Paper IPaper I · History

The Mughal Empire

Babur to Aurangzeb and the later Mughals (1526 to 1857): the great rulers, the Sur interregnum, the mansabdari and zabti systems, religious policy, art and architecture, the chronicles and travellers, and the eighteenth-century decline, with reference tables and authored CAPF practice

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At a glance
PaperPaper ISubjectHistorySyllabusHistory of India: broad understanding of the social, economic and political aspects of Indian history from ancient to modern timesImportanceHigh
Medieval IndiaMughalsAkbarAurangzebMansabdariIndo Islamic Architecture

Flagship overview

The Mughal Empire (1526 to 1857, at its political height to 1707) was the greatest of the medieval Indian states, founded by Babur at the First Battle of Panipat and built into a centralised, prosperous, and culturally brilliant empire by his grandson Akbar. The Mughals welded north India and much of the Deccan into a single administrative system based on the mansabdari rank order and the zabti land-revenue settlement, presided over a synthesis of Persian and Indian art and architecture, and produced a rich chronicle literature (the Baburnama, the Akbarnama and Ain-i-Akbari, the Tuzuk-i-Jahangiri). The sources combine these court chronicles with the accounts of European travellers (Sir Thomas Roe, Bernier, Tavernier, Manucci), inscriptions, and a fine coinage.

For CAPF, the Mughals are among the most heavily tested topics. The examiner favours the ruler order, king-to-event and king-to-monument matching, the mansabdari terms (zat and sawar), Akbar's religious and revenue policies, the great Shah Jahan monuments, which European traveller visited which emperor, the battle dates (especially the three Battles of Panipat), and the causes of the post-Aurangzeb decline.

Core narrative

Babur (1526 to 1530)

Zahiruddin Muhammad Babur, a Timurid prince of Farghana (descended from Timur on his father's side and from Chinggis Khan on his mother's), founded the empire. He won three decisive battles:

  • First Battle of Panipat (1526): defeated Ibrahim Lodi, using field artillery and the tulughma (flanking) tactic; this founded the empire.
  • Battle of Khanwa (1527): defeated Rana Sanga (Sangram Singh) of Mewar and the Rajput confederacy.
  • Battle of Chanderi (1528): against Medini Rai.
  • Battle of Ghaghra (1529): defeated the Afghans of the east.

Babur wrote his memoirs, the Baburnama (Tuzuk-i-Baburi), in Turki (Chaghatai Turkish), a candid and observant work.

Humayun (1530 to 1540, then 1555 to 1556)

Humayun lost the empire to the rising Afghan Sher Shah Suri after the battles of Chausa (1539) and Kannauj / Bilgram (1540). He spent some fifteen years in exile (in Sindh and at the Safavid court in Persia), recovered Delhi and Agra in 1555 with Persian help, and died in 1556 from a fall down the steps of his library (Sher Mandal). His tomb at Delhi, the first great Mughal garden-tomb, was built by his widow Bega Begum.

The Sur interregnum (1540 to 1555)

Sher Shah Suri (1540 to 1545), an Afghan of remarkable administrative genius, ruled the brief but important Sur empire. He built (rebuilt and extended) the Grand Trunk Road (Sadak-i-Azam, from Sonargaon in Bengal to the north-west), introduced the silver rupiya and the copper dam (the basis of the later rupee), reformed land revenue by measuring and classifying land and fixing the demand (the system Akbar's officials later refined), built sarais (rest-houses) and a postal system, and constructed his own tomb at Sasaram (Bihar). His reforms are a favourite "who introduced the rupee / GT Road" question.

Akbar (1556 to 1605)

Jalaluddin Muhammad Akbar, the real architect of the empire, came to the throne as a boy under the regent Bairam Khan and won the Second Battle of Panipat (1556) against Hemu (Hemchandra Vikramaditya), the Hindu general of the Afghans. Once in power, Akbar pursued territorial expansion (Rajputana, Gujarat, Bengal, Kabul, Kashmir, Sindh, parts of the Deccan) and, more famously, a policy of conciliation and religious tolerance:

  • He abolished the pilgrim tax (1563) and the jizya on non-Muslims (1564), married Rajput princesses (the marriage with the Kachhwaha of Amber), and gave high office to Rajputs such as Raja Man Singh and Raja Todar Mal.
  • He built the Ibadat Khana (house of worship) at Fatehpur Sikri (1575) for religious debate among scholars of all faiths.
  • He proclaimed the doctrine of Sulh-i-kul ("peace with all", universal toleration) and in 1582 founded the Din-i-Ilahi (Tauhid-i-Ilahi), a small eclectic order of personal discipleship, not a mass religion.
  • His revenue minister Raja Todar Mal devised the zabti (dahsala) settlement; his court hosted the navaratnas (nine gems), including Abul Fazl, Birbal, Tansen, Todar Mal, and Man Singh.
  • Abul Fazl, his friend and chronicler, wrote the Akbarnama and its statistical third volume, the Ain-i-Akbari, the great administrative gazetteer of the empire.

