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Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak

Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak, also known as Abul Fazl, Abu'l Fadl and Abu'l-Fadl 'Allami (14 January 1551 – 22 August 1602[1]), was the grand vizier of the Mughal emperor Akbar, from his appointment in 1579 until his death in 1602.[2] He was the author of the Akbarnama, the official history of Akbar's reign in three volumes, (the third volume is known as the Ain-i-Akbari) and a Persian translation of the Bible.[3] He was also one of the Nine Jewels (Hindi: Navaratnas) of Akbar's royal court and the brother of Faizi, the poet laureate of Emperor Akbar.

Abul Fazl
Abu'l-Fazl presenting Akbarnama to Akbar
Born(1551-01-14)14 January 1551
Agra, Mughal Empire (present day India)
Died22 August 1602(1602-08-22) (aged 51) Deccan, Mughal Empire
Cause of deathAssassination
Notable workAkbarnama, Ain-i-Akbari
RelativesFaizi (brother)

Ancestors

Abul Fazl ibn Mubarak was a descendant of Shaikh Musa who lived in Rel near Siwistan (Sehwan), Sindh, until the close of the 15th century. His grandfather, Shaikh Khizr, moved to Nagaur which had attained importance as a sufi mystic centre under Shaikh Hamid-ud-din Sufi Sawali, a khalifa of Shaikh Muin-ud-din Chisti of Ajmer. He claimed his ancestors hailed from Yemen. However, it was common during the Delhi Sultanate and Mughal Empire for individuals to embellish their ancestral heritage to raise their stature.[4] At Nagaur Shaikh Khizr settled near the tomb of Shaikh Hamid-ud-din.

Shaikh Mubarak Nagori

 
Young Akbar leads a Mughal Army of 10,000 during the Second Battle of Panipat, against more than 30,000 adversaries led by Hemu.

Abul Fazl's father, Shaikh Mubarak [5] was born in 1506 at Nagaur. Soon after Fazl's birth, Khizr travelled to Sindh to bring other members of his family to Nagaur but he died on the way. Khizr's death and a famine and plague that ravaged Nagaur caused great hardship to the destitute Mubarak and his mother. Despite these hardships Mubarak's mother arranged a good education for him. One of Mubarak's earliest teacher was Shaikh Attan'who was known for his piety.[6] Another important teacher who influenced Shaikh Mubarak was Shaikh Fayyazi, a disciple of Khwaja Ubaidullah Ahrar.[7] Later he went to Ahmedabad and studied under Shaikh Abu'l Fazl Gazruni[8] (who adopted him as a son), Shaikh Umar and Shaikh Yusuf.

Yusuf advised Mubarak to go to Agra and set up a madrasah there. Mubarak reached Agra in April 1543 and on the suggestion of Shaikh Alawal Balawal[9] set up his residence at Charbagh, which was built by Babur on the left bank of Yamuna. Mir Rafi'ud-din Safavi of Inju (Shiraz) lived close by and Mubarak married a near relative of his. Mubarak established his madrash in Agra where his special field of instruction was philosophy and he attracted a number of scholars to his lectures such as Mulla Abdul Qadir Badauni. He also spent some time in Badaun, holy land of Sufism.

 
The court of Akbar, an ill ama

The orthodox group of ulama criticised Mubarak and accused him of changing his views.[10] Khwaja Ubaidullah, who was brought up in the house of Shaikh Mubarak's daughter, was of the opinion that Mubarak's views changed with the change in the political climate and he adopted the religious attitudes of rulers and nobles of those days out of expediency. For example, he was a Sunni during the reign of Sultan Ibrahim Lodi, became a Naqshbandi during the Sur period, was a Mahdavia during the reign of Humayun and a protagonist of liberal thought under Akbar.[11]

Biography

 
Abu'l Fazl Ibn Mubarak and Akbar (D. 1602 AD)

Shaikh Mubarak's first son, the poet Abu'l Faizi and his second son Abu'l Fazl were born in Agra.[12] Abul Fazl's education began with Arabic[13] and by the age of five he could read and write. His father started teaching him about all the branches of Islamic sciences (manqulat) but Fazl could not adhere to conventional learning and he sank in a state of mental depression.[14] A friend rescued him from this state and he resumed his studies. Some incidents from his early life reflect on his brilliance. A dictionary of Ishafani, which had been eaten by white ants came under his observation. He removed the parts that had been eaten and joined blank paper to the rest. He discovered the beginning and end of each fragment and eventually penned a draft text. Subsequently, the entire work was discovered and on comparison to Fazl's draft the original differed in only two or three places.[15]

He came to Akbar's court in 1575 and was influential in Akbar's religious views becoming more liberal into the 1580s and 1590s. In 1599, Abu’l Fazl was given his first office in the Deccan, where he was recognized for his ability as a military commander, leading the Mughal imperial army in its wars against the Deccan Sultanates.

