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Battle between Timur and Tokhtamysh. 15th century / Wikimedia Commons
Kamal al-Din Bihzad. Portrait of Muhammad Shaybani. 16th century / Wikimedia Commons
Mausoleum of Babur in Kabul / Wikimedia Commons
Portrait of Shah Jahangir, 1617. Private collection / Wikimedia Commons
Babur and Humayun with Courtiers. 17th century / Wikimedia Commons
Margin illustration with an astrologer at work from the Padishah Album. Mughal Empire, 17th century / Photo by Werner Forman / Getty Images
Encounter of Humayun (left) and Tahmasp I (right) in Isfahan in 1544. Chehel Sotoun Palace, painted circa 1647 / Wikimedia Commons
Portrait of Shah Jahan on the Peacock Throne, 1635/Wikimedia Commons
Replica of the Koh-i-Noor Diamond in its modern cut / Shutterstock
Timur Ruby (upper right corner). Fragment of a lithograph by Emily Eden depicting the treasures of Ranjit Singh. 1844 / Online Gallery of the British Library
King Satrajit with the Syamantaka gemstone / From open sources
Prince Shah-Shuja’s barat wedding procession arriving at the Agra Fort on 4 March 1633. He is accompanied by his brothers princes Aurangzeb and Murad Baksh
Maharajah Duleep Bassi dressed for a State function, c. 1875, oil painting by Capt. Goldingham of London / Wikimedia Commons
Shah Jahan holding one of his four sons (probably Aurangzeb) / Wikimedia Commons
Ulugh Beg with Women from His Harem and Servants. 15th century / Wikimedia Commons