7. It CHAPTER VII

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

7. It CHAPTER VII 7. I t CHAPTER V II. RANA RATANSI S/O RANA SANGA. (1523 > 1532 A .D J The ecirly death of Bhojraj, the eldest son of Sanga and Kuwar Bai Solanki, left Ratansi alias Ratanslngh, son of Sanga and Dhanbai Rathor, as the eldest surviving prince to succeed Sanga in 152S A.D. His date of birth is unknown* Nothing is known about his early life* He was called upon to handle the administration of Mewar after the Battle of Kanwah when Sanga was mourning his defeat thjrough self-inflicted seclusion from public appearance. After the victory at Chanderi (after April, 2, 152S A.D.^Sanga emerged out with a coloured turban and royal Kettle"drura, Which threatened Ratansi*s position as the aiininistrator of Mdv/ar as the Rana’ s deputy. So it is no TOnder that he and his farhter-in-law, Karam- -chand Pawar, colluded with Silhadi and other chieftains in poisoning Sanga at Kalpi. However, while deputising for his fatiwr, Ratansi acquired a a>od knowledga of the political health of Mewar. Possibly, he had his own ideas to cure its ills. His first steps were against his half“bi'others Vikramajit and Udai Singh, then living in Ranthambhor and Rao Surajmal Hada of Bundi• Ratansi and Vikrama.iit: Karmeti, daughter of Narbad Hada of Bundi and the most beloved consort of Sanga, had borne two sons - Vikraraajit and Udai Singh - to the Rana* During his life tirae^at her request, Sar^a had bestowed the fort and fiet of Ranthambhor on her sons and had placed them under the charge of Siirajmal Hada, son of Narayan- -das of Bundi. Surajaal had hesitated and made his acceptance of this job contingent xka upon the con- -sent of Ratansi, to avoid clashes vdth the future Rana after Sanga’ s death, Ratansi,due to the fear of his father Rana Sanga, had also agreed and Surajmal becaiae something like a guaidian of Vikraraajit and Udai Singh, Honfever, Ratansi nursed a grievance and a grudge against Surajmal Hada! So on his accession, Ratansi refused to accept the pressi* of an elephant and a horse from Surajmal, and cleioanded the elephant Meghnad (cost Rs, 60,000) and the horse Lai Lashkar (cost Rs, 20,000) ¥hich were given in *tika* to Surajmal by Sanga on the former’ s accession after the death of his father Narayandas* Rat ansi’ s strange deraand enraged Surajmal vAio point blank refused to accede to it* 2 This estranged the two. Soon.after the death of Sanga, Karmeti left Chittor and went to stay in Hanthambhor. Rataisi sent puranmal aiKi deinanded the presence of his half-brothers in Chittor^ along with the jewelled crown and belt of the Sultans of Malwa, the trophies of the war of Sanga with Mahmud Khilji (1519 A.D,), then lying in Ranthambhorif' Karnieti directed Pui’anmal to Surajmal, who offered to appear personally before the Rana. Puranmal falsely reported to Ratansi in Chittor that Vikraraajit and Udai Singh would have returned to ChittM but for the abstraction of Surajmal. The Rana was further offended with Sijrajraal? Ylkrama.iit and Babar : The undue haste and rudeness implied in the demand for^personal appec.ranee^with the trophies of x4a3»ra^soon after the death of Sanga liiade Vikramajit desperate. He 6 sought tiie protection of babar. iishoka , a person "higji in Bikrainajit*s confidence” and ” a near relative 7 3 of Padmavati, (wrongly identified with Karmeti), fixK sent envoys to Babar before the latter had set out fbr Q 10 Gwalior, i.e . before Septeinber 20, 1528 A.D, They were ait-hori zed to ne^gtiate tlie submission of Vikramajit and the exchange of the fie ^ and fort of Ranthambhor for a subsistence allowance of 70 laks of rupeesa SEhaqf Annually. Babar agreed to confer a jagir worth this sum on Vikrauiajit on his surrendei' of the fcrt of Ranthambhor. They Jeft Babar to ineet him again in Gwalio^] probably 12 13 after the 26th . They returned a day ca* tvo late. During this period Ashokiaal himself went to Eanthaabhor and eaq)lained the situation to Padmavati and Vikramajit. Tliey approved of the proceedirjg and agreed to the arrangesnents made by his envoys. These envoys were now authorized to negotiate the surrendei' of the fief ard fort of Ranthambhor along x^ith the trophies of *4alwa in exchange for some Jagir in Biana!