Akbar also records witnessing the passage of the Great Comet of 1577.[16]

Abul Fazl's own account of his first twenty years

The following is the Abul Fazl's own account of his first twenty years from the A'in-i-Akbari:[17][18]

As I have now recounted somewhat of my ancestors, I proceed to say a few words regarding myself and thus unburden my mind, to refresh this narrative and loosen the bonds of my tongue. In the year 473 of the Jalali era, corresponding to the night of Sunday, the 6th of Muharram 958 of the lunar reckoning (14 January 1551), my pure spirit joined to this elemental body came forth from the womb into this fair expanse of the world. At a little over one year I had the miraculous gift of fluent speech and at five years of age I had acquired an unusual stock of information and could both read and write. At the age of seven I became the treasurer of my father's stores of knowledge and a trusty keeper of the jewels of hidden meaning and as a serpent, guarded the treasure. And it was strange that by a freak of fortune my heart was disinclined, my will ever averse, and my disposition repugnant to conventional learning and the ordinary courses of instruction. Generally I could not understand them. My father in his way conjured with the spell of knowledge and taught me a little of every branch of science, and although my intelligence grew, I gained no deep impressions from the school of learning. Sometimes I understood nothing at all, at others doubts suggested themselves which my tongue was incapable of explaining. Either shame made me hesitate or I had not the power of expression. I used to weep in public and put all the blame upon myself. In this state of things I came into fellowship of mind with a congenial helper and my spirit recovered from that ignorance and incomprehension. Not many days had elapsed before his conversation and society induced me to go to college and there they restored to rest my bewildered and dissipated mind and by the wondrous working of destiny they took me away and brought another back.

The temple as I entered, drew they nigh
And brought their gift, a wine-cup brimming high.
Its strength snatched all my senses, self from self,
Wherein some other entered and not I.

The truths of philosophy and the subtleties of the schools now appeared plain, and a book which I had never before seen gave me a clearer insight than any thing I could read. Although I had a special gift which came down upon me from the throne of holiness, yet the inspirations of my venerable father and his making me commit to memory the essential elements of every branch of science, together with the unbroken continuity of this chain, were of immense help, and became one of the most important causes of my enlightenment. For ten years longer I made no distinction between night and day, teaching and learning, and recognised no difference between satiety and hunger, nor discriminated between privacy and society, nor had I the power to dissever pain from pleasure. I acknowledged nothing else but the bond of demonstration and the tie of knowledge. Those who had a regard for my constitution, from seeing that two and sometimes three days passed without my taking food, and that my studious spirit had no inclination therefore, were amazed, and stood out strongly against it. I answered that my withdrawal, was now a matter of habit and custom, and how was it that no one was astonished when the natural inclination of a sick man on an attack of illness was averse from food. If therefore my love of study induced forgetfulness, where was the wonder? Most of the current arguments of the schools, frequently misquoted and misunderstood when heard, and abstruse questions from ancient works, had been presented to the fresh tablet of my mind. Before these points had been elucidated and the attribution to me of extreme ignorance had passed to that of transcendent knowledge, I had taken objection to ancient writers, and men learning my youth, dissented, and my mind was troubled and my inexperienced heart was in agitation. Once in the early part of my career they brought the gloss of Khwajah Abu'l Qasim, on the Mutawwal. All that I had stated before learned doctors and divines of which some of my friends had taken notes, was there found, and those present were astounded and withdrew their dissent, and began to regard me with other eyes and to raise the wicket of misunderstanding and to open the gate of comprehension. In my early days of study, the gloss of Isfahani more than half of which had been eaten by white ants, came under my observation. The public being in despair at profiting by it, I removed the parts that had been eaten and joined blank paper to the rest. In the serene hours of morning, with a little reflection, I discovered the beginnings and endings of each fragment and conjecturally penned a draft text which I transcribed on the paper. In the meanwhile the entire work was discovered, and when both were compared, in two or three places only were there found differences of words, though synonymous in meaning; and in three or four others, (differing) citations but approximate in sense. All were astounded.

