Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "ஔரங்கசீப்" in Tamil language version.
Shayista Khan … was appointed [Bengal's] governor in 1664 and swept the region clean of Portuguese and Arakanese pirates … in 1666, he recaptured the port of Chittagong … from the king of Arakan. A strategic outpost, Chittagong would remain the principal commercial port of call before entering the waters of the delta.
... Aurangzeb and Dara Shukoh participated in Aceh's trade, and Aurangzeb even exchanged presents with Aceh's sultan in 1641. For two decades after the Dutch conquest of Portuguese Melaka in 1641, the VOC tried to attract trade to Melaka by the VOC tried to attract trade to Melaka by restricting Muslim trade to Aceh. Angered by
... backed out and allowed Indian traders to sail to Aceh and other southern ports without restriction.74 According to S …
... 1660s the VOC backed down and allowed Indian traders to sail to Aceh, Perak, and Kedah without restriction.ll Another important trading community in Aceh consisted of Indians from the Coromandel Coast who had been prominent in Malay …
Aurangzeb, who seized the Peacock throne from Shahjahan, was equally unwilling to acknowledge the Ottoman claim to the Khilafat. Hostile towards the Ottomans, the Emperor took every opportunity to support the opponents of the Ottoman regime. He cordially welcomed two rebel Governors of Basra and gave them and their dependents high mansabs in the imperial service. Aurangzeb also did not respond to Sultan Suleiman II's friendly overtures.
The whole country was soon occupied by the imperialists, anarchy and slaughter were let loose upon the doomed state; all great towns in the village were pillaged; the temples were thrown down
... 1641 , his daughter , Sultanah Safiatuddin presented Aurangzeb with eight …
[Aurangzeb] marched in the direction of Bijapur and on reaching Bidar laid siege to it … The Qiladar of the fort was Sidi Marjan … [The Mughals] were helped by an explosion of powder magazine in the fortress … Sidi Marjan and two of his sons were badly burnt … Thus was the fort of Bidar taken after a siege of 27 days … Sidi Marjan died of his wounds soon afterwards … Aurangzeb arrived at Kalyani.
In November 1659, shortly after his formal coronation, Aurangzeb sent … a diplomatic mission to Mecca … entrusted with 630.000 rupees for the Sharif families of Mecca and Medina … Aurangzeb sent another mission to Mecca in 1662 … with presents worth 660,000 rupees … Aurangzeb also sent considerable amount of money, through his own agents, to Mecca. In 1666 … alms and offerings; … six years later … several lakhs of rupees; the money was to be spent in charity in Mecca and Medina.
In former times the sacred Quaranic credo (Kalma) used to be stamped on gold and silver coins, and such coins were constantly touched with the hands and feet of men; Aurangzib said that it would be better to stamp some other words … The Emperor liked it [the couplet] and ordered that one face … should be stamped with this verse and the other with the name of the mint-city and the year.
Mir Jumla was appointed governor of Bengal (June 1660) and ordered to punish the kings of Kuch Bihar and Assam.
[Mir Jumla] left Dacca on 1st November 1661 … the Mughal army entered the capital of Kuch Bihar on 19th December … The kingdom was annexed to the Mughal empire … Mir Jumla set out for the conquest of Assam on 4th January, 1662 … triumphantly marched into Garh-gaon the Ahom capital on 17th March. Raja Jayadhwaj … had fled .. The spoils … 82 elephants, 3 lakhs of rupees in cash, … over a thousand bots, and 173 stores of paddy.
[Mir Jumla] set out on his return on 10th January 1663, travelling by pālki owing to his illness, which daily increased. At Baritalā he embarked in a boat and glided down the river toward Dacca, dying on 31st March.