^ Babar wasjjwilling to bewtow Shamshabad for 13 Ranthambhor . They all left Gv/alior on Sept. 29 with an appointment to meet again Biana on Oct. The fact of in the diary of Babar between Oct 5 to 12 cbee not dU«L prevent us from inferring that this rreetingi^fee-ek place afcr 15 its appointed time. Babar in his entry of Oct, 19 sjjeaks 7 about "former” and ”later" envoys of Vikramajit^^ As all 1 7 the envoys were given lBa^« to depart at OwalicM*, the former envoys can only be those vho came to Babar on Oct.d 18 at Biana. They vrere not given leave to depart and were brought to Agra where they were joined by another batdi of envoys from Vikramajit . ix)th the teams were now disnii- -ssed with an added person Hamusi son of Diva from Behrah, / He was sent along with them by Babar ”in order thatthe pact and agreement for the surrender of Ranthambhor and for the conditions of Bikrajnjit*s service might be made in 19 their o>«i (Hindu) way* and custom"* It is here that Babar proclaims his deteimina- -tion to put Vikramjit on the throne of Ghittor if he 20 fulfilled his part of the duty . Hawal Rana Ki Vat dis- -torts these negotiations by colouTxng them with the 21 myth of sending of "Rakhi" by Karmeti. In the lawnoirs there is not only no reference to Karr®ti but also no hint about these negotiations being started, handled or f7 in any way mnaged W eve n^"Padmavati", All through Babar refers t Vikramajit alone. Padmavati is referred to only as a*near relative* of Aahokmal and nothing moire. And even if the identification of Padmavati with Karnsti be accepted dtill there is no reference in the f4emoirs to her part in these r»po tiatlons. Ratansi Reconciles with Vikraroa.lit. The negotiations of Vikramajit with Babar acted OLM asj^eye-opener to Ratansi. Its Imriediate result took the fonn of breaking away of the Vikrana jit-Babar ties. The handing over of Ranthambhor and the trophies of Balwa to Babar, as stipulated in the a^reei^Bnt of Oct. 19 did not materialise 22. It also prevented 3^*: tiie submission of Vikramajit and Udaisingh to Babar vjhich would certainly have app offered a pretext tot Surajrnal Hada to break away openly from the vassalage of Mewar. Vikranajit returned to Chit tor and lived amicably with Ilatansi till the death of the later in 1532 A.D. Ratansi setit Vikrasnajit at the head of the 40*000 cavalry to relieve Aaisin, besieged by Bahadur Shah ih 1532 A.D.^^ This fact points to the gsod relations subsisting between the two half brotiiers during the remaining perLodof the reisi of / Ratansi. It also underlines the efforts of Ratansi in reorganizing the army of Mewar \^*ich ordinarily comprised 24 of 10,000 hourse during his reign. Rise of Bahadur Shah The effect of the political vacuum caused by the death of Sanga and the internal dissensions in Mewar paved the way for the imperialism of Bahadur Shah. When Sanga was locked up with the Mughals Bahadur Shaii killed all his brothers and eliminated the clique of Imadulinulk?^ After Sanga’s death on the preirext of helping Iraadulniulk, tlie ruler of Berar, and Adil Shah^ the ruler cf Khandesh, 26 he marcl'ied in November, 152^ A.D, , besieged unsuccess- -rylly the fort of Daulatabad, compelled Nizamulmulk, the ruler of Ahmadnagar, Bar id, the ruler of Bidar, Khuda~ -wand Khan Bantaria and Adil Siiah of Bij. pur to make good 2? all the losses to Imadulmulk and returned to his capital on f4ay, 3, 1529 Here Narsinghdeo^f the nephew 29 30 31 of Raja of Givalior, Banavir , the son of Prithviraj 32 and nephew of Sanga, and some other amirs from }Ae\iwr 3 3 ^joined him.Soiaa soldiers also fled Mewar to Gujarat. On Sept .6 , 1529 A*D. Bahadur Shah rode out into the Oeccan for the second time, again at the requsst of -* Imadulmulk. He plundered .ahiaadnagar and Parinda, put to fligl^it the combined forces of the rliters of the Deccan reduced Barid and Nizamulmulk to vassalaaa^^ and retiimed to his c o ita l about the teginning of May, 1530 Thus within one year and a half after the danise of Sanga, Bfiiiadur forged himself int» a formidable power* . Ratansi aid Partition of IVagar Rawal Udai S i n ^ of W ^a r had divided his kii^dom 37 between his two sons ~ Pritiiviraj and Jagga or Jagtnal. Ja^oal accomptanied UdaT^Singh to tiie Battle of Kanwah 3^ 39 v^re the former was wounded and the latter killed. jagmal remained ill for several months. After nursing hla wound with the lielp of Baba Man B}az*ti he xeturmd to Wagar v^ere Prithviraj had already taken possession of his share and now not only refused to recogiiEe his brother but also declared him an impster.^^Jagpnal « rebeOf^and raised much tzoubla in Wagar fxt>m a plase , 41 now called after him, Jagmer or Jagner. Jagmal also fought several engageinent s ^fi th thakir of Kubania, in the vast of R.