Jahangir (1605 to 1627)

Nuruddin Salim Jahangir is known for his queen Nur Jahan (Mehr-un-Nisa), who wielded great political influence (the "junta" with her father Itimad-ud-Daula and brother Asaf Khan), and for his interest in painting and natural history (his memoirs are the Tuzuk-i-Jahangiri). The English ambassador Sir Thomas Roe visited his court (1615 to 1619) on behalf of King James I and the East India Company and secured trading rights at Surat; the earlier English visitor William Hawkins had come in 1608. The Sikh Guru Arjan Dev was executed during his reign. Jahangir built the tomb of Itimad-ud-Daula at Agra (the "Baby Taj", an early use of pietra dura) and laid out the Shalimar Bagh in Kashmir.

Shah Jahan (1628 to 1658)

The reign of Shah Jahan (Khurram) is the golden age of Mughal architecture. He built the Taj Mahal at Agra (for his queen Mumtaz Mahal, completed around 1653), the Red Fort (Lal Qila) and the Jama Masjid at Delhi, and the new capital Shahjahanabad, and commissioned the jewelled Peacock Throne (Takht-i-Taus) and the Moti Masjid. The French traveller Francois Bernier and the jeweller Jean-Baptiste Tavernier, and the Italian Niccolao Manucci, visited in this period. His reign saw costly Deccan campaigns and a failed attempt to recover the Timurid homelands (the Balkh and Qandahar campaigns). In the war of succession among his sons, Aurangzeb won and deposed and imprisoned his father in the Agra fort, where Shah Jahan died in 1666.

Aurangzeb (1658 to 1707)

Muhi-ud-din Muhammad Aurangzeb, who took the title Alamgir ("world-seizer"), brought the empire to its greatest territorial extent (annexing Bijapur in 1686 and Golconda in 1687) but also to over-extension and growing strain. A devout and austere ruler, he reversed Akbar's policy of conciliation: he re-imposed the jizya (1679), discouraged music and lavish display at court, and executed the ninth Sikh Guru, Tegh Bahadur (1675). He fought long, exhausting wars in the Deccan against the Marathas (Shivaji, who had been crowned Chhatrapati in 1674, and his successors) and the Deccan sultanates, spending his last decades there. He compiled the legal digest Fatawa-i-Alamgiri (a compendium of Hanafi law). His policies and unending wars are commonly seen as having sapped the empire.

Administration

  • Mansabdari system (introduced by Akbar): every officer (mansabdar) held a numerical rank (mansab) expressed in two figures, the zat (which fixed personal status and pay) and the sawar (the number of cavalrymen the officer was to maintain). It was the framework of both military and civil organisation. Mansabs were graded (from 10 up to 5,000 and higher for princes), were not hereditary, and were paid either in cash (naqdi) or, more usually, by the assignment of a jagir.
  • Land revenue: the zabti or dahsala (ten-year) system, perfected by Raja Todar Mal (1580), measured and classified the land, calculated the average produce and prices of the previous ten years, and fixed the state demand (about one-third of the average produce) in cash. Other systems in use were the batai or ghalla-bakshi (crop-sharing), the kankut (estimation), and the nasaq.
  • Jagirdari system: most mansabdars were assigned a jagir (a revenue assignment) in lieu of cash salary; the jagir was transferable and non-hereditary, and the holder (jagirdar) drew the revenue, not the land itself.
  • Provincial structure: the empire was divided into subas (provinces, twelve under Akbar, more later), each under a subadar (governor), and below them into sarkars (districts) and parganas, down to the village. Provincial officers included the diwan (revenue), the bakhshi (military pay and intelligence), the sadr (religious and charitable grants), and the qazi (justice).

