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Presenting you the topic CONTENTS Introduction Who are Mughals? Emperors Military Traditions Relations Religion Akbar s policies Mughal style of architecture ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Presenting you the topic


1
Presenting you the topic
MUGHAL EMPIRE
presented by CHIRASVI H.R.
CECILIA WILSON
2
CONTENTS
  • Introduction
  • Who are Mughals?
  • Emperors
  • Military
  • Traditions
  • Relations
  • Religion
  • Akbars policies
  • Mughal style of architecture
  • Influence of Mughal Empire On the subcontinent
  • Fall of mughal empire
  • Conclusion

3
Introduction
  • Ruling as large a territory as the Indian
    subcontinent with such a diversity of people
    cultures was a difficult task for a ruler to
    accomplish in Middle Ages. Mughals created an
    empire and accomplished what had hitherto seemed
    possible for only short periods. They expanded
    their kingdom from
  • Agra to Delhi.

4
Who Are Mughals?
  • The Mughals were descendants of two great
    lineages of rulers. From their mothers side they
    were descendants of Genghis Khan, ruler of the
    Mongol tribes, China Central Asia. From their
    fathers side they were the successors of Timur,
    the ruler of Iran, Iraq Modern-day Turkey. They
    celebrated their genealogy pictorially, each
    ruler getting a picture made of Timur himself.

5
The great rulersof Mughal Empire.
BABUR HUMAYUN AKBAR JAHANGIR SHAH JAHAN AURANGZEB
6
BABUR
  • Babur the tiger came to power in1483 ruled till
    1530. he ruled over a very small kingdom in
    Turkestan. With significantly small armies he
    managed to conquer Afghanistan the Delhi
    sultanate all of Hindustan.

7
HUMAYUN
Humayun inherited one of the largest empires in
the world at the time and nearly ruined it.
Between 1530 and 1540 he managed to lose all the
land that his father worked so hard to get
through rebellions from Afghanistan and India. He
was sent into exile in Persia and created a small
army. He ended up eventually regaining all the
lands back but is looked upon as one of the worst
Mughal emperors. At the end of his conquests he
fell down a flight of stairs and broke his neck.
He was succeeded by his son Akbar which in Arabic
means" Great One."
8
AKBAR
  • Muslim, Indian and Western Historians all see
    Akbar as the greatest ruler throughout Indian
    history. He became emperor at the age of thirteen
    in 1556. He immediately began seizing land in
    Hindustan. He conquered more lands than any of
    his ancestors before him had. He was very wise in
    his rulings and tried to govern all his people
    equally and fairly. Since his conquered lands
    were so many he assigned governors to each region
    called mansabars.

9
Akbar was succeeded by his favorite son,
Jahangir, who ruled the empire from 1605 to 1628.
Jahangir did not pursue military conquests as
forcefully as his father, but he did manage to
extend the empire into Bengal. His father had
once said that any Empire that is not expanding
is in decline. Jahangir had a great passion for
the arts painting, culture architecture,
philosophy, and literature. He was known to carry
the Mughal Empire through their richest cultural
period.
JAHANGIR
10
Jahangir successor, Shah Jahan, inherited
Akbar's obsession with the military. Shah Jahan
ruled from 1628 1658. By the end of his reign,
the Mughal Empire was expanding and seemed in
charge and stable. He built a new capital and
many other buildings. The most famous of all is
the TajMahal in Agra. When his favorite wife died
while giving birth to her fourteenth child, Shah
Jahan decided to build her the most beautiful
tomb that the world had ever seen and that was
exactly what he did. Till this day the Taj Mahal
is known as one of the Seven Wonders of the
World. The TajMahal took over twenty years to
build and over twenty thousand men. All of his
lavish building projects, though, eventually ran
the treasury dry. Because of this he raised the
taxes on all the people and raised a lot of
hostility towards himself
SHAH JAHAN
11
AURANGZEB
  • The last great Mughal ruler was Aurangzeb
    Alamgir. During the fifty-year reign, the empire
    reached its greatest physical size but also
    showed unmistakable signs of decline. Aurangzeb
    restored Mughal military dominance expanded
    power southwards.

