Is Kohinoor India or Iran's hero instead of Pakistan?
Is Kohinoor India or Iran's hero instead of Pakistan?
India has made a claim on Kohinoor many years ago
Kohinoor is one of the world's most controversial diamonds.
The conspiracy has been created for centuries to achieve it. The battles are fighting. This hero sometimes lives with the Mughals, sometimes the Iranians have.
Sometimes the Afghans sometimes have the Panjabians and the Marathas. At present, this hero is the beauty of Queen of Britain.
This invaluable hero of 105 Karate reached the hands of the British in the middle of the 19th century. The Taj is displayed in the Taj, it is displayed in the Tower of London.
William Dalrymple and Anita Anand wrote a book, "Kohinoor: The Story of the World's Most Infamous Diamond."
The book states that the then governor general Lord Dalhousie received the hero in 1849.
He thought of sending a note to Queen Victoria showing him and her history with her.
He entrusted the task of searching on it to Delhi's Junior Assistant Magistrate Theo Mattakoff. But they did not find anything other than the goppas walking among the people in the markets.
Many types of myths are associated with this diamond.
Myth: Kohinoor is primarily a hero of India.
Did you read this or not?
After the death of Queen Mother of Britain, her mother was crowned with a diamond jade crown
Fact: When Kohinoor reached Britain, it was 190.30 Metric Caret.
Apart from this, there were two other diamonds of the same type. One was Sari-e-Noor (Roshanie River), which was 175-195 metric carats. Currently in Iran
The second was 189.90 Metric Croats Great Mughal Diamond. Experts believe that this hero was the only Orlow Diamond.
When the Iranian ruler Nadir Shah attacked India in 1739, these three diamonds came with the baggage of luggage.
Kohinoor reached Punjab in the early 19th century.
Myth: There was no loss in Kohinoor diamonds.
Fact: Before discovering there were many drawbacks in diamonds.
Its centerpiece was a yellow color line. There was a single line in it and did not allow the light to be transformed well.
For this reason, Queen Victoria's husband, Prince Albert, again emphasized his creation.
Kohinoor is not the world's biggest hero. It is in the 90th position.
Tourists coming to see him in 'Tower of London' are a little bit of a surprise hero.
They also wonder if they compare it with two closely held diamonds.
Myth: Kohinoor was extracted from India's Kollur mine in the 13th century.
Fact: It is impossible to know when and where Kohinoor Hero came from.
Some people even believe that this Bhagavad is the hero of the Gita's Krishna.
Mattakf wrote in his report that this hero was 'extracted in Krishna's lifetime.'
We know that this hero was extracted from a mine.
This was not found in a dry river in southern India. No diamond has ever been extracted by digging a mine in India. It is only found in rivers.
Myth: Kohinoor was the most precious treasure of the Mughals.
Fact: However, Hindus and Sikhs believed diamonds to be the most precious. Mughal and Irani were prominent in the big and created jewels.
The Mughals had many valuable stones and Kohinoor was only one of them precious stones.
The treasures of the Mughals were not the most precious stone diamonds. They preferred red spinal-stone, disgrace, and then the red man of Burma.
Mughal emperor Humayun gave Babar's hero to Shah Shah of Iran. It is believed that he was only Kohinoor.
Babar's hero then reached South India. It is not clear how and when he reached the Mughal court.
Myth: During the practice of changing the turban with the Mughal Emperor Mohammed Shah Rangila, this hero was manipulated.
It is famous for the general public that the Mughal Emperor kept his head hidden in his turban and Nadir Shah managed to manipulate him.
But Kohinoor was not alone with a valuable stone that Mohammed Shah would keep in a turban secretly and Nadir Shah would be manipulated in the name of changing turban.
Iranian historian Maravi has told the audience that this hero can not be turbaned because the most precious furniture made up to that time has been embedded in the Mayurasan. The throne was built by Shah Jahan
Myth: A Venetian man accidentally created and polished Kohinoor, which made his shape smaller.
Fact: The Mughal emperor Aurangzeb was shown as a French tourist, where Baptist Tavonia had his own personal treasure.
Tvenia wrote that Horatio Borgia had actually cut down the big diamond and made it smaller.
But that hero was the Great Mughal Diamond. Mirza Jumla, a diamond merchant, gave a drink to Sharjah.
Most modern scholars believe that the Great Mughal Diamond was actually the Orlov's hero. This is currently embedded in the Katharine Scepter in Kremlin.
Great Mughal Diamond has been overturned, so everything is concentrated on Kohinoor
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