Builders of the Mogul Empire

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A01=Michael Prawdin
Abul Fazl
Adil Shah
Afghan Rivals
Akbar
Akbar's Empire
Akbar’s Empire
Amu Darya
Aral Sea
Author_Michael Prawdin
Babur
Bahadur Shah
Baikara
Barren
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Conferred
cross-cultural administration
Divine Faith
early modern statecraft
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Holy Man
Humayun
Indo-Persian culture
Islam Shah
Islamic governance India
Mirzas
Mogul Empire
Mughal dynasty history
Mughal empire political integration
Rana Sanga
Samarkand
Shah Beg
Shah Tahmasp
Sheikh Mubarak
Sher Shah
Sikandar Shah
Sir Darya
South Asian empires
Ulugh Beg
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138485631
  • Weight: 400g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Nov 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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First published in 1963. The Moguls, the descendants of the Mongols, two and a half centuries later than Jenghiz Khan, created an empire that stretched from Persia to Burma and from the Himalayas to the centre of the Indian subcontinent. It was a creation almost more astonishing than Jenghiz Khan's own: an empire that was civilized and prosperous, and which left behind an artistic legacy that has been a wonder till this day.

Michael Prawdin tells the story which begins with Babur, passes through the reign of Humayun, and finds its climax at the death of Akbar. By this time the empire was no longer a patchwork of incidental conquests dominated by the arms of foreign invaders, but a coherent landmass that had been welded into a co-ordinated state, ruled by one system of administration. The diverse lands had become so many different provinces, held together by a highly organized bureaucracy in which Mohammedans and Hindus were equally eligible to the highest posts, honours and privileges. Moreover, a new cultural synthesis of the Hindu and Moslem cultures had taken shape, and throughout the empire all peoples showed the same demand for knowledge, art, poetry and for refinements of all kinds.

Michael Prawdin

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