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Akbar

Abu'l-Fath Jalal-ud-din Muhammad Akbar[8] (15 October 1542[a] – 27 October 1605),[11][12][13] popularly known as Akbar the Great[14] (Persian: اکبر اعظم Persian pronunciation: [akbarɪ azam]), and also as Akbar I (Persian pronunciation: [akbar]),[15] was the third Mughal emperor, who reigned from 1556 to 1605. Akbar succeeded his father, Humayun, under a regent, Bairam Khan, who helped the young emperor expand and consolidate Mughal domains in India.

Jalal-ud-din Muhammad
Akbar
Padishah
Ghazi[1]
Akbar by Govardhan, c. 1630
3rd Emperor of the Mughal Empire
Reign11 February 1556 – 27 October 1605[2][3]
Coronation14 February 1556[2]
PredecessorHumayun
SuccessorJahangir
RegentBairam Khan (1556–1560)[4]
BornJalal-ud-din Muhammad Akbar
15 October 1542[a]
Amarkot, Rajputana (present-day Umerkot, Sindh, Pakistan)
Died27 October 1605(1605-10-27) (aged 63)
Fatehpur Sikri, Agra, Mughal Empire (present-day Uttar Pradesh, India)
BurialNovember 1605
Consorts
Wives
  • Raj Kunwari
    (m. 1570)
  • Nathi Bai
    (m. 1570)
  • Bhakkari Begum
    (m. 1572)
  • Qasima Banu Begum
    (m. 1575)
  • Gauhar-un-Nissa Begum
  • Bibi Daulat Shad
  • Rukmavati
  • several others
Issue
Detail
Names
Abu'l-Fath Jalal-ud-din Muhammad Akbar[8]
Posthumous name
Arsh-Ashyani (lit.'One who nests on the divine throne')
HouseHouse of Babur
DynastyTimurid dynasty
FatherHumayun
MotherHamida Banu Begum
ReligionSunni Islam[9][10]
Din-e-Illahi

A strong personality and a successful general, Akbar gradually enlarged the Mughal Empire to include much of the Indian subcontinent. His power and influence, however, extended over the entire subcontinent because of Mughal military, political, cultural, and economic dominance. To unify the vast Mughal state, Akbar established a centralised system of administration throughout his empire and adopted a policy of conciliating conquered rulers through marriage and diplomacy. To preserve peace and order in a religiously and culturally diverse empire, he adopted policies that won him the support of his non-Muslim subjects. Eschewing tribal bonds and Islamic state identity, Akbar strove to unite far-flung lands of his realm through loyalty, expressed through an Indo-Persian culture, to himself as an emperor.

Mughal India developed a strong and stable economy, leading to commercial expansion and greater patronage of culture. Akbar himself was a patron of art and culture. He was fond of literature, and created a library of over 24,000 volumes written in Sanskrit, Urdu, Persian, Greek, Latin, Arabic, and Kashmiri, staffed by many scholars, translators, artists, calligraphers, scribes, bookbinders, and readers. He did much of the cataloging himself.[16] Akbar also established the library of Fatehpur Sikri exclusively for women,[17] and he decreed the establishment of schools for the education of both Muslims and Hindus throughout the realm. He also encouraged bookbinding to become a high art.[16] Holy men of many faiths, poets, architects, and artisans all over the world adorned his court from for study and discussion. Akbar's courts at Delhi, Agra, and Fatehpur Sikri became centres of the arts, letters, and learning. Timurid and Perso-Islamic culture began to merge and blend with indigenous Indian elements, and a distinct Indo-Persian culture emerged characterized by Mughal style arts, painting, and architecture. Disillusioned with orthodox Islam and perhaps hoping to bring about religious unity within his empire, Akbar promulgated Din-i-Ilahi, a syncretic creed derived mainly from Islam and Hinduism as well as elements of Zoroastrianism and Christianity.

Akbar's reign significantly influenced the course of Indian history. During his rule, the Mughal Empire tripled in size and wealth. He created a powerful military system and instituted effective political and social reforms. By abolishing the sectarian tax on non-Muslims and appointing them to high civil and military posts, he was the first Mughal ruler to win the trust and loyalty of the native subjects. He had Sanskrit literature translated, participated in native festivals, realising that a stable empire depended on the co-operation and good-will of his subjects. Thus, the foundations for a multicultural empire under Mughal rule were laid during his reign. Akbar was succeeded as emperor by his son, Prince Salim, later known as Jahangir.

Early years

Defeated in battles at Chausa and Kannauj in 1539 to 1541 by the forces of Sher Shah Suri, Mughal emperor Humayun fled westward to Sindh.[18] There he met and married the 14-year-old Hamida Banu Begum, daughter of Shaikh Ali Akbar Jami, a Persian teacher of Humayun's younger brother Hindal Mirza. Jalal ud-din Muhammad Akbar was born the next year on 25 October 1542[a] (the fifth day of Rajab, 949 AH)[12] at the Rajput Fortress of Amarkot in Rajputana (in modern-day Sindh), where his parents had been given refuge by the local Hindu ruler Rana Prasad.[20]

 
Akbar as a boy

During the extended period of Humayun's exile, Akbar was brought up in Kabul by the his extended family of paternal uncles, Kamran Mirza and Askari Mirza, and his aunts, in particular Kamran Mirza's wife. He spent his youth learning to hunt, run, and fight, making him a daring, powerful, and brave warrior, but he never learned to read or write. This, however, did not hinder his search for knowledge. It is said that when he retired in the evening he would have someone read to him.[21][22] On 20 November 1551, Humayun's youngest brother, Hindal Mirza, died in a battle against Kamran Mirza's forces. Upon hearing the news of his brother's death, Humayun was overwhelmed with grief.[23]

About the time of nine-year-old Akbar's first appointment as governor of Ghazni, he married Hindal's daughter, Ruqaiya Sultan Begum.[24] Humayun conferred on the imperial couple all the wealth, army, and adherents of Hindal and Ghazni.[clarification needed] One of Hindal's jagir was given to his nephew Akbar, who was appointed as its viceroy and was also given command of his uncle's army.[25] Akbar's marriage to Ruqaiya was solemnized in Jalandhar, Punjab, when they both were 14-years-old.[26] She was his first wife and chief consort.[27][5]

Following the chaos over the succession of Sher Shah Suri's son Islam Shah, Humayun reconquered Delhi in 1555,[28] leading an army partly provided by his Persian ally Tahmasp I. A few months later, Humayun died. Akbar's guardian, Bairam Khan concealed the death in order to prepare for Akbar's succession. Akbar succeeded Humayun on 14 February 1556,[29] while in the midst of a war against Sikandar Shah to reclaim the Mughal throne. In Kalanaur, Punjab, the 14-year-old Akbar was enthroned by Bairam Khan on a newly constructed platform, which still stands.[30][31] He was proclaimed Shahanshah (Persian for "King of Kings").[29] Bairam Khan ruled on his behalf until he came of age.[32]

Military campaigns

Military innovations

 
Mughal Empire under Akbar's period (yellow)

Akbar had a record of unbeaten military campaigns that consolidated Mughal rule in the Indian subcontinent.[29][33] The basis of this military prowess and authority was Akbar's skilful structural and organisational calibration of the Mughal army.[34] The Mansabdari system in particular has been acclaimed for its role in upholding Mughal power in the time of Akbar. The system persisted with few changes down to the end of the Mughal Empire, but was progressively weakened under his successors.[34]

Organisational reforms were accompanied by innovations in cannons, fortifications, and the use of elephants.[33] Akbar also took an interest in matchlocks and effectively employed them during various conflicts. He sought the help of Ottomans, and also increasingly of Europeans, especially Portuguese and Italians, in procuring firearms and artillery.[35] Mughal firearms in the time of Akbar came to be far superior to anything that could be deployed by regional rulers, tributaries, or by zamindars.[36] Such was the impact of these weapons that Akbar's Vizier, Abul Fazl, once declared that "with the exception of Turkey, there is perhaps no country in which its guns has more means of securing the Government than [India]."[37] The term "gunpowder empire" has thus often been used by scholars and historians in analysing the success of the Mughals in India. Mughal power has been seen as owing to their mastery of the techniques of warfare, especially the use of firearms encouraged by Akbar.[38]

Struggle for North India

 
Mughal Emperor Akbar training an elephant

Akbar's father Humayun had regained control of the Punjab, Delhi, and Agra with Safavid support, but even in these areas Mughal rule was precarious, and when the Surs reconquered Agra and Delhi following the death of Humayun, the fate of the boy emperor seemed uncertain. Akbar's minority and the lack of any possibility of military assistance from the Mughal stronghold of Kabul, which was in the throes of an invasion by the ruler of Badakhshan Prince Mirza Suleiman, aggravated the situation.[39] When his regent, Bairam Khan, called a council of war to marshall the Mughal forces, none of Akbar's chieftains approved. Bairam Khan was ultimately able to prevail over the nobles, however, and it was decided that the Mughals would march against the strongest of the Sur rulers, Sikandar Shah Suri, in the Punjab. Delhi was left under the regency of Tardi Baig Khan.[39] Sikandar Shah Suri, however, presented no major concern for Akbar,[40] and avoided giving battle as the Mughal army approached.[citation needed] The gravest threat came from Hemu, a minister and general of one of the Sur rulers, who had proclaimed himself Hindu emperor and expelled the Mughals from the Indo-Gangetic plains.[39]

Urged by Bairam Khan, who re-marshalled the Mughal army before Hemu could consolidate his position, Akbar marched on Delhi to reclaim it.[41] His army, led by Bairam Khan, defeated Hemu and the Sur army on 5 November 1556 at the Second Battle of Panipat, 50 miles (80 km) north of Delhi.[42] Soon after the battle, Mughal forces occupied Delhi and then Agra. Akbar made a triumphant entry into Delhi, where he stayed for a month. Then he and Bairam Khan returned to Punjab to deal with Sikandar Shah, who had become active again.[43] In the next six months, the Mughals won another major battle against Sikander Shah Suri, who fled east to Bengal. Akbar and his forces occupied Lahore and then seized Multan in the Punjab. In 1558, Akbar took possession of Ajmer, the aperture to Rajputana, after the defeat and flight of its Muslim ruler.[43] The Mughals had also besieged and defeated the Sur forces in control of Gwalior Fort, the greatest stronghold north of the Narmada river.[43]

Royal begums, along with the families of Mughal amirs, were finally brought over from Kabul to India at the time – according to Akbar's vizier, Abul Fazl, "so that men might become settled and be restrained in some measure from departing to a country to which they were accustomed".[39] Akbar had firmly declared his intentions that the Mughals were in India to stay. This was a far cry from the political settlements of his grandfather, Babur, and father, Humayun, both of whom had done little to indicate that they were anything but transient rulers.[39][43] However, Akbar methodically re-introduced a historical legacy of the Timurid Renaissance that his ancestors had left.[44]

Expansion into Central India

 
Akbar hawking with Mughal chieftains and nobleman accompanied by his guardian Bairam Khan

By 1559, the Mughals had launched a drive to the south into Rajputana and Malwa.[45] However, Akbar's disputes with his regent, Bairam Khan, temporarily put an end to the expansion.[45] The young emperor, at the age of eighteen, wanted to take a more active part in managing affairs. Urged on by his foster mother, Maham Anga, and his relatives, Akbar decided to dispense with the services of Bairam Khan. After yet another dispute at court, Akbar finally dismissed Bairam Khan in the spring of 1560 and ordered him to leave on Hajj to Mecca.[46] Bairam Khan left for Mecca but on his way was goaded by his opponents to rebel.[42] He was defeated by the Mughal army in the Punjab and forced to submit. Akbar forgave him, however, and gave him the option of either continuing in his court or resuming his pilgrimage; Bairam chose the latter.[47] Bairam Khan was later assassinated on his way to Mecca, allegedly by an Afghan with a personal vendetta.[45]

In 1560, Akbar resumed military operations.[45] A Mughal army under the command of his foster brother, Adham Khan, and a Mughal commander, Pir Muhammad Khan, began the Mughal conquest of Malwa. The Afghan ruler, Baz Bahadur, was defeated at the Battle of Sarangpur and fled to Khandesh for refuge leaving behind his harem, treasure, and war elephants.[45] Despite initial success, the campaign proved a disaster from Akbar's point of view. His foster brother retained all the spoils and followed through with the Central Asian practice of slaughtering the surrendered garrison, their wives and children, and many Muslim theologians and Sayyids, who were the descendants of Muhammad.[45] Akbar personally rode to Malwa to confront Adham Khan and relieve him of command. Pir Muhammad Khan was then sent in pursuit of Baz Bahadur but was beaten back by the alliance of the rulers of Khandesh and Berar.[45] Baz Bahadur temporarily regained control of Malwa until, in the next year, Akbar sent another Mughal army to invade and annex the kingdom.[45] Malwa became a province of the nascent imperial administration of Akbar's regime. Baz Bahadur survived as a refugee at various courts until, eight years later in 1570, he took service under Akbar.[45]

 
Young Abdul Rahim Khan-I-Khana son of Bairam Khan being received by Akbar

Despite the ultimate success in Malwa, the conflict exposed cracks in Akbar's personal relationships with his relatives and Mughal nobles. When Adham Khan confronted Akbar following another dispute in 1562, he was struck down by the emperor and thrown from a terrace into the palace courtyard at Agra. Still alive, Adham Khan was dragged up and thrown to the courtyard once again by Akbar to ensure his death. Akbar now sought to eliminate the threat of over-mighty subjects.[45] He created specialised ministerial posts relating to imperial governance; no member of the Mughal nobility was to have unquestioned pre-eminence.[45] When a powerful clan of Uzbek chiefs broke out in rebellion in 1564, Akbar decisively defeated and routed them in Malwa and then Bihar.[48] He pardoned the rebellious leaders, hoping to conciliate them, but they rebelled again, so Akbar had to quell their uprising a second time. Following a third revolt with the proclamation of Mirza Muhammad Hakim, Akbar's brother and the Mughal ruler of Kabul, as emperor, his patience was finally exhausted. Several Uzbek chieftains were subsequently slain and the rebel leaders trampled to death under elephants.[48] Simultaneously the Mirzas, a group of Akbar's distant cousins who held important fiefs near Agra, had also risen up in rebellion. They too were slain and driven out of the empire.[48] In 1566, Akbar moved to meet the forces of his brother, Muhammad Hakim, who had marched into the Punjab with dreams of seizing the imperial throne. Following a brief confrontation, however, Muhammad Hakim accepted Akbar's supremacy and retreated back to Kabul.[48]

In 1564, Mughal forces began the conquest of Garha, a thinly populated, hilly area in central India that was of interest to the Mughals because of its herd of wild elephants.[49] The territory was ruled over by Raja Vir Narayan, a minor, and his mother, Durgavati, a Rajput warrior queen of the Gonds.[48] Akbar did not personally lead the campaign because he was preoccupied with the Uzbek rebellion, leaving the expedition in the hands of Asaf Khan, the Mughal governor of Kara.[48][50] Durgavati committed suicide after her defeat at the Battle of Damoh, while Raja Vir Narayan was slain at the Fall of Chauragarh, the mountain fortress of the Gonds.[50] The Mughals seized immense wealth, an uncalculated amount of gold and silver, jewels, and 1000 elephants. Kamala Devi, a younger sister of Durgavati, was sent to the Mughal harem.[50] The brother of Durgavati's deceased husband was installed as the Mughal administrator of the region.[50] Like in Malwa, however, Akbar entered into a dispute with his vassals over the conquest of Gondwana.[50] Asaf Khan was accused of keeping most of the treasures and sending back only 200 elephants to Akbar. When summoned to give accounts, he fled Gondwana. He went first to the Uzbeks, then returned to Gondwana where he was pursued by Mughal forces. Finally, he submitted and Akbar restored him to his previous position.[50]

Attempt to murder Akbar

Around 1564 is also when there was an assassination attempt on Akbar documented in a painting. The attempt was made when Akbar was returning from a visit to the dargah of Hazrat Nizamuddin near Delhi, by an assassin shooting an arrow. The arrow pierced his right shoulder. The assassin was apprehended and ordered beheaded by the Emperor. The culprit was a slave of Mirza Sharfuddin, a noble in Akbar's court whose rebellion had recently been curbed.[51]

Conquest of Rajputana

 
Mughal Emperor Akbar shoots the Rajput warrior Jaimal during the Siege of Chittorgarh in 1568
 
Bullocks dragging siege-guns uphill during Akbar's attack on Ranthambhor Fort in 1568

Having established Mughal rule over northern India, Akbar turned his attention to the conquest of Rajputana. No imperial power in India based on the Indo-Gangetic plains could be secure if a rival centre of power existed on its flank in Rajputana.[50] The Mughals had already established domination over parts of northern Rajputana in Mewat, Ajmer, and Nagor.[43][48] Now, Akbar was determined to drive into the heartlands of the Rajput kings that had rarely previously submitted to the Muslim rulers of the Delhi Sultanate. Beginning in 1561, the Mughals actively engaged the Rajputs in warfare and diplomacy.[49] Most Rajput states accepted Akbar's suzerainty; the rulers of Mewar and Marwar, Udai Singh, and Chandrasen Rathore, however, remained outside the imperial fold.[48] Rana Udai Singh was descended from the Sisodia ruler, Rana Sanga, who had fought Babur at the Battle of Khanwa in 1527.[48] As the head of the Sisodia clan, he possessed the highest ritual status of all the Rajput kings and chieftains in India.[citation needed] Unless Udai Singh was reduced to submission, the imperial authority of the Mughals would be lessened in Rajput eyes.[48] Furthermore, Akbar, at this early period, was still enthusiastically devoted to the cause of Islam and sought to impress the superiority of his faith over the most prestigious warriors in Hinduism.[48]

In 1567, Akbar moved to reduce the Chittor Fort in Mewar. The fortress-capital of Mewar was of great strategic importance as it lay on the shortest route from Agra to Gujarat and was also considered a key to holding the interior parts of Rajputana. Udai Singh retired to the hills of Mewar, leaving two Rajput warriors, Jaimal and Patta, in charge of the defence of his capital.[52] Chittorgarh fell in February 1568 after a siege of four months. The fall of Chittor was proclaimed by Akbar as "the victory of Islam over infidels (non-Muslims)."[53] In his Fathnama (dispatches announcing victory) issued on 9 March 1575 conveying his news of victory it is written:

With the help of our blood-thirsty sword we have erased the signs of infidelity in their (Hindus) minds and destroyed the temples in those places and all over Hindustan.[54]

Akbar had the surviving defenders and 30,000 non-combatants massacred and their heads displayed upon towers erected throughout the region, in order to demonstrate his authority.[55][56] The booty that fell into the hands of the Mughals was distributed throughout the empire.[57] He remained in Chittorgarh for three days, then returned to Agra, where to commemorate the victory, he set up, at the gates of his fort, statues of Jaimal and Patta mounted on elephants.[58] Udai Singh's power and influence was broken. He never again ventured out of his mountain refuge in Mewar and Akbar was content to let him be.[59]