The more my will was engaged, the more my mind was illumined. At the age of twenty the good tidings of my independence reached me. My mind cast off its former bonds and my early bewilderment recurred. With a parade of much learning, the intoxication of youth effervescing, the skirts of pretension spread wide, and the world-displaying cup of wisdom in my hand, the ringings of delirium began to sound in my ears, and suggested a total withdrawal from the world. Meanwhile, the wise prince-regnant called me to mind and drew me from my obscurity, somewhat of which I have in its entirety and somewhat but approximately suggested and acknowledged. Here my coin has been tested and its full weight passed into currency. Men now view me with a different regard, and many effusive speeches have been made amid felicitous congratulations evoked.

On this day which is the last of the 42nd year of His Majesty's reign (A.D. 1598), my spirit again breaks away from its yoke and a new solicitude arises within me.

My songster heart knows not King David's strains:
Let it go free—'tis no bird for a cage.

I know not how it will all end nor in what resting-place my last journey will have to be made, but from the beginning of my existence until now the grace of God has continuously kept me under its protection. It is my firm hope that my last moments may be spent in doing His will and that I may pass unburdened to eternal rest.

Assassination/Death

Abu'l Fazl was assassinated while he was returning from the Deccan by Vir Singh Bundela (who later became the ruler of Orchha) between Sarai Vir and Antri (near Gwalior) in a plot contrived by Akbar's eldest son Prince Salim (who later became the Emperor Jahangir)[19] in 1602, because Abu'l Fazl was known to oppose the accession of Prince Salim to the throne. His severed head was sent to Salim at Allahabad. Abu'l Fazl was buried at Antri.[20][21] Abu'l Fazl's son Shaikh Afzal Khan (29 December 1571 – 1613) was later appointed governor of Bihar in 1608 by Jahangir.[22]

Works

The Akbarnama

The Akbarnama is a document of history of Akbar's reign and his ancestors spread over three volumes. It contains the history of Akbar's ancestors from Timur to Humayun, Akbar's reign up to the 46th regnal year (1602), and an administrative report of Akbar's empire, the Ain-i-Akbari, which itself is in three volumes. The third volume of Ain-i-Akbari gives an account of the ancestry and life of the author. The Ain-i-Akbari was completed in the 42nd regnal year, but a slight addition was made to it in the 43rd regnal year on the account of the conquest of Berar.[23][24]

Ruqaʿāt

The Ruqaʿāt or the Ruqaʿāt-i-Abu'l Fazl is a collection of private letters from Abū al-Fażl to Murad, Daniyal, Akbar, Mariam Makani, Salim (Jahangir), Akbar's queens and daughters, his father, mother and brothers and several other notable contemporaries[23] compiled by his nephew Nūr al-Dīn Muḥammad.

Inshā-i-Abu'l Fazl

The Inshā-i-Abu'l Fazl or the Maqtubāt-i-Allami contains the official despatches written by Abu'l Fazl. It is divided into two parts. The first part contains Akbar's letters to Abdullah Khan Uzbeg of Turan, Shah Abbas of Persia, Raja Ali Khan of Khandesh, Burhan-ul-Mulk of Ahmadnagar and his own nobles such as Abdur Rahim Khan Khanan. The second part consists Abu'l Fazl's letters to Akbar, Daniyal, Mirza Shah Rukh and Khan Khanan.[23] This collection was compiled by Abd-us-samad, son of Afzal Muhammad, who claims that he was Abu'l Fazl's sister's son as well as his son-in-law.[24]

Governance and sovereignty

Abul Fazl in the political sphere was concerned with social stability. In his Ain-i-Akbari, he presented a theory of sovereignty promised on social contract.

His divine theory of 'Padshahat', present the concept of royalty. According to him 'Padshahat' meant 'an established owner' where 'Pad' stands for stability and 'shah' stands for owner. Padshah therefore is the established owner who cannot be eliminated by anyone. According to Abul Fazl, Padshah has been sent by God, who works as an agent of God for the welfare of his subjects and maintains peace and harmony in his empire.

