White People Of India: Great Mughals. Part 2 - Alternative View

White People Of India: Great Mughals. Part 2 - Alternative View
White People Of India: Great Mughals. Part 2 - Alternative View

Video: White People Of India: Great Mughals. Part 2 - Alternative View

Video: White People Of India: Great Mughals. Part 2 - Alternative View
Video: In Search of India's Soul: From Mughals to Modi - Episode 2 | Featured Documentary 2024, May
Anonim

Read the first part here.

White people who came from the North helped the Indians to survive in ancient times

White Slavic people have constantly come to India from the North for centuries to help black Hindus raise their evolutionary level. They gave them knowledge, technologies and fair laws, dynasties of rulers and warriors …

White people have constantly come to India from the North for centuries to help the black people raise their evolutionary level. They gave them knowledge, technology and fair laws, dynasties of rulers and warriors

Let's return, however, to the Mughals. There was such a Mughal padishah, whose name was Aurangzeb or Alamgir I ("Conqueror of the Universe") (1618-1707), who lived just during the active study of the rich Mughal empire by Europeans, who persistently came to them to build their little gesheft, their little ost -Indian Campaigns - British, Danes, Dutch, Portuguese, French. Therefore, on the Web, we managed to find two whole engravings with his image. Akbar the Great (1542-1605), the third padish of the Mughal Empire, the grandson of Babur, the founder of the Mughal dynasty in India, and also the viziers of the Mughal Empire, for example, Shuja ad-Daula Haydar (1732-1775), was also a man of the white race.

The last Great Mogul Bahadur Shah II
The last Great Mogul Bahadur Shah II

The last Great Mogul Bahadur Shah II.

The last Great Mogul - Bahadur Shah II (1775-1862) was also white. Note that, judging by these images, the Mughal elite was serious about the purity of blood - the features of the white race were clearly preserved from the first to the last ruler. The end of his life was unenviable - during his reign, the British managed to destroy the Mughal Empire. In September 1857, British troops stormed Delhi, and Bahadur Shah surrendered. His two sons, Mirza Mogol and Mirza Khair Sultan, as well as the grandson of Mirza Abubakr, were killed by them. The British announced the liquidation of the institution of the Mughal Empire. Bahadur Shah was arrested, put on trial and sentenced to exile. He passed away 5 years later at the age of 87. Thus ended the more than 300-year history of the Mughal empire, the last of the Tartarii, whose rulers were not only generals,as well as administrative and political figures, but also very educated people who have enriched world culture with their creations. For example, Bahadur Shah went down in history as a famous poet in the Urdu language, and the founder of the empire, Babur, was a historian, geographer, ethnographer, prose writer and poet.

Mumtaz Mahal (Arjumand Banu Begum)
Mumtaz Mahal (Arjumand Banu Begum)

Mumtaz Mahal (Arjumand Banu Begum).

Promotional video:

Shah Jahan (1592-1666)
Shah Jahan (1592-1666)

Shah Jahan (1592-1666).

Nur Jahan (Begum Nur Jahan)
Nur Jahan (Begum Nur Jahan)

Nur Jahan (Begum Nur Jahan).

Hamida Banu Begum, wife of Shah Humayun
Hamida Banu Begum, wife of Shah Humayun

Hamida Banu Begum, wife of Shah Humayun.

Zeenat Mahal is the younger wife of the last ruler of the Mughal Empire, Bahadur Shah
Zeenat Mahal is the younger wife of the last ruler of the Mughal Empire, Bahadur Shah

Zeenat Mahal is the younger wife of the last ruler of the Mughal Empire, Bahadur Shah.

The wives of the padishahs were also white people. Mumtaz Mahal (Arjumand Banu Begum) was the wife of the fifth Mughal padishah Shah Jahan (1592-1666). Pay attention to her headdress - a pure Russian kokoshnik, and even with ryasns and kolts. It was Shah Jahan who built the world famous Taj Mahal - the tomb for his wife, which made his name immortal. She died shortly after giving birth to their fourteenth child in 1631. The next year after her death, he began to build a mausoleum for her. Nur Jahan (Begum Nur Jahan (1577-1645)) was the wife of Shah Jahangir (1569-1627), father of the builder Shah Taj Mahal. She was the real ruler of the empire and even printed coins with her name, and was also a recognized poet. Hamida Banu Begum (1527-1604) - one of the wives of Humayun, the second Mughal padishah,mother of Padishah Akbar I. Zinat Mahal is the younger and beloved wife of the last ruler of the Mughal Empire, Bahadur Shah II. The portrait was taken around 1857.