Society and economy

Mughal India was, by contemporary standards, prosperous and populous. Agriculture was the foundation, and the cash-based zabti settlement pushed cultivators toward marketable crops (cotton, indigo, sugarcane, opium) alongside food grains. The empire had a flourishing textile industry (Bengal muslin, Gujarat and Coromandel cottons, Kashmir shawls), and exported textiles, indigo, saltpetre, and spices, drawing in silver bullion through the European trading companies (Portuguese, Dutch, English, French). Towns such as Agra, Delhi, Lahore, Ahmedabad, Surat (the chief western port), Patna, and Dhaka were large commercial centres. The currency was trimetallic: the gold mohur, the silver rupiya, and the copper dam. Society was hierarchical, headed by the mansabdari nobility (a multi-ethnic service class of Turanis, Iranis, Afghans, Rajputs, and Indian Muslims), below whom were the zamindars (intermediary landholders), the peasantry, artisans organised in karkhanas, and merchants and bankers (the sarrafs and the great firms). The condition of the peasantry varied with the revenue demand, which grew heavier in the later period.

Religious policy: a contrast

Measure Akbar Aurangzeb
Jizya Abolished (1564) Re-imposed (1679)
Pilgrim tax Abolished (1563) Re-imposed
Music and court display Patronised Discouraged
Policy doctrine Sulh-i-kul (peace with all); Din-i-Ilahi Orthodox Islam; Fatawa-i-Alamgiri
Rajput relations Alliance and high office Strained; the Rajput and Maratha wars
Sikh Gurus Relations cordial (granted land at Amritsar) Executed Guru Tegh Bahadur (1675)

Art, architecture, and culture

Mughal architecture fused Persian, Central Asian, Timurid, and Indian elements: the char-bagh (four-quartered) garden, the bulbous dome, the pishtaq (arched portal), the use of red sandstone and white marble, and pietra dura (parchin kari, inlay of semi-precious stones). Landmarks in order: Humayun's Tomb (the first great Mughal garden-tomb, the forerunner of the Taj); Fatehpur Sikri with the Buland Darwaza, Jodha Bai's palace, and the Panch Mahal (Akbar); the tomb of Itimad-ud-Daula and the Shalimar Bagh (Jahangir); and the Taj Mahal, Red Fort, Jama Masjid, and Shahjahanabad (Shah Jahan). Mughal miniature painting, a blend of Persian and Indian styles, flourished above all under Jahangir, who patronised masters such as Ustad Mansur. Persian was the court and administrative language, and Urdu (the "camp language") developed as a composite tongue.

Decline

After Aurangzeb's death in 1707, the empire declined rapidly:

  • Weak "later Mughals" (Bahadur Shah I, Jahandar Shah, Farrukhsiyar, Muhammad Shah "Rangila", and others) and bloody wars of succession, with the kingmaker Sayyid brothers controlling the throne.
  • The rise of autonomous and independent regional powers: the Marathas (now an expanding confederacy), and the breakaway provinces of Hyderabad (Nizam-ul-Mulk Asaf Jah, 1724), Bengal (Murshid Quli Khan), and Awadh (Saadat Khan).
  • Foreign invasions: Nadir Shah of Persia sacked Delhi in 1739 (carrying off the Peacock Throne and the Koh-i-Noor diamond), and Ahmad Shah Abdali (Durrani) of Afghanistan invaded repeatedly, defeating the Marathas at the Third Battle of Panipat (1761).
  • Structural strains: the jagirdari crisis (too many claimants for too few revenue assignments), agrarian discontent, and the over-extension caused by the Deccan wars.

The empire survived only in name through the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, increasingly under the protection of the British East India Company, until the last emperor, Bahadur Shah II (Zafar), was deposed and exiled to Rangoon after the Revolt of 1857.

Static facts to memorise

The six great Mughals (and the Sur)

Ruler Reign Key fact
Babur 1526 to 1530 Founder; First Panipat (1526); Khanwa (1527); Baburnama (in Turki)
Humayun 1530 to 1540, 1555 to 1556 Lost to Sher Shah (Chausa 1539, Kannauj 1540); regained Delhi 1555
Sher Shah Suri 1540 to 1545 GT Road; rupiya and dam; land-revenue reform; tomb at Sasaram
Akbar 1556 to 1605 Second Panipat (1556); mansabdari; Sulh-i-kul; Din-i-Ilahi (1582); Todar Mal's zabti
Jahangir 1605 to 1627 Nur Jahan; Sir Thomas Roe (1615); Guru Arjan Dev executed; Tuzuk-i-Jahangiri
Shah Jahan 1628 to 1658 Taj Mahal; Red Fort; Jama Masjid; Peacock Throne; Bernier and Tavernier
Aurangzeb (Alamgir) 1658 to 1707 Re-imposed jizya (1679); Deccan wars; Guru Tegh Bahadur executed; Fatawa-i-Alamgiri