With respect to sovereignty, Abul Fazl considered it to be present in nature. The king established his sovereignty through his absolute power, he had the final authority in governance, administration, agriculture, education and other fields. According to Abul Fazl, it was impossible to challenge the king and nobody could share his power.[25]

Sulh-I-Kul or the doctrine of peace

Abul Fazl said that sovereignty was not restricted to a particular faith. As the king was considered an agent of God, he cannot discriminate among various faiths present in society and in case the king discriminates on the basis of caste, religion or class then he would not be considered a just king.[25]

Sovereignty was not linked to any particular faith. Abul Fazl promoted the good values of different religions and assembled them for the maintenance of peace. He provided relief to people by making them free from bound thoughts. He also justified the views of Akbar by presenting him as a rational ruler.[26]

References

  1. ^ "Abu al-Faḍl ʿAllāmī". Encyclopedia Britannica. 10 January 2021. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  2. ^ Alfred J. Andrea, James H. Overfield. The Human Record: To 1700. Houghton Mifflin. p. 476. Abul Fazl(1551-1602), the emperor's chief advisor and confidant from 1579 until Abul Fazl's assassination at the instigation of Prince Salim, the future Emperor Jahangir(r. 1605-1627)
  3. ^ Abu al Fazl Biography and Works 7 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine persian.packhum.org.
  4. ^ Alvi Azra (1985). Socio Religious Outlook of Abul Fazl. Lahore Pakistan: Vanguard Books. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-210-40543-7.
  5. ^ . .stetson.edu. Archived from the original on 5 December 2013. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
  6. ^ Shattari Ghausi. Gulzar-i-Abrar (Rotograph of MS in British Museum). Aligarh: Department of History. p. 225.
  7. ^ Abu'l-Fazl 'Allami, A'in-I Akbari (3 vols.). Vol. 3 trans. H. S. Jarrett, 1894. Vol. 3, pp. 420.
  8. ^ Alvi Azra (1985). Socio Religious Outlook of Abul Fazl. Lahore Pakistan: Vanguard Books. p. 6. ISBN 978-0-210-40543-7.
  9. ^ Dehlavi Shaikh Abdul Haqq Muhaddis. Akhbar-ul-Akhyar. pp. 280–81.
  10. ^ Mulla Abdul Qadir Badauni. Muntakhab-ul-Twarikh Vol III. p. 74.
  11. ^ Azra Alavi (1983). Socio-religious Outlook of Abul Fazl. p. 17.
  12. ^ Blochmann, H. (tr.) (1927, reprint 1993) The Ain-I Akbari by Abu'l-Fazl Allami, Vol. I, The Asiatic Society, Calcutta, pp. xxv–lix
  13. ^ Fazl, Abul: Akbar Namah Vol II, p. 376.
  14. ^ Jarrett (tr.) The Ain-I Akbari by Abu'l-Fazl Allami, Vol.II, p. 277
  15. ^ Blochmann, H. (tr.) (1927, reprint 1993) The Ain-I Akbari by Abu'l-Fazl Allami, Vol.I, The Asiatic Society, Calcutta, pp. xxxiv
  16. ^ Kapoor, R. C. (2015). "Abū'l Faẓl, independent discoverer of the Great Comet of 1577". Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage. 18 (3): 249–260. Bibcode:2015JAHH...18..249K.
  17. ^ BK. (1784). Aan den Heere J.H. v. d. Palm, by den pokaal van gelukwensching met den door hem ontvangen' gouden' eerprys, op de maaltyd van 't Haagsche Kunstgenootschap. (Kniedicht.) [Signed: Bk., i.e. W. Bilderdijk.]. OCLC 556992222.
  18. ^ Abu'l-Fazl 'Allami, A'in-I Akbari (3 vols.). Vol. 3 trans. H. S. Jarrett, 1898. Vol. 3, Book 5, Chapter 14: An Account of the Author, pp. 478–524.
  19. ^ Orchha 7 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine British Library.
  20. ^ Majumdar, R.C. (2007). The Mughul Empire, Mumbai: Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, p. 167
  21. ^ Blochmann, H. (tr.) (1927, reprint 1993) The Ain-I Akbari by Abu'l-Fazl Allami, Vol.I, The Asiatic Society, Calcutta, pp. lxviii–lxix
  22. ^ Blochmann, H. (tr.) (1927, reprint 1993) The Ain-I Akbari by Abu'l-Fazl Allami, Vol.I, The Asiatic Society, Calcutta, pp. lviii–lix
  23. ^ a b c Majumdar, R.C. (2007). The Mughul Empire, Mumbai: Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, pp. 5–6
  24. ^ a b Blochmann, H. (tr.) (1927, reprint 1993) The Ain-I Akbari by Abu'l-Fazl Allami, Vol.I, The Asiatic Society, Calcutta, p.liii
  25. ^ a b Roy, Himanshu (2020). Indian Political Thought themes and thinkers. Pearson. p. 130. ISBN 978-93-325-8733-5.
  26. ^ Roy, Himanshu (2020). Indian Political Thought themes and thinkers. Pearson. p. 131. ISBN 978-93-325-8733-5.

