Muhammad Azam Shah

Azam Shah
Padishah
Al-Sultan Al-Azam
Azam Shah holding a turban jewel c. 1679
Emperor of Hindustan
Reign14 March 1707 – 20 June 1707
PredecessorAurangzeb
SuccessorBahadur Shah I
Subahdar of Bengal
Reign1677–1680
PredecessorFidai Khan II
SuccessorShaista Khan
BadshahAurangzeb
Born(1653-06-28)28 June 1653
Shahi Qila, Burhanpur, Mughal Empire
Died20 June 1707(1707-06-20) (aged 53)
Agra Subah, Mughal Empire
Burial
Consort
(m. 1669; died 1705)
Wives
Issue
  • Bidar Bakht
  • Jawan Bakht
  • Sikandar Shan
  • Wala Jah
  • Zih Jah
  • Wala Shan
  • Ali Tabar
  • Gitti Ara Begum
  • Iffat Ara Begum
  • Najib-un-Nisa Begum
Names
Mirza Abu'l Fayaz Qutb-ud-Din Mohammad Azam Shah[1]
HouseHouse of Babur
DynastyTimurid dynasty
FatherAurangzeb
MotherDilras Banu Begum
ReligionSunni Islam (Hanafi)

Mirza Abu'l Fayaz Qutb-ud-Din Mohammad Azam (28 June 1653 – 20 June 1707), commonly known as Azam Shah, was briefly the seventh Mughal emperor from 14 March to 20 June 1707. He was the third son of the sixth Mughal emperor Aurangzeb and his chief consort Dilras Banu Begum.

Azam was appointed as the heir-apparent (Shahi Ali Jah) to his father on 12 August 1681 and retained that position until Aurangzeb's death.[2] During his long military career, he served as the viceroy of Berar Subah, Malwa, Bengal, Gujarat and the Deccan. Azam ascended the Mughal throne in Ahmednagar upon the death of his father on 14 March 1707. However, he and his three sons, Bidar Bakht, Jawan Bakht and Sikandar Shan, were later defeated and killed by Azam Shah's older half-brother, Shah Alam (later crowned as Bahadur Shah I), during the Battle of Jajau on 20 June 1707.

  1. ^ Garg, Sanjay (2018). Studies in Indo-Muslim History by S.H. Hodivala Volume II: A Critical Commentary on Elliot and Dowson's History of India as Told by its Own Historians (Vols. V-VIII) & Yule and Burnell's Hobson-Jobson. Routledge. ISBN 9780429757778.
  2. ^ Sir Jadunath Sarkar (1925). Anecdotes of Aurangzib. M.C. Sarkar & Sons. p. 21.