Battles

Battle Year Significance
First Battle of Panipat 1526 Babur defeats Ibrahim Lodi; the empire is founded
Battle of Khanwa 1527 Babur defeats Rana Sanga of Mewar
Battle of Ghaghra 1529 Babur defeats the Afghans of the east
Battle of Chausa 1539 Sher Shah defeats Humayun
Battle of Kannauj (Bilgram) 1540 Sher Shah defeats Humayun; Humayun loses the empire
Second Battle of Panipat 1556 Akbar (Bairam Khan) defeats Hemu
Battle of Haldighati 1576 Akbar's forces (Man Singh) versus Maharana Pratap of Mewar
Third Battle of Panipat 1761 Ahmad Shah Abdali defeats the Marathas

Chronicles and travellers

Work / visitor Associated with
Baburnama Babur (memoirs, in Turki)
Humayun-nama Gulbadan Begum (Humayun's sister)
Akbarnama / Ain-i-Akbari Abul Fazl (on Akbar)
Tuzuk-i-Jahangiri Jahangir (memoirs)
Padshahnama Abdul Hamid Lahori (on Shah Jahan)
Sir Thomas Roe Jahangir (English ambassador, 1615 to 1619)
William Hawkins Jahangir (English, 1608)
Bernier, Tavernier Shah Jahan / Aurangzeb (French)
Niccolao Manucci Shah Jahan / Aurangzeb (Italian)

Monuments by reign

Reign Monuments
Humayun Humayun's Tomb (the first great Mughal garden-tomb), built by his widow
Akbar Fatehpur Sikri, the Buland Darwaza, the Panch Mahal, Agra Fort, Akbar's tomb at Sikandra
Jahangir Tomb of Itimad-ud-Daula ("Baby Taj"), Shalimar Bagh (Kashmir)
Shah Jahan Taj Mahal, Red Fort, Jama Masjid, Shahjahanabad, Moti Masjid, Peacock Throne
Aurangzeb Badshahi Mosque (Lahore), Bibi ka Maqbara (Aurangabad), Moti Masjid (Red Fort)

Security and governance angle

The mansabdari system was the institutional spine of Mughal power: by tying every officer's rank, pay, and military obligation (the sawar quota of cavalry) to the state, and by keeping mansabs non-hereditary and transferable, Akbar created a salaried, rotating service nobility loyal to the crown rather than to land, an early imperial bureaucracy and standing-force model. The jagirdari and zabti systems linked this military service directly to a measured, cash-based land revenue. The breakdown of these systems (the jagirdari crisis, the growth of hereditary and autonomous nobles and provinces) is the structural story of the decline, a useful case study in how an over-extended centralised state fragments. The Mughal-Maratha contest and the management of the Deccan and the north-west frontier are recurring security themes.

How CAPF asks it

Formats: ruler-to-event or ruler-to-monument matching; battle-to-year (especially the three Panipats); mansabdari terms (zat and sawar) and the zabti author (Todar Mal); which European traveller under which emperor; Akbar's religious measures; the order of the six great Mughals.

Authored practice (with answers):