The fall of Chittorgarh was followed up by a Mughal attack on the Ranthambore Fort in 1568. Ranthambore was held by the Hada Rajputs and reputed to be the most powerful fortress in India.[59] However, it fell only after a couple of months.[59] Akbar was now the master of almost the whole of Rajputana. Most of the Rajput kings had submitted to the Mughals.[59] Only the clans of Mewar continued to resist.[59] Udai Singh's son and successor, Pratap Singh, was later defeated by the Mughals at the Battle of Haldighati in 1576.[59] Akbar would celebrate his conquest of Rajputana by laying the foundation of a new capital, 23 miles (37 km) W.S.W of Agra in 1569. It was called Fatehpur Sikri ("the city of victory").[60] Rana Pratap Singh, however, continuously attacked Mughals and was able to retain most of the kingdom of his ancestors in the life of Akbar.[61]

Annexation of Western and Eastern India

 
The court of young Akbar, age 13, showing his first imperial act: the arrest of an unruly courtier, who was once a favourite of Akbar's father. Illustration from a manuscript of the Akbarnama

Akbar's next military objectives were the conquest of Gujarat and Bengal, which connected India with the trading centres of Asia, Africa, and Europe through the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal respectively.[59] Furthermore, Gujarat had been a haven for rebellious Mughal nobles, while in Bengal, the Afghans still held considerable influence under their ruler, Sulaiman Khan Karrani. Akbar first moved against Gujarat, which lay in the crook of the Mughal provinces of Rajputana and Malwa.[59] Gujarat, with its coastal regions, possessed areas of rich agricultural production in its central plain, an impressive output of textiles and other industrial goods, and the busiest seaports of India.[59][62] Akbar intended to link the maritime state with the massive resources of the Indo-Gangetic plains.[63] However, the ostensible casus belli was that the rebel Mirzas, who had previously been driven out of India, were now operating out of a base in southern Gujarat. Moreover, Akbar had received invitations from cliques in Gujarat to oust the reigning king, which served as justification for his military expedition.[59] In 1572, he moved to occupy Ahmedabad, the capital, and other northern cities, and was proclaimed the lawful sovereign of Gujarat. By 1573, he had driven out the Mirzas who, after offering token resistance, fled for refuge in the Deccan. Surat, the commercial capital of the region, and other coastal cities soon capitulated to the Mughals.[59] The king, Muzaffar Shah III, was caught hiding in a corn field; he was pensioned off by Akbar with a small allowance.[59]

Having established his authority over Gujarat, Akbar returned to Fatehpur Sikiri, where he built the Buland Darwaza to commemorate his victories, but a rebellion by Afghan nobles supported by the Rajput ruler of Idar, and the renewed intrigues of the Mirzas forced his return to Gujarat.[63] Akbar crossed the Rajputana and reached Ahmedabad in eleven days – a journey that normally took six weeks. The outnumbered Mughal army then won a decisive victory on September 2, 1573. Akbar slew the rebel leaders and erected a tower out of their severed heads.[59] The conquest and subjugation of Gujarat proved highly profitable for the Mughals; the territory yielded a revenue of more than five million rupees annually to Akbar's treasury, after expenses.[59]

Akbar had now defeated most of the Afghan remnants in India. The only centre of Afghan power was now in Bengal, where Sulaiman Khan Karrani, an Afghan chieftain whose family had served under Sher Shah Suri, was reigning in power. While Sulaiman Khan scrupulously avoided giving offence to Akbar, his son, Daud Khan, who had succeeded him in 1572, decided otherwise.[64] Whereas Sulaiman Khan had the khutba read in Akbar's name and acknowledged Mughal supremacy, Daud Khan assumed the insignia of royalty and ordered the khutba to be proclaimed in his own name in defiance of Akbar. Munim Khan, the Mughal governor of Bihar, was ordered to chastise Daud Khan, but later, Akbar himself set out to Bengal.[64] This was an opportunity to bring the trade in the east under Mughal control.[65] In 1574, the Mughals seized Patna from Daud Khan, who fled to Bengal.[64] Akbar returned to Fatehpur Sikri and left his generals to finish the campaign. The Mughal army was subsequently victorious at the Battle of Tukaroi in 1575, which led to the annexation of Bengal and parts of Bihar that had been under the dominion of Daud Khan. Only Orissa was left in the hands of the Karrani dynasty as a fief of the Mughal Empire. A year later, however, Daud Khan rebelled and attempted to regain Bengal. He was defeated by the Mughal general, Khan Jahan Quli, and had to flee into exile. Daud Khan was later captured and executed by Mughal forces. His severed head was sent to Akbar, while his limbs were gibbeted at Tandah, the Mughal capital in Bengal.[64]

Campaigns in Afghanistan and Central Asia

Following his conquests of Gujarat and Bengal, Akbar was preoccupied with domestic concerns. He did not leave Fatehpur Sikri on a military campaign until 1581, when Punjab was again invaded by his brother, Mirza Muhammad Hakim. Akbar expelled his brother to Kabul and this time pressed on, determined to end the threat from Muhammad Hakim once and for all. In contrast to the problem that his predecessors once had in getting Mughal nobles to stay on in India, the problem now was to get them to leave India. They were, according to Abul Fazl "afraid of the cold of Afghanistan." The Hindu officers, in turn, were additionally inhibited by the traditional taboo against crossing the Indus. Akbar, however, spurred them on. The soldiers were provided with pay eight months in advance. In August 1581, Akbar seized Kabul and took up residence at Babur's old citadel. He stayed there for three weeks, in the absence of his brother, who had fled into the mountains. Akbar left Kabul in the hands of his sister, Bakht-un-Nissa Begum, and returned to India. He pardoned his brother, who took up de facto charge of the Mughal administration in Kabul; Bakht-un-Nissa continued to be the official governor. A few years later, in 1585, Muhammad Hakim died and Kabul passed into the hands of Akbar once again. It was officially incorporated as a province of the Mughal Empire.[64]

The Kabul expedition was the beginning of a long period of activity over the northern frontiers of the empire.[66] For thirteen years, beginning in 1585, Akbar remained in the north, shifting his capital to Lahore in the Punjab while dealing with challenges from beyond the Khyber Pass.[66] The gravest threat came from the Uzbeks, the tribe that had driven his grandfather, Babur, out of Central Asia.[64] They had been organised under Abdullah Khan Shaybanid, a capable military chieftain who had seized Badakhshan and Balkh from Akbar's distant Timurid relatives, and whose Uzbek troops now posed a serious challenge to the northwestern frontiers of the Mughal Empire.[64][67] The Afghan tribes on the border were also restless, partly on account of the hostility of the Yusufzai of Bajaur and Swat, and partly owing to the activity of a new religious leader, Bayazid, the founder of the Roshaniyya sect.[66] The Uzbeks were also known to be subsidising Afghans.[68]

In 1586, Akbar negotiated a pact with Abdullah Khan in which the Mughals agreed to remain neutral during the Uzbek invasion of Safavid held Khorasan.[68] In return, Abdullah Khan agreed to refrain from supporting, subsidising, or offering refuge to the Afghan tribes hostile to the Mughals. Thus freed, Akbar began a series of campaigns to pacify the Yusufzais and other rebels.[68] Akbar ordered Zain Khan to lead an expedition against the Afghan tribes. Raja Birbal, a renowned minister in Akbar's court, was also given military command. The expedition turned out to be a disaster, and on its retreat from the mountains, Birbal and his entourage were ambushed and killed by the Afghans at the Malandarai Pass in February 1586.[68] Akbar immediately fielded new armies to reinvade the Yusufzai lands under the command of Raja Todar Mal. Over the next six years, the Mughals contained the Yusufzai in the mountain valleys, and forced the submission of many chiefs in Swat and Bajaur.[68] Dozens of forts were built and occupied to secure the region. Akbar's response demonstrated his ability to clamp firm military control over the Afghan tribes.[68]

Despite his pact with the Uzbeks, Akbar nurtured a secret hope of reconquering Central Asia from today's Afghanistan.[69] However, Badakshan and Balkh remained firmly part of the Uzbek dominions. There was only a transient occupation of the two provinces by the Mughals under his grandson, Shah Jahan, in the mid-17th century.[67] Nevertheless, Akbar's stay in the northern frontiers was highly fruitful. The last of the rebellious Afghan tribes were subdued by 1600.[67] The Roshaniyya movement was firmly suppressed. The Afridi and Orakzai tribes, which had risen up under the Roshaniyyas, had been subjugated.[67] The leaders of the movement were captured and driven into exile.[67] Jalaluddin, the son of the Roshaniyya movement's founder, Bayazid, was killed in 1601 in a fight with Mughal troops near Ghazni.[67] Mughal rule over today's Afghanistan was finally secure, particularly after the passing of the Uzbek threat with the death of Abdullah Khan in 1598.[68]

Conquests in the Indus Valley

While in Lahore dealing with the Uzbeks, Akbar had sought to subjugate the Indus valley to secure the frontier provinces.[68] He sent an army to conquer Kashmir in the upper Indus basin when, in 1585, Ali Shah, the reigning king of the Shia Chak dynasty, refused to send his son as a hostage to the Mughal court. Ali Shah surrendered immediately to the Mughals, but another of his sons, Yaqub, crowned himself as king, and led a stubborn resistance against the Mughal armies. Finally, in June, 1589, Akbar himself travelled from Lahore to Srinagar to receive the surrender of Yaqub and his rebel forces.[68] Baltistan and Ladakh, which were Tibetan provinces adjacent to Kashmir, pledged their allegiance to Akbar.[70] The Mughals also moved to conquer Sindh in the lower Indus valley. Since 1574, the northern fortress of Bhakkar had remained under imperial control. Now, in 1586, the Mughal governor of Multan tried and failed to secure the capitulation of Mirza Jani Beg, the independent ruler of Thatta in southern Sindh.[68] Akbar responded by sending a Mughal army to besiege Sehwan, the river capital of the region. Jani Beg mustered a large army to meet the Mughals.[68] The outnumbered Mughal forces defeated the Sindhi forces at the Battle of Sehwan. After suffering further defeats, Jani Beg surrendered to the Mughals in 1591, and in 1593, paid homage to Akbar in Lahore.[70]

Subjugation of parts of Baluchistan

As early as 1586, about half a dozen Baluchi chiefs, under nominal Pani Afghan rule, had been persuaded to subordinate themselves to Akbar. In preparations to take Kandahar from the Safavids, Akbar ordered the Mughal forces to conquer the rest of the Afghan held parts of Baluchistan in 1595.[70][71] The Mughal general, Mir Masum, led an attack on the stronghold of Sibi, northeast of Quetta and defeated a coalition of local chieftains in battle.[71] They were made to acknowledge Mughal supremacy and attend Akbar's court. As a result, the modern-day Pakistani and Afghan parts of Baluchistan, including the Makran coast, became a part of the Mughal Empire.[71]

Safavids and Kandahar

Kandahar was the name given by Arab historians to the ancient Indian kingdom of Gandhara.[72] It was intimately connected with the Mughals since the time of their ancestor, Timur, the warlord who had conquered much of Western, Central, and parts of South Asia in the 14th century. However, the Safavids considered it as an appanage of the Persian-ruled territory of Khorasan and declared its association with the Mughal emperors to be a usurpation. In 1558, while Akbar was consolidating his rule over northern India, the Safavid emperor, Tahmasp I, had seized Kandahar and expelled its Mughal governor. For the next thirty years, it remained under Persian rule.[70] The recovery of Kandahar had not been a priority for Akbar, but after his prolonged military activity in the northern frontiers, a move to restore Mughal rule over the region became desirable.[70] The conquests of Sindh, Kashmir, and parts of Baluchistan, and the ongoing consolidation of Mughal power over today's Afghanistan had added to Akbar's confidence.[70] Furthermore, Kandahar was at this time under threat from the Uzbeks, but the Emperor of Persia, himself beleaguered by the Ottoman Turks, was unable to send any reinforcements. Circumstances favoured the Mughals.[70]

In 1593, Akbar received the exiled Safavid prince, Rostam Mirza, after he had quarreled with his family.[73] Rostam Mirza pledged allegiance to the Mughals; he was granted a rank (mansab) of commander of 5000 men and received Multan as a jagir.[73] Beleaguered by constant Uzbek raids, and seeing the reception of Rostom Mirza at the Mughal court, the Safavid prince and governor of Kandahar, Mozaffar Hosayn, also agreed to defect to the Mughals. Mozaffar Hosayn, who was in any case in an adversary relationship with his overlord, Shah Abbas, was granted a rank of 5000 men, and his daughter Kandahari Begum was married to Akbar's grandson, the Mughal prince, Khurram.[70][73] Kandahar was finally secured in 1595 with the arrival of a garrison headed by the Mughal general, Shah Bayg Khan.[73] The reconquest of Kandahar did not overtly disturb the Mughal-Persian relationship.[70] Akbar and the Persian Shah continued to exchange ambassadors and presents. However, the power equation between the two had now changed in favour of the Mughals.[70]

Deccan Sultans

 
Falcon Mohur of Akbar, minted in Asir. This coin was issued in the name of Akbar, to commemorate the capture of the strategic Asirgarh Fort of the Khandesh Sultanate on 17 January 1601 CE. Legend: "Allah is great, Khordad Ilahi 45, struck at Asir".[74][75]

In 1593, Akbar began military operations against the Deccan Sultans who had not submitted to his authority. He besieged Ahmednagar Fort in 1595, forcing Chand Bibi to cede Berar.[76] A subsequent revolt forced Akbar to take the fort in August 1600. Akbar occupied Burhanpur and besieged Asirgarh Fort in 1599, and took it on 17 January 1601, when Miran Bahadur Shah refused to submit Khandesh. Akbar then established the Subahs of Ahmadnagar, Berar, and Khandesh under Prince Daniyal. "By the time of his death in 1605, Akbar controlled a broad sweep of territory from the Bay of Bengal to Qandahar and Badakshan. He touched the western sea in Sind and at Surat and was well astride central India."[77]

Administration

Political government

Akbar's system of central government was based on the system that had evolved since the Delhi Sultanate, but the functions of various departments were carefully reorganised by laying down detailed regulations for their functioning[citation needed]

  • The revenue department was headed by a wazir, responsible for all finances and management of jagir and inam lands.
  • The head of the military was called the mir bakshi, appointed from among the leading nobles of the court. The mir bakshi was in charge of intelligence gathering, and also made recommendations to the emperor for military appointments and promotions.
  • The mir saman was in charge of the imperial household, including the harems, and supervised the functioning of the court and royal bodyguard.
  • The judiciary was a separate organisation headed by a chief qazi, who was also responsible for religious beliefs and practices

Taxation

Akbar set about reforming the administration of his empire's land revenue by adopting a system that had been used by Sher Shah Suri. A cultivated area where crops grew well was measured and taxed through fixed rates based on the area's crop and productivity. However, this placed hardship on the peasantry because tax rates were fixed on the basis of prices prevailing in the imperial court, which were often higher than those in the countryside.[78] Akbar changed to a decentralised system of annual assessment, but this resulted in corruption among local officials and was abandoned in 1580, to be replaced by a system called the dahsala.[79] Under the new system, revenue was calculated as one-third of the average produce of the previous ten years, to be paid to the state in cash. This system was later refined, taking into account local prices, and grouping areas with similar productivity into assessment circles. Remission was given to peasants when the harvest failed during times of flood or drought.[79] Akbar's dahsala system (also known as zabti) is credited to Raja Todar Mal, who also served as a revenue officer under Sher Shah Suri,[80] and the structure of the revenue administration was set out by the latter in a detailed memorandum submitted to the emperor in 1582–83.[81]

Other local methods of assessment continued in some areas. Land which was fallow or uncultivated was charged at concessional rates.[82] Akbar also actively encouraged the improvement and extension of agriculture. The village continued to remain the primary unit of revenue assessment.[83] Zamindars of every area were required to provide loans and agricultural implements in times of need, to encourage farmers to plough as much land as possible and to sow seeds of superior quality. In turn, the zamindars were given a hereditary right to collect a share of the produce. Peasants had a hereditary right to cultivate the land as long as they paid the land revenue.[82] While the revenue assessment system showed concern for the small peasantry, it also maintained a level of distrust towards the revenue officials. Revenue officials were guaranteed only three-quarters of their salary, with the remaining quarter dependent on their full realisation of the revenue assessed.[84]

Military organization

Akbar organised his army as well as the nobility by means of a system called the mansabdari. Under this system, each officer in the army was assigned a rank (a mansabdar), and assigned a number of cavalry that he had to supply to the imperial army.[80] The mansabdars were divided into 33 classes. The top three commanding ranks, ranging from 7,000 to 10,000 troops, were normally reserved for princes. Other ranks between 10 and 5,000 were assigned to other members of the nobility. The empire's permanent standing army was quite small and the imperial forces mostly consisted of contingents maintained by the mansabdars.[85] Persons were normally appointed to a low mansab and then promoted, based on their merit as well as the favour of the emperor.[86] Each mansabdar was required to maintain a certain number of cavalrymen and twice that number of horses. The number of horses was greater because they had to be rested and rapidly replaced in times of war. Akbar employed strict measures to ensure that the quality of the armed forces was maintained at a high level; horses were regularly inspected and only Arabian horses were normally employed.[87] The mansabdars were remunerated well for their services and constituted the highest paid military service in the world at the time.[86]

Capital

 
Diwan-i-Khas (Hall of Private Audience) in Fatehpur Sikri

Akbar was a follower of Salim Chishti, a holy man who lived in the region of Sikri near Agra. Believing the area to be a lucky one for himself, he had a mosque constructed there for the use of the priest. Subsequently, he celebrated the victories over Chittor and Ranthambore by laying the foundations of a new walled capital, 23 miles (37 km) west of Agra in 1569, which was named Fatehpur ("town of victory") after the conquest of Gujarat in 1573 and subsequently came to be known as Fatehpur Sikri in order to distinguish it from other similarly named towns.[52] Palace for Akbar's favorite queen, a huge artificial lake, and sumptuous water-filled courtyards were built there. However, the city was soon abandoned and the capital was moved to Lahore in 1585. The reason may have been that the water supply in Fatehpur Sikri was insufficient or of poor quality. Or, as some historians believe, Akbar had to attend to the northwest areas of his empire and therefore moved his capital northwest. Other sources indicate Akbar simply lost interest in the city[88] or realised it was not militarily defensible. In 1599, Akbar shifted his capital back to Agra from where he reigned until his death.

Economy

Trade

The reign of Akbar was characterized by commercial expansion.[89] The Mughal government encouraged traders, provided protection and security for transactions, and levied a very low custom duty to stimulate foreign trade. Furthermore, it strived to foster a climate conducive to commerce by requiring local administrators to provide restitution to traders for goods stolen while in their territory. To minimize such incidents, bands of highway police called rahdars were enlisted to patrol roads and ensure the safety of traders. Other active measures taken included the construction and protection of routes of commerce and communications.[90] Indeed, Akbar would make concerted efforts to improve roads to facilitate the use of wheeled vehicles through the Khyber Pass, the most popular route frequented by traders and travelers journeying from Kabul into Mughal India.[90] He also strategically occupied the northwestern cities of Multan and Lahore in the Punjab and constructed great forts, such as the one at Attock near the crossing of the Grand Trunk Road and the Indus river, as well as a network of smaller forts called thanas throughout the frontier to secure the overland trade with Persia and Central Asia.[90] Furthermore, he established a trade business for his chief consort, Mariam-uz-Zamani who ran an extensive trade of indigo, spices, and cotton to Gulf nations through merchant's vessels.[91]

Coins

 
Silver coin of Akbar with inscriptions of the Islamic declaration of faith, the declaration reads: "There is no god except Allah, and Muhammad is the messenger of Allah."