Unfortunately, the immense wealth of the Mughal Empire, the splendor of their court, beautiful buildings, magnificent gardens and animals of the rulers, mountains of jewelry, wealth of clothing and food could not leave indifferent European, in particular English, "civilizers" -parasites. The padishah hung with jewels and his courtyard made an irresistible impression on the poor Europeans, they probably experienced the same impression at the court of Ivan the Terrible, and even now they drool looking at the chicly restored halls of the Moscow Kremlin. According to the English priest Edward Terry, Europeans could not even imagine the cost of those "unthinkable" jewelry with which the padishah adorned his head, neck and hands every day. (A Voyage to East-India; Wherein Some Things Are Taken Notice Of, in Our Passage Thither,But Many More in Our Abode There, Within That Empire of the Great Mogul, observed by Edward Terry). Just what were his beads alone - threads with beads made of expensive pearls, rubies, diamonds, emeralds and corals. The wealth and luxury of the Great Mogul is evidenced by engravings from the same Fascinating Gallery of the World.

The court of the Great Mogul in Agra
The court of the Great Mogul in Agra

The court of the Great Mogul in Agra.

Courtyard of the Great Mogul in Lahore
Courtyard of the Great Mogul in Lahore

Courtyard of the Great Mogul in Lahore.

Palace of the Great Mogul
Palace of the Great Mogul

Palace of the Great Mogul.

Reception at the Great Mogul
Reception at the Great Mogul

Reception at the Great Mogul.

Equestrian warrior of the Great Mughal army in combat attire
Equestrian warrior of the Great Mughal army in combat attire

Equestrian warrior of the Great Mughal army in combat attire.

They show the court of the Great Mogul in Agra, the court of the Great Mogul in Lahore, the palace of the Great Mogul, a reception at the Great Mogul, an equestrian warrior of the Great Mughal army in combat clothing (and he is also clearly Caucasian in appearance). "Supermen" clearly looked wretched against this background both morally and physically. The Ambassador of King James I of England (1566-1625), Sir Thomas Roe, in his notes on his visit to the court of the Great Mogul Jehangir (Journal of Sir Thomas Roe, Ambassador from King James I, to Shah Jehanguiro, Mogul Emperor of Hindoostan) poured paper soul that he felt at the court of the shah among his nobles, as the last … "somewhat embarrassed", because the Mughal robes overshadowed his modest European costume. The reason was that he received a salary of £ 60 a year,and the "barbaric" Mughal courtiers had tens and hundreds of thousands. In his opinion, it was "unfair".

Naturally, the "enlightened" Europeans could not calmly look at such a luxury that did not belong to them. They had to restore this very justice of theirs, taking everything to their grasping hands, which they ultimately achieved by destroying the country, plunging the population into poverty and deploying there mass production of drugs in order to destroy and enrich themselves at the expense of another country - China … At the same time, they treated the “barbaric” culture of the conquered state and its rulers with amazing arrogance and disdain. The padishah's palace, despite its wealth, was, in their opinion, tasteless. The same Ro noted that in the throne room of Jahangir's palace there were "a lot of all sorts of things that do not fit together, and remind him of hastily done work …" and the room was more like a lady's room,which, to showcase the lush decoration, placed a pair of her embroidered slippers on the sideboard along with silver and china.

The Europeans treated the padishah's lifestyle with ostentatious contempt, describing him as an alcoholic, a glutton and a libertine. In their opinion, the ruler drank too much, ate, slept and visited his harem too often, and did nothing else. Although they themselves were not averse to retraining as "barbarians" and to eat, drink and use other joys of the "oriental tale" as much, for example, to participate in a magnificent royal hunt or in the departure of the ruler to the city, decorated with "barbaric" luxury - a large number of elephants decorated with copper, gold and silver, in beautiful blankets of velvet and brocade, silk banners with the royal coat of arms, musical accompaniment of many bells, a large number of richly dressed and armed guards.

Surprisingly, the fact, the style of behavior and methodology of Western "educators and democrats", nurtured on parasitic ideology and morality, has not changed in hundreds of years. This is what they did in India and China in the 16-18 century, and they do the same now - to slander the victim, democratically bomb and then plunder. History repeats itself, and that is why it needs to be carefully studied.

Conclusion: Part 3

Author: Elena Lyubimova