Constant waging of wars and the passage of time were taking a heavy toll on him. But Aurangazeb took no notice. In 1705 when he was reaching 86 years, he finally wound up his last military campaign when he was engaged in a siege in conquering an insignificant fortress near Bijapur. Exhausted completely, he felt like returning to imperial Delhi, the seat of the Mughal capital. The homeward march began, but as Aurangazeb reached Devapur on the Krishna River in Bijapur province, he fell violently ill and the journey had to be stopped. He had to rest there for six months till October 1705.Thereafter the emperor was carried in a palanquin. On 20th January 1706 the entourage reached Ahmednagar. By now the illness became too serious and prevented further journey. Aurangazeb had to spend his last miserable year here. During his illness there was none with him dear and near. His rebel son, Akbar, had died in Persia in 1704 his daughter had died two years earlier. His sister also passed away sometime in 1706.His only companion was his spinster daughter and his last wife Udipuri Mahal, reputedly a Georgian slave girl he had appropriated from his Brother Dara Shikoh’s entourage. But Aurangazeb was a lonely man, indrawn and combating with death
He fell ill again in 1707.However, he would not give up his religious duties. Five times a day, for three days, he insisted on saying public prayers. His nobles suggested to him that he could ward off evil influences by making a gift of an elephant and a valuable diamond but he dismissed the suggestion as smacking of Hindu practices which he despised. Nevertheless he recommended that the court send four thousand rupees [the price of an elephant] to the chief Kazi for distribution to the poor. And should he die, he further commanded “Carry this creature of dust quickly to the first burial place and consign him to the earth without any useless coffin”. That was the voice of the puritan in Aurangazeb. The great Mogul would have none of the pomp associated with the burial of monarchs.
urangazeb made preparations for his death. He would divide his empire among his sons to prevent a bitter war of secession and to avoid fighting between armies and slaughter of mankind. He wrote a will. In it he said that a sum of four rupees and two annas, the price of the caps he had sewn in his lifetime, be spent on his death shroud and another sum of three hundred and five rupees which he had earned copying the Koran, be distributed to fakirs. He wanted no ostentation. He was to be buried bare-headed, the coffin covered with white cloth, but no canopy and no musicians. Bitterness still ruled his heart as he drew closer to death. Said his testament “Never trust your sons nor treat them during your lifetimes in an intimate manner "
It was 21st February 1707.Aurangazeb said his morning prayers and returned to his sleeping quarters, but quickly fell into a trance. He continued to tug at his rosary. His stiffening fingers pressing desperately at bead after bead. His lips were mumbling something which none could understand. For one moment this mighty Mogul Monarch was hovering between life and death. At eight o’clock the movement of the fingers stopped. The rosary fell silent. Aurangazeb was dead. He had died, as always wanted, on a Friday, the Muslim Sabbath.
References-http://murtymandala.blogspot.in/2011/03/aurangzebs-last-days.html