Akbar was a great innovator as far as coinage is concerned. The coins of Akbar set a new chapter in India's numismatic history.[92] The coins of Akbar's grandfather, Babur, and father, Humayun, are basic and devoid of any innovation as the former was busy establishing the foundations of the Mughal rule in India while the latter was ousted by the Afghan, Sher Shah Suri, and returned to the throne only to die a year later. While the reign of both Babur and Humayun represented turmoil, Akbar's relative long reign of 50 years allowed him to experiment with coinage.

Akbar introduced coins with decorative floral motifs, dotted borders, quatrefoil, and other types. His coins were both round and square in shape with a unique 'mehrab' (lozenge) shape coin highlighting numismatic calligraphy at its best.[93] Akbar's portrait type gold coin (Mohur) is generally attributed to his son, Prince Salim (later Emperor Jahangir), who had rebelled and then sought reconciliation thereafter by minting and presenting his father with gold Mohurs bearing Akbar's portrait. The tolerant view of Akbar is represented by the 'Ram-Sita' silver coin type while during the latter part of Akbar's reign, we see coins portraying the concept of Akbar's newly promoted religion 'Din-e-ilahi' with the Ilahi type and Jalla Jalal-Hu type coins.

The coins,[citation needed] left, represent examples of these innovative concepts introduced by Akbar that set the precedent for Mughal coins which was refined and perfected by his son, Jahangir, and later by his grandson, Shah Jahan.

Diplomacy

Matrimonial alliances

The practice of arranging marriages between Hindu princesses and Muslim kings was known much before Akbar's time, but in most cases, these marriages did not lead to any stable relations between the families involved, and the women were lost to their families and did not return after marriage.[94][95][96]

However, Akbar's policy of matrimonial alliances marked a departure in India from previous practice in that the marriage itself marked the beginning of a new order of relations, wherein the Hindu Rajputs who married their daughters or sisters to him would be treated on par with his Muslim fathers-in-law and brothers-in-law in all respects except being able to dine and pray with him or take Muslim wives. These Rajputs were made members of his court and their daughters' or sisters' marriage to a Muslim ceased to be a sign of degradation, except for certain proud elements who still considered it a sign of humiliation.[96]

 
Portrait of Empress Mariam-uz-Zamani, commonly known as Jodha Bai, giving birth to Prince Salim, the future emperor Jahangir.

The Kacchwaha Rajput, Raja Bharmal, of the small kingdom of Amer, who had come to Akbar's court shortly after the latter's accession, allied by giving his daughter Harka Bai, mother of Akbar's successor, in marriage to the emperor. Bharmal was made a noble of high rank in the imperial court, and subsequently, his son Bhagwant Das and grandson Man Singh also rose to high ranks in the nobility.[95]

Other Rajput kingdoms also established matrimonial alliances with Akbar, but matrimony was not insisted on as a precondition for forming alliances. Two major Rajput clans remained aloof – the Sisodiyas of Mewar and Hadas of Ranthambore. In another turning point of Akbar's reign, Raja Man Singh I of Amber went with Akbar to meet the Hada leader, Surjan Hada, to effect an alliance. Surjan accepted an alliance on the condition that Akbar did not marry any of his daughters. Consequently, no matrimonial alliance was entered into, yet Surjan was made a noble and placed in charge of Garh-Katanga.[95]

The political effect of these alliances was significant. While some Rajput women who entered Akbar's harem converted to Islam, they were generally provided full religious freedom, and their relatives, who continued to remain Hindu, formed a significant part of the nobility and served to articulate the opinions of the majority of the common populace in the imperial court.[95] The interaction between Hindu and Muslim nobles in the imperial court resulted in an exchange of thoughts and blending of the two cultures. Further, newer generations of the Mughal line represented a merger of Mughal and Rajput blood, thereby strengthening ties between the two. As a result, the Rajputs became the strongest allies of the Mughals, and Rajput soldiers and generals fought for the Mughal army under Akbar, leading it in several campaigns including the conquest of Gujarat in 1572.[97] Akbar's policy of religious tolerance ensured that employment in the imperial administration was open to all on merit irrespective of creed, and this led to an increase in the strength of the administrative services of the empire.[98]

Another legend is that Akbar's daughter Meherunnissa was enamored by Tansen and had a role in his coming to Akbar's court.[99] Tansen converted to Islam from Hinduism, apparently on the eve of his marriage with Akbar's daughter.[100][101]

Foreign relations

Relations with the Portuguese

An Emperor shall be ever Intent on Conquest, Otherwise, His enemies shall rise in arms against him.

Jalal-ud-Din Muhammad Akbar

At the time of Akbar's ascension in 1556, the Portuguese had established several fortresses and factories on the western coast of the subcontinent, and largely controlled navigation and sea trade in that region. As a consequence of this colonialism, all other trading entities were subject to the terms and conditions of the Portuguese, and this was resented by the rulers and traders of the time including Bahadur Shah of Gujarat.[102]

 
Death of Bahadur Shah of Gujarat at Diu, in front of the Portuguese in 1537[103]

In the year 1572 the Mughal Empire annexed Gujarat and acquired its first access to the sea after local officials informed Akbar that the Portuguese had begun to exert control in the Indian Ocean. Hence Akbar was conscious of the threat posed by the presence of the Portuguese and remained content with obtaining a cartaz (permit) from them for sailing in the Persian Gulf region.[104] At the initial meeting of the Mughals and the Portuguese during the Siege of Surat in 1572, the Portuguese, recognizing the superior strength of the Mughal army, chose to adopt diplomacy instead of war. The Portuguese Governor, upon the request of Akbar, sent him an ambassador to establish friendly relations.[105] Akbar's efforts to purchase and secure from the Portuguese some of their compact artillery pieces were unsuccessful and thus Akbar could not establish the Mughal navy along the Gujarat coast.[106]

Akbar accepted the offer of diplomacy, but the Portuguese continually asserted their authority and power in the Indian Ocean; Akbar was highly concerned when he had to request a permit from the Portuguese before any ships from the Mughal Empire were to depart for the Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca and Medina.[107] In 1573, he issued a firman directing Mughal administrative officials in Gujarat not to provoke the Portuguese in the territory they held in Daman. The Portuguese, in turn, issued passes for the members of Akbar's family to go on Hajj to Mecca. The Portuguese made mention of the extraordinary status of the vessel and the special status to be accorded to its occupants.[108] Furthermore, he established a trade business for his favourite consort, Mariam-uz-Zamani who ran an extensive trade of indigo, spices, and cotton to the Gulf nations through merchant's vessels. The cost of her largest ship named 'Rahimi', built on the orders of Akbar, is estimated to be around 300000 pounds (Rs 3 crores approximately).[91]

In September 1579 Jesuits from Goa were invited to visit the court of Akbar.[109] The emperor had his scribes translate the New Testament and granted the Jesuits the freedom to preach the Gospel.[110] One of his sons, Sultan Murad Mirza, was entrusted to Antoni de Montserrat for his education.[111][112] While debating at court, the Jesuits did not confine themselves to the exposition of their own beliefs but also reviled Islam and Muhammad. Their comments enraged the Imams and Ulama, who objected to the remarks, but Akbar ordered their comments to be recorded and observed the Jesuits and their behavior. This event was followed by a rebellion of Muslim clerics in 1581 led by Mullah Muhammad Yazdi and Muiz-ul-Mulk, the chief Qadi of Bengal; the rebels wanted to overthrow Akbar and insert his brother Mirza Muhammad Hakim, ruler of Kabul, on the Mughal throne. Akbar successfully defeated the rebels, but he had grown more cautious about his guests and his proclamations, which he later checked with his advisers carefully.[113]

Relations with the Ottoman Empire

 
Portuguese ambush against the galleys of Seydi Ali Reis (Akbar's allies) in the Indian Ocean.

In 1555, while Akbar was still a child, the Ottoman Admiral Seydi Ali Reis visited the Mughal Emperor Humayun. In 1569, during the early years of Akbar's rule, another Ottoman Admiral Kurtoğlu Hızır Reis arrived on the shores of the Mughal Empire. These Ottoman admirals sought to end the growing threats of the Portuguese Empire during their Indian Ocean campaigns. During his reign Akbar himself is known to have sent six documents addressing the Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent.[114][115]

In 1576, Akbar sent a contingent of pilgrims on Hajj, led by Khwaja Sultan Naqshbandi, with 600,000 rupees and 12,000 khalats (honorific robes) for the needy of Mecca and Medina.[116] In October 1576, Akbar sent a delegation including members of his family, including his aunt Gulbadan Begum and his consort Salima, on Hajj by two ships from Surat including an Ottoman vessel, which reached the port of Jeddah in 1577 and then proceeded towards Mecca and Medina.[117] Four more caravans were sent from 1577 to 1580, with exquisite gifts for the authorities of Mecca and Medina.[118]

During this period Akbar financed the pilgrimages of many poor Muslims from the Mughal Empire and also funded the foundations of the Qadiriyya Sufi Order's dervish lodge in the Hijaz.[119] Because of Akbar's attempts to build Mughal presence in Mecca and Medina, the local Sharifs began to have more confidence in the financial support provided by Mughal Empire, lessening their dependency upon Ottoman bounty.[119] Mughal-Ottoman trade also flourished during this period – in fact, merchants loyal to Akbar are known to have reached Aleppo after journeying upriver through the port of Basra.[120]

The imperial Mughal entourage stayed in Mecca and Medina for nearly four years and attended the Hajj four times.[121] The pilgrims overstayed their welcome and strained the limited resources of these cities. The Ottoman authorities forced them to return to India in 1582. Historian Naimur Rahman Farooqi wrote that their unceremonious expulsion may explain why Akbar broke relations with the Hijaz and stopped sending Hajj caravans after 1581.[122]

According to some accounts Akbar expressed a desire to form an alliance with the Portuguese against the Ottomans, but nothing came of the idea.[123][124]

Relations with the Safavid dynasty

 
The Akbari Mosque, overlooking the Ganges

The Safavids and the Mughals had a long history of diplomatic relationship, with the Safavid ruler Tahmasp I having provided refuge to Humayun when he had to flee the Indian subcontinent following his defeat by Sher Shah Suri. However, the Safavids differed from the Sunni Mughals and Ottomans in following the Shiite sect of Islam.[125] One of the longest standing disputes between the Safavids and the Mughals pertained to the control of the city of Qandahar in the Hindukush region, forming the border between the two empires.[126] The Hindukush region was militarily very significant owing to its geography, and this was well-recognised by strategists of the times.[127] Consequently, the city, which was being administered by Bairam Khan at the time of Akbar's accession, was invaded and captured by the Persian ruler Husain Mirza, a cousin of Tahmasp I, in 1558.[126] Subsequent to this, Bairam Khan sent an envoy to the court of Tahmasp I in an effort to maintain peaceful relations with the Safavids. This gesture was reciprocated and a cordial relationship continued to prevail between the two empires during the first two decades of Akbar's reign.[128] However, the death of Tahmasp I in 1576 resulted in civil war and instability in the Safavid empire, and diplomatic relations between the two empires ceased for more than a decade. They were restored only in 1587 following the accession of Shah Abbas to the Safavid throne.[129] Shortly afterwards, Akbar's army completed its annexation of Kabul, and in order to further secure the north-western boundaries of his empire, it proceeded to Qandahar. The city capitulated without resistance on 18 April 1595, and the ruler Muzaffar Hussain moved into Akbar's court.[130] Qandahar continued to remain in Mughal possession, and the Hindukush the empire's western frontier, for several decades until Shah Jahan's expedition into Badakhshan in 1646.[131] Diplomatic relations continued to be maintained between the Safavid and Mughal courts until the end of Akbar's reign.[132]

Relations with other contemporary kingdoms

Vincent Arthur Smith observes that the merchant Mildenhall was employed in 1600 while the establishment of the company was under adjustment to bear a letter from Queen Elizabeth to Akbar requesting liberty to trade in his dominions on terms as good as those enjoyed by the Portuguese.[133]

Akbar was also visited by the French explorer Pierre Malherbe.[134]

Religious policy

 
Portrait of the Mughal Emperor Akbar invocation of a Dua prayer.

Akbar, as well as his mother and other members of his family, are believed to have been Sunni Hanafi Muslims.[135] His early days were spent in the backdrop of an atmosphere in which liberal sentiments were encouraged and religious narrow-mindedness was frowned upon.[136] From the 15th century, a number of rulers in various parts of the country adopted a more liberal policy of religious tolerance, attempting to foster communal harmony between Hindus and Muslims.[137] These sentiments were earlier encouraged by the teachings of popular saints like Guru Nanak, Kabir, and Chaitanya,[136] the verses of the Persian poet Hafez which advocated human sympathy and a liberal outlook,[138] as well as the Timurid ethos of religious tolerance in the empire, persisted in the polity right from the times of Timur to Humayun, and influenced Akbar's policy of tolerance in matters of religion.[139] Further, his childhood tutors, who included two Irani Shias, were largely above sectarian prejudices, and made a significant contribution to Akbar's later inclination towards religious tolerance.[139]

Akbar sponsored religious debates between different Muslim groups (Sunni, Shia, Ismaili, and Sufis), Parsis, Hindus (Shaivite and Vaishnava), Sikhs, Jains, Jews, Jesuits, and Materialists, but was partial to Sufism; he proclaimed that 'the wisdom of Vedanta is the wisdom of Sufism'.[140]

Association with the Muslim aristocracy

 
The Mughal Emperor Akbar welcomes his son Prince Salim at Fatehpur Sikri, (Akbarnameh).

During the early part of his reign, Akbar adopted an attitude of suppression towards Muslim sects that were condemned by the orthodoxy as heretical.[141] In 1567, on the advice of Shaikh Abdu'n Nabi, he ordered the exhumation of Mir Murtaza Sharifi Shirazi – a Shia buried in Delhi – because of the grave's proximity to that of Amir Khusrau, arguing that a "heretic" could not be buried so close to the grave of a Sunni saint, reflecting a restrictive attitude towards the Shia, which continued to persist until the early 1570s.[142] He suppressed Mahdavism in 1573 during his campaign in Gujarat, in the course of which the Mahdavi leader Bandagi Miyan Sheik Mustafa was arrested and brought in chains to the court for debate and released after eighteen months.[142] However, as Akbar increasingly came under the influence of pantheistic Sufi mysticism from the early 1570s, it caused a great shift in his outlook and culminated in his shift from orthodox Islam as traditionally professed, in favour of a new concept of Islam transcending the limits of religion.[142] Consequently, during the latter half of his reign, he adopted a policy of tolerance towards the Shias and declared a prohibition on Shia-Sunni conflict, and the empire remained neutral in matters of internal sectarian conflict.[143] In the year 1578, the Mughal Emperor Akbar famously referred to himself as:

Emperor of Islam, Emir of the Faithful, Shadow of God on earth, Abul Fath Jalal-ud-din Muhammad Akbar Badshah Ghazi (whose empire Allah perpetuate), is a most just, most wise, and a most God-fearing ruler.

In 1580, a rebellion broke out in the eastern part of Akbar's empire, and a number of fatwas, declaring Akbar to be a heretic, were issued by Qazis. Akbar suppressed the rebellion and handed out severe punishments to the Qazis. To further strengthen his position in dealing with the Qazis, Akbar issued a mazhar, or declaration, that was signed by all major ulemas in 1579.[144][145] The mahzar asserted that Akbar was the Khalifa of the age, a higher rank than that of a Mujtahid: in case of a difference of opinion among the Mujtahids, Akbar could select any one opinion and could also issue decrees that did not go against the nass.[146] Given the prevailing Islamic sectarian conflicts in various parts of the country at that time, it is believed that the Mazhar helped stabilize the religious situation in the empire.[144] It made Akbar very powerful because of the complete supremacy accorded to the Khalifa by Islam, and also helped him eliminate the religious and political influence of the Ottoman Khalifa over his subjects, thus ensuring their complete loyalty to him.[147]

Throughout his reign Akbar was a patron of influential Muslim scholars such as Mir Ahmed Nasrallah Thattvi and Tahir Muhammad Thattvi.[citation needed]

Whenever Akbar would attend congregations at a mosque, the following proclamation was made:[148]

The Lord to me the Kingdom gave, He made me wise, strong, and brave, He guides me through right and truth, Filling my mind with the love of truth, No praise of man could sum his state, Allah Hu Akbar, God is Great.

Din-i Ilahi

 
Akbar holds a religious assembly of different faiths in the Ibadat Khana in Fatehpur Sikri.