Q1The mansabdari system, with its zat and sawar ranks, was introduced by:
  1. ABabur
  2. BSher Shah Suri
  3. CAkbar
  4. DAurangzeb. Answer:
  5. C. Akbar introduced the mansabdari system; zat fixed status and pay, sawar the cavalry to be maintained.
Q2The Grand Trunk Road and the silver rupiya are associated with:
  1. AAkbar
  2. BSher Shah Suri
  3. CShah Jahan
  4. DHumayun. Answer:
  5. B. Sher Shah Suri built the GT Road and introduced the rupiya and the copper dam.
Q3The Second Battle of Panipat (1556) was fought between Akbar's forces (under Bairam Khan) and:
  1. AIbrahim Lodi
  2. BRana Sanga
  3. CHemu
  4. DAhmad Shah Abdali. Answer:
  5. C. Akbar defeated Hemu at the Second Battle of Panipat.
Q4The English ambassador Sir Thomas Roe visited the court of:
  1. AAkbar
  2. BJahangir
  3. CShah Jahan
  4. DAurangzeb. Answer:
  5. B. Sir Thomas Roe came to Jahangir's court (1615) for the East India Company.
Q5Which of the following monuments was built by Shah Jahan?
  1. AHumayun's Tomb
  2. BBuland Darwaza
  3. CTaj Mahal
  4. DTomb of Itimad-ud-Daula. Answer:
  5. C. Shah Jahan built the Taj Mahal; the Buland Darwaza is Akbar's and the Itimad-ud-Daula tomb is Jahangir's reign.
Q6The Ain-i-Akbari, the great administrative gazetteer of Akbar's reign, was written by:
  1. ABadauni
  2. BAbul Fazl
  3. CFaizi
  4. DAbdur Rahim. Answer:
  5. B. Abul Fazl wrote the Akbarnama and its third volume, the Ain-i-Akbari.
Q7Nadir Shah of Persia sacked Delhi and carried off the Peacock Throne and the Koh-i-Noor in:
  1. A1707
  2. B1739
  3. C1761
  4. D1857. Answer:
  5. B. Nadir Shah's invasion and sack of Delhi took place in 1739.
Q8The Third Battle of Panipat (1761) was fought between the Marathas and:
  1. ABabur
  2. BAkbar
  3. CAhmad Shah Abdali
  4. DNadir Shah. Answer:
  5. C. Ahmad Shah Abdali (Durrani) defeated the Marathas at the Third Battle of Panipat.
Q9The jizya, abolished by Akbar in 1564, was re-imposed in 1679 by:
  1. AJahangir
  2. BShah Jahan
  3. CAurangzeb
  4. DBahadur Shah. Answer:
  5. C. Aurangzeb re-imposed the jizya in 1679.

Common confusion

  • Three Battles of Panipat: First (1526, Babur versus Ibrahim Lodi), Second (1556, Akbar versus Hemu), Third (1761, Abdali versus the Marathas). The examiner loves to mix the years.
  • Sher Shah Suri (GT Road, rupiya, revenue reform) versus Akbar (mansabdari, zabti via Todar Mal). Sher Shah laid the base; Akbar built on it.
  • Zat (personal rank and pay) versus sawar (cavalry quota) in the mansab. Do not swap their meanings.
  • Iqta (Sultanate) versus jagir (Mughal): both are revenue assignments, but of different periods and systems. The jagirdar drew revenue from a transferable assignment in lieu of salary.
  • Din-i-Ilahi (1582) was a small order of personal discipleship, not a new mass religion, and Sulh-i-kul was the broader policy of toleration.
  • Travellers: Sir Thomas Roe and William Hawkins under Jahangir; Bernier, Tavernier, and Manucci under Shah Jahan and Aurangzeb. (Distinguish from Ibn Battuta, who belongs to the Sultanate under Muhammad bin Tughlaq.)
  • Guru Arjan Dev was executed under Jahangir; Guru Tegh Bahadur under Aurangzeb. Do not swap.

Memory hook

  • Six great Mughals in order: "Babur Humayun Akbar Jahangir Shah Jahan Aurangzeb" (B-H-A-J-S-A): mnemonic "Bahu Aaj Shaam Aayegi" or simply "Be Happy, Always Joyful, Stay Aware".
  • Three Panipats: "26-56-61" (1526, 1556, 1761).
  • Mansab: "Zat = status, Sawar = soldiers."
  • Akbar's policy trio: "Jizya gone, Ibadat built, Din-i-Ilahi founded."

Night before

  • Mughal Empire founded by Babur at the First Battle of Panipat (1526), defeating Ibrahim Lodi.
  • Babur defeated Rana Sanga at Khanwa (1527); wrote the Baburnama in Turki.
  • Humayun lost to Sher Shah Suri (Chausa 1539, Kannauj 1540) and regained Delhi in 1555.
  • Sher Shah built the Grand Trunk Road, introduced the rupiya and the dam, and reformed land revenue.
  • Akbar won the Second Battle of Panipat (1556) against Hemu with Bairam Khan; abolished the jizya (1564).
  • Akbar's policies: Sulh-i-kul, the Ibadat Khana, the Din-i-Ilahi (1582); Todar Mal's zabti revenue system.
  • Mansabdari: rank in zat (status) and sawar (cavalry); introduced by Akbar; not hereditary.
  • Abul Fazl wrote the Akbarnama and the Ain-i-Akbari.
  • Jahangir hosted Sir Thomas Roe (1615); Nur Jahan was influential; Guru Arjan Dev was executed.
  • Shah Jahan built the Taj Mahal, Red Fort, and Jama Masjid, and the Peacock Throne.
  • Aurangzeb (Alamgir) re-imposed the jizya (1679), fought the Marathas, executed Guru Tegh Bahadur, and compiled the Fatawa-i-Alamgiri.
  • Decline after 1707: weak later Mughals, autonomous provinces, Nadir Shah's sack of Delhi (1739), Third Panipat (1761).
  • The last emperor, Bahadur Shah Zafar, was deposed after the 1857 Revolt.