Recommended publications
  • 2 Chapter Iv
    il CHAPTER IV maharana sangram sinch ALIAS SANGA (1509 A.D. - 1523 A.D.) Sangraa Singh alias Sanga, born to Jaivanta Bai on Tuesday» April 14* 14^ A.B.^ » was the third son of Hana Raiiaal* Nothing is known about his childhood though i t is safe to presume that normal martial training, a necessair equipaient of a prince-royal in the mediaeval times, v/ould not hare been denied to him; and that martial k skill which ch^terised all the sons 2 of Raimal , would have adorned the personality of young Sanga as well. We first hear of him when Prithviraj and Jaimal challenged the(^verdicts )or the astrologer and the priestess-oracle of Bhimal about the future succession of Sanga to the throne of Ghittor after the death of Raimal through their attempts on the life of Sanga. The War of Succession (150$-6 A .D .) and the period following:, the return of Sanga to Mewar to administer the state on behalf of his father schooled him in the ytays of the world and statecraft. The period preceeding the death o f Raimal proved further fateful to him by manoeinrring events to bless the beginning of the reign of Sanga with a victory over the forces of Sikandar Lodi. Battle of Bakrol:- The Vanshavalis evidence for a battle between Sher 3 4 Khan Pathan of Narwar and Maharana Sanga on the 19th day since his succession to the throne of Mewar ( i .e ., Monday, June 11,1509 A .D ,), However, no reason for this clash is giren.
    [Show full text]
  • Socio-Political Condition of Gujarat Daring the Fifteenth Century
    Socio-Political Condition of Gujarat Daring the Fifteenth Century Thesis submitted for the dc^ee fif DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN HISTORY By AJAZ BANG Under the supervision of PROF. IQTIDAR ALAM KHAN Department of History Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarb- 1983 T388S 3 0 JAH 1392 ?'0A/ CHE':l!r,D-2002 CENTRE OF ADVANCED STUDY TELEPHONE SS46 DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY ALIGARH MUSLIM UNIVERSITY ALIGARH-202002 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN This is to certify that the thesis entitled 'Soci•-Political Condition Ml VB Wtmmimt of Gujarat / during the fifteenth Century' is an original research work carried out by Aijaz Bano under my Supervision, I permit its submission for the award of the Degree of the Doctor of Philosophy.. /-'/'-ji^'-^- (Proi . Jrqiaao;r: Al«fAXamn Khan) tc ?;- . '^^•^\ Contents Chapters Page No. I Introduction 1-13 II The Population of Gujarat Dxiring the Sixteenth Century 14 - 22 III Gujarat's External Trade 1407-1572 23 - 46 IV The Trading Cotnmxinities and their Role in the Sultanate of Gujarat 47 - 75 V The Zamindars in the Sultanate of Gujarat, 1407-1572 76 - 91 VI Composition of the Nobility Under the Sultans of Gujarat 92 - 111 VII Institutional Featvires of the Gujarati Nobility 112 - 134 VIII Conclusion 135 - 140 IX Appendix 141 - 225 X Bibliography 226 - 238 The abljreviations used in the foot notes are f ollov.'ing;- Ain Ain-i-Akbarl JiFiG Arabic History of Gujarat ARIE Annual Reports of Indian Epigraphy SIAPS Epiqraphia Indica •r'g-acic and Persian Supplement EIM Epigraphia Indo i^oslemica FS Futuh-^ffi^Salatin lESHR The Indian Economy and Social History Review JRAS Journal of Asiatic Society ot Bengal MA Mi'rat-i-Ahmadi MS Mirat~i-Sikandari hlRG Merchants and Rulers in Giijarat MF Microfilm.