Akbar was deeply interested in religious and philosophical matters. An orthodox Muslim at the outset, he later came to be influenced by Sufi mysticism that was being preached in the country at that time, and moved away from orthodoxy, appointing to his court several talented people with liberal ideas, including Abul Fazl, Faizi, and Birbal. In 1575, he built a hall called the Ibadat Khana ("House of Worship") at Fatehpur Sikri, to which he invited theologians, mystics, and selected courtiers renowned for their intellectual achievements and discussed matters of spirituality with them.[136] These discussions, initially restricted to Muslims, were acrimonious and resulted in the participants shouting at and abusing each other. Upset by this, Akbar opened the Ibadat Khana to people of all religions as well as atheists, resulting in the scope of the discussions broadening and extending even into areas such as the validity of the Quran and the nature of God. This shocked the orthodox theologians, who sought to discredit Akbar by circulating rumours of his desire to forsake Islam.[144]

Akbar's effort to evolve a meeting point among the representatives of various religions was not very successful, as each of them attempted to assert the superiority of their respective religions by denouncing other religions. Meanwhile, the debates at the Ibadat Khana grew more acrimonious and, contrary to their purpose of leading to a better understanding among religions, instead led to greater bitterness among them, resulting in the discontinuance of the debates by Akbar in 1582.[149] However, his interaction with various religious theologians had convinced him that despite their differences, all religions had several good practices, which he sought to combine into a new religious movement known as Din-i-Ilahi.[150][151]

 
Silver square rupee of Akbar, Lahore mint, struck in Aban month of Ilahi

Some modern scholars claim that Akbar did not initiate a new religion but instead introduced what Oscar R. Gómez calls the transtheistic outlook from tantric Tibetan Buddhism,[152] and that he did not use the word Din-i-Ilahi.[153] According to the contemporary events in the Mughal court Akbar was indeed angered by the acts of embezzlement of wealth by many high level Muslim clerics.[154]

Virtues in Din-i-Ilahi included generosity, forgiveness, abstinence, prudence, wisdom, kindness, and piety.[155] Celibacy was respected, chastity enforced, the slaughter of animals was forbidden, and there were no sacred scriptures or a priestly hierarchy.[156] However, a leading noble of Akbar's court, Aziz Koka, wrote a letter to him from Mecca in 1594 arguing that the discipleship promoted by Akbar amounted to nothing more than a desire on Akbar's part to portray his superiority regarding religious matters.[157] To commemorate Din-e-Ilahi, he changed the name of Prayag to Allahabad (pronounced as ilahabad) in 1583.[158][159]

It has been argued that the theory of Din-i-Ilahi being a new religion was a misconception that arose because of erroneous translations of Abul Fazl's work by later British historians.[160] However, it is also accepted that the policy of sulh-e-kul, which formed the essence of Din-i-Ilahi, was adopted by Akbar not merely for religious purposes but as a part of general imperial administrative policy. This also formed the basis for Akbar's policy of religious tolerance.[161] At the time of Akbar's death in 1605 there were no signs of discontent amongst his Muslim subjects, and the impression of even a theologian like Abdu'l Haq was that close ties remained.[162]

Relation with Hindus

 
The great Mogul discoursing with a Humble Fakir

Akbar decreed that Hindus who had been forced to convert to Islam could reconvert to Hinduism without facing the death penalty.[163] In his days of tolerance he was so well liked by Hindus that there are numerous references to him, and his eulogies are sung in songs and religious hymns as well.[164]

Akbar practised several Hindu customs. He celebrated Diwali, allowed Brahman priests to tie jewelled strings round his wrists by way of blessing, and, following his lead, many of the nobles took to wearing rakhi (protection charms).[165] He renounced beef and forbade the sale of all meats on certain days.[165]

Even his son Jahangir and grandson Shahjahan maintained many of Akbar's concessions, such as the ban on cow slaughter, having only vegetarian dishes on certain days of the week, and drinking only Ganges water.[166] Even as he was in the Punjab, 200 miles away from the Ganges, the water was sealed in large jars and transported to him. He referred to the Ganges water as the "water of immortality."[166]

Relation with Jains

 
Akbar triumphantly enters Surat

Akbar regularly held discussions with Jain scholars and was also greatly impacted by their teachings. His first encounter with Jain rituals was when he saw a procession of a Jain Shravaka named Champa after a six-month-long fast. Impressed by her power and devotion, he invited her guru, or spiritual teacher, Acharya Hiravijaya Suri to Fatehpur Sikri. Acharya accepted the invitation and began his march towards the Mughal capital from Gujarat.[167]

Akbar was impressed by the scholastic qualities and character of the Acharya. He held several inter-faith dialogues among philosophers of different religions. The arguments of Jains against eating meat persuaded him to become a vegetarian.[168] Akbar also issued many imperial orders that were favourable for Jain interests, such as banning animal slaughter.[169] Jain authors also wrote about their experience at the Mughal court in Sanskrit texts that are still largely unknown to Mughal historians.[170]

The Indian Supreme Court has cited examples of co-existence of Jain and Mughal architecture, calling Akbar "the architect of modern India" and that "he had great respect" for Jainism. In 1584, 1592, and 1598, Akbar had declared "Amari Ghosana", which prohibited animal slaughter during Paryushan and Mahavira Janma Kalyanak. He removed the Jazia tax from Jain pilgrim places like Palitana.[171] Santichandra, disciple of Suri, was sent to the Emperor, who in turn left his disciples Bhanuchandra and Siddhichandra in the court. Akbar again invited Hiravijaya Suri's successor Vijayasena Suri in his court who visited him between 1593 and 1595.[citation needed]

Akbar's religious tolerance was not followed by his son Jahangir, who even threatened Akbar's former friend Bhanuchandra.[172]

Historical accounts

Personality

 
Akbar hunting with cheetahs, c. 1602

Akbar's reign was chronicled extensively by his court historian Abul Fazl in the books Akbarnama and Ain-i-akbari. Other contemporary sources of Akbar's reign include the works of Badayuni, Shaikhzada Rashidi, and Shaikh Ahmed Sirhindi.

Akbar was a warrior, emperor, general, animal trainer (reputedly keeping thousands of hunting cheetahs during his reign and training many himself), and theologian.[173] Believed to be dyslexic, he was read to every day and had a remarkable memory.[174]

Akbar was said to have been a wise emperor and a sound judge of character. His son and heir, Jahangir, wrote effusive praise of Akbar's character in his memoirs, and dozens of anecdotes to illustrate his virtues.[175] According to Jahangir, Akbar was "of the hue of wheat; his eyes and eyebrows were black, and his complexion rather dark than fair". Antoni de Montserrat, the Catalan Jesuit who visited his court described him as follows:

"One could easily recognize even at first glance that he is King. He has broad shoulders, somewhat bandy legs well-suited for horsemanship, and a light brown complexion. He carries his head bent towards the right shoulder. His forehead is broad and open, his eyes so bright and flashing that they seem like a sea shimmering in the sunlight. His eyelashes are very long. His eyebrows are not strongly marked. His nose is straight and small though not insignificant. His nostrils are widely open as though in derision. Between the left nostril and the upper lip there is a mole. He shaves his beard but wears a moustache. He limps in his left leg though he has never received an injury there."[176]

Akbar was not tall but powerfully built and very agile. He was also noted for various acts of courage. One such incident occurred on his way back from Malwa to Agra when Akbar was 19 years of age. Akbar rode alone in advance of his escort and was confronted by a tigress who, along with her cubs, came out from the shrubbery across his path. When the tigress charged the emperor, he was alleged to have dispatched the animal with his sword in a solitary blow. His approaching attendants found the emperor standing quietly by the side of the dead animal.[177]

Abul Fazl, and even the hostile critic Badayuni, described him as having a commanding personality. He was notable for his command in battle, and, "like Alexander of Macedon, was always ready to risk his life, regardless of political consequences". He often plunged on his horse into the flooded river during the rainy seasons and safely crossed it. He rarely indulged in cruelty and is said to have been affectionate towards his relatives. He pardoned his brother Hakim, who was a repented rebel. But on rare occasions, he dealt cruelly with offenders, such as his maternal uncle Muazzam and his foster-brother Adham Khan, who was twice defenestrated for drawing Akbar's wrath.[178]

He is said to have been extremely moderate in his diet. Ain-e-Akbari mentions that during his travels and also while at home, Akbar drank water from the Ganges river, which he called 'the water of immortality'. Special people were stationed at Sorun and later Haridwar to dispatch water, in sealed jars, to wherever he was stationed.[179][better source needed] According to Jahangir's memoirs, he was fond of fruits and had little liking for meat, which he stopped eating in his later years.

Akbar also once visited Vrindavan, regarded as the birthplace of Krishna, in the year 1570, and gave permission for four temples to be built by the Gaudiya Vaishnavas, which were Madana-mohana, Govindaji, Gopinatha, and Jugal Kisore.

To defend his stance that speech arose from hearing, he carried out a language deprivation experiment, and had children raised in isolation, not allowed to be spoken to, and pointed out that as they grew older, they remained mute.[180]

Hagiography

During Akbar's reign, the ongoing process of inter-religious discourse and syncretism resulted in a series of religious attributions to him in terms of positions of assimilation, doubt or uncertainty, which he either assisted himself or left unchallenged.[181] Such hagiographical accounts of Akbar traversed a wide range of denominational and sectarian spaces, including several accounts by Parsis, Jains, and Jesuit missionaries, apart from contemporary accounts by Brahminical and Muslim orthodoxy.[182] Existing sects and denominations, as well as various religious figures who represented popular worship felt they had a claim to him. The diversity of these accounts is attributed to the fact that his reign resulted in the formation of a flexible centralised state accompanied by personal authority and cultural heterogeneity.[181]

Akbarnāma, the Book of Akbar

 
Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak presenting Akbarnama to Akbar, Mughal miniature

The Akbarnāma (Persian: اکبر نامہ), which literally means Book of Akbar, is an official biographical account of Akbar, the third Mughal Emperor (r. 1542–1605), written in Persian. It includes vivid and detailed descriptions of his life and times.[183]

The work was commissioned by Akbar, and written by Abul Fazl, one of the Nine Jewels (Hindi: Navaratnas) of Akbar's royal court. It is stated that the book took seven years to be completed and the original manuscripts contained a number of paintings supporting the texts, and all the paintings represented the Mughal school of painting, and work of masters of the imperial workshop, including Basawan, whose use of portraiture in its illustrations was an innovation in Indian art.[183]

Consorts and concubines

Akbar's first wife and one of the chief consorts was his cousin, Princess Ruqaiya Sultan Begum,[27][5] the only daughter of his paternal uncle, Prince Hindal Mirza,[184] and his wife Sultanam Begum. In 1551, Hindal Mirza died fighting valorously in a battle against Kamran Mirza's forces. Upon hearing the news of his brother's death, Humayun was overwhelmed with grief.[23] Hindal's daughter Ruqaiya married Akbar about the time of his first appointment, at age nine, as governor of Ghazni Province.[24] Humayun conferred on the imperial couple, all the wealth, army, and adherents of Hindal and Ghazni which one of Hindal's jagir was given to his nephew, Akbar, who was appointed as its viceroy and was also given the command of his uncle's army.[25] Akbar's marriage with Ruqaiya was solemnized near Jalandhar, Punjab, when both of them were 14 years old.[26] She was a senior-ranking wife of Akbar. She died childless in January 1626 and was buried next to her father's grave.

His second wife was the daughter of Abdullah Khan Mughal.[185] The marriage took place in 1557 during the siege of Mankot. Bairam Khan did not approve of this marriage, for Abdullah's sister was married to Akbar's uncle, Prince Kamran Mirza, and so he regarded Abdullah as a partisan of Kamran. He opposed the match until Nasir-al-Mulk made him understand that opposition in such matters was unacceptable. Nasir-al-Mulk arranged an assemblage of pleasure and banquet of joy, and a royal feast was provided.[186]

His third wife and one of his three chief consorts was his cousin, Salima Sultan Begum,[185] the daughter of Nur-ud-din Muhammad Mirza and his wife Gulrukh Begum also known as Gulrang, the daughter of Emperor Babur. She was at first betrothed to Bairam Khan by Humayun. After Bairam Khan died in 1561, Akbar married her in the same year. She was the foster mother of Akbar's second son, Murad Mirza. She held a great influence on Akbar. She was a poetess and was regarded as a remarkable woman being a poetess, lover of books, and actively played a role in the politics of the Mughal court during Akbar's and Jahangir's reigns. She is regarded as the senior-most wife of Akbar. She died childless on 2 January 1613.[187]

Akbar's fourth and favourite wife [6][188][189][190][191][192] was the Mariam-uz-Zamani, commonly known by the misnomer Jodha Bai, whom he married in the year 1562. She was the daughter of the ruler of Amer, Raja Bharmal, and was by birth of Rajput caste. She was his fourth wife and became one of his chief consorts.[193] She gradually became his most influential wife[192] and subsequently is the only wife buried close to him. She was bestowed with the name 'Wali Nimat Begum' (Blessings/Gift of God) by Akbar shortly after her marriage. She was a beautiful woman said to possess uncommon beauty.[194] This marriage took place when Akbar was on his way back from Ajmer after offering prayers to the tomb of Moinuddin Chishti. Raja Bharmal had conveyed to Akbar that he was being harassed by his brother-in-law Sharif-ud-din Mirza (the Mughal hakim of Mewat). Akbar insisted that the Raja should submit to him personally; it was also suggested that his daughter should be married to him as a sign of complete submission.[195] Her marriage is considered one of the most important events of the Mughal Empire. She became his first wife to honour the royal mansion with an heir. In the year 1564, she gave birth to twins named Mirza Hassan and Mirza Hussain. In the year 1569, she was honoured with the title of 'Mariam-uz-Zamani' after giving birth to their third son named Prince Salim (the future emperor Jahangir), the heir to the throne. She was also the foster mother of Akbar's favourite son, Daniyal Mirza.

 
Portrait of Jalaluddin Muhammad Akbar with Mariam Zamani Begum, drawn as per Akbar's description.

She commanded a high rank in the imperial harem and was a recipient of many privileges.[196] She was an intellectual woman[197] who held a considerable influence in Akbar's court and is known as the prime driving force for Akbar's promotion of secularism and religious neutrality.[198] She was a smart woman who established international trade in the Mughal Empire and is regarded as the most adventurous and fearsome businesswoman of her time. Known as a great female patron of architecture of Mughal empire,[199] she died on 19 May 1623 in Agra and was buried close to her husband in Sikandra, Agra. [200]

In the year 1562, Akbar married the former wife of Abdul Wasi, the son of Shaikh Bada, lord of Agra. Akbar was enamored with her beauty, and ordered Abdul Wasi to divorce her.[201] Another of his wives was Gauhar-un-Nissa Begum, the daughter of Shaikh Muhammad Bakhtiyar and the sister of Shaikh Jamal Bakhtiyar. Their dynasty was called Din Laqab and had been living for a long time in Chandwar and Jalesar near Agra.[202] He married the daughter of Jagmal Rathore, son of Rao Viramde of Merta in 1562.[203]

His next marriage took place in 1564 to the daughter of Miran Mubarak Shah, the ruler of Khandesh. In 1564, he sent presents to the court with a request that his daughter be married to Akbar. Miran's request acceded and an order was issued. Itimad Khan was sent with Miran's ambassadors, and when he came near the fort of Asir, which was Miran's residence. Miran welcomed Itimad with honor and despatched his daughter with Itimad. A large number of nobles accompanied her. The marriage took place in September 1564 when she reached Akbar's court.[204] As a dowry, Mubarak Shah ceded Bijagarh and Handia to his imperial son-in-law.[205]

He married another Rajput princess in 1570, Raj Kunwari, daughter of Kanha, the brother of Rai Kalyan Mal, the ruler of Bikanir.[206] The marriage took place in 1570 when Akbar came to this part of the country. Kalyan made a homage to Akbar and requested that his brother's daughter be married to him. Akbar accepted his proposal, and the marriage was arranged.[207] He also married Bhanmati, daughter of Bhim Raj, another brother of Rai Kalyan Mal.[206] He also married Nathi Bai, daughter of Rawal Har Rai, the ruler of Jaisalmer in 1570.[208][209][210] Rawal had sent a request that his daughter be married to Akbar. The proposal was accepted by Akbar. Raja Bhagwan Das was despatched on this service. The marriage ceremony took place after Akbar's return from Nagor.[211] She was the mother of Princess Mahi Begum, who died on 8 April 1577.[212] In 1570, Narhardas, a grandson of Rao Viramde of Merta, married his sister, Puram Bai, to Akbar in return for Akbar's support of Keshodas's claims on Merta.[213][214]

Another of his wives was Bhakkari Begum, the daughter of Sultan Mahmud of Bhakkar.[215] On 2 July 1572, Akbar's envoy I'timad Khan reached Mahmud's court to escort his daughter to Akbar. Itimad Khan brought with him for Sultan Mahmud an elegant dress of honor, a bejeweled scimitar belt, a horse with a saddle and reins, and four elephants. Mahmud celebrated the occasion by holding extravagant feasts for fifteen days. On the day of the wedding, the festivities reached their zenith, and the ulema, saints, and nobles were adequately honored with rewards. Mahmud offered 30,000 rupees in cash and kind to Itimad Khan and farewelled his daughter with a grand dowry and an impressive entourage.[216] She came to Ajmer and waited upon Akbar. The gifts of Sultan Mahmud, carried by the delegation were presented to the ladies of the imperial harem.[217]

His ninth wife was Qasima Banu Begum,[185] the daughter of Arab Shah. The marriage took place in 1575. A great feast was given, and the high officers and other pillars of the state were present.[218] In 1577, the Rawal Askaran of Dungarpur State petitioned a request that his daughter might be married to Akbar. Akbar had regard for his loyalty and granted his request.[219] Rai Loukaran and Rajah Birbar, servants of the Rajah were sent from Dihalpur to do the honor of conveying his daughter. The two delivered the lady to Akbar's court where the marriage took place on 12 July 1577.[220]

His eleventh wife was Bibi Daulat Shad.[185] She was the mother of Princess Shakr-un-Nissa Begum, and Princess Aram Banu Begum[221] born on 22 December 1584.[222][223] His next wife was the daughter of Shams Chak, a Kashmiri. The marriage took place on 3 November 1592. Shams belonged to the great men of the country and had long cherished this wish.[224] In 1593, he married the daughter of Qazi Isa and the cousin of Najib Khan. Najib told Akbar that his uncle had made his daughter a present for him. Akbar accepted his representation and on 3 July 1593, he visited Najib Khan's house and married Qazi Isa's daughter.[225]

At some point, Akbar took into his harem Rukmavati, a daughter of Rao Maldev of Marwar by his mistress, Tipu Gudi. This was a dolo union as opposed to formal marriage, representing the bride's lower status in her father's household, and serving as an expression of vassalage to an overlord. The dating of this event is not recorded.[226][227]

Death

 
Gate of Akbar's mausoleum at Sikandra, Agra, 1795

On 3 October 1605, Akbar fell ill from an attack of dysentery[228] from which he never recovered. He is believed to have died on 27 October 1605. He was buried at his mausoleum in Sikandra, Agra, which lies a kilometer next to the tomb of Mariam-uz-Zamani, his favourite and chief consort.[229][6][7]

Legacy

Akbar left a rich legacy both for the Mughal Empire as well as the Indian subcontinent in general. He firmly entrenched the authority of the Mughal Empire in India and beyond, after it had been threatened by the Afghans during his father's reign,[230] establishing its military and diplomatic superiority.[231] During his reign, the nature of the state changed to a secular and liberal one, with emphasis on cultural integration. He also introduced several far-sighted social reforms, including prohibiting sati, legalizing widow remarriage, and raising the age of marriage.

Folk tales revolving around him and Birbal, one of his navratnas, are popular in India. He and his Hindu wife, Mariam-uz-Zamani, in the popular culture known as 'Jodha Bai' are widely popular as the latter is believed to have been the prime inspiration and driving force for Akbar's promotion of secularism and universal benevolence (Sulh-i-Qul).

