Jahangir was the Mughal Emperor prohibited the use of tobacco.
jahangir
Shah is the part of name of a Mughal Emperor. Bahadur Shah Zafar was the name of the king.
The Mughal Empire was a Muslim dynasty that ruled Northern India and parts of modern Pakistan and Afghanistan. The Mughal Empire was established by Zahir-ud-din Muhammad Babur, a descendant of Timur and Genghis Khan, in 1526, which lasted until 1857. The Mughals introduced the use of artillery in war. Akbar the Great and Shah Jahan, the builder of Taj Mahal, were the most popular rulers of the Mughal dynasty. Aurangzeb was the last powerful Mughal Emperor and Bahadur Shah Zafar was the last ruler of the Mughal dynasty.
Yes. Babur the first emperor brought the technology with him, its one of the reasons he managed to defeat Ibrahim Lodi's much bigger army at Panipat to win Delhi.
You can only take controlled drugs legally if a doctor proscribes them to you or in a country where use of the drug in question is not controlled or otherwise prohibited by law. or you can just drink alcohol and smoke tobacco
Mughal Emperor Akbar the Great attempted to promote Urdu as a state language during his rule in the 16th century. He encouraged the fusion of Persian and local languages to create a new language that would facilitate communication among the diverse populations of his empire.
more than think use tobacco
You can say..."Bob PROHIBITED jhonny from going to the store"...
They grew tobacco in the colonies. The tobacco had to be harvested by hand.
The only thing that tobacco use will give is Cancer. This can be used to spread awareness.
Canvass and oil paint
I am the emperor.
Akbar, the Mughal emperor, made significant contributions to literature by supporting the translation of Sanskrit texts into Persian, encouraging the use of Persian as the court language, and fostering the development of a hybrid Persian-Hindavi literary style known as "Rekhta." He also patronized the renowned poets of his time, such as Abdul Rahim Khan-I-Khana and Faizi, who enriched the Mughal literary tradition.