Mirzā ʿAzīz Koka (c. 949-1033/c. 1542-1624) was one of the leading nobles at the courts of the Mughal emperors Akbar and Jahāngīr. He was the son of Shams al-Dīn Aḥmad Ghaznawī and of Akbar's (r. 963-1013/1556-1605) wet-nurse Jījī Ānga, hence his Turkish sobriquet "Koka" or "foster-brother." His family, the Ātka Khayl, came into prominence at the beginning of Akbar's reign. Mindful of their influence in the Panjāb, the emperor had all their jāgīr s (revenue-producing lands assigned as