12
Military
  • Babur, the first Mughal emperor , succeeded to
    the throne of ferghana in 1494 when he was only
    12 years old.
  • He was forced to leave his ancestral throne due
    to invasion of Mongol group, the uzbegs. In 1526
    he defeated the sultan of Delhi, Ibrahim lodi, at
    panipat captured Delhi Agra

13
Mughal relations with other rulers
  • As the Mughals became powerful many other rulers
    also joined them voluntarily. the rajputs are
    good example of this. many of them married their
    daughters into Mughal families and received high
    positions. But many resisted as well. once
    defeated, however, they were honorably treated by
    Mughals, given lands back as assignments.

14
Religion
  • Mughals followed a different kind of religion.
  • It was named sulh-i-kul .As in the wide expanse
    of the divine compassion there is room for all
    classes and the followers of all creeds, so.
    in his Imperial dominions, which on all sides
    were limited only by the sea, there was room for
    the professors of opposite religions, for
    beliefs, good bad, and the road to intolerance
    was closed . Sunnis and shias met in one mosque
    and Christians and Jews in one church to pray. He
    consistently followed the principle of universal
    peace sulh-i-kul it was also followed by
    jahangir shan jahan.

15
Mughals Traditions of succession
  • The Mughals did not believe in the rule of
    primogeniture where the eldest son inherited his
    fathers estate. Instead they followed the Mughal
    and Timurid custom ofcoparcenary inheritance
    amongst all sons.
  • Which do you think is a fairer
    division of inheritance
  • primogeniture or coparcenary?

16
Akbars policies
  • The broad features of administration were laid
    down by Akbar. The empire was divided into
    provinces called subas, governed by a subadar who
    carried out both political and military
    functions. Subadar was supported by other
    officers.
  • Akbars nobles commanded large armies and had
    access to large amounts of revenue. While they
    were loyal the empire functioned efficiently.

17
Mughal style of architecture
  • He was defeated by the new Afghan leader, Sher
    Khan Sur (later known as Sher Shah), wandered in
    exile in Persia, and finally settled in Kâbul.
    After 15 years, by which time the Sur regime was
    in a shambles, Humayun recaptured Hindustan just
    before his death in 1556. His young son Akbar
    soon recovered the lost empire, expanding its
    almost to the entire upper India. Akbar, who
    is often considered the true founder of the
    Mughal Empire, laid the grounds for the
    significant economic growth and the fabulous art
    and building activities of his successors. He
    died in 1605 and was succeeded by his eldest son,
    Jahangir.

18
Mughal influence on the subcontinent
  • The main Mughal contribution to the south Asia
    was their unique architecture. They also
    influenced these points
  • Persian art culture amalgamated with native
    Indian art culture.
  • Urdu Hindi languages were formed.
  • Landscape gardening.
  • A new style of architecture.

19
Fall of Mughal Empire
  • The Mughal Empire reached its greatest extent in
    the time of Aurangzeb Alamgir, but it collapsed
    with dramatic suddenness within a few decades
    after his death. The Mughal Empire owes its
    decline and ultimate downfall to a combination of
    factors firstly Aurangzeb religious policy is
    regarded as a cause for the decline of the Mughal
    Empire as it led to disunity among the people.
    Although the policy did lead to weakening of the
    empire but the major cause of decline was the
    lack of worthy and competent successors after
    him. The character of Mughal kings had
    deteriorated over a period of time. The
    successive rulers after Aurangzeb were weak and
    lacked the character, motivation and commitment
    to rule the empire strongly. They had become ease
    loving and cowardly. They totally disregarded
    their state duties and were unable to detain the
    declining empire from its fall.

20
CONCLUSION
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