๐ Class 12 History – Chapter 9
๐ Kings and Chronicles (Mughal Court) – NCERT / CBSE Notes
❇️ Who were the Mughals?
๐น Two great lineages –
- Mother’s side → Descendant of Genghis Khan (Mongol ruler of China & Central Asia, died 1227 AD).
- Father’s side → Descendant of Timur (ruler of Iran & Turkey, died 1404 AD).
๐น Mughals avoided title “Mongol” ❌ –
- Because “Mongol” reminded of Uzbegs (rivals of Mughals).
- Preferred to call themselves Timurid (descendants of Timur who invaded Delhi in 1398 AD).
๐น Genealogy (เคตंเคถाเคตเคฒी) –
- Portraits showed Mughal rulers with Timur.
- Babur → maternal link with Genghis Khan, spoke Turkish, mocked Mongols as “barbaric gangs”.
๐น Term ‘Mughal’ in Europe –
- 16th century Europeans used the word Mughal for Indian rulers.
- Even Mowgli (from Jungle Book) derived from “Mughal”.
๐น Founders of the empire –
- Babur driven out by Uzbegs from Fergana.
- Humayun defeated by Sher Shah Sur, took refuge in Safavid court (Iran).
- Chagatai Turks considered themselves descendants of eldest son of Genghis Khan.
❇️ Babur (1526 – 1530 AD)
๐น Inherited Fergana (1494 AD) at age 12, lost throne due to Uzbeg invasion.
๐น Captured Kabul (1504 AD).
๐น 1st Battle of Panipat (1526 AD) – defeated Ibrahim Lodi, captured Delhi & Agra.
๐น Battle of Khanua (1527 AD) – defeated Rana Sanga & Rajput allies.
๐น Battle of Chanderi (1528 AD) – defeated Rajputs.
๐น First use of cannons & firepower in Indian battles.
❇️ Humayun (1530 – 1540 AD, restored 1555 – 1556 AD)
๐น Divided empire among brothers (Mirza Kamran, etc.) → led to weakness.
๐น Defeated by Sher Shah →
- Battle of Chausa (1539 AD)
- Battle of Kannauj (1540 AD) → forced into exile.๐น With Safavid help, recaptured Delhi (1555 AD).๐น Died next year (1556 AD) due to accident (fall from staircase).
❇️ Akbar (1556 – 1605 AD)
๐น Became emperor at 13 years.
๐น Conquests –
- Chittor (1568 AD), Ranthambore (1569 AD).
- Captured Kandahar from Safavids.
- Annexed Kashmir & Kabul.
- Began Deccan campaigns.๐น Revolts → Support to Mirza Hakim (1579–1580 AD).
❇️ Jahangir (1605 – 1627 AD)
๐น Sisodia ruler of Mewar (Amar Singh) accepted Mughal service.
๐น Launched campaigns against Sikhs, Ahoms, Ahmednagar (not fully successful).
๐น Last years → Prince Khurram (Shah Jahan) revolted.
❇️ Shah Jahan (1628 – 1658 AD)
๐น Khan Jahan Lodi revolted → defeated.
๐น Campaigns against Ahmednagar & Bundelas (captured Orchha).
๐น Failed campaign in Balkh (NW frontier) → lost Kandahar to Safavids.
๐น Ahmednagar annexed (1632 AD), Bijapur sought reconciliation.
๐น War of succession (1657–58 AD) → Aurangzeb defeated Dara Shukoh & brothers.
๐น Shah Jahan imprisoned in Agra Fort for life.
❇️ Aurangzeb (1658 – 1707 AD)
๐น Ahoms (Assam) defeated in 1663, revolted again in 1690.
๐น Sikhs & Yousafzai tribes revolted due to Mughal interference.
๐น Conflict with Shivaji –
- Captured, insulted at Agra → escaped Mughal prison.๐น Prince Akbar (Aurangzeb’s son) rebelled with Marathas & fled to Iran.๐น Deccan campaigns –
- Annexed Bijapur (1685 AD) & Golconda (1687 AD).
- Struggled with Maratha guerrilla warfare.
๐ฐ Mughal Empire: Capitals, Chronicles & Culture
❇️ Mughal Capitals ๐️
- ๐ In the 16th–17th centuries, Mughal capitals shifted rapidly.
- ๐ฐ Babur occupied Agra (Lodi capital) but his courts were held at different places.
- ๐งฑ Akbar (1560s) built Agra Fort with red sandstone.
- ๐ Fatehpur Sikri (1570s) became capital → close to Ajmer (Shrine of Khwaja Muinuddin Chishti ✨).
- ๐ Akbar built a marble mausoleum for Sheikh Salim Chishti near Jama Masjid, Sikri.