Bhavishya Purana is a minor Purana that depicts the various Hindu holy days and includes a section devoted to the various dynasties that ruled India, dating its oldest portion to 500 CE and newest to the 18th century. It contains a story about Akbar in which he is compared to the other Mughal rulers. The section called "Akbar Bahshaha Varnan", written in Sanskrit describes his birth as a "reincarnation" of a sage who immolated himself on seeing the first Mughal ruler Babur, who is described as the "cruel king of Mlecchas (Muslims)". In this text it is stated that Akbar "was a miraculous child" and that he would not follow the previous "violent ways" of the Mughals.[232][233]

Citing Akbar's melding of the disparate 'fiefdoms' of India into the Mughal Empire as well as the lasting legacy of "pluralism and tolerance" that "underlies the values of the modern republic of India", Time magazine included his name in its list of top 25 world leaders.[15]

On the other hand, his legacy is explicitly negative in Pakistan for the same reasons. Historian Mubarak Ali, while studying the image of Akbar in Pakistani textbooks, observes that Akbar "is conveniently ignored and not mentioned in any school textbook from class one to matriculation", as opposed to the omnipresence of emperor Aurangzeb. He quotes historian Ishtiaq Hussain Qureshi, who said that, due to his religious tolerance, "Akbar had so weakened Islam through his policies that it could not be restored to its dominant position in the affairs." A common thread among Pakistani historians is to blame Akbar's Rajput policy. In a conclusion, after analyzing many textbooks, Mubarak Ali says that "Akbar is criticized for bringing Muslims and Hindus together as one nation and putting the separate identity of the Muslims in danger. This policy of Akbar contradicts the theory of Two-Nation and therefore makes him an unpopular figure in Pakistan."[234]

Issue

Akbar's sons were:

  • Hassan Mirza ( b. 19 October 1564; d. 5 November 1564) (twin with Hussain Mirza)—with Mariam-uz-Zamani Begum[235]
  • Hussain Mirza ( b. 19 October 1564; d. 29 October 1564) (twin with Hassan Mirza)—with Mariam-uz-Zamani Begum[235]
  • Shahzada Salim ( b. 31 August 1569; d. 28 October 1627)—with Mariam-uz-Zamani Begum—He succeeded Akbar to the throne.
  • Murad Mirza ( b. 15 June 1570; d. 12 May 1599)—with Mariam-uz-Zamani Begum or a concubine—Fostered by Salima Sultan Begum for the first few years and then returned to his mother's care before 1575.
  • Daniyal Mirza ( b. 11 September 1572; d. 19 March 1605 )— with a concubine — Fostered by Mariam-uz-Zamani Begum.
  • Shahzada Khusrao ( d. infancy)—with a niece Rai Kalyan Mal of Bikaner[citation needed]

Akbar's daughters were:

  • Fatima Banu Begum ( c. 1562; d. infancy)[236][237]
  • Shahzada Khanam ( b. 21 November 1569)—with Bibi Salima—Fostered by Mariam Makani—Married to Muzaffar Hussain Mirza, Timurid Prince.
  • Mahi Begum ( d. 7 April 1577)—with Nathi Bai
  • Shakr-un-Nissa Begum (d. 1 January 1653)—with Bibi Daulat Shad—Married to Shahrukh Mirza.
  • Firoze Khannum ( b. 1575)—with a concubine —Fostered by Mariam-uz-Zamani Begum[citation needed]
  • Aram Banu Begum ( b. 22 December 1584; d. 17 June 1624)—with Bibi Daulat Shad

He had also adopted several children including :

In popular culture

Films and television
Fiction
  • Akbar is a principal character in Indu Sundaresan's award-winning novel The Twentieth Wife (2002) as well as in its sequel The Feast of Roses (2003).
  • A fictionalised Akbar plays an important supporting role in Kim Stanley Robinson's 2002 novel, The Years of Rice and Salt.
  • Akbar is also a major character in Salman Rushdie's 2008 novel The Enchantress of Florence.
  • Bertrice Small is known for incorporating historical figures as primary characters in her romance novels, and Akbar is no exception. He is a prominent figure in two of her novels, and mentioned several times in a third, which takes place after his death. In This Heart of Mine the heroine becomes Akbar's fortieth "wife" for a time, while Wild Jasmine and Darling Jasmine centre around the life of his half-British daughter, Yasaman Kama Begum (alias Jasmine).
  • In Kunal Basu's The Miniaturist, the story revolves around a young painter during Akbar's time who paints his own version of the Akbarnamu
  • Akbar is mentioned as 'Raja Baadshah' in the Chhattisgarhi folktale of "Mohna de gori kayina"
  • Akbar is the main character in Empire of the Moghul: Ruler of the World by Alex Rutherford, the third book in a sextet based on the six great Mughal Emperors of the Mughal Dynasty.
Video games

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Official sources, such as contemporary biographer Abu'l-Fazl, record Akbar's birth name and date as Jalal ud-din Muhammad Akbar and 15 October 1542 . However, based on recollections of Humayun's personal attendant Jauhar, historian Vincent Arthur Smith holds that Akbar was born on 23 November 1542 (the fourteenth day of Sha'aban, which had a full moon) and was originally named Badr ud-din ("The full moon of religion"). According to Smith, the recorded date of birth was changed at the time of Akbar's circumcision ceremony in March 1546 in order to throw off astrologers and sorcerers, and the name accordingly changed to Jalal ud-din ("Splendour of Religion")[19]

References

  1. ^ Kishori Saran Lal (1999). Theory and Practice of Muslim State in India. Aditya Prakashan. p. 67. ISBN 978-81-86471-72-2. It may be recalled that as an adolescent, Akbar had earned the title of Ghazi by beheading the defenseless infidel Himu. Under Akbar and Jahangir "five or six hundred thousand human beings were killed,"says emperor Jahangir
  2. ^ a b Eraly, Abraham (2004). The Mughal Throne: The Saga of India's Great Emperors. Phoenix. pp. 115, 116. ISBN 978-0-7538-1758-2.
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  6. ^ a b c Hindu Shah, Muhammad Qasim (1595–1612). Gulshan-I-Ibrahimi. Vol. 2. p. 223. Akbur, after this conquest, made pilgrimage to Khwaja Moyin-ood-Deen Chishty at Ajmere and returned to Agra; from whence he proceeded to visit the venerable Sheikh Sulim Chishty, in the village of Seekry. As all the king's children had hitherto died, he solicited the Sheikh's prayers, who consoled him, by assuring him he would soon have a son, who would live to a good old age. Shortly after, his favourite sooltana, being then pregnant, on Wednesday the 17th of Rubbee-ool-Awul, in the year 997 was delivered of a son, who was called Sulim.
  7. ^ a b Mehta, J.L. (1981). Advance Study in the history of Medieval India:Mughal Empire. Vol. II. Sterling Publisher Private Limited. ISBN 8120704320. Bihari Mal gave rich dowry to his daughter and sent his son Bhagwan Das with a contingent of Rajput soldiers to escort his newly married sister to Agra as per Hindu custom. Akbar was deeply impressed by the highly dignified, sincere and princely conduct of his Rajput relations. He took Man Singh, the youthful son of Bhagwant Das into the royal service. Akbar was fascinated by the charm and accomplishments of his Rajput wife; he developed real love for her and raised her to the status of chief queen. She came to exercise profound impact on socio-cultural environment of the entire royal household and changed the lifestyle of Akbar. Salim (later Jahangir), heir to the throne, was born of this wedlock on 30th August, 1569.
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Bibliography

Further reading

  • Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak Akbar-namah Edited with commentary by Muhammad Sadiq Ali (Kanpur-Lucknow: Nawal Kishore) 1881–83 Three Vols. (Persian)
  • Abu al-Fazl ibn Mubarak Akbarnamah Edited by Maulavi Abd Al-Rahim. Bibliotheca Indica Series (Calcutta: Asiatic Society of Bengal) 1877–1887 Three Vols. (Persian)
  • Henry Beveridge (Trans.) The Akbarnama of Ab-ul-Fazl Bibliotheca Indica Series (Calcutta: Asiatic Society of Bengal) 1897 Three Vols.
  • Haji Muhammad 'Arif Qandahari Tarikh-i-Akbari (Better known as Tarikh-i-Qandahari) edited & Annotated by Haji Mu'in'd-Din Nadwi, Dr. Azhar 'Ali Dihlawi & Imtiyaz 'Ali 'Arshi (Rampur Raza Library) 1962 (Persian)
  • Martí Escayol, Maria Antònia. "Antoni de Montserrat in the Mughal Garden of good government European construction of Indian nature", Word, Image, Text: Studies in Literary and Visual Culture, ed. Shormistha Panja et al., Orient Blackswan, New Delhi, 2009. ISBN 978-81-250-3735-4
  • Satyananda Giri, Akbar, Trafford Publishing, 2009, ISBN 978-1-4269-1561-1
  • John Correia-Afonso, Letters from the Mughal court, Bombay, 1980.
  • Augustus, Frederick (1890). The Emperor Akbar, a contribution towards the history of India in the 16th century (Vol. 1). Translated by Annette Susannah Beveridge. Thacker, Spink and Co., Calcutta.
  • Augustus, Frederick (1890). Gustav von Buchwald (ed.). The Emperor Akbar, a contribution towards the history of India in the 16th century (Vol. 2). Translated by Annette Susannah Beveridge. Thacker, Spink and Co., Calcutta.
  • Malleson, Colonel G. B. (1899). Akbar and the Rise of the Mughal Empire. Rulers of India series. Oxford at the Clarendon Press.
  • Garbe, Dr. Richard von (1909). Akbar – Emperor of India. A Picture of Life and Customs from the Sixteenth Century. The Opencourt Publishing Company, Chicago.
    • Akbar, Emperor of India by Richard von Garbe 1857–1927 (ebook)
  • The Adventures of Akbar by Flora Annie Steel, 1847–1929 -(ebook)
  • Havell, E. B. (1918). The History of Aryan Rule in India from the earliest times to the death of Akbar. Frederick A. Stokes Co., New York.
  • Moreland, W. H. (1920). India at the death of Akbar: An economic study. Macmillan & Co., London.
  • Monserrate, Father Antonio (1922). The commentary of Father Monserrate, S.J., on his journey to the court of Akbar. Oxford University Press.
  • Shrivastava, A. L. (1957). A short history of Akbar the Great. Shiva Lal Agarwala.

External links

  • Jalaluddin Muhammad Akbar The Great
  • Akbar, Emperor of India by Richard von Garbe at Project Gutenberg
  • The Drama of Akbar by Muhammad Husain Azad from 1922.
Akbar
Born: 14 October 1542 Died: 27 October 1605
Regnal titles
Preceded by Mughal Emperor
1556–1605
Succeeded by

