Zenana
Zenana (from Persian zanānah, meaning “women’s place”) is a historical term used in the Indian subcontinent to denote the part of a household or palace reserved for women. In many households, particularly among Muslims and in royal courts, the zenana represented a private realm where women lived, worked, and received visitors, separate from the public spaces used by men. Access to the zenana was typically restricted to female relatives and to appointed female servants or eunuchs who acted as guards and stewards; male outsiders generally could not enter without authorization.
Architecturally, the zenana was often a distinct wing or cluster of rooms arranged around courtyards, with
The concept was closely linked with purdah, the practice of female seclusion that shaped the zenana’s visibility