- ๐ช Buland Darwaza (huge arched gateway) built to commemorate Gujarat victory.
- ๐ก️ 1585 – Capital shifted to Lahore to control North-West borders (Akbar stayed 13 yrs).
- ๐️ 1648 AD – Capital moved to Shahjahanabad by Shah Jahan.
❇️ Chronicles (เคเคคिเคนाเคธ เคी เคाเคฅाเคँ) ๐
- ✍️ Historical writings describing a region are called Itivartas (เคเคคिเคตृเคค).
- ๐ Mughal chronicles mostly survive in manuscript form.
❇️ Manuscripts (เคนเคธ्เคคเคฒिเคिเคค เค्เคฐंเคฅ) ๐️
- ๐ Handwritten articles = manuscripts.
- ๐ Mughals prepared many chronicles to inform future generations about their rule.
- ๐ฐ These works are an important source of Mughal history.
❇️ Composition of the Chronicle ๐️
- ๐ Mughal chronicles are key sources for empire & court history.
- ๐ Purpose → To show vision of an enlightened state (เคช्เคฐเคฌुเคฆ्เคง เคฐाเค्เคฏ).
- ⏳ Ensure future generations had records of rulers.
- ๐จ๐ Authors were mostly courtiers → focused on rulers, royal family, court, aristocracy, wars, administration.
- ๐ฐ For writers → History of Empire = History of Emperor.
- ๐ All works were manuscripts → main hub was Royal Kitabkhana (เคชुเคธ्เคคเคाเคฒเคฏ).
❇️ Language of the Mughals ๐ฃ️
- ๐ Court Histories → Written in Persian.
- ๐️ Mughals were of Chagatai origin → Turkish was their mother tongue.
- ๐️ Babur wrote poetry & memoirs in Turkish.
- ๐ Akbar made Persian the main court language.
- ๐️ Persian became the language of administration, clerks & officers learnt it.
- ๐ Interaction of Persian + Hindavi → Urdu language emerged.
- ๐ Works like Akbarnama written in Persian.
- ๐ Baburnama → translated from Turkish to Persian.
- ๐ Akbar ordered Sanskrit texts (Mahabharata, Ramayana) translated into Persian.
- ⚔️ Mahabharata → translated as Razmanama (Book of Wars).
❇️ Mughal Painting ๐จ
- ✍️ Abul Fazl → called painting a magical art (เคाเคฆुเค เคเคฒा), respected it greatly.
- ๐ 17th century – Mughal emperors shown with halo (divine aura) → inspired from European Christian art.
- ๐ Akbar often painted in white robes → symbol of Sufi purity.
- ⚖️ Conflict between rulers & Ulama (Muslim orthodox) → Ulama opposed human forms citing Qur’an & Hadith.
- ๐ฎ๐ท Safavid kings of Iran supported talented painters like Bihzad.
- ๐ Humayun brought Iranian painters Mir Syed Ali & Abdul Samad to Delhi.
๐ Special Note:
- ๐งต Payag (Shah Jahan’s time) → Carpet Painter.
- ๐จ Abdul Hasan (Jahangir’s time) → Carpet Painter.
๐ Akbarnama, Ain-e-Akbari & Mughal Court Life
❇️ Akbarnama & Ain-e-Akbari ๐
- ✍️ Most famous Mughal histories = Akbarnama & Badshahnama.
- ๐จ Each manuscript has ~150 illustrated pages → battle ⚔️, siege ๐ฐ, hunting ๐น, court scenes ๐, constructions ๐️.
- ๐️ Abul Fazl (Akbar’s close friend & courtier) wrote Akbarnama → raised in Agra.
- ๐ Written in 3 volumes:1️⃣ Volume I → History of Akbar’s ancestors.2️⃣ Volume II → Events of Akbar’s reign.3️⃣ Volume III (Ain-e-Akbari) → Detailed description of:
- Geography ๐
- Administration ๐️
- Household ๐
- Army ๐ก️
- Revenue ๐ฐ
- Traditions & Culture of India ๐ญ
- ๐ Ain-e-Akbari’s best feature → Statistical records of crops ๐พ, prices ๐ต, wages ๐ท, revenues ๐.
๐ Mehrunissa (married Jahangir in 1611) → Became Nur Jahan (Light of the World).
- Always loyal to Jahangir ❤️.
- Jahangir issued silver coins in her honor.
❇️ Badshahnama ๐ฐ
- ๐️ Official history of Shah Jahan.
- ๐ Written in 3 volumes (daftars) → each covered lunar years.
- ✍️ Abdul Hamid Lahori wrote first 2 daftars (1627–1647).
- ๐ง Later revised by Wazir Sadullah Khan.