akbar, this, article, about, mughal, emperor, other, uses, disambiguation, fath, jalal, muhammad, october, 1542, october, 1605, popularly, known, great, persian, اکبر, اعظم, persian, pronunciation, akbarɪ, azam, also, persian, pronunciation, akbar, third, mugh. This article is about the Mughal emperor For other uses see Akbar disambiguation Abu l Fath Jalal ud din Muhammad Akbar 8 15 October 1542 a 27 October 1605 11 12 13 popularly known as Akbar the Great 14 Persian اکبر اعظم Persian pronunciation akbarɪ azam and also as Akbar I Persian pronunciation akbar 15 was the third Mughal emperor who reigned from 1556 to 1605 Akbar succeeded his father Humayun under a regent Bairam Khan who helped the young emperor expand and consolidate Mughal domains in India Jalal ud din MuhammadAkbarPadishahGhazi 1 Akbar by Govardhan c 16303rd Emperor of the Mughal EmpireReign11 February 1556 27 October 1605 2 3 Coronation14 February 1556 2 PredecessorHumayunSuccessorJahangirRegentBairam Khan 1556 1560 4 BornJalal ud din Muhammad Akbar15 October 1542 a Amarkot Rajputana present day Umerkot Sindh Pakistan Died27 October 1605 1605 10 27 aged 63 Fatehpur Sikri Agra Mughal Empire present day Uttar Pradesh India BurialNovember 1605Akbar s Tomb Sikandra AgraConsortsRuqaiya Sultan Begum m 1556 wbr 5 Salima Sultan Begum m 1561 wbr Mariam uz Zamani m 1562 wbr 6 7 WivesRaj Kunwari m 1570 wbr Nathi Bai m 1570 wbr Bhakkari Begum m 1572 wbr Qasima Banu Begum m 1575 wbr Gauhar un Nissa BegumBibi Daulat ShadRukmavatiseveral othersIssueDetailHassan MirzaHussain MirzaJahangirShahzada KhanamMurad MirzaShakr un Nissa BegumDaniyal MirzaAram Banu BegumNamesAbu l Fath Jalal ud din Muhammad Akbar 8 Posthumous nameArsh Ashyani lit One who nests on the divine throne HouseHouse of BaburDynastyTimurid dynastyFatherHumayunMotherHamida Banu BegumReligionSunni Islam 9 10 Din e IllahiA strong personality and a successful general Akbar gradually enlarged the Mughal Empire to include much of the Indian subcontinent His power and influence however extended over the entire subcontinent because of Mughal military political cultural and economic dominance To unify the vast Mughal state Akbar established a centralised system of administration throughout his empire and adopted a policy of conciliating conquered rulers through marriage and diplomacy To preserve peace and order in a religiously and culturally diverse empire he adopted policies that won him the support of his non Muslim subjects Eschewing tribal bonds and Islamic state identity Akbar strove to unite far flung lands of his realm through loyalty expressed through an Indo Persian culture to himself as an emperor Mughal India developed a strong and stable economy leading to commercial expansion and greater patronage of culture Akbar himself was a patron of art and culture He was fond of literature and created a library of over 24 000 volumes written in Sanskrit Urdu Persian Greek Latin Arabic and Kashmiri staffed by many scholars translators artists calligraphers scribes bookbinders and readers He did much of the cataloging himself 16 Akbar also established the library of Fatehpur Sikri exclusively for women 17 and he decreed the establishment of schools for the education of both Muslims and Hindus throughout the realm He also encouraged bookbinding to become a high art 16 Holy men of many faiths poets architects and artisans all over the world adorned his court from for study and discussion Akbar s courts at Delhi Agra and Fatehpur Sikri became centres of the arts letters and learning Timurid and Perso Islamic culture began to merge and blend with indigenous Indian elements and a distinct Indo Persian culture emerged characterized by Mughal style arts painting and architecture Disillusioned with orthodox Islam and perhaps hoping to bring about religious unity within his empire Akbar promulgated Din i Ilahi a syncretic creed derived mainly from Islam and Hinduism as well as elements of Zoroastrianism and Christianity Akbar s reign significantly influenced the course of Indian history During his rule the Mughal Empire tripled in size and wealth He created a powerful military system and instituted effective political and social reforms By abolishing the sectarian tax on non Muslims and appointing them to high civil and military posts he was the first Mughal ruler to win the trust and loyalty of the native subjects He had Sanskrit literature translated participated in native festivals realising that a stable empire depended on the co operation and good will of his subjects Thus the foundations for a multicultural empire under Mughal rule were laid during his reign Akbar was succeeded as emperor by his son Prince Salim later known as Jahangir Contents 1 Early years 2 Military campaigns 2 1 Military innovations 2 2 Struggle for North India 2 3 Expansion into Central India 2 3 1 Attempt to murder Akbar 2 4 Conquest of Rajputana 2 5 Annexation of Western and Eastern India 2 6 Campaigns in Afghanistan and Central Asia 2 7 Conquests in the Indus Valley 2 8 Subjugation of parts of Baluchistan 2 9 Safavids and Kandahar 2 10 Deccan Sultans 3 Administration 3 1 Political government 3 2 Taxation 3 3 Military organization 3 4 Capital 4 Economy 4 1 Trade 4 2 Coins 5 Diplomacy 5 1 Matrimonial alliances 6 Foreign relations 6 1 Relations with the Portuguese 6 2 Relations with the Ottoman Empire 6 3 Relations with the Safavid dynasty 6 4 Relations with other contemporary kingdoms 7 Religious policy 7 1 Association with the Muslim aristocracy 7 2 Din i Ilahi 7 3 Relation with Hindus 7 4 Relation with Jains 8 Historical accounts 8 1 Personality 8 2 Hagiography 8 3 Akbarnama the Book of Akbar 9 Consorts and concubines 10 Death 11 Legacy 12 Issue 13 In popular culture 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 Bibliography 18 Further reading 19 External linksEarly yearsDefeated in battles at Chausa and Kannauj in 1539 to 1541 by the forces of Sher Shah Suri Mughal emperor Humayun fled westward to Sindh 18 There he met and married the 14 year old Hamida Banu Begum daughter of Shaikh Ali Akbar Jami a Persian teacher of Humayun s younger brother Hindal Mirza Jalal ud din Muhammad Akbar was born the next year on 25 October 1542 a the fifth day of Rajab 949 AH 12 at the Rajput Fortress of Amarkot in Rajputana in modern day Sindh where his parents had been given refuge by the local Hindu ruler Rana Prasad 20 Akbar as a boy During the extended period of Humayun s exile Akbar was brought up in Kabul by the his extended family of paternal uncles Kamran Mirza and Askari Mirza and his aunts in particular Kamran Mirza s wife He spent his youth learning to hunt run and fight making him a daring powerful and brave warrior but he never learned to read or write This however did not hinder his search for knowledge It is said that when he retired in the evening he would have someone read to him 21 22 On 20 November 1551 Humayun s youngest brother Hindal Mirza died in a battle against Kamran Mirza s forces Upon hearing the news of his brother s death Humayun was overwhelmed with grief 23 About the time of nine year old Akbar s first appointment as governor of Ghazni he married Hindal s daughter Ruqaiya Sultan Begum 24 Humayun conferred on the imperial couple all the wealth army and adherents of Hindal and Ghazni clarification needed One of Hindal s jagir was given to his nephew Akbar who was appointed as its viceroy and was also given command of his uncle s army 25 Akbar s marriage to Ruqaiya was solemnized in Jalandhar Punjab when they both were 14 years old 26 She was his first wife and chief consort 27 5 Following the chaos over the succession of Sher Shah Suri s son Islam Shah Humayun reconquered Delhi in 1555 28 leading an army partly provided by his Persian ally Tahmasp I A few months later Humayun died Akbar s guardian Bairam Khan concealed the death in order to prepare for Akbar s succession Akbar succeeded Humayun on 14 February 1556 29 while in the midst of a war against Sikandar Shah to reclaim the Mughal throne In Kalanaur Punjab the 14 year old Akbar was enthroned by Bairam Khan on a newly constructed platform which still stands 30 31 He was proclaimed Shahanshah Persian for King of Kings 29 Bairam Khan ruled on his behalf until he came of age 32 Military campaignsMilitary innovations Mughal Empire under Akbar s period yellow Akbar had a record of unbeaten military campaigns that consolidated Mughal rule in the Indian subcontinent 29 33 The basis of this military prowess and authority was Akbar s skilful structural and organisational calibration of the Mughal army 34 The Mansabdari system in particular has been acclaimed for its role in upholding Mughal power in the time of Akbar The system persisted with few changes down to the end of the Mughal Empire but was progressively weakened under his successors 34 Organisational reforms were accompanied by innovations in cannons fortifications and the use of elephants 33 Akbar also took an interest in matchlocks and effectively employed them during various conflicts He sought the help of Ottomans and also increasingly of Europeans especially Portuguese and Italians in procuring firearms and artillery 35 Mughal firearms in the time of Akbar came to be far superior to anything that could be deployed by regional rulers tributaries or by zamindars 36 Such was the impact of these weapons that Akbar s Vizier Abul Fazl once declared that with the exception of Turkey there is perhaps no country in which its guns has more means of securing the Government than India 37 The term gunpowder empire has thus often been used by scholars and historians in analysing the success of the Mughals in India Mughal power has been seen as owing to their mastery of the techniques of warfare especially the use of firearms encouraged by Akbar 38 Struggle for North India Mughal Emperor Akbar training an elephant Akbar s father Humayun had regained control of the Punjab Delhi and Agra with Safavid support but even in these areas Mughal rule was precarious and when the Surs reconquered Agra and Delhi following the death of Humayun the fate of the boy emperor seemed uncertain Akbar s minority and the lack of any possibility of military assistance from the Mughal stronghold of Kabul which was in the throes of an invasion by the ruler of Badakhshan Prince Mirza Suleiman aggravated the situation 39 When his regent Bairam Khan called a council of war to marshall the Mughal forces none of Akbar s chieftains approved Bairam Khan was ultimately able to prevail over the nobles however and it was decided that the Mughals would march against the strongest of the Sur rulers Sikandar Shah Suri in the Punjab Delhi was left under the regency of Tardi Baig Khan 39 Sikandar Shah Suri however presented no major concern for Akbar 40 and avoided giving battle as the Mughal army approached citation needed The gravest threat came from Hemu a minister and general of one of the Sur rulers who had proclaimed himself Hindu emperor and expelled the Mughals from the Indo Gangetic plains 39 Urged by Bairam Khan who re marshalled the Mughal army before Hemu could consolidate his position Akbar marched on Delhi to reclaim it 41 His army led by Bairam Khan defeated Hemu and the Sur army on 5 November 1556 at the Second Battle of Panipat 50 miles 80 km north of Delhi 42 Soon after the battle Mughal forces occupied Delhi and then Agra Akbar made a triumphant entry into Delhi where he stayed for a month Then he and Bairam Khan returned to Punjab to deal with Sikandar Shah who had become active again 43 In the next six months the Mughals won another major battle against Sikander Shah Suri who fled east to Bengal Akbar and his forces occupied Lahore and then seized Multan in the Punjab In 1558 Akbar took possession of Ajmer the aperture to Rajputana after the defeat and flight of its Muslim ruler 43 The Mughals had also besieged and defeated the Sur forces in control of Gwalior Fort the greatest stronghold north of the Narmada river 43 Royal begums along with the families of Mughal amirs were finally brought over from Kabul to India at the time according to Akbar s vizier Abul Fazl so that men might become settled and be restrained in some measure from departing to a country to which they were accustomed 39 Akbar had firmly declared his intentions that the Mughals were in India to stay This was a far cry from the political settlements of his grandfather Babur and father Humayun both of whom had done little to indicate that they were anything but transient rulers 39 43 However Akbar methodically re introduced a historical legacy of the Timurid Renaissance that his ancestors had left 44 Expansion into Central India Akbar hawking with Mughal chieftains and nobleman accompanied by his guardian Bairam Khan By 1559 the Mughals had launched a drive to the south into Rajputana and Malwa 45 However Akbar s disputes with his regent Bairam Khan temporarily put an end to the expansion 45 The young emperor at the age of eighteen wanted to take a more active part in managing affairs Urged on by his foster mother Maham Anga and his relatives Akbar decided to dispense with the services of Bairam Khan After yet another dispute at court Akbar finally dismissed Bairam Khan in the spring of 1560 and ordered him to leave on Hajj to Mecca 46 Bairam Khan left for Mecca but on his way was goaded by his opponents to rebel 42 He was defeated by the Mughal army in the Punjab and forced to submit Akbar forgave him however and gave him the option of either continuing in his court or resuming his pilgrimage Bairam chose the latter 47 Bairam Khan was later assassinated on his way to Mecca allegedly by an Afghan with a personal vendetta 45 In 1560 Akbar resumed military operations 45 A Mughal army under the command of his foster brother Adham Khan and a Mughal commander Pir Muhammad Khan began the Mughal conquest of Malwa The Afghan ruler Baz Bahadur was defeated at the Battle of Sarangpur and fled to Khandesh for refuge leaving behind his harem treasure and war elephants 45 Despite initial success the campaign proved a disaster from Akbar s point of view His foster brother retained all the spoils and followed through with the Central Asian practice of slaughtering the surrendered garrison their wives and children and many Muslim theologians and Sayyids who were the descendants of Muhammad 45 Akbar personally rode to Malwa to confront Adham Khan and relieve him of command Pir Muhammad Khan was then sent in pursuit of Baz Bahadur but was beaten back by the alliance of the rulers of Khandesh and Berar 45 Baz Bahadur temporarily regained control of Malwa until in the next year Akbar sent another Mughal army to invade and annex the kingdom 45 Malwa became a province of the nascent imperial administration of Akbar s regime Baz Bahadur survived as a refugee at various courts until eight years later in 1570 he took service under Akbar 45 Young Abdul Rahim Khan I Khana son of Bairam Khan being received by Akbar Despite the ultimate success in Malwa the conflict exposed cracks in Akbar s personal relationships with his relatives and Mughal nobles When Adham Khan confronted Akbar following another dispute in 1562 he was struck down by the emperor and thrown from a terrace into the palace courtyard at Agra Still alive Adham Khan was dragged up and thrown to the courtyard once again by Akbar to ensure his death Akbar now sought to eliminate the threat of over mighty subjects 45 He created specialised ministerial posts relating to imperial governance no member of the Mughal nobility was to have unquestioned pre eminence 45 When a powerful clan of Uzbek chiefs broke out in rebellion in 1564 Akbar decisively defeated and routed them in Malwa and then Bihar 48 He pardoned the rebellious leaders hoping to conciliate them but they rebelled again so Akbar had to quell their uprising a second time Following a third revolt with the proclamation of Mirza Muhammad Hakim Akbar s brother and the Mughal ruler of Kabul as emperor his patience was finally exhausted Several Uzbek chieftains were subsequently slain and the rebel leaders trampled to death under elephants 48 Simultaneously the Mirzas a group of Akbar s distant cousins who held important fiefs near Agra had also risen up in rebellion They too were slain and driven out of the empire 48 In 1566 Akbar moved to meet the forces of his brother Muhammad Hakim who had marched into the Punjab with dreams of seizing the imperial throne Following a brief confrontation however Muhammad Hakim accepted Akbar s supremacy and retreated back to Kabul 48 In 1564 Mughal forces began the conquest of Garha a thinly populated hilly area in central India that was of interest to the Mughals because of its herd of wild elephants 49 The territory was ruled over by Raja Vir Narayan a minor and his mother Durgavati a Rajput warrior queen of the Gonds 48 Akbar did not personally lead the campaign because he was preoccupied with the Uzbek rebellion leaving the expedition in the hands of Asaf Khan the Mughal governor of Kara 48 50 Durgavati committed suicide after her defeat at the Battle of Damoh while Raja Vir Narayan was slain at the Fall of Chauragarh the mountain fortress of the Gonds 50 The Mughals seized immense wealth an uncalculated amount of gold and silver jewels and 1000 elephants Kamala Devi a younger sister of Durgavati was sent to the Mughal harem 50 The brother of Durgavati s deceased husband was installed as the Mughal administrator of the region 50 Like in Malwa however Akbar entered into a dispute with his vassals over the conquest of Gondwana 50 Asaf Khan was accused of keeping most of the treasures and sending back only 200 elephants to Akbar When summoned to give accounts he fled Gondwana He went first to the Uzbeks then returned to Gondwana where he was pursued by Mughal forces Finally he submitted and Akbar restored him to his previous position 50 Attempt to murder Akbar Around 1564 is also when there was an assassination attempt on Akbar documented in a painting The attempt was made when Akbar was returning from a visit to the dargah of Hazrat Nizamuddin near Delhi by an assassin shooting an arrow The arrow pierced his right shoulder The assassin was apprehended and ordered beheaded by the Emperor The culprit was a slave of Mirza Sharfuddin a noble in Akbar s court whose rebellion had recently been curbed 51 Conquest of Rajputana Mughal Emperor Akbar shoots the Rajput warrior Jaimal during the Siege of Chittorgarh in 1568 Bullocks dragging siege guns uphill during Akbar s attack on Ranthambhor Fort in 1568 Having established Mughal rule over northern India Akbar turned his attention to the conquest of Rajputana No imperial power in India based on the Indo Gangetic plains could be secure if a rival centre of power existed on its flank in Rajputana 50 The Mughals had already established domination over parts of northern Rajputana in Mewat Ajmer and Nagor 43 48 Now Akbar was determined to drive into the heartlands of the Rajput kings that had rarely previously submitted to the Muslim rulers of the Delhi Sultanate Beginning in 1561 the Mughals actively engaged the Rajputs in warfare and diplomacy 49 Most Rajput states accepted Akbar s suzerainty the rulers of Mewar and Marwar Udai Singh and Chandrasen Rathore however remained outside the imperial fold 48 Rana Udai Singh was descended from the Sisodia ruler Rana Sanga who had fought Babur at the Battle of Khanwa in 1527 48 As the head of the Sisodia clan he possessed the highest ritual status of all the Rajput kings and chieftains in India citation needed Unless Udai Singh was reduced to submission the imperial authority of the Mughals would be lessened in Rajput eyes 48 Furthermore Akbar at this early period was still enthusiastically devoted to the cause of Islam and sought to impress the superiority of his faith over the most prestigious warriors in Hinduism 48 In 1567 Akbar moved to reduce the Chittor Fort in Mewar The fortress capital of Mewar was of great strategic importance as it lay on the shortest route from Agra to Gujarat and was also considered a key to holding the interior parts of Rajputana Udai Singh retired to the hills of Mewar leaving two Rajput warriors Jaimal and Patta in charge of the defence of his capital 52 Chittorgarh fell in February 1568 after a siege of four months The fall of Chittor was proclaimed by Akbar as the victory of Islam over infidels non Muslims 53 In his Fathnama dispatches announcing victory issued on 9 March 1575 conveying his news of victory it is written With the help of our blood thirsty sword we have erased the signs of infidelity in their Hindus minds and destroyed the temples in those places and all over Hindustan 54 Akbar had the surviving defenders and 30 000 non combatants massacred and their heads displayed upon towers erected throughout the region in order to demonstrate his authority 55 56 The booty that fell into the hands of the Mughals was distributed throughout the empire 57 He remained in Chittorgarh for three days then returned to Agra where to commemorate the victory he set up at the gates of his fort statues of Jaimal and Patta mounted on elephants 58 Udai Singh s power and influence was broken He never again ventured out of his mountain refuge in Mewar and Akbar was content to let him be 59 The fall of Chittorgarh was followed up by a Mughal attack on the Ranthambore Fort in 1568 Ranthambore was held by the Hada Rajputs and reputed to be the most powerful fortress in India 59 However it fell only after a couple of months 59 Akbar was now the master of almost the whole of Rajputana Most of the Rajput kings had submitted to the Mughals 59 Only the clans of Mewar continued to resist 59 Udai Singh s son and successor Pratap Singh was later defeated by the Mughals at the Battle of Haldighati in 1576 59 Akbar would celebrate his conquest of Rajputana by laying the foundation of a new capital 23 miles 37 km W S W of Agra in 1569 It was called Fatehpur Sikri the city of victory 60 Rana Pratap Singh however continuously attacked Mughals and was able to retain most of the kingdom of his ancestors in the life of Akbar 61 Annexation of Western and Eastern India The court of young Akbar age 13 showing his first imperial act the arrest of an unruly courtier who was once a favourite of Akbar s father Illustration from a manuscript of the Akbarnama Akbar s next military objectives were the conquest of Gujarat and Bengal which connected India with the trading centres of Asia Africa and Europe through the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal respectively 59 Furthermore Gujarat had been a haven for rebellious Mughal nobles while in Bengal the Afghans still held considerable influence under their ruler Sulaiman Khan Karrani Akbar first moved against Gujarat which lay in the crook of the Mughal provinces of Rajputana and Malwa 59 Gujarat with its coastal regions possessed areas of rich agricultural production in its central plain an impressive output of textiles and other industrial goods and the busiest seaports of India 59 62 Akbar intended to link the maritime state with the massive resources of the Indo Gangetic plains 63 However the ostensible casus belli was that the rebel Mirzas who had previously been driven out of India were now operating out of a base in southern Gujarat Moreover Akbar had received invitations from cliques in Gujarat to oust the reigning king which served as justification for his military expedition 59 In 1572 he moved to occupy Ahmedabad the capital and other northern cities and was proclaimed the lawful sovereign of Gujarat By 1573 he had driven out the Mirzas who after offering token resistance fled for refuge in the Deccan Surat the commercial capital of the region and other coastal cities soon capitulated to the Mughals 59 The king Muzaffar Shah III was caught hiding in a corn field he was pensioned off by Akbar with a small allowance 59 Having established his authority over Gujarat Akbar returned to Fatehpur Sikiri where he built the Buland Darwaza to commemorate his victories but a rebellion by Afghan nobles supported by the Rajput ruler of Idar and the renewed intrigues of the Mirzas forced his return to Gujarat 63 Akbar crossed the Rajputana and reached Ahmedabad in eleven days a journey that normally took six weeks The outnumbered Mughal army then won a decisive victory on September 2 1573 Akbar slew the rebel leaders and erected a tower out of their severed heads 59 The conquest and subjugation of Gujarat proved highly profitable for the Mughals the territory yielded a revenue of more than five million rupees annually to Akbar s treasury after expenses 59 Akbar had now defeated most of the Afghan remnants in India The only centre of Afghan power was now in Bengal where Sulaiman Khan Karrani an Afghan chieftain whose family had served under Sher Shah Suri was reigning in power While Sulaiman Khan scrupulously avoided giving offence to Akbar his son Daud Khan who had succeeded him in 1572 decided otherwise 64 Whereas Sulaiman Khan had the khutba read in Akbar s name and acknowledged Mughal supremacy Daud Khan assumed the insignia of royalty and ordered the khutba to be proclaimed in his own name in defiance of Akbar Munim Khan the Mughal governor of Bihar was ordered to chastise Daud Khan but later Akbar himself set out to Bengal 64 This was an opportunity to bring the trade in the east under Mughal control 65 In 1574 the Mughals seized Patna from Daud Khan who fled to Bengal 64 Akbar returned to Fatehpur Sikri and left his generals to finish the campaign The Mughal army was subsequently victorious at the Battle of Tukaroi in 1575 which led to the annexation of Bengal and parts of Bihar that had been under the dominion of Daud Khan Only Orissa was left in the