and unmarked graves in Humayun’s Tomb in Delhi.
Adjacent to the tomb is the tomb of Mian Mir's nephew Muhammed Sharif, who served as the first sajjada nashin, or hereditary caretaker of the shrine. [2] Another tomb, that of Haji Muhammed Saleh, is also located within the shrine complex. The shrine is located immediately west of the tomb of Nadira Begum, wife of the Mughal prince Dara Shikoh.
Many smaller chambers too, contain cenotaphs of other members of the Mughal royal family and nobility, all within main walls of the tomb. Prominent among them cenotaphs of Hamida Begum herself are there alongside Dara Shikoh. In all there are over 100 graves within the entire complex, including many on the first level terrace, earning it the ...
Nadira was the wife of Dara Shikoh, who served as the governor of Lahore in the 1640s.In 1659, Dara was fighting his brother Aurangzeb for the Mughal throne. After Dara's defeat in the Battle of Deorai, he and his wife tried to flee to Iran through the Bolan Pass, but Nadira died of dysentery and exhaustion.
Nadira Banu Begum (14 March 1618 – 6 June 1659) was a Mughal princess and the wife of Crown Prince Dara Shikoh, [1] the eldest son and heir-apparent of the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan. [2] After Aurangzeb's rise to power, Dara Shikoh's immediate family and supporters were in danger. Nadira died in 1659, a few months before her husband's ...
Mausoleum of Mir Muhammad better known as Mian Mir in Lahore; he was the spiritual instructor of Mughal Prince Dara Shikoh. Mausoleum of Sohni Mahiwal in Shahdadpur , Sindh Shrine of Pir Hadi Hassan Bux Shah Jilani , Duthro Sharif, Sanghar , Sindh
Shrine of Mian Mir. Dara Shikoh with Mian Mir and Mullah Shah Badakhshi. Mian Mir migrated to and settled in Lahore at the age of 25. [1] He was a friend of God-loving people and he would shun worldly, selfish men, greedy Emirs and ambitious Nawabs who ran after faqirs to get their blessings.
The main tomb belongs to Sufi Abd-ur-Rahim Abdul-Karim Abd-ur-Razak, popularly known by the name of Sheikh Chilli. He was Qadiriyya Sufi master of Mughal Prince Dara Shikoh. The architectural plan of the tomb shows considerable Persian influence. There is another tomb in the complex, believed to be of Sheikh Chilli's wife. [4]