    [Show full text]
  • 7 Battles of Mughal Army
    Battles of Mughal Army Module - II Military History of Medieval India 7 BATTLES OF MUGHAL ARMY Note In the previous lesson, you studied the factors that encouraged Babur to invade India, composition of the Mughal Army and their war equipment and weapons. You also learnt that the Mughal artillery was a new weapon of war and terrifying to the enemies. The gunpowder played a vital role in winning battles and in the establishment and expansion of the Mughal empire. In this lesson, you will study the three important battles fought by Babur which laid a solid foundation of the Mughal rule in India. Panipat (a town in Haryana) has been described as the pivot of Indian history for 300 years. And its story begins in the first great battle that took place in 1526. The victory at Panipat, significant as it was, did not allow Babur the luxury to sit back and savour the moment for long. For there were other enemies such as that of Rana Sanga, the powerful ruler of Mewar to be subdued in land called Hindustan. After capturing Delhi, Babur lived for only four more years. His son Humayun and grandson Akbar continued the consolidation of Mughal power after his death. Although Mughal influence reached its political peak during Akbar's time, the foundation was laid by Akbar's grandfather. Objectives After studing this lesson you will be able to: explain the first battle of Panipat and battle field tactics of the Mughals and discuss the power-struggle that existed during the early years of the Mughal Dynasty.
    [Show full text]
  • Ghtei- to R.^Na Iiatansi Was Made by Kaja Frithviraj
    This offended Ratansl, However, Vanshavali tind 177 Vanshavali ^7^ hold that an offer to marry his dau- -ghtei- to r.^na iiatansi was made by Kaja Frithviraj Kachliawaha* The Rana sent his svard as his proxy for mair^rir^ the girl. Incensed, Prithviraj returned the sword and gave the girl in laarria^e to Surajmal. Rana Ratansi I'elt offended and decided to pit ai end to the lii'e of his competitor. iUl these ajBojunts are incorrect, Surajmal did not liarry any fiancee of Ratansi. iiatansi 17B had Raj Kumi'{d/o Prithvircij ii-ac hhawalia) far his wife. The Vansha-bhaskar says that Ratansi £nd Surajmal Hada were both married to tFie different daughters of Sar*angadas of Srinagar. Unce Ratansi and Surajraal happened to go to tlieir father-in-law. Ratansi suspected illicit relations Let ween his wife and Surajmal on .tJie occcsion of i tiger- 179 -hunt arranged by their mother.^in-law. As r^ards the c ircuffistances leading to the open reptisre bet vie en Ratansi and Surajmal, the Vansha-bhai^ar blames Furaniaal t'urbia, the priiueHrcinister of Mewar. Rao Narayandas, the father of Siirajmal, hid killed Dikku, the father of i^uranmal, ©n account of his frivolously putting a straw piece in the beard of the Rao while he was dozir^g under t!ie influence of opiusa. So an inveterate enmity existed between these two fanilies. It was at t^ e instance of Puraninal th it the Rana sent very ineagre gifts at the tii.ie of the accession of Surajmal, which the latter had reluntantly accepted at the instance of his mother.