hands of the Karrani dynasty as a fief of the Mughal Empire A year later however Daud Khan rebelled and attempted to regain Bengal He was defeated by the Mughal general Khan Jahan Quli and had to flee into exile Daud Khan was later captured and executed by Mughal forces His severed head was sent to Akbar while his limbs were gibbeted at Tandah the Mughal capital in Bengal 64 Campaigns in Afghanistan and Central Asia See also Akbar s conquest of Gujarat Following his conquests of Gujarat and Bengal Akbar was preoccupied with domestic concerns He did not leave Fatehpur Sikri on a military campaign until 1581 when Punjab was again invaded by his brother Mirza Muhammad Hakim Akbar expelled his brother to Kabul and this time pressed on determined to end the threat from Muhammad Hakim once and for all In contrast to the problem that his predecessors once had in getting Mughal nobles to stay on in India the problem now was to get them to leave India They were according to Abul Fazl afraid of the cold of Afghanistan The Hindu officers in turn were additionally inhibited by the traditional taboo against crossing the Indus Akbar however spurred them on The soldiers were provided with pay eight months in advance In August 1581 Akbar seized Kabul and took up residence at Babur s old citadel He stayed there for three weeks in the absence of his brother who had fled into the mountains Akbar left Kabul in the hands of his sister Bakht un Nissa Begum and returned to India He pardoned his brother who took up de facto charge of the Mughal administration in Kabul Bakht un Nissa continued to be the official governor A few years later in 1585 Muhammad Hakim died and Kabul passed into the hands of Akbar once again It was officially incorporated as a province of the Mughal Empire 64 The Kabul expedition was the beginning of a long period of activity over the northern frontiers of the empire 66 For thirteen years beginning in 1585 Akbar remained in the north shifting his capital to Lahore in the Punjab while dealing with challenges from beyond the Khyber Pass 66 The gravest threat came from the Uzbeks the tribe that had driven his grandfather Babur out of Central Asia 64 They had been organised under Abdullah Khan Shaybanid a capable military chieftain who had seized Badakhshan and Balkh from Akbar s distant Timurid relatives and whose Uzbek troops now posed a serious challenge to the northwestern frontiers of the Mughal Empire 64 67 The Afghan tribes on the border were also restless partly on account of the hostility of the Yusufzai of Bajaur and Swat and partly owing to the activity of a new religious leader Bayazid the founder of the Roshaniyya sect 66 The Uzbeks were also known to be subsidising Afghans 68 In 1586 Akbar negotiated a pact with Abdullah Khan in which the Mughals agreed to remain neutral during the Uzbek invasion of Safavid held Khorasan 68 In return Abdullah Khan agreed to refrain from supporting subsidising or offering refuge to the Afghan tribes hostile to the Mughals Thus freed Akbar began a series of campaigns to pacify the Yusufzais and other rebels 68 Akbar ordered Zain Khan to lead an expedition against the Afghan tribes Raja Birbal a renowned minister in Akbar s court was also given military command The expedition turned out to be a disaster and on its retreat from the mountains Birbal and his entourage were ambushed and killed by the Afghans at the Malandarai Pass in February 1586 68 Akbar immediately fielded new armies to reinvade the Yusufzai lands under the command of Raja Todar Mal Over the next six years the Mughals contained the Yusufzai in the mountain valleys and forced the submission of many chiefs in Swat and Bajaur 68 Dozens of forts were built and occupied to secure the region Akbar s response demonstrated his ability to clamp firm military control over the Afghan tribes 68 Despite his pact with the Uzbeks Akbar nurtured a secret hope of reconquering Central Asia from today s Afghanistan 69 However Badakshan and Balkh remained firmly part of the Uzbek dominions There was only a transient occupation of the two provinces by the Mughals under his grandson Shah Jahan in the mid 17th century 67 Nevertheless Akbar s stay in the northern frontiers was highly fruitful The last of the rebellious Afghan tribes were subdued by 1600 67 The Roshaniyya movement was firmly suppressed The Afridi and Orakzai tribes which had risen up under the Roshaniyyas had been subjugated 67 The leaders of the movement were captured and driven into exile 67 Jalaluddin the son of the Roshaniyya movement s founder Bayazid was killed in 1601 in a fight with Mughal troops near Ghazni 67 Mughal rule over today s Afghanistan was finally secure particularly after the passing of the Uzbek threat with the death of Abdullah Khan in 1598 68 Conquests in the Indus Valley While in Lahore dealing with the Uzbeks Akbar had sought to subjugate the Indus valley to secure the frontier provinces 68 He sent an army to conquer Kashmir in the upper Indus basin when in 1585 Ali Shah the reigning king of the Shia Chak dynasty refused to send his son as a hostage to the Mughal court Ali Shah surrendered immediately to the Mughals but another of his sons Yaqub crowned himself as king and led a stubborn resistance against the Mughal armies Finally in June 1589 Akbar himself travelled from Lahore to Srinagar to receive the surrender of Yaqub and his rebel forces 68 Baltistan and Ladakh which were Tibetan provinces adjacent to Kashmir pledged their allegiance to Akbar 70 The Mughals also moved to conquer Sindh in the lower Indus valley Since 1574 the northern fortress of Bhakkar had remained under imperial control Now in 1586 the Mughal governor of Multan tried and failed to secure the capitulation of Mirza Jani Beg the independent ruler of Thatta in southern Sindh 68 Akbar responded by sending a Mughal army to besiege Sehwan the river capital of the region Jani Beg mustered a large army to meet the Mughals 68 The outnumbered Mughal forces defeated the Sindhi forces at the Battle of Sehwan After suffering further defeats Jani Beg surrendered to the Mughals in 1591 and in 1593 paid homage to Akbar in Lahore 70 Subjugation of parts of Baluchistan As early as 1586 about half a dozen Baluchi chiefs under nominal Pani Afghan rule had been persuaded to subordinate themselves to Akbar In preparations to take Kandahar from the Safavids Akbar ordered the Mughal forces to conquer the rest of the Afghan held parts of Baluchistan in 1595 70 71 The Mughal general Mir Masum led an attack on the stronghold of Sibi northeast of Quetta and defeated a coalition of local chieftains in battle 71 They were made to acknowledge Mughal supremacy and attend Akbar s court As a result the modern day Pakistani and Afghan parts of Baluchistan including the Makran coast became a part of the Mughal Empire 71 Safavids and Kandahar Kandahar was the name given by Arab historians to the ancient Indian kingdom of Gandhara 72 It was intimately connected with the Mughals since the time of their ancestor Timur the warlord who had conquered much of Western Central and parts of South Asia in the 14th century However the Safavids considered it as an appanage of the Persian ruled territory of Khorasan and declared its association with the Mughal emperors to be a usurpation In 1558 while Akbar was consolidating his rule over northern India the Safavid emperor Tahmasp I had seized Kandahar and expelled its Mughal governor For the next thirty years it remained under Persian rule 70 The recovery of Kandahar had not been a priority for Akbar but after his prolonged military activity in the northern frontiers a move to restore Mughal rule over the region became desirable 70 The conquests of Sindh Kashmir and parts of Baluchistan and the ongoing consolidation of Mughal power over today s Afghanistan had added to Akbar s confidence 70 Furthermore Kandahar was at this time under threat from the Uzbeks but the Emperor of Persia himself beleaguered by the Ottoman Turks was unable to send any reinforcements Circumstances favoured the Mughals 70 In 1593 Akbar received the exiled Safavid prince Rostam Mirza after he had quarreled with his family 73 Rostam Mirza pledged allegiance to the Mughals he was granted a rank mansab of commander of 5000 men and received Multan as a jagir 73 Beleaguered by constant Uzbek raids and seeing the reception of Rostom Mirza at the Mughal court the Safavid prince and governor of Kandahar Mozaffar Hosayn also agreed to defect to the Mughals Mozaffar Hosayn who was in any case in an adversary relationship with his overlord Shah Abbas was granted a rank of 5000 men and his daughter Kandahari Begum was married to Akbar s grandson the Mughal prince Khurram 70 73 Kandahar was finally secured in 1595 with the arrival of a garrison headed by the Mughal general Shah Bayg Khan 73 The reconquest of Kandahar did not overtly disturb the Mughal Persian relationship 70 Akbar and the Persian Shah continued to exchange ambassadors and presents However the power equation between the two had now changed in favour of the Mughals 70 Deccan Sultans Falcon Mohur of Akbar minted in Asir This coin was issued in the name of Akbar to commemorate the capture of the strategic Asirgarh Fort of the Khandesh Sultanate on 17 January 1601 CE Legend Allah is great Khordad Ilahi 45 struck at Asir 74 75 Main article Deccan sultanates In 1593 Akbar began military operations against the Deccan Sultans who had not submitted to his authority He besieged Ahmednagar Fort in 1595 forcing Chand Bibi to cede Berar 76 A subsequent revolt forced Akbar to take the fort in August 1600 Akbar occupied Burhanpur and besieged Asirgarh Fort in 1599 and took it on 17 January 1601 when Miran Bahadur Shah refused to submit Khandesh Akbar then established the Subahs of Ahmadnagar Berar and Khandesh under Prince Daniyal By the time of his death in 1605 Akbar controlled a broad sweep of territory from the Bay of Bengal to Qandahar and Badakshan He touched the western sea in Sind and at Surat and was well astride central India 77 AdministrationPolitical government Akbar s system of central government was based on the system that had evolved since the Delhi Sultanate but the functions of various departments were carefully reorganised by laying down detailed regulations for their functioning citation needed The revenue department was headed by a wazir responsible for all finances and management of jagir and inam lands The head of the military was called the mir bakshi appointed from among the leading nobles of the court The mir bakshi was in charge of intelligence gathering and also made recommendations to the emperor for military appointments and promotions The mir saman was in charge of the imperial household including the harems and supervised the functioning of the court and royal bodyguard The judiciary was a separate organisation headed by a chief qazi who was also responsible for religious beliefs and practicesTaxation Akbar set about reforming the administration of his empire s land revenue by adopting a system that had been used by Sher Shah Suri A cultivated area where crops grew well was measured and taxed through fixed rates based on the area s crop and productivity However this placed hardship on the peasantry because tax rates were fixed on the basis of prices prevailing in the imperial court which were often higher than those in the countryside 78 Akbar changed to a decentralised system of annual assessment but this resulted in corruption among local officials and was abandoned in 1580 to be replaced by a system called the dahsala 79 Under the new system revenue was calculated as one third of the average produce of the previous ten years to be paid to the state in cash This system was later refined taking into account local prices and grouping areas with similar productivity into assessment circles Remission was given to peasants when the harvest failed during times of flood or drought 79 Akbar s dahsala system also known as zabti is credited to Raja Todar Mal who also served as a revenue officer under Sher Shah Suri 80 and the structure of the revenue administration was set out by the latter in a detailed memorandum submitted to the emperor in 1582 83 81 Other local methods of assessment continued in some areas Land which was fallow or uncultivated was charged at concessional rates 82 Akbar also actively encouraged the improvement and extension of agriculture The village continued to remain the primary unit of revenue assessment 83 Zamindars of every area were required to provide loans and agricultural implements in times of need to encourage farmers to plough as much land as possible and to sow seeds of superior quality In turn the zamindars were given a hereditary right to collect a share of the produce Peasants had a hereditary right to cultivate the land as long as they paid the land revenue 82 While the revenue assessment system showed concern for the small peasantry it also maintained a level of distrust towards the revenue officials Revenue officials were guaranteed only three quarters of their salary with the remaining quarter dependent on their full realisation of the revenue assessed 84 Military organization Main article Mansabdari Akbar organised his army as well as the nobility by means of a system called the mansabdari Under this system each officer in the army was assigned a rank a mansabdar and assigned a number of cavalry that he had to supply to the imperial army 80 The mansabdars were divided into 33 classes The top three commanding ranks ranging from 7 000 to 10 000 troops were normally reserved for princes Other ranks between 10 and 5 000 were assigned to other members of the nobility The empire s permanent standing army was quite small and the imperial forces mostly consisted of contingents maintained by the mansabdars 85 Persons were normally appointed to a low mansab and then promoted based on their merit as well as the favour of the emperor 86 Each mansabdar was required to maintain a certain number of cavalrymen and twice that number of horses The number of horses was greater because they had to be rested and rapidly replaced in times of war Akbar employed strict measures to ensure that the quality of the armed forces was maintained at a high level horses were regularly inspected and only Arabian horses were normally employed 87 The mansabdars were remunerated well for their services and constituted the highest paid military service in the world at the time 86 Capital Diwan i Khas Hall of Private Audience in Fatehpur Sikri Akbar was a follower of Salim Chishti a holy man who lived in the region of Sikri near Agra Believing the area to be a lucky one for himself he had a mosque constructed there for the use of the priest Subsequently he celebrated the victories over Chittor and Ranthambore by laying the foundations of a new walled capital 23 miles 37 km west of Agra in 1569 which was named Fatehpur town of victory after the conquest of Gujarat in 1573 and subsequently came to be known as Fatehpur Sikri in order to distinguish it from other similarly named towns 52 Palace for Akbar s favorite queen a huge artificial lake and sumptuous water filled courtyards were built there However the city was soon abandoned and the capital was moved to Lahore in 1585 The reason may have been that the water supply in Fatehpur Sikri was insufficient or of poor quality Or as some historians believe Akbar had to attend to the northwest areas of his empire and therefore moved his capital northwest Other sources indicate Akbar simply lost interest in the city 88 or realised it was not militarily defensible In 1599 Akbar shifted his capital back to Agra from where he reigned until his death EconomyTrade The reign of Akbar was characterized by commercial expansion 89 The Mughal government encouraged traders provided protection and security for transactions and levied a very low custom duty to stimulate foreign trade Furthermore it strived to foster a climate conducive to commerce by requiring local administrators to provide restitution to traders for goods stolen while in their territory To minimize such incidents bands of highway police called rahdars were enlisted to patrol roads and ensure the safety of traders Other active measures taken included the construction and protection of routes of commerce and communications 90 Indeed Akbar would make concerted efforts to improve roads to facilitate the use of wheeled vehicles through the Khyber Pass the most popular route frequented by traders and travelers journeying from Kabul into Mughal India 90 He also strategically occupied the northwestern cities of Multan and Lahore in the Punjab and constructed great forts such as the one at Attock near the crossing of the Grand Trunk Road and the Indus river as well as a network of smaller forts called thanas throughout the frontier to secure the overland trade with Persia and Central Asia 90 Furthermore he established a trade business for his chief consort Mariam uz Zamani who ran an extensive trade of indigo spices and cotton to Gulf nations through merchant s vessels 91 Coins Silver coin of Akbar with inscriptions of the Islamic declaration of faith the declaration reads There is no god except Allah and Muhammad is the messenger of Allah Akbar was a great innovator as far as coinage is concerned The coins of Akbar set a new chapter in India s numismatic history 92 The coins of Akbar s grandfather Babur and father Humayun are basic and devoid of any innovation as the former was busy establishing the foundations of the Mughal rule in India while the latter was ousted by the Afghan Sher Shah Suri and returned to the throne only to die a year later While the reign of both Babur and Humayun represented turmoil Akbar s relative long reign of 50 years allowed him to experiment with coinage Akbar introduced coins with decorative floral motifs dotted borders quatrefoil and other types His coins were both round and square in shape with a unique mehrab lozenge shape coin highlighting numismatic calligraphy at its best 93 Akbar s portrait type gold coin Mohur is generally attributed to his son Prince Salim later Emperor Jahangir who had rebelled and then sought reconciliation thereafter by minting and presenting his father with gold Mohurs bearing Akbar s portrait The tolerant view of Akbar is represented by the Ram Sita silver coin type while during the latter part of Akbar s reign we see coins portraying the concept of Akbar s newly promoted religion Din e ilahi with the Ilahi type and Jalla Jalal Hu type coins The coins citation needed left represent examples of these innovative concepts introduced by Akbar that set the precedent for Mughal coins which was refined and perfected by his son Jahangir and later by his grandson Shah Jahan DiplomacyMatrimonial alliances The practice of arranging marriages between Hindu princesses and Muslim kings was known much before Akbar s time but in most cases these marriages did not lead to any stable relations between the families involved and the women were lost to their families and did not return after marriage 94 95 96 However Akbar s policy of matrimonial alliances marked a departure in India from previous practice in that the marriage itself marked the beginning of a new order of relations wherein the Hindu Rajputs who married their daughters or sisters to him would be treated on par with his Muslim fathers in law and brothers in law in all respects except being able to dine and pray with him or take Muslim wives These Rajputs were made members of his court and their daughters or sisters marriage to a Muslim ceased to be a sign of degradation except for certain proud elements who still considered it a sign of humiliation 96 Portrait of Empress Mariam uz Zamani commonly known as Jodha Bai giving birth to Prince Salim the future emperor Jahangir The Kacchwaha Rajput Raja Bharmal of the small kingdom of Amer who had come to Akbar s court shortly after the latter s accession allied by giving his daughter Harka Bai mother of Akbar s successor in marriage to the emperor Bharmal was made a noble of high rank in the imperial court and subsequently his son Bhagwant Das and grandson Man Singh also rose to high ranks in the nobility 95 Other Rajput kingdoms also established matrimonial alliances with Akbar but matrimony was not insisted on as a precondition for forming alliances Two major Rajput clans remained aloof the Sisodiyas of Mewar and Hadas of Ranthambore In another turning point of Akbar s reign Raja Man Singh I of Amber went with Akbar to meet the Hada leader Surjan Hada to effect an alliance Surjan accepted an alliance on the condition that Akbar did not marry any of his daughters Consequently no matrimonial alliance was entered into yet Surjan was made a noble and placed in charge of Garh Katanga 95 The political effect of these alliances was significant While some Rajput women who entered Akbar s harem converted to Islam they were generally provided full religious freedom and their relatives who continued to remain Hindu formed a significant part of the nobility and served to articulate the opinions of the majority of the common populace in the imperial court 95 The interaction between Hindu and Muslim nobles in the imperial court resulted in an exchange of thoughts and blending of the two cultures Further newer generations of the Mughal line represented a merger of Mughal and Rajput blood thereby strengthening ties between the two As a result the Rajputs became the strongest allies of the Mughals and Rajput soldiers and generals fought for the Mughal army under Akbar leading it in several campaigns including the conquest of Gujarat in 1572 97 Akbar s policy of religious tolerance ensured that employment in the imperial administration was open to all on merit irrespective of creed and this led to an increase in the strength of the administrative services of the empire 98 Another legend is that Akbar s daughter Meherunnissa was enamored by Tansen and had a role in his coming to Akbar s court 99 Tansen converted to Islam from Hinduism apparently on the eve of his marriage with Akbar s daughter 100 101 Foreign relationsRelations with the Portuguese An Emperor shall be ever Intent on Conquest Otherwise His enemies shall rise in arms against him Jalal ud Din Muhammad Akbar At the time of Akbar s ascension in 1556 the Portuguese had established several fortresses and factories on the western coast of the subcontinent and largely controlled navigation and sea trade in that region As a consequence of this colonialism all other trading entities were subject to the terms and conditions of the Portuguese and this was resented by the rulers and traders of the time including Bahadur Shah of Gujarat 102 Death of Bahadur Shah of Gujarat at Diu in front of the Portuguese in 1537 103 In the year 1572 the Mughal Empire annexed Gujarat and acquired its first access to the sea after local officials informed Akbar that the Portuguese had begun to exert control in the Indian Ocean Hence Akbar was conscious of the threat posed by the presence of the Portuguese and remained content with obtaining a cartaz permit from them for sailing in the Persian Gulf region 104 At the initial meeting of the Mughals and the Portuguese during the Siege of Surat in 1572 the Portuguese recognizing the superior strength of the Mughal army chose to adopt diplomacy instead of war The Portuguese Governor upon the request of Akbar sent him an ambassador to establish friendly relations 105 Akbar s efforts to purchase and secure from the Portuguese some of their compact artillery pieces were unsuccessful and thus Akbar could not establish the Mughal navy along the Gujarat coast 106 Akbar accepted the offer of diplomacy but the Portuguese continually asserted their authority and power in the Indian Ocean Akbar was highly concerned when he had to request a permit from the Portuguese before any ships from the Mughal Empire were to depart for the Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca and Medina 107 In 1573 he issued a firman directing Mughal administrative officials in Gujarat not to provoke the Portuguese in the territory they held in Daman The Portuguese in turn issued passes for the members of Akbar s family to go on Hajj to Mecca The Portuguese made mention of the extraordinary status of the vessel and the special status to be accorded to its occupants 108 Furthermore he established a trade business for his favourite consort Mariam uz Zamani who ran an extensive trade of indigo spices and cotton to the Gulf nations through merchant s vessels The cost of her largest ship named Rahimi built on the orders of Akbar is estimated to be around 300000 pounds Rs 3 crores approximately 91 In September 1579 Jesuits from Goa were invited to visit the court of Akbar 109 The emperor had his scribes translate the New Testament and granted the Jesuits the freedom to preach the Gospel 110 One of his sons Sultan Murad Mirza was entrusted to Antoni de Montserrat for his education 111 112 While debating at court the Jesuits did not confine themselves to the exposition of their own beliefs but also reviled Islam and Muhammad Their comments enraged the Imams and Ulama who objected to the remarks but Akbar ordered their comments to be recorded and observed the Jesuits and their behavior This event was followed by a rebellion of Muslim clerics in 1581 led by Mullah Muhammad Yazdi and Muiz ul Mulk the chief Qadi of Bengal the rebels wanted to overthrow Akbar and insert his brother Mirza Muhammad Hakim ruler of Kabul on the Mughal throne Akbar successfully defeated the rebels but he had grown more cautious about his guests and his proclamations which he later checked with his advisers carefully 113 