- ๐ Philosophy → Suharwardi (inspired by Plato’s Republic), where God = Sun ☀️.
- ๐ Widely read in Islamic world, also studied by Sheikh Mubarak.
❇️ Religious Status of Mughals ๐
- ๐ 1563 → Akbar ended pilgrimage tax (เคฏाเคค्เคฐा เคเคฐ).
- ๐ฐ 1564 → Abolished Jizya (เคเค़िเคฏा).
- ⛪ All emperors gave grants for temples, mosques, churches, gurudwaras.
- ๐️ Even destroyed temples (during wars) were later repaired with grants → seen in Shah Jahan & Aurangzeb’s reign.
❇️ Mughal Court ๐
- ๐️ Court status = proximity to emperor.
- ๐ Formal greeting = Cornish (เคोเคฐ्เคจिเคถ).
- ๐ Greeting posture showed rank.
- Shah Jahan replaced with → Taslim (hand on chest) & Jami-bos (kiss on ground).
❇️ Emperor’s Day ๐
- ๐ Emperor’s day began with religious rituals.
- ๐ Then → Jharokha Darshan (public appearance from balcony).
- Purpose = Acceptance of royal power as public trust (เคเคจ เคตिเคถ्เคตाเคธ).
❇️ Takht-e-Taus (Peacock Throne) ๐ฆ๐
- ๐ Shah Jahan’s jewel-studded throne → took 7 years to complete.
- ๐ Decorated with rubies, diamonds & gems.
- Gift ruby from Shah Abbas (Safavid ruler).
- Names inscribed: Timur, Ulugh Beg, Shah Abbas, Akbar, Jahangir, Shah Jahan.
❇️ Diwan-e-Aam vs. Diwan-e-Khas ⚖️
- ๐️ Diwan-e-Aam (Public Hall) → Emperor handled govt functions, officials submitted reports.
- ๐ฐ Diwan-e-Khas (Private Hall) → Confidential discussions, petitions, revenue details, ministers’ advice.
❇️ Titles, Gifts & Honors ๐
- ๐️ Titles = recognition of merit (เคเคชाเคงि).
- ๐ Major titles → Asaf Khan, Mirza Raja.
- ๐น Aurangzeb gave Mirza Raja to Jai Singh & Jaswant Singh.
- ๐ฐ Titles could be earned or purchased (e.g., Mir Khan paid 1 lakh).
- ๐ Khillat (robe of honor) → previously worn by emperor = blessing symbol.
- ๐ Special gift = Padm Murassa (gem-studded ornaments with lotus rings).
- ๐ Courtiers always carried gifts → symbol of loyalty.
- ๐ค In diplomacy, gifts = respect. Example: Thomas Roe’s ring (worth ₹400) insulted & returned.
❇️ Royal Family (Harem) ๐๐ฉ
- ๐ Haram (เคนเคฐเคฎ) = Persian word → “Sacred place (เคชเคตिเคค्เคฐ เคธ्เคฅाเคจ)”.
- Included: Wives, concubines, relatives, attendants, slaves.
- ๐ Polygamy common in Rajputs & Mughals → marriages used for political alliances.
- ๐น Begum (เคฌेเคเคฎ) = royal-born Mughal women.
- ๐ธ Agha women = non-royal aristocratic wives.
- ๐ฐ Mehr (dowry) higher in royal marriages → Begums > Aghas in status.
- ๐ธ After Nur Jahan, Mughal queens controlled finances.
- ๐ Shah Jahan’s daughters Jahanara & Roshanara → had incomes = top mansabdars.
- ๐ฆ Jahanara earned huge revenue from Surat trade.
❇️ Mughal Aristocracy ๐
- ๐ฅ Nobility = multi-ethnic, multi-religious (Turani, Irani, Rajput, Hindustani).
- ๐น Ensured no single group dominated power.
- ๐น First Rajput chief → Raja of Amber (Kachhwaha) → gave daughter to Akbar.
- ๐ฎ๐ท Under Jahangir → Iranians gained high posts (Nur Jahan herself was Iranian).
- ⚔️ Aurangzeb → appointed Rajputs, but Marathas rose among non-Muslims.
- ๐ Chandrabhan Brahman’s book Char Chaman → describes aristocracy.
- ๐ Akbar treated some nobles as Murids (disciples) → spiritual bond.
❇️ Jesuit Priests in Mughal Court ⛪
- ✝️ Akbar curious about Christianity → invited Jesuit priests.
- ๐ 1580 → First Jesuit mission arrived at Fatehpur Sikri, stayed 2 years.
- ✝️ Later missions came to Lahore (1591 & 1595).
- ๐ Given close seats near Akbar’s throne.
- ๐ก️ Joined expeditions, educated princes, accompanied emperor in leisure.