    [Show full text]
  • Zahiruddin Muhammad Babur
    Zahiruddin Muhammad Babur: Babur was the founder of the Mughal Empire in India. He came from the race of Mongols which had created havoc across Asia and Europe a few centuries ago. He was also related to the family of Taimur from his mother’s side. Umar Sheikh Mirza: Umar Sheikh Mirza was a man of restless energy. He ruled the northern part of Marwara-un-Nahar (Transoxiana). He was not on good terms with his elder brother, Ahmed Mirza, the ruler of Samarqand and Bukhara and brothers-in-law Mahmud Khan and Ahmed Khan. As long as his father-in-law, Yunus Khan Mongol was alive, the rivalries were kept in control. When he died in 1487, Ahmed Khan and Mahmud Khan invaded Farghana and its capital town of Andijan. Leaving Babur incharge of capital, Umar Sheikh Mirza marched to the town of Akshi where he died on 8 June 1494. Early Life of Babur: Zahiruddin Muhammad Babur was the eldest son of Umar Sheikh Mirza. He was born in 14 February 1483 in Andijan. A few years before the birth of Babur, Umar Sheikh Mirza had transferred his capital from Andijan to Akshi. Umar Sheikh Mirza died on 8 June 1494. Babur memoir says that he fell off the roof of his house while flying pigeons and died instantly. Accession and Early Difficulties: Thus, Babur ascended the throne of Farghana at the age of 11. Soon after his accession, his small principality came under attack from all sides by his uncles: Ahmed Mirza and Sultan Mahmud Khan. Babur sent a message to his uncle Ahmed Mirza to the effect that after the conquest of Farghana, he would hand it over to someone else; why not, then entrust the work to him.
    [Show full text]
  • Humayun Badshah
    HUMAYUN ON THE THRONE HUMAYUN BADSHAH BY S. K. BANERJI, M.A., PH.D. (LOND.) READER IN INDIAN HISTORY, LUCKNOW UNIVERSITY WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY SIR E. DENISON ROSS FORMERLY DIRECTOR, SCHOOL OF ORIENTAL STUDIES, LONDON HUMPHREY MILFORD OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 1938 OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS AMEN HOUSE, LONDON, B.C. 4 EDINBURGH GLASGOW NEW YORK TORONTO MELBOURNE CAPETOWN BOMBAY CALCUTTA MADRAS HUMPHREY MILFORD PUBLISHER TO THE UNIVERSITY PRINTED IN INDIA AT THE MODERN ART PRESS, CALCUTTA INTRODUCTION It was with great pleasure that I accepted Dr S. K. Banerji's invitation to write a few words by way of intro1 duction to his Life of the Emperor Humayun, seeing that it was under my supervision, at the School of Oriental Studies, London, that he prepared his PH.D. thesis on the early years of Humayun 's reign. During the two years that he spent here I had ample opportunity of seeing his work and formed a high opinion of his capacity and enthusiasm. Since his return to India he has become Reader in Indian History at the Lucknow University, and he has devoted such leisure as his duties permitted him to the expansion of his thesis and a continuation of the life of Humayun, with a view to producing a full and definite history of that gifted but unfortunate monarch. The present volume brings the story down to the defeat of Humayun at the hands of Sher Shah in 1540 and his consequent abandonment of his Empire : the rest of the story will be told in a second volume which is under preparation.
    [Show full text]
  • Babar and His Children Free Ebook
    FREEBABAR AND HIS CHILDREN EBOOK Brunhoff Jean De | 48 pages | 01 Jul 2005 | Random House USA Inc | 9780394805771 | English | New York, United States Jean De Brunhoff Babar and his Children | eBay He was a descendant of Timur and Genghis Khan through his father and mother respectively. Of Chagatai Turkic origin, [7] Babur was born in Andijan in the Fergana Valley in present-day Uzbekistan : the eldest son of Umar Sheikh Mirza —, governor of Fergana from to and a great-great grandson of Timur — Babur ascended the throne of Fergana in its capital Akhsikent in at the age of twelve and faced rebellion. He conquered Samarkand two years later, only to lose Fergana soon after. In his attempt to reconquer Fergana, he lost control of Samarkand. In his attempt to recapture both the regions failed when Muhammad Shaybani Khan defeated him. Babur formed a partnership with the Safavid ruler Ismail I and reconquered parts of Turkistanincluding Samarkand, only to again lose it and the other newly-conquered lands to the Sheybanids. After losing Samarkand for the third time, Babur turned his attention to India. He faced opposition from Rana Sangawho Babar and His Children first promised to help Babur defeat Ibrahim Lodi; however he later backed out upon realising that Babur had plans to stay in India. The Rana prepared an army of Rajputs and Afghans to force Babur out of India, however the Rana was defeated in the Battle of Khanwa after which he was fatally poisoned by his own men. Babur married several times. Babur died in in Agra and Humayun succeeded him.