One-line recall

  • The Mughal Empire (1526 to 1857, height to 1707) was the greatest medieval Indian state.
  • Babur founded it at the First Battle of Panipat (1526) by defeating Ibrahim Lodi.
  • Babur defeated Rana Sanga at Khanwa (1527) and wrote the Baburnama in Turki.
  • Humayun lost the empire to Sher Shah Suri at Chausa (1539) and Kannauj (1540) and regained it in 1555.
  • Sher Shah Suri built the GT Road, introduced the rupiya and the copper dam, and reformed the revenue.
  • Akbar, the real architect, won the Second Battle of Panipat (1556) against Hemu under Bairam Khan.
  • Akbar abolished the jizya (1564), built the Ibadat Khana, proclaimed Sulh-i-kul, and founded the Din-i-Ilahi (1582).
  • Raja Todar Mal devised the zabti (dahsala) land-revenue settlement under Akbar.
  • The mansabdari system graded officers by zat (status and pay) and sawar (cavalry); it was non-hereditary.
  • Most mansabdars were paid by transferable jagirs rather than cash.
  • Abul Fazl wrote the Akbarnama and the Ain-i-Akbari, the great administrative gazetteer.
  • Jahangir's queen Nur Jahan was powerful; Sir Thomas Roe came in 1615; Guru Arjan Dev was executed.
  • Shah Jahan's reign was the golden age of Mughal architecture: the Taj Mahal, Red Fort, and Jama Masjid.
  • The Peacock Throne and the city of Shahjahanabad belong to Shah Jahan.
  • Aurangzeb (Alamgir) extended the empire to its greatest size but re-imposed the jizya (1679).
  • Aurangzeb executed Guru Tegh Bahadur, fought the Marathas in the Deccan, and compiled the Fatawa-i-Alamgiri.
  • The empire was divided into subas under subadars, then sarkars and parganas.
  • After 1707, weak later Mughals, autonomous provinces (Hyderabad, Bengal, Awadh), and the Marathas eroded the centre.
  • Nadir Shah sacked Delhi in 1739 (taking the Peacock Throne and the Koh-i-Noor); Abdali won the Third Panipat (1761).
  • The last emperor, Bahadur Shah Zafar, was deposed and exiled after the Revolt of 1857.

Glossary

  • Mansab: the numerical rank of a Mughal officer, fixing status and military obligation.
  • Zat and sawar: the two figures of a mansab, denoting personal rank (and pay) and the cavalry quota.
  • Jagir: a transferable, non-hereditary assignment of revenue granted in lieu of salary.
  • Zabti (dahsala): Todar Mal's ten-year average land-revenue settlement in cash.
  • Batai / kankut / nasaq: alternative revenue systems (crop-sharing, estimation, contract).
  • Sulh-i-kul: Akbar's policy of "peace with all", universal religious toleration.
  • Din-i-Ilahi: Akbar's small eclectic order of personal discipleship (1582).
  • Ibadat Khana: the house of worship at Fatehpur Sikri for religious debate.
  • Jizya: the tax on non-Muslims, abolished by Akbar (1564) and re-imposed by Aurangzeb (1679).
  • Suba, sarkar, pargana: the province, district, and sub-district of Mughal administration.
  • Subadar, diwan, bakhshi: the provincial governor, revenue head, and military-pay officer.
  • Char-bagh: the four-quartered Mughal garden layout.
  • Pietra dura (parchin kari): inlay of semi-precious stones in marble.
  • Peacock Throne (Takht-i-Taus): Shah Jahan's jewelled throne, looted by Nadir Shah in 1739.
  • Fatawa-i-Alamgiri: the digest of Islamic (Hanafi) law compiled under Aurangzeb.
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