Delhi : 12th to 15th century
"For almost sixteen years after the second Battle of Tarain, Turkish possessions in India formed a part of the empire of Ghur. After the death of Muhammad Ghori, Qutubuddin Aibak became the sultan which marked the beginning of Delhi Sultanate."
1.0Introduction
- Delhi (Dilli) became an important city only in the twelfth century.
- Delhi first became the capital of a kingdom under the Tomara Rajputs, who were defeated in the middle of the twelfth century by the Chauhans (also referred to as Chahamanas) of Ajmer.
- It was under the Tomaras and Chauhans that Delhi became an important commercial centre.
- Many rich Jaina merchants lived in the city and constructed several temples. Coins minted here, called dehliwal, had a wide circulation.
- The transformation of Delhi into a capital that controlled vast areas of the subcontinent started with the foundation of the Delhi Sultanate in the beginning of the thirteenth century.
- The Delhi Sultans built many cities in the area that we now know as Delhi.
Selected Sultanate cities of Delhi,
thirteenth-fourteenth centuries.2.0Understanding Delhi under the Sultans
- Histories are known as Tarikh (singular)/tawarikh (plural), in Persian, the language of administration under the Delhi Sultans.
- The authors of tawarikh were learned men: secretaries, administrators, poets and courtiers, who both recounted events and advised rulers on governance, emphasising the importance of just rule.
Four stages in the making of a manuscript: A. Preparing the paper. B. Writing the text. C. Melting gold to highlight important words and passages. D. Preparing the binding.
- The authors of tawarikh lived in cities (mainly Delhi) and hardly ever in villages. They often wrote their histories for Sultans in the hope of rich rewards. These authors advised rulers on the need to preserve an "ideal" social order based on birthright and gender distinctions.
- Their ideas were not shared by everybody.
- In 1236 Sultan Iltutmish's daughter, Raziyya, became Sultan.
- The chronicler of the age, Minhaj-i Siraj, recognised that she was more able and qualified than all her brothers.
- But he was not comfortable at having a queen as ruler.
- Nor were the nobles happy at her attempts to rule independently.
- She was removed from the throne in 1240.
The circle of justice
Fakhr-i Mudabbir wrote in the thirteenth century:
A king cannot survive without soldiers. And soldiers cannot live without salaries. Salaries come from the revenue collected from peasants. But peasants can pay revenue only whenthey are prosperous and happy. This happens when the king promotes justice and honest governance.
3.0What Minhaj-I Siraj thought about Raziyya?
- Minhaj-i Siraj thought that the queen's rule went against the ideal social order created by God, in which women were supposed to be subordinate to men.
- He therefore asked: "In the register of God's creation, since her account did not fall under the column of men, how did she gain from all of her excellent qualities?"
- On her inscriptions and coins Raziyya mentioned that she was the daughter of Sultan Iltutmish.
- This was in contrast to the queen Rudramadevi (1262-1289), of the Kakatiya dynasty of Warangal, part of modern Telengana.
Raziya Sultan
- Rudramadevi changed her name on her inscriptions and pretended she was a man.
- Another queen, Didda, ruled in Kashmir (980-1003), it comes from "didi" or "elder sister", an obviously affectionate term given to a loved ruler by her subjects.
4.0A Closer Look: Administration under the Khalijis and Tughlugs
- The consolidation of a kingdom as vast as the Delhi Sultanate needed reliable governors and administrators. Rather than appointing aristocrats and landed chieftains as governors, the early Delhi Sultans, especially Iltutmish, favoured their special slaves purchased for military service, called Bandagan in Persian.
- They were carefully trained to man some of the most important political offices in the kingdom. Since they were totally dependent upon their master, the Sultan could trust and rely upon them.
- The Khaljis and Tughluqs continued to use bandagan and also raised people of humble birth, who were often their clients, to high political positions.
- They were appointed as generals and governors. However, this also introduced an element of political instability.
- Slaves and clients were loyal to their masters and patrons, but not to their heirs.
- New Sultans had their own servants. As a result the accession of a new monarch often saw conflict between the old and the new nobility.
Slaves rather than sons
The Sultans were advised: A slave, whom one has brought up and promoted, must be looked after for it needs a whole lifetime and good luck to find a worthy and experienced slave. Wise men have said that a worthy and experienced slave is better than a son ...