    [Show full text]
  • Mughal Empire
    Mughal Empire [8][2] (translit. Mughliyah Saltanat , ﻣﻐﻠﯿ ﺳﻠﻄﻨﺖ :The Mughal Empire (Urdu Mughal Empire , ﮔﻮرﮐﺎﻧﯿﺎن :or Mogul Empire,[9] self-designated as Gurkani (Persian (Persian) ﮔﻮرﮐﺎﻧﯿﺎن Gūrkāniyān, meaning "son-in-law"),[10] was an empire in the Indian subcontinent, founded in 1526. It was established and ruled by a Muslim Gūrkāniyān (Urdu) ﻣﻐﻠﯿ ﺳﻠﻄﻨﺖ dynasty with Turco-Mongol Chagatai roots from Central Asia,[11][12][13] but with significant Indian Rajput and Persian ancestry through marriage Mug̱ liyah Salṭanat alliances;[14][15] only the first two Mughal emperors were fully Central Asian, 1526–1540 while successive emperors were of predominantly Rajput and Persian 1555–1857 ancestry.[16] The dynasty was Indo-Persian in culture,[17] combining Persianate culture[9][18] with local Indian cultural influences[17] visible in its traits and customs.[19] The Mughal Empire at its peak extended over nearly all of the Indian subcontinent[6] and large parts of Afghanistan. It was the second largest empire to have existed in the Indian subcontinent, spanning approximately four million square kilometres at its zenith,[5] after only the Maurya Empire, which spanned approximately five million square kilometres. The Mughal Empire ushered in a period of proto-industrialization,[20] and around the 17th century, Mughal India The empire at its greatest extent, in the became the world's largest economic power, accounting for 24.4% of world late 17th and early 18th centuries GDP,[21] and the world leader in manufacturing,[22] producing 25% of global Capital Agra (1526–1540; [23] industrial output up until the 18th century. The Mughal Empire is considered 1555–1571; 1598– [24] "India's last golden age" and one of the three Islamic Gunpowder Empires 1648) [25] (along with the Ottoman Empire and Safavid Persia).
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 1: Sufi Tale and Rajput Heroism in Avadh
    Chapter 1: Sufi tale and Rajput heroism in Avadh Introducfion The first available text of the Padmini story is Malik Muhammad Jayasi's Padmavat (composed c. 1540) in Avadhi (a dialect of Hindi spoken in modern east Uttar Pradesh). Heroic romances in which the prince embarked on a dangerous quest to woo and wed a princess of fabled beauty and riches, were common to many literary traditions in medieval north India. The Padmavat belongs with a range of Sufi mystical adaptations of this formula, written in Avadhi betvveen the fourteenth and sixteenth centuries. This discussion of the story explores the evolution of the genre, as it appropriates and reconstitutes elements from contiguous genres and literary traditions. The form and content of the poem must be contextualized within larger literary formations. Such an exploration uncovers not only the aesthetic but also social and historical functions of literary genre. Equally, this analysis of the Padmavat traces the ideology of gender it articulates, and its relationship with the poem's specific patriarchal contexts. These patriarchies are in tum implicated in wider historical contexts, as they uphold the specific caste and class relations defining a given political formation in sixteenth-century north India. The history of the Padmavat's manuscripts and their transmission indicates the generic horizons within which the poem was read in the medieval period. The manuscript traditions indicate that the Padmavat is clearly a Sufi poem, as has been apparent in one consistent strand in the history of its reception. As a Sufi 'tale of love,' it is deeply embedded and implicated in contemporary history and politics.
