زیب‌النسا (Persian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "زیب‌النسا" in Persian language version.

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archive.org

books.google.com

ecampus.com

  • Annie Krieger Krynick; Enjum Hamid. Captive Princess; Zebunissa, Daughter of Emperor Aurangzeb. Retrieved 31 May 2009. The book revolves around Princess Zebunissa (1638–1702) who is defined as the symbol of female power of the Mughal dynasty and portrays their stature in the court life in the seventeenth century...For her the name signified a life dramatically suppressed, cut off from the world. Her mysterious and unexpected imprisonment is also described in this book: Zebunissa's fate changed drastically when she was sent to prison by her father Aurangzeb, where she died leaving a landmark near the Red Fort of Delhi.

indianexpress.com

  • "Memories of Ferghana". Retrieved 31 May 2009. MUSIC and dance? But wasn't that '‘unIslamic'’ in a country celebrating an Islamic revival, I'd thought back then, as I twirled at an Uzbek soiree at Kokand in the Ferghana Valley. My hostess had snatched up a daf (dafli in India) and was dancing slowly to a sad Persian song by Zebunisa 'Makhfi', an Uzbek-Tajik favourite. She was a princess of Delhi via Ferghana; Aurangzeb's daughter, whom he jailed for 20 years in Salimgarh, next to the Red Fort, because of her Sufi sympathies. Aurangzeb had killed music in his realm. Zebunisa's voice sang in her ancestral homeland, though lost to Delhi.

nation.com.pk

orientalarchitecture.com

sacred-texts.com

thenews.com.pk

  • Sana Munir (30 June 2019). "Jehan Ara's Chauburji". The News International (newspaper). Retrieved 19 November 2020.

web.archive.org

  • "Aurangzeb daughter's monument in a shambles". nation.com.pk. 16 July 2009. Archived from the original on 28 August 2012. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  • «WISE: Muslim Women: Past and Present – Zebunnisa». بایگانی‌شده از اصلی در ۲۷ دسامبر ۲۰۱۱. دریافت‌شده در ۵ آوریل ۲۰۲۱.

wisemuslimwomen.org

  • «WISE: Muslim Women: Past and Present – Zebunnisa». بایگانی‌شده از اصلی در ۲۷ دسامبر ۲۰۱۱. دریافت‌شده در ۵ آوریل ۲۰۲۱.

worldcat.org