The nobles were a powerful force in the Sultanate period. Most of the nobles were Turkish in origin. Most of the provincial governors, military commanders and high ranking officials in the government came from this noble class.
- The patronage of these humble people by the Delhi Sultans also shocked many elites and the authors of Persian tawarikh criticised the Delhi Sultans for appointing the "low and base-born" to high offices.
- Like the earlier Sultans, the Khalji and Tughluq monarchs appointed military commanders as governors of territories of varying sizes.
- These lands were called iqta and their holder was called Iqtadar or Muqti.
- The duty of the muqtis was to lead military campaigns and maintain law and order in their iqtas.
- In exchange for their military services, the muqtis collected the revenues of their assignments as salary. They also paid their soldiers from these revenues.
Alauddin Khalji
- Control over muqtis was most effective if their office was not inheritable and if they were assigned iqtas for a short period of time before being shifted.
- These harsh conditions of service were rigorously imposed during the reigns of Alauddin Khalji and Muhammad Tughluq.
- Accountants were appointed by the state to check the amount of revenue collected by the muqtis. Care was taken that the muqti collected only the taxes prescribed by the state and that he kept the required number of soldiers.
- As the Delhi Sultans brought the hinterland of the cities under their control, they forced the landed chieftains - the samanta aristocrats - and rich landlords to accept their authority.
- Under Alauddin Khalji the state brought the assessment and collection of land revenue under its own control.
- The rights of the local chieftains to levy taxes were cancelled and they were also forced to pay taxes.
- The Sultan's administrators measured the land and kept careful accounts.
- Some of the old chieftains and landlords served the Sultanate as revenue collectors and assessors.
- There were three types of taxes: (1) on cultivation called kharaj and amounting to about 50 per cent of the peasant's produce, (2) on cattle and (3) on houses.
- It is important to remember that large parts of the subcontinent remained outside the control of the Delhi Sultans.
- It was difficult to control distant provinces like Bengal from Delhi and soon after annexing southern India, the entire region became independent.
- Even in the Gangetic plain there were forested areas that Sultanate forces could not penetrate.
- Local chieftains established their rule in these regions.
- Sometimes rulers like Alauddin Khalji and Muhammad Tughluq could force their control in these areas but only for a short duration.
- The Mongols under Genghis Khan invaded Transoxiana in north-east Iran in 1219 and the Delhi Sultanate faced their onslaught soon after.
- Mongol attacks on the Delhi Sultanate increased during the reign of Alauddin Khalji and in the early years of Muhammad Tughluq's rule.
- This forced the two rulers to mobilise a large standing army in Delhi which posed a huge administrative challenge.
Transoxiana
Officials of Sultan Muhammad Tughluq
Sultan Muhammad Tughluq appointed Aziz Khummar, a wine distiller, Firuz Hajjam, a barber, Manka Tabbakh, a cook, and two gardeners, Ladha and Pira, to high administrative posts. Ziyauddin Barani, a midfourteenth- century chronicler, reported their appointments as a sign of the Sultan's loss of political judgement and his incapacity to rule.
5.0The Sultanate in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries
- After the Tughluqs, the Sayyid and Lodi dynasties ruled from Delhi and Agra until 1526.
- By then, Jaunpur, Bengal, Malwa, Gujarat, Rajasthan and the entire south India had independent rulers who established flourishing states and prosperous capitals.
- This was also the period which saw the emergence of new ruling groups like the Afghans and the Rajputs.
- Some of the states established in this period were small but powerful and extremely well administered.
- Sher Shah Sur (1540-1545) started his career as the manager of a small territory for his uncle in Bihar and eventually challenged and defeated the Mughal emperor Humayun (15301540, 1555-1556).
Sher Shah Sur
- Sher Shah captured Delhi and established his own dynasty.
- Although the Sur dynasty ruled for only fifteen years (1540-1555), it introduced an administration that borrowed elements from Alauddin Khalji and made them more efficient.
- Sher Shah's administration became the model followed by the great emperor Akbar (1556-1605) when he consolidated the Mughal Empire.
6.0Glossary
- Courtiers - a person who attends a royal court as a companion or adviser to the king or queen.
- Doab - the area of land between two rivers .
- Aristocrats - a member of the highest social class, often with a special title.
- Heirs - the person with the legal right to receive (inherit) money, property or a title when the owner dies.
- Revenue - money regularly received by a government, company, etc.
7.0MIND MAP