Further reading

External links

  • Persian Institute
  • Abū al-Fazl ibn Mubārak; Henry Blochmann (1887). The Aín i Akbarí. archive.org (in Hindi). Vol. 2. Asiatic Society of Bengal. p. 487.

fazl, mubarak, bahá, scholar, mírzá, fadl, also, known, abul, fazl, fadl, fadl, allami, january, 1551, august, 1602, grand, vizier, mughal, emperor, akbar, from, appointment, 1579, until, death, 1602, author, akbarnama, official, history, akbar, reign, three, . For the Baha i scholar see Mirza Abu l Fadl Abu l Fazl ibn Mubarak also known as Abul Fazl Abu l Fadl and Abu l Fadl Allami 14 January 1551 22 August 1602 1 was the grand vizier of the Mughal emperor Akbar from his appointment in 1579 until his death in 1602 2 He was the author of the Akbarnama the official history of Akbar s reign in three volumes the third volume is known as the Ain i Akbari and a Persian translation of the Bible 3 He was also one of the Nine Jewels Hindi Navaratnas of Akbar s royal court and the brother of Faizi the poet laureate of Emperor Akbar Abul FazlAbu l Fazl presenting Akbarnama to AkbarBorn 1551 01 14 14 January 1551Agra Mughal Empire present day India Died22 August 1602 1602 08 22 aged 51 Deccan Mughal EmpireCause of deathAssassinationNotable workAkbarnama Ain i AkbariRelativesFaizi brother Contents 1 Ancestors 1 1 Shaikh Mubarak Nagori 2 Biography 2 1 Abul Fazl s own account of his first twenty years 3 Assassination Death 4 Works 4 1 The Akbarnama 4 2 Ruqaʿat 4 3 Insha i Abu l Fazl 5 Governance and sovereignty 5 1 Sulh I Kul or the doctrine of peace 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksAncestors EditAbul Fazl ibn Mubarak was a descendant of Shaikh Musa who lived in Rel near Siwistan Sehwan Sindh until the close of the 15th century His grandfather Shaikh Khizr moved to Nagaur which had attained importance as a sufi mystic centre under Shaikh Hamid ud din Sufi Sawali a khalifa of Shaikh Muin ud din Chisti of Ajmer He claimed his ancestors hailed from Yemen However it was common during the Delhi Sultanate and Mughal Empire for individuals to embellish their ancestral heritage to raise their stature 4 At Nagaur Shaikh Khizr settled near the tomb of Shaikh Hamid ud din Shaikh Mubarak Nagori Edit Young Akbar leads a Mughal Army of 10 000 during the Second Battle of Panipat against more than 30 000 adversaries led by Hemu Abul Fazl s father Shaikh Mubarak 5 was born in 1506 at Nagaur Soon after Fazl s birth Khizr travelled to Sindh to bring other members of his family to Nagaur but he died on the way Khizr s death and a famine and plague that ravaged Nagaur caused great hardship to the destitute Mubarak and his mother Despite these hardships Mubarak s mother arranged a good education for him One of Mubarak s earliest teacher was Shaikh Attan who was known for his piety 6 Another important teacher who influenced Shaikh Mubarak was Shaikh Fayyazi a disciple of Khwaja Ubaidullah Ahrar 7 Later he went to Ahmedabad and studied under Shaikh Abu l Fazl Gazruni 8 who adopted him as a son Shaikh Umar and Shaikh Yusuf Yusuf advised Mubarak to go to Agra and set up a madrasah there Mubarak reached Agra in April 1543 and on the suggestion of Shaikh Alawal Balawal 9 set up his residence at Charbagh which was built by Babur on the left bank of Yamuna Mir Rafi ud din Safavi of Inju Shiraz lived close by and Mubarak married a near relative of his Mubarak established his madrash in Agra where his special field of instruction was philosophy and he attracted a number of scholars to his lectures such as Mulla Abdul Qadir Badauni He also spent some time in Badaun holy land of Sufism The court of Akbar an ill amaThe orthodox group of ulama criticised Mubarak and accused him of changing his views 10 Khwaja Ubaidullah who was brought up in the house of Shaikh Mubarak s daughter was of the opinion that Mubarak s views changed with the change in the political climate and he adopted the religious attitudes of rulers and nobles of those days out of expediency For example he was a Sunni during the reign of Sultan Ibrahim Lodi became a Naqshbandi during the Sur period was a Mahdavia during the reign of Humayun and a protagonist of liberal thought under Akbar 11 Biography Edit Abu l Fazl Ibn Mubarak and Akbar D 1602 AD Shaikh Mubarak s first son the poet Abu l Faizi and his second son Abu l Fazl were born in Agra 12 Abul Fazl s education began with Arabic 13 and by the age of five he could read and write His father started teaching him about all the branches of Islamic sciences manqulat but Fazl could not adhere to conventional learning and he sank in a state of mental depression 14 A friend rescued him from this state and he resumed his studies Some incidents from his early life reflect on his brilliance A dictionary of Ishafani which had been eaten by white ants came under his observation He removed the parts that had been