In modern financial administration, serves as a Principal Business Activity Code used by the IRS on tax returns (such as Form 1120 or Schedule C). This specific code is designated for businesses engaged in other animal production , excluding cattle, hogs, sheep, goats, aquaculture, or poultry. It typically covers the raising of: Bees (Apiculture) Horses and other equines Fur-bearing animals (e.g., rabbits) Laboratory animals

The number is a numeric identifier that appears in several distinct contexts, most notably as an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) business code and as a historical timestamp marking the end of a groundbreaking reign in medieval India. Because this figure is primarily a data point rather than a single entity, its "story" is one of administrative categorization and historical transition. Administrative Significance: IRS Business Activity Code

: Many Turkish nobles refused to accept a woman’s authority.

: Her appointment of an African slave, Jamal-ud-Din Yaqut, to a high position sparked a revolt led by Malik Ikhtiyar-ud-din Altunia.

Whether marking the end of an empress’s era or the start of a bee-keeping business’s tax filing, 124030 functions as a bridge between the precise world of modern data and the dramatic shifts of history.

From a historical perspective, the sequence (often represented as the year 1240 ) marks a pivotal moment in the Delhi Sultanate. On October 15, 1240 , Razia Sultan , the first female Muslim ruler of the Indian Subcontinent, was killed near Kaithal after being defeated by rebellious generals.

: In software development and database management, 124030 is frequently seen as a unique primary key or "ID" for specific entries in large-scale datasets, such as those used by Saksoft for digital transformation projects.

: In astronomical databases maintained by NASA, numbers in this range often refer to specific observation records or lightcurve data points for minor planets.