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THE GREAT MOGUL.                        199
ter — for some go so far as to suggest that the Great Mogul was a white topaz! The fact that we now cannot find the diamond is no sufficient reason for denying its former existence.
In the account of Queen Victoria's diamond, the Koh-i-nur, we made acquaintance with the court of Delhi; to its complicated records we must return for the Great Mogul. It is scarcely needful to state this name is a fanciful one be­stowed on the lost gem by European writers; Tav-ernier gives it no distinct name in his description.
Shah Jehan ( Lord of the World ) who reigned in the middle of the seventeenth century was, as we have already seen, the husband of the beau­tiful Nur Jehan (Light of the World) who bore him four sons and two daughters.
As the King grew older his sons grew stronger, and fearing that they would not be able to dwell together in amity at Delhi the old monarch gave distant governments to three of his sons, in order to keep the young men apart from one another, and at a safe distance from himself. In