eaten and joined blank paper to the rest He discovered the beginning and end of each fragment and eventually penned a draft text Subsequently the entire work was discovered and on comparison to Fazl s draft the original differed in only two or three places 15 He came to Akbar s court in 1575 and was influential in Akbar s religious views becoming more liberal into the 1580s and 1590s In 1599 Abu l Fazl was given his first office in the Deccan where he was recognized for his ability as a military commander leading the Mughal imperial army in its wars against the Deccan Sultanates Akbar also records witnessing the passage of the Great Comet of 1577 16 Abul Fazl s own account of his first twenty years Edit The following is the Abul Fazl s own account of his first twenty years from the A in i Akbari 17 18 As I have now recounted somewhat of my ancestors I proceed to say a few words regarding myself and thus unburden my mind to refresh this narrative and loosen the bonds of my tongue In the year 473 of the Jalali era corresponding to the night of Sunday the 6th of Muharram 958 of the lunar reckoning 14 January 1551 my pure spirit joined to this elemental body came forth from the womb into this fair expanse of the world At a little over one year I had the miraculous gift of fluent speech and at five years of age I had acquired an unusual stock of information and could both read and write At the age of seven I became the treasurer of my father s stores of knowledge and a trusty keeper of the jewels of hidden meaning and as a serpent guarded the treasure And it was strange that by a freak of fortune my heart was disinclined my will ever averse and my disposition repugnant to conventional learning and the ordinary courses of instruction Generally I could not understand them My father in his way conjured with the spell of knowledge and taught me a little of every branch of science and although my intelligence grew I gained no deep impressions from the school of learning Sometimes I understood nothing at all at others doubts suggested themselves which my tongue was incapable of explaining Either shame made me hesitate or I had not the power of expression I used to weep in public and put all the blame upon myself In this state of things I came into fellowship of mind with a congenial helper and my spirit recovered from that ignorance and incomprehension Not many days had elapsed before his conversation and society induced me to go to college and there they restored to rest my bewildered and dissipated mind and by the wondrous working of destiny they took me away and brought another back The temple as I entered drew they nigh And brought their gift a wine cup brimming high Its strength snatched all my senses self from self Wherein some other entered and not I The truths of philosophy and the subtleties of the schools now appeared plain and a book which I had never before seen gave me a clearer insight than any thing I could read Although I had a special gift which came down upon me from the throne of holiness yet the inspirations of my venerable father and his making me commit to memory the essential elements of every branch of science together with the unbroken continuity of this chain were of immense help and became one of the most important causes of my enlightenment For ten years longer I made no distinction between night and day teaching and learning and recognised no difference between satiety and hunger nor discriminated between privacy and society nor had I the power to dissever pain from pleasure I acknowledged nothing else but the bond of demonstration and the tie of knowledge Those who had a regard for my constitution from seeing that two and sometimes three days passed without my taking food and that my studious spirit had no inclination therefore were amazed and stood out strongly against it I answered that my withdrawal was now a matter of habit and custom and how was it that no one was astonished when the natural inclination of a sick man on an attack of illness was averse from food If therefore my love of study induced forgetfulness where was the wonder Most of the current arguments of the schools frequently misquoted and misunderstood when heard and abstruse questions from ancient works had been presented to the fresh tablet of my mind Before these points had been elucidated and the attribution to me of extreme ignorance had passed to that of transcendent knowledge I had taken objection to ancient writers and men learning my youth dissented and my mind was troubled and my inexperienced heart was in agitation Once in the early part of my career they brought the gloss of Khwajah Abu l Qasim on the Mutawwal All that I had stated before learned doctors and divines of which some of my friends had taken notes was there found and those present were astounded and withdrew their dissent