    [Show full text]
  • Paper 13 Political and Administrative History of Medieval India (1526-1707)
    M.A HISTORY PAPER-13 Political and Administrative History of Medieval India (1526-1707) AUTHOR NAME-Dr.Ganeswar Nayak Lecturer in History SKCG College Paralakhemundi 1 PAPER -13 POLITICAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE HISTORY OF MEDIEVAL HISTORY(1206-1526) BLOCK INTRODUCTION The Delhi Sultanate is a term used to cover five short lived dynasty .Delhi based kingdoms or Sultans mostly of Turkic or Pastun ( Afgan ) origin in medieval India. The Sultan ruled from Delhi between 1206-1526, when the last was replaced by Mughal dynasty. The five dynasty were the Mamuluk dynasty(1206-1290), the Khilji dynasty(1290-1320) the Tughlaq dynasty(1320-1414) the Sayyid dynasty(1414-51) and the Afghan Lodi dynasty(1450-1526) The sultanate ushered in a period of Indian cultural renaissance. The resulting Indo-Muslim fusion of culture left lasting syncretism monuments in architecture, music, literature, religion and clothing. It is surmised that the Urdu language was born during this period as result of intermingling of local speakers of Sanskrit Prairies with immigrants speaking Persian, Turkish and Arabic under the Muslim rulers. The Delhi Sultanate is only Indo- Muslim empire to have enthroned one of the few female rulers in India, Rajia Sultana(1236-1240)In 1256, the Delhi Sultanate was absorbed by emerging Moghul Empire. This paper is divided into four units. Again each unit is divided in to sections and subsections. 2 Unit-1, deals with primary sources of Medival Indian History. It also delineates the ghorian invasion and foundation and foundation of Delhi Sultanate.it further delineates administration and theory of kingship of Balban and Iltutmish.
    [Show full text]
  • Unit 5 Growth of Mughal Empire: I
    UNIT 5 GROWTH OF MUGHAL EMPIRE: Structure 5.0 Objectives I 5.1 Inroduction 5.2 Political Scenario on the eve of Babur's Invasion I 5.3 Central Asia and Rabur 5.4 Foundation of Mughal Rule in India 5.4.1 Babur and the Rajput Kingdoms i 5.4.2 Babur and the Afghan Chieftains 5.5 Humayur, - 1530-1540 I 5.5.1 Bahadur Shah and Humayun I 5.5.2 Eastern Afghans and ~u&un I 5.5.3 Humayun and His Brothers 5.6 Establishment of Second Afghan Empire in India: 1540-1555 5.7 Revival of Mughal Rule in India 5.8 Let Us Sum Up 5.9 Key Words 5.10 Answers to Check Your Progress Exercises 5.0 OBJECTIVES This Unit will tell you about: the political situation of India on the eve of Babur's invasion, Babur's successful campaigns against the Lodis, the conquests and capflicts of the Mughals with the local ruling powers, specially their clashes with the Afghans and the Rajputs, the emergence and consolidation of Sher Shah, and the circumstances and factors that led to the revival of Mughals in India under Humayun. 5.1 INTRODUCTION The scope of the present Unit confines itself to the process of the establishment of Mughal rule in India under Babur and Humayun. Afghans' bid to challenge and overthrow Mughal authority is also discussed. A brief survey of the Afghan rule has also been attempted. The Unit deals mainly with the territorial expansion under Babur and Humayun. The organisational aspects of the Mughals will be dealt in subsequent Blocks.
    [Show full text]
  • Battle of Khanwa.Docx
    Battle of Khanwa The Battle of Khanwa was a decisive engagement between the Mughal forces under Babur and the Rajput alliance under Rana Sanga of Mewar. The battle was fought on 16 March 1527. It ended in a decisive victory for the Mughal forces and would consolidate Babur and his descendants’ rule for centuries to come. The topic about the Battle of Khanwa is an important one within the context of the history segment of the IAS Exam. Background of the Battle of Khanwa Babur had embarked on a campaign of conquest to fulfill the legacy of his ancestor, Timur. Up until 1524, he was aiming to expand his rule in the Punjab region but certain events led to him expanding far beyond the original confines of Timur’s erstwhile empire. ● The decline of the Delhi Sultanate under the Lodi Dynasty presented fresh opportunities for conquest ● Babur was invited by Daulat Khan Lodi to invade the Delhi Sultanate. Around the same time a proposal for an alliance was made by Rana Sangha. ● Rana Sangha proposed that while Babur would attack Delhi, the Rajputs would attack Agra. Babur seemingly agreed to this proposal. However, Daulat Khan betrayed Babur and subverted the Mughal garrison at Sialkot and marched towards Lahore. The Mughals defeated Daulat Khan near the city and they were the undisputed lords of Punjab. Following this, Babur would go on to destroy Ibrahim Lodi’s army at the first battle of Panipat, which would lead to the beginning of the Mughal Empire. While these events took place, Rana Sangha made no move despite the Mughals taking over Agra.
    [Show full text]