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Niccolao Manucci (19
April 1638 – 1717) was a
Venetian writer, a self-taught physician, and traveller, who
wrote accounts of the
Mughal Empire as a first-hand...
- Manucci,
Niccolao; tr. by
William Irvine (1907).
Storia do Mogor; or,
Mogul India 1653–1708, Vol. 1. London, J. Murray. Manucci,
Niccolao; tr. by William...
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several months of such setbacks,
Aurangzeb decided on an all-out offensive.
Niccolao Manucci, an
Italian gunner in the
Mughal army, says: "for this campaign...
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Muslin fabric was
produced and
traded in this area.
Italian traveller Niccolao Manucci came to
Dhaka in 1662–63.
According to him,
there were only two...
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Muhammad Muazzam. In 1686, she met the
famous Italian writer and traveller,
Niccolao Manucci at Goa, who
claimed that have
bleed Nawab Bai
twice a year. In...
- Court. However,
Bernier did not
mention witnessing such a relationship.
Niccolao Manucci, a
Venetian traveler,
dismisses such
accusations by
Bernier as...
-
Muhammad Kam
Bakhsh being the sons of
Hindu wives of Aurangzeb.
According to
Niccolao Manucci, the
courtiers were very
impressed by Azam's
royal Persian ancestry...
- in an
unidentified grave in Humayun's tomb in
Delhi at the age of 44.
Niccolao Manucci, the
Venetian traveler who
worked in the
Mughal court, has written...
- the site.
Other records were
written by Firishta,
Thevenot (1633–67),
Niccolao Manucci (1653–1708),
Charles Warre Malet (1794), and
Seely (1824). Some...
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Santi Stefano e
Niccolao or
Stefano e Nicolò is a
Roman Catholic church located in Pescia,
region of Tuscany, Italy. A
church at the site
dates from about...