Jehangir was succeeded by his second son Khurram in 1628. Khurram took
the name of Shah Jehan, i.e. the Emperor of the World. He further
expanded his Empire to Kandhar in the north and conquered most of
Southern India. The Mughal Empire was at its zenith during Shah Jehan's
rule. This was due to almost 100 years of unparalleled prosperity and
peace. As a result, during this reign, the world witnessed the unique
development of arts and culture of the Mughal Empire. During the reign
of Shah Jehan, Mughal architecture reached its supreme exuberance. He
chose marble as the chief medium for all his architectural undertakings.
Elaborate ornamentation, pietra dura, and creation of exclusive
landscape settings, are some important features of the buildings of this
period.
Shah Jehan built marble edifices at Agra such as the Diwan-i-Aam, the
Diwan-i-Khas, the Shish Mahal and the Moti Masjid, which have been
described as the most elegant buildings of their class to be found
anywhere. But all other architectural creations of Shah Jehan are
nothing when compared to the exquisite conception of the mausoleum of
his wife, Arjumand Bano Begum (Mumtaz Mehal) at Agra. The Taj Mehal is
the crowning glory and culmination of Mughal architecture. Its
construction commenced in 1631 and was completed sometime around 1653.
Gulbadan Begum's "Humayun Namah", Jehangir's autobiography
"Tuzk-i-Jehangiri", Abdul Hamid Lahori's "Padshahnama" and Inayat Khan's
"Shah Jehannama" are some of the examples of Mughal literature in the
latter period of Shah Jehan's reign.
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