and began to regard me with other eyes and to raise the wicket of misunderstanding and to open the gate of comprehension In my early days of study the gloss of Isfahani more than half of which had been eaten by white ants came under my observation The public being in despair at profiting by it I removed the parts that had been eaten and joined blank paper to the rest In the serene hours of morning with a little reflection I discovered the beginnings and endings of each fragment and conjecturally penned a draft text which I transcribed on the paper In the meanwhile the entire work was discovered and when both were compared in two or three places only were there found differences of words though synonymous in meaning and in three or four others differing citations but approximate in sense All were astounded The more my will was engaged the more my mind was illumined At the age of twenty the good tidings of my independence reached me My mind cast off its former bonds and my early bewilderment recurred With a parade of much learning the intoxication of youth effervescing the skirts of pretension spread wide and the world displaying cup of wisdom in my hand the ringings of delirium began to sound in my ears and suggested a total withdrawal from the world Meanwhile the wise prince regnant called me to mind and drew me from my obscurity somewhat of which I have in its entirety and somewhat but approximately suggested and acknowledged Here my coin has been tested and its full weight passed into currency Men now view me with a different regard and many effusive speeches have been made amid felicitous congratulations evoked On this day which is the last of the 42nd year of His Majesty s reign A D 1598 my spirit again breaks away from its yoke and a new solicitude arises within me My songster heart knows not King David s strains Let it go free tis no bird for a cage I know not how it will all end nor in what resting place my last journey will have to be made but from the beginning of my existence until now the grace of God has continuously kept me under its protection It is my firm hope that my last moments may be spent in doing His will and that I may pass unburdened to eternal rest Assassination Death EditAbu l Fazl was assassinated while he was returning from the Deccan by Vir Singh Bundela who later became the ruler of Orchha between Sarai Vir and Antri near Gwalior in a plot contrived by Akbar s eldest son Prince Salim who later became the Emperor Jahangir 19 in 1602 because Abu l Fazl was known to oppose the accession of Prince Salim to the throne His severed head was sent to Salim at Allahabad Abu l Fazl was buried at Antri 20 21 Abu l Fazl s son Shaikh Afzal Khan 29 December 1571 1613 was later appointed governor of Bihar in 1608 by Jahangir 22 Works EditThe Akbarnama Edit Main article Akbarnama The Akbarnama is a document of history of Akbar s reign and his ancestors spread over three volumes It contains the history of Akbar s ancestors from Timur to Humayun Akbar s reign up to the 46th regnal year 1602 and an administrative report of Akbar s empire the Ain i Akbari which itself is in three volumes The third volume of Ain i Akbari gives an account of the ancestry and life of the author The Ain i Akbari was completed in the 42nd regnal year but a slight addition was made to it in the 43rd regnal year on the account of the conquest of Berar 23 24 Ruqaʿat Edit The Ruqaʿat or the Ruqaʿat i Abu l Fazl is a collection of private letters from Abu al Fazl to Murad Daniyal Akbar Mariam Makani Salim Jahangir Akbar s queens and daughters his father mother and brothers and several other notable contemporaries 23 compiled by his nephew Nur al Din Muḥammad Insha i Abu l Fazl Edit The Insha i Abu l Fazl or the Maqtubat i Allami contains the official despatches written by Abu l Fazl It is divided into two parts The first part contains Akbar s letters to Abdullah Khan Uzbeg of Turan Shah Abbas of Persia Raja Ali Khan of Khandesh Burhan ul Mulk of Ahmadnagar and his own nobles such as Abdur Rahim Khan Khanan The second part consists Abu l Fazl s letters to Akbar Daniyal Mirza Shah Rukh and Khan Khanan 23 This collection was compiled by Abd us samad son of Afzal Muhammad who claims that he was Abu l Fazl s sister s son as well as his son in law 24 Governance and sovereignty EditAbul Fazl in the political sphere was concerned with social stability In his Ain i Akbari he presented a theory of sovereignty promised on social contract His divine theory of Padshahat present the concept of royalty According to him Padshahat meant an established owner where Pad stands for stability and shah stands for owner Padshah therefore is the established owner who cannot be eliminated by anyone According to Abul Fazl Padshah has been sent by God who works as an agent of God for the welfare of his subjects and maintains