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Mughals
nearest Rajput state to Delhi later known as Jaipur)
who became the mother of the Sultan’s heir
Jahangir. This was the beginning of a policy that he
continued with other Rajput princes so that by the
end of his reign all were under his overlordship
although with varying degrees of independence. In
addition to marital alliances and diplomacy Akbar
also gained territory by force conquering Gujarat
in 1573, Bengal in 1576, Kashmir in the 1586, Sind
and Baluchistan between 1591 and 1595. The
southern part of India was added in the latter part
of his reign and included Berar and part of
Ahmadnagar.
Akbar’s territorial victories were consolidated
by an efficient system of government with a paid
non-hereditary civil service. In addition Akbar
abolished the ‘jizya’, poll tax payable by Hindus
and other non-Muslims, in order to integrate and
unify the differing peoples of his expanding
empire in the same way that the Rajput dominions
had been incorporated. Religious toleration
became a central principle of Akbar’s government
to the extent that in 1570 he convened a conference
between the different religions at his newly
established city of Fatehpur Sikri. The conference
included scholars from Hindu and Muslim sects
as well as Jains, Zoroastrians and Catholic Jesuits
from Goa. The result was a new religion conceived
by Akbar himself and known as Din Ilahi (Divine
Faith) which drew elements from all the sects.
Although the religion was not successful it shows
Akbar’s concern to create an empire free from
religious divisions. Akbar died in 1605 leaving the
empire to his son Jahangir who had recently been
in open revolt of his father. On his accession to
the throne Jahangir left his son Shah Jahan in
charge of the military campaigns, a pattern which
was later repeated when as emperor Shah Jahan
delegated control of the south to his son
Aurangzeb. Both Jahangir and later Shah Jahan
continued the policies of Akbar so that the empire
remained relatively stable despite more or less
constant warfare in the south of the country. Shah
Jahan failed in his attempt to create a united Sunni
state incorporating India with Central Asia, but
managed to keep the empire more or less intact
for his son Aurangzeb.
The last of the great Mughals, Aurangzeb,
departed from the pattern of government set by
Akbar and precipitated the decline of the empire.
Aurangzeb devoted a great deal of energy and
manpower to continuing the conquest of the south
of India at the expense of all other policies. The
empire reached its greatest extent during this period
and included the whole subcontinent with the
exception of the southern tip. However, this brought
increased problems of communication and military
control which the empire was not able to manage.
These problems were exacerbated by Aurangzeb’s
fanatical Muslim zeal which meant that he reversed
the policy of religious tolerance exercised by his
great-grandfather by introducing the poll tax (jizya)
for non-Muslims. Similarly he encouraged the
destruction of Hindu temples and other religious
shrines and his southern conquests became one of
the greatest iconoclastic excursions in India’s history.
Although Aurangzeb may have been a pious
Muslim, this policy was not successful in an empire
which depended on the co-operation and toleration
of different ethnic and religious groups. Perhaps the
best example of Aurangzeb’s policy was the Great
Mosque built to tower over the Hindu holy city of
Banares.
With Aurangzeb’s death at the age of 90 in 1707
the empire passed to his son Bahadur Shah who
only lived another five years. During the next half-
century the rapidly disintegrating empire was ruled
by eight sultans. The weakness of the empire was
shown in 1739 when Delhi was sacked by the
Persian emperor Nadir Shah who carried off the
peacock throne along with countless other
treasures. The latter part of the century witnessed
the conflict between a variety of forces including
the Mughals, the Hindu Marathas and the British
East India Company. In 1803 the East India com-
pany occupied Delhi and Agra thus ending Mughal
power in India. For the next half-century the power-
less Mughals were retained by the British as ‘Kings
of Delhi’. Finally in 1857 the last Mughal Bahadur
Shah II was stripped of even this title and was
removed from Delhi for his part in the sepoy
mutiny.
Architecture
Mughal architecture was derived from three main
sources: native Indian Islamic, Persian Central Asian
and local Hindu architecture. It is difficult to
determine the extent to which any feature or building
type used by the Mughals derives from any of these
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