Luthunnisa Begum | |
---|---|
Begum of Nawab of Bengal | |
Empress of the Bengal, Bihar and Orissa | |
Tenure | 9 April 1756 – 23 June 1757 |
Born | 1720 |
Died | November 1790 Murshidabad, India |
Burial | Khushbagh, India |
Spouse | Siraj ud-Daulah |
Issue | Zohra Begum |
Religion |
Hindu (before marriage) Islam (after marriage) |
Lutfunnisa Begum was the second wife of Nawab Siraj ud-Daulah, the last independent Nawab of Bengal.
Lutfunnisa was originally named Rajkunwar, she was Hindu slave girl who served Amina Begum, the mother of Nawab Siraj ud-Daulah. Nawab Siraj was infatuated with the beauty of Rajkunwar and asker her mother to give her to him. Amina Begum gave Rajkunwar to Nawab Siraj, who renamed her Lutfunnisa Begum. Nawab Siraj was already married to Umdatunnisa Bahu Begum when he married Lutfunnisa as his second wife.
Lutfunnisa gave birth to a daughter, Zohra Begum, who was the first born child of Nawab Siraj. In 1748 the father of Nawab Siraj, Zain ud-Din Ahmed Khan the Naib Nazim was killed by Afghan rebels. Nawab Siraj was also appointed Naib Nazim of Bihar. During the same time, Lufunnisa Begum became the Primary Consort of Nawab Siraj. After the Battle of Plassey, that saw the British East India Company defeat Nawab Siraj and his French allies, Lutfunnisa escaped the palace with Nawab and their daughter. Accompanying them was a trusted Eunuch. On 24 June 1757 they made their escape. They were soon captured and brought back to Murshidabad by Mir Jafar, the new nawab allied with the British. Mir Qasim, the son in law of Mir Jafar, tortured Lutfunnisa to discover the locations of family jewels.
In 1758, Lutfunnisa and her daughter were exile to Dhaka and imprisoned in Jinjira Palace. She was confined there for seven years during which time Mir Jafar and his son asked her hand in marriage. She refused them both. She was released from Jinjira Palace in 1765 and was allowed back to Murshidabad. The British East India company allowed the creation of a pension for her and her daughter. Her daughter, Zohra Begum, was married to Mir Asad Ali Khan. They would give Lufunnisa four granddaughters, who she raised after her the death of her son-in-law and daughter. In March 1787 she petitioned the British East India Company to increase her pension so to meet the additional cost of four grandchildren. The company refused the increase. The Estate of the Nawab of Bengal still paid for the upkeep of Lufunnisa's father-in-law's grave, which was managed by her.