peace and harmony in his empire With respect to sovereignty Abul Fazl considered it to be present in nature The king established his sovereignty through his absolute power he had the final authority in governance administration agriculture education and other fields According to Abul Fazl it was impossible to challenge the king and nobody could share his power 25 Sulh I Kul or the doctrine of peace Edit Abul Fazl said that sovereignty was not restricted to a particular faith As the king was considered an agent of God he cannot discriminate among various faiths present in society and in case the king discriminates on the basis of caste religion or class then he would not be considered a just king 25 Sovereignty was not linked to any particular faith Abul Fazl promoted the good values of different religions and assembled them for the maintenance of peace He provided relief to people by making them free from bound thoughts He also justified the views of Akbar by presenting him as a rational ruler 26 References Edit Abu al Faḍl ʿAllami Encyclopedia Britannica 10 January 2021 Retrieved 18 January 2021 Alfred J Andrea James H Overfield The Human Record To 1700 Houghton Mifflin p 476 Abul Fazl 1551 1602 the emperor s chief advisor and confidant from 1579 until Abul Fazl s assassination at the instigation of Prince Salim the future Emperor Jahangir r 1605 1627 Abu al Fazl Biography and Works Archived 7 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine persian packhum org Alvi Azra 1985 Socio Religious Outlook of Abul Fazl Lahore Pakistan Vanguard Books p 5 ISBN 978 0 210 40543 7 Al Badaoni Emperor Akbar stetson edu Archived from the original on 5 December 2013 Retrieved 8 July 2014 Shattari Ghausi Gulzar i Abrar Rotograph of MS in British Museum Aligarh Department of History p 225 Abu l Fazl Allami A in I Akbari 3 vols Vol 3 trans H S Jarrett 1894 Vol 3 pp 420 Alvi Azra 1985 Socio Religious Outlook of Abul Fazl Lahore Pakistan Vanguard Books p 6 ISBN 978 0 210 40543 7 Dehlavi Shaikh Abdul Haqq Muhaddis Akhbar ul Akhyar pp 280 81 Mulla Abdul Qadir Badauni Muntakhab ul Twarikh Vol III p 74 Azra Alavi 1983 Socio religious Outlook of Abul Fazl p 17 Blochmann H tr 1927 reprint 1993 The Ain I Akbari by Abu l Fazl Allami Vol I The Asiatic Society Calcutta pp xxv lix Fazl Abul Akbar Namah Vol II p 376 Jarrett tr The Ain I Akbari by Abu l Fazl Allami Vol II p 277 Blochmann H tr 1927 reprint 1993 The Ain I Akbari by Abu l Fazl Allami Vol I The Asiatic Society Calcutta pp xxxiv Kapoor R C 2015 Abu l Faẓl independent discoverer of the Great Comet of 1577 Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 18 3 249 260 Bibcode 2015JAHH 18 249K BK 1784 Aan den Heere J H v d Palm by den pokaal van gelukwensching met den door hem ontvangen gouden eerprys op de maaltyd van t Haagsche Kunstgenootschap Kniedicht Signed Bk i e W Bilderdijk OCLC 556992222 Abu l Fazl Allami A in I Akbari 3 vols Vol 3 trans H S Jarrett 1898 Vol 3 Book 5 Chapter 14 An Account of the Author pp 478 524 Orchha Archived 7 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine British Library Majumdar R C 2007 The Mughul Empire Mumbai Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan p 167 Blochmann H tr 1927 reprint 1993 The Ain I Akbari by Abu l Fazl Allami Vol I The Asiatic Society Calcutta pp lxviii lxix Blochmann H tr 1927 reprint 1993 The Ain I Akbari by Abu l Fazl Allami Vol I The Asiatic Society Calcutta pp lviii lix a b c Majumdar R C 2007 The Mughul Empire Mumbai Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan pp 5 6 a b Blochmann H tr 1927 reprint 1993 The Ain I Akbari by Abu l Fazl Allami Vol I The Asiatic Society Calcutta p liii a b Roy Himanshu 2020 Indian Political Thought themes and thinkers Pearson p 130 ISBN 978 93 325 8733 5 Roy Himanshu 2020 Indian Political Thought themes and thinkers Pearson p 131 ISBN 978 93 325 8733 5 Further reading EditRizvi Saiyid Athar Abbas Religious and Intellectual History of the Muslims in Akbar s Reign With Special Reference to Abu l Fazl New Delhi Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt Ltd 1975 The History of Akbar Volume 1 the Akbarnama by Abu l Fazl ibn Mubarak edited and translated by Wheeler M Thackston Murty Classical Library of India Harvard University Press January 2015 hardcover 656 pages ISBN 9780674427754External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Abu l Fazl ibn Mubarak Wikiquote has quotations related to Abu l Fazl ibn Mubarak Biography and Works of Abu l Fazl English Translation Persian Institute Abu al Fazl ibn Mubarak Henry Blochmann 1887 The Ain i Akbari archive org in Hindi Vol 2 Asiatic Society of Bengal p 487 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abu 27l Fazl ibn Mubarak amp oldid 1127839923, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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