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  1. Baburi Andijani or Andizani (Baburi Al-Barin, Persian: بابری اندیجان) (1486 – April 1526) was beloved of Zahiruddin Muhammad Babur; Emperor Babur first saw him at the camp market in Uzbekistan, in 1499, and was smitten.

  2. Friends and Enemies: Baburi. At seventeen, Babur fell for a young male shop attendant. Too bashful for conversation, Babur retreated alone to the hills to write poetry. Although Babur does not describe his crush’s appearance, the round, beardless face and arched eyebrows of this young man exemplify sixteenth-century beauty ideals.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BaburnamaBaburnama - Wikipedia

    The Bāburnāma ( Chagatay: وياقع, romanized: Vayaqıʿ, lit. 'The Events'; [1] Persian: بابر‌نامه, romanized : Bāburnāma, lit. 'History of Babur') is the memoirs of Ẓahīr-ud-Dīn Muhammad Bābur (14831530), founder of the Mughal Empire and a great-great-great-grandson of Timur.

  4. Baburi Andijani or Andizani ( Baburi Al-Barin, Persian: بابری اندیجان) (1486 – April 1526) was a captured slave of Mughal Emperor Zahiruddin Muhammad Babur and his secret lover, whom he rescued from the camp market in Uzbekistan, in 1499. [1] . For coming from the city of Andijan, Emperor Babur preferred to call him Andijani.

  5. Baburi Andijani or Andizani (Baburi Al-Barin, Persian: بابری اندیجان) (1486 – April 1526) was a captured slave of Mughal Emperor Zahiruddin Muhammad Babur and his secret lover, whom he rescued from the camp market in Uzbekistan, in 1499.

  6. 20 de ene. de 2024 · Historical records suggest that Babur may have ordered the construction, albeit never personally visiting, supposedly in the name of Baburi Andijani—a young male lover slave he rescued in 1499. Babur openly expressed his affection for Baburi in his autobiography, the Baburnama.

  7. indianculture.gov.in › artefacts-museums › babur-namaBabur Nama | INDIAN CULTURE

    Babur Nama or Waqiat-e- Baburi is the autobiography of Emperor Babur translated into Persian from the Turki original by Mirza 'Abdur Rahim Khan Khanan in 1589 at the behest of Emperor Akbar. 144 miniatures are painted by various artists, representing historical episodes, battle scenes, hunting expeditions, architectural designs, dance and music ...