Relations with the Ottoman Empire Portuguese ambush against the galleys of Seydi Ali Reis Akbar s allies in the Indian Ocean In 1555 while Akbar was still a child the Ottoman Admiral Seydi Ali Reis visited the Mughal Emperor Humayun In 1569 during the early years of Akbar s rule another Ottoman Admiral Kurtoglu Hizir Reis arrived on the shores of the Mughal Empire These Ottoman admirals sought to end the growing threats of the Portuguese Empire during their Indian Ocean campaigns During his reign Akbar himself is known to have sent six documents addressing the Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent 114 115 In 1576 Akbar sent a contingent of pilgrims on Hajj led by Khwaja Sultan Naqshbandi with 600 000 rupees and 12 000 khalats honorific robes for the needy of Mecca and Medina 116 In October 1576 Akbar sent a delegation including members of his family including his aunt Gulbadan Begum and his consort Salima on Hajj by two ships from Surat including an Ottoman vessel which reached the port of Jeddah in 1577 and then proceeded towards Mecca and Medina 117 Four more caravans were sent from 1577 to 1580 with exquisite gifts for the authorities of Mecca and Medina 118 During this period Akbar financed the pilgrimages of many poor Muslims from the Mughal Empire and also funded the foundations of the Qadiriyya Sufi Order s dervish lodge in the Hijaz 119 Because of Akbar s attempts to build Mughal presence in Mecca and Medina the local Sharifs began to have more confidence in the financial support provided by Mughal Empire lessening their dependency upon Ottoman bounty 119 Mughal Ottoman trade also flourished during this period in fact merchants loyal to Akbar are known to have reached Aleppo after journeying upriver through the port of Basra 120 The imperial Mughal entourage stayed in Mecca and Medina for nearly four years and attended the Hajj four times 121 The pilgrims overstayed their welcome and strained the limited resources of these cities The Ottoman authorities forced them to return to India in 1582 Historian Naimur Rahman Farooqi wrote that their unceremonious expulsion may explain why Akbar broke relations with the Hijaz and stopped sending Hajj caravans after 1581 122 According to some accounts Akbar expressed a desire to form an alliance with the Portuguese against the Ottomans but nothing came of the idea 123 124 Relations with the Safavid dynasty The Akbari Mosque overlooking the Ganges The Safavids and the Mughals had a long history of diplomatic relationship with the Safavid ruler Tahmasp I having provided refuge to Humayun when he had to flee the Indian subcontinent following his defeat by Sher Shah Suri However the Safavids differed from the Sunni Mughals and Ottomans in following the Shiite sect of Islam 125 One of the longest standing disputes between the Safavids and the Mughals pertained to the control of the city of Qandahar in the Hindukush region forming the border between the two empires 126 The Hindukush region was militarily very significant owing to its geography and this was well recognised by strategists of the times 127 Consequently the city which was being administered by Bairam Khan at the time of Akbar s accession was invaded and captured by the Persian ruler Husain Mirza a cousin of Tahmasp I in 1558 126 Subsequent to this Bairam Khan sent an envoy to the court of Tahmasp I in an effort to maintain peaceful relations with the Safavids This gesture was reciprocated and a cordial relationship continued to prevail between the two empires during the first two decades of Akbar s reign 128 However the death of Tahmasp I in 1576 resulted in civil war and instability in the Safavid empire and diplomatic relations between the two empires ceased for more than a decade They were restored only in 1587 following the accession of Shah Abbas to the Safavid throne 129 Shortly afterwards Akbar s army completed its annexation of Kabul and in order to further secure the north western boundaries of his empire it proceeded to Qandahar The city capitulated without resistance on 18 April 1595 and the ruler Muzaffar Hussain moved into Akbar s court 130 Qandahar continued to remain in Mughal possession and the Hindukush the empire s western frontier for several decades until Shah Jahan s expedition into Badakhshan in 1646 131 Diplomatic relations continued to be maintained between the Safavid and Mughal courts until the end of Akbar s reign 132 Relations with other contemporary kingdoms Vincent Arthur Smith observes that the merchant Mildenhall was employed in 1600 while the establishment of the company was under adjustment to bear a letter from Queen Elizabeth to Akbar requesting liberty to trade in his dominions on terms as good as those enjoyed by the Portuguese 133 Akbar was also visited by the French explorer Pierre Malherbe 134 Religious policy Portrait of the Mughal Emperor Akbar invocation of a Dua prayer Akbar as well as his mother and other members of his family are believed to have been Sunni Hanafi Muslims 135 His early days were spent in the backdrop of an atmosphere in which liberal sentiments were encouraged and religious narrow mindedness was frowned upon 136 From the 15th century a number of rulers in various parts of the country adopted a more liberal policy of religious tolerance attempting to foster communal harmony between Hindus and Muslims 137 These sentiments were earlier encouraged by the teachings of popular saints like Guru Nanak Kabir and Chaitanya 136 the verses of the Persian poet Hafez which advocated human sympathy and a liberal outlook 138 as well as the Timurid ethos of religious tolerance in the empire persisted in the polity right from the times of Timur to Humayun and influenced Akbar s policy of tolerance in matters of religion 139 Further his childhood tutors who included two Irani Shias were largely above sectarian prejudices and made a significant contribution to Akbar s later inclination towards religious tolerance 139 Akbar sponsored religious debates between different Muslim groups Sunni Shia Ismaili and Sufis Parsis Hindus Shaivite and Vaishnava Sikhs Jains Jews Jesuits and Materialists but was partial to Sufism he proclaimed that the wisdom of Vedanta is the wisdom of Sufism 140 Association with the Muslim aristocracy The Mughal Emperor Akbar welcomes his son Prince Salim at Fatehpur Sikri Akbarnameh During the early part of his reign Akbar adopted an attitude of suppression towards Muslim sects that were condemned by the orthodoxy as heretical 141 In 1567 on the advice of Shaikh Abdu n Nabi he ordered the exhumation of Mir Murtaza Sharifi Shirazi a Shia buried in Delhi because of the grave s proximity to that of Amir Khusrau arguing that a heretic could not be buried so close to the grave of a Sunni saint reflecting a restrictive attitude towards the Shia which continued to persist until the early 1570s 142 He suppressed Mahdavism in 1573 during his campaign in Gujarat in the course of which the Mahdavi leader Bandagi Miyan Sheik Mustafa was arrested and brought in chains to the court for debate and released after eighteen months 142 However as Akbar increasingly came under the influence of pantheistic Sufi mysticism from the early 1570s it caused a great shift in his outlook and culminated in his shift from orthodox Islam as traditionally professed in favour of a new concept of Islam transcending the limits of religion 142 Consequently during the latter half of his reign he adopted a policy of tolerance towards the Shias and declared a prohibition on Shia Sunni conflict and the empire remained neutral in matters of internal sectarian conflict 143 In the year 1578 the Mughal Emperor Akbar famously referred to himself as Emperor of Islam Emir of the Faithful Shadow of God on earth Abul Fath Jalal ud din Muhammad Akbar Badshah Ghazi whose empire Allah perpetuate is a most just most wise and a most God fearing ruler In 1580 a rebellion broke out in the eastern part of Akbar s empire and a number of fatwas declaring Akbar to be a heretic were issued by Qazis Akbar suppressed the rebellion and handed out severe punishments to the Qazis To further strengthen his position in dealing with the Qazis Akbar issued a mazhar or declaration that was signed by all major ulemas in 1579 144 145 The mahzar asserted that Akbar was the Khalifa of the age a higher rank than that of a Mujtahid in case of a difference of opinion among the Mujtahids Akbar could select any one opinion and could also issue decrees that did not go against the nass 146 Given the prevailing Islamic sectarian conflicts in various parts of the country at that time it is believed that the Mazhar helped stabilize the religious situation in the empire 144 It made Akbar very powerful because of the complete supremacy accorded to the Khalifa by Islam and also helped him eliminate the religious and political influence of the Ottoman Khalifa over his subjects thus ensuring their complete loyalty to him 147 Throughout his reign Akbar was a patron of influential Muslim scholars such as Mir Ahmed Nasrallah Thattvi and Tahir Muhammad Thattvi citation needed Whenever Akbar would attend congregations at a mosque the following proclamation was made 148 The Lord to me the Kingdom gave He made me wise strong and brave He guides me through right and truth Filling my mind with the love of truth No praise of man could sum his state Allah Hu Akbar God is Great Din i Ilahi Main article Din i Ilahi Akbar holds a religious assembly of different faiths in the Ibadat Khana in Fatehpur Sikri Akbar was deeply interested in religious and philosophical matters An orthodox Muslim at the outset he later came to be influenced by Sufi mysticism that was being preached in the country at that time and moved away from orthodoxy appointing to his court several talented people with liberal ideas including Abul Fazl Faizi and Birbal In 1575 he built a hall called the Ibadat Khana House of Worship at Fatehpur Sikri to which he invited theologians mystics and selected courtiers renowned for their intellectual achievements and discussed matters of spirituality with them 136 These discussions initially restricted to Muslims were acrimonious and resulted in the participants shouting at and abusing each other Upset by this Akbar opened the Ibadat Khana to people of all religions as well as atheists resulting in the scope of the discussions broadening and extending even into areas such as the validity of the Quran and the nature of God This shocked the orthodox theologians who sought to discredit Akbar by circulating rumours of his desire to forsake Islam 144 Akbar s effort to evolve a meeting point among the representatives of various religions was not very successful as each of them attempted to assert the superiority of their respective religions by denouncing other religions Meanwhile the debates at the Ibadat Khana grew more acrimonious and contrary to their purpose of leading to a better understanding among religions instead led to greater bitterness among them resulting in the discontinuance of the debates by Akbar in 1582 149 However his interaction with various religious theologians had convinced him that despite their differences all religions had several good practices which he sought to combine into a new religious movement known as Din i Ilahi 150 151 Silver square rupee of Akbar Lahore mint struck in Aban month of Ilahi Some modern scholars claim that Akbar did not initiate a new religion but instead introduced what Oscar R Gomez calls the transtheistic outlook from tantric Tibetan Buddhism 152 and that he did not use the word Din i Ilahi 153 According to the contemporary events in the Mughal court Akbar was indeed angered by the acts of embezzlement of wealth by many high level Muslim clerics 154 Virtues in Din i Ilahi included generosity forgiveness abstinence prudence wisdom kindness and piety 155 Celibacy was respected chastity enforced the slaughter of animals was forbidden and there were no sacred scriptures or a priestly hierarchy 156 However a leading noble of Akbar s court Aziz Koka wrote a letter to him from Mecca in 1594 arguing that the discipleship promoted by Akbar amounted to nothing more than a desire on Akbar s part to portray his superiority regarding religious matters 157 To commemorate Din e Ilahi he changed the name of Prayag to Allahabad pronounced as ilahabad in 1583 158 159 It has been argued that the theory of Din i Ilahi being a new religion was a misconception that arose because of erroneous translations of Abul Fazl s work by later British historians 160 However it is also accepted that the policy of sulh e kul which formed the essence of Din i Ilahi was adopted by Akbar not merely for religious purposes but as a part of general imperial administrative policy This also formed the basis for Akbar s policy of religious tolerance 161 At the time of Akbar s death in 1605 there were no signs of discontent amongst his Muslim subjects and the impression of even a theologian like Abdu l Haq was that close ties remained 162 Relation with Hindus The great Mogul discoursing with a Humble Fakir Akbar decreed that Hindus who had been forced to convert to Islam could reconvert to Hinduism without facing the death penalty 163 In his days of tolerance he was so well liked by Hindus that there are numerous references to him and his eulogies are sung in songs and religious hymns as well 164 Akbar practised several Hindu customs He celebrated Diwali allowed Brahman priests to tie jewelled strings round his wrists by way of blessing and following his lead many of the nobles took to wearing rakhi protection charms 165 He renounced beef and forbade the sale of all meats on certain days 165 Even his son Jahangir and grandson Shahjahan maintained many of Akbar s concessions such as the ban on cow slaughter having only vegetarian dishes on certain days of the week and drinking only Ganges water 166 Even as he was in the Punjab 200 miles away from the Ganges the water was sealed in large jars and transported to him He referred to the Ganges water as the water of immortality 166 Relation with Jains Akbar triumphantly enters Surat Akbar regularly held discussions with Jain scholars and was also greatly impacted by their teachings His first encounter with Jain rituals was when he saw a procession of a Jain Shravaka named Champa after a six month long fast Impressed by her power and devotion he invited her guru or spiritual teacher Acharya Hiravijaya Suri to Fatehpur Sikri Acharya accepted the invitation and began his march towards the Mughal capital from Gujarat 167 Akbar was impressed by the scholastic qualities and character of the Acharya He held several inter faith dialogues among philosophers of different religions The arguments of Jains against eating meat persuaded him to become a vegetarian 168 Akbar also issued many imperial orders that were favourable for Jain interests such as banning animal slaughter 169 Jain authors also wrote about their experience at the Mughal court in Sanskrit texts that are still largely unknown to Mughal historians 170 The Indian Supreme Court has cited examples of co existence of Jain and Mughal architecture calling Akbar the architect of modern India and that he had great respect for Jainism In 1584 1592 and 1598 Akbar had declared Amari Ghosana which prohibited animal slaughter during Paryushan and Mahavira Janma Kalyanak He removed the Jazia tax from Jain pilgrim places like Palitana 171 Santichandra disciple of Suri was sent to the Emperor who in turn left his disciples Bhanuchandra and Siddhichandra in the court Akbar again invited Hiravijaya Suri s successor Vijayasena Suri in his court who visited him between 1593 and 1595 citation needed Akbar s religious tolerance was not followed by his son Jahangir who even threatened Akbar s former friend Bhanuchandra 172 Historical accountsPersonality Akbar hunting with cheetahs c 1602 Akbar s reign was chronicled extensively by his court historian Abul Fazl in the books Akbarnama and Ain i akbari Other contemporary sources of Akbar s reign include the works of Badayuni Shaikhzada Rashidi and Shaikh Ahmed Sirhindi Akbar was a warrior emperor general animal trainer reputedly keeping thousands of hunting cheetahs during his reign and training many himself and theologian 173 Believed to be dyslexic he was read to every day and had a remarkable memory 174 Akbar was said to have been a wise emperor and a sound judge of character His son and heir Jahangir wrote effusive praise of Akbar s character in his memoirs and dozens of anecdotes to illustrate his virtues 175 According to Jahangir Akbar was of the hue of wheat his eyes and eyebrows were black and his complexion rather dark than fair Antoni de Montserrat the Catalan Jesuit who visited his court described him as follows One could easily recognize even at first glance that he is King He has broad shoulders somewhat bandy legs well suited for horsemanship and a light brown complexion He carries his head bent towards the right shoulder His forehead is broad and open his eyes so bright and flashing that they seem like a sea shimmering in the sunlight His eyelashes are very long His eyebrows are not strongly marked His nose is straight and small though not insignificant His nostrils are widely open as though in derision Between the left nostril and the upper lip there is a mole He shaves his beard but wears a moustache He limps in his left leg though he has never received an injury there 176 Akbar was not tall but powerfully built and very agile He was also noted for various acts of courage One such incident occurred on his way back from Malwa to Agra when Akbar was 19 years of age Akbar rode alone in advance of his escort and was confronted by a tigress who along with her cubs came out from the shrubbery across his path When the tigress charged the emperor he was alleged to have dispatched the animal with his sword in a solitary blow His approaching attendants found the emperor standing quietly by the side of the dead animal 177 Abul Fazl and even the hostile critic Badayuni described him as having a commanding personality He was notable for his command in battle and like Alexander of Macedon was always ready to risk his life regardless of political consequences He often plunged on his horse into the flooded river during the rainy seasons and safely crossed it He rarely indulged in cruelty and is said to have been affectionate towards his relatives He pardoned his brother Hakim who was a repented rebel But on rare occasions he dealt cruelly with offenders such as his maternal uncle Muazzam and his foster brother Adham Khan who was twice defenestrated for drawing Akbar s wrath 178 He is said to have been extremely moderate in his diet Ain e Akbari mentions that during his travels and also while at home Akbar drank water from the Ganges river which he called the water of immortality Special people were stationed at Sorun and later Haridwar to dispatch water in sealed jars to wherever he was stationed 179 better source needed According to Jahangir s memoirs he was fond of fruits and had little liking for meat which he stopped eating in his later years Akbar also once visited Vrindavan regarded as the birthplace of Krishna in the year 1570 and gave permission for four temples to be built by the Gaudiya Vaishnavas which were Madana mohana Govindaji Gopinatha and Jugal Kisore To defend his stance that speech arose from hearing he carried out a language deprivation experiment and had children raised in isolation not allowed to be spoken to and pointed out that as they grew older they remained mute 180 Hagiography During Akbar s reign the ongoing process of inter religious discourse and syncretism resulted in a series of religious attributions to him in terms of positions of assimilation doubt or uncertainty which he either assisted himself or left unchallenged 181 Such hagiographical accounts of Akbar traversed a wide range of denominational and sectarian spaces including several accounts by Parsis Jains and Jesuit missionaries apart from contemporary accounts by Brahminical and Muslim orthodoxy 182 Existing sects and denominations as well as various religious figures who represented popular worship felt they had a claim to him The diversity of these accounts is attributed to the fact that his reign resulted in the formation of a flexible centralised state accompanied by personal authority and cultural heterogeneity 181 Akbarnama the Book of Akbar Main article Akbarnama Abu l Fazl ibn Mubarak presenting Akbarnama to Akbar Mughal miniature The Akbarnama Persian اکبر نامہ which literally means Book of Akbar is an official biographical account of Akbar the third Mughal Emperor r 1542 1605 written in Persian It includes vivid and detailed descriptions of his life and times 183 The work was commissioned by Akbar and written by Abul Fazl one of the Nine Jewels Hindi Navaratnas of Akbar s royal court It is stated that the book took seven years to be completed and the original manuscripts contained a number of paintings supporting the texts and all the paintings represented the Mughal school of painting and work of masters of the imperial workshop including Basawan whose use of portraiture in its illustrations was an innovation in Indian art 183 Consorts and concubinesAkbar s first wife and one of the chief consorts was his cousin Princess Ruqaiya Sultan Begum 27 5 the only daughter of his paternal uncle Prince Hindal Mirza 184 and his wife Sultanam Begum In 1551 Hindal Mirza died fighting valorously in a battle against Kamran Mirza s forces Upon hearing the news of his brother s death Humayun was overwhelmed with grief 23 Hindal s daughter Ruqaiya married Akbar about the time of his first appointment at age nine as governor of Ghazni Province 24 Humayun conferred on the imperial couple all the wealth army and adherents of Hindal and Ghazni which one of Hindal s jagir was given to his nephew Akbar who was appointed as its viceroy and was also given the command of his uncle s army 25 Akbar s marriage with Ruqaiya was solemnized near Jalandhar Punjab when both of them were 14 years old 26 She was a senior ranking wife of Akbar She died childless in January 1626 and was buried next to her father s grave His second wife was the daughter of Abdullah Khan Mughal 185 The marriage took place in 1557 during the siege of Mankot Bairam Khan did not approve of this marriage for Abdullah s sister was married to Akbar s uncle Prince Kamran Mirza and so he regarded Abdullah as a partisan of Kamran He opposed the match until Nasir al Mulk made him understand that opposition in such matters was unacceptable Nasir al Mulk arranged an assemblage of pleasure and banquet of joy and a royal feast was provided 186 His third wife and one of his three chief consorts was his cousin Salima Sultan Begum 185 the daughter of Nur ud din Muhammad Mirza and his wife Gulrukh Begum also known as Gulrang the daughter of Emperor Babur She was at first betrothed to Bairam Khan by Humayun After Bairam Khan died in 1561 Akbar married her in the same year She was the foster mother of Akbar s second son Murad Mirza She held a great influence on Akbar She was a poetess and was regarded as a remarkable woman being a poetess lover of books and actively played a role in the politics of the Mughal court during Akbar s and Jahangir s reigns She is regarded as the senior most wife of Akbar She died childless on 2 January 1613 187 Akbar s fourth and favourite wife 6 188 189 190 191 192 was the Mariam uz Zamani commonly known by the misnomer Jodha Bai whom he married in the year 1562 She was the daughter of the ruler of Amer Raja Bharmal and was by birth of Rajput caste She was his fourth wife and became one of his chief consorts 193 She gradually became his most influential wife 192 and subsequently is the only wife buried close to him She was bestowed with the name Wali Nimat Begum Blessings Gift of God by Akbar shortly after her marriage She was a beautiful woman said to possess uncommon beauty 194 This marriage took place when Akbar was on his way back from Ajmer after offering prayers to the tomb of Moinuddin Chishti Raja Bharmal had conveyed to Akbar that he was being harassed by his brother in law Sharif ud din Mirza the Mughal hakim of Mewat Akbar insisted that the Raja should submit to him personally it was also suggested that his daughter should be married to him as a sign of complete submission 195 Her marriage is considered one of the most important events of the Mughal Empire She became his first wife to honour the royal mansion with an heir In the year 1564 she gave birth to twins named Mirza Hassan and Mirza Hussain In the year 1569 she was honoured with the title of Mariam uz Zamani after giving birth to their third son named Prince Salim the future emperor Jahangir the heir to the throne She was also the foster mother of Akbar s favourite son Daniyal Mirza Portrait of Jalaluddin Muhammad Akbar with Mariam Zamani Begum drawn as per Akbar s description She commanded a high rank in the imperial harem and was a recipient of many privileges 196 She was an intellectual woman 197 who held a considerable influence in Akbar s court and is known as the prime driving force for Akbar s promotion of secularism and religious neutrality 198 She was a smart woman who established international trade in the Mughal Empire and is regarded as the most adventurous and fearsome businesswoman of her time Known as a great female patron of architecture of Mughal empire 199 she died on 19 May 1623 in Agra and was buried close to her husband in Sikandra Agra 200 In the year 1562 Akbar married the former wife of Abdul Wasi the son of Shaikh Bada lord of Agra Akbar was enamored with her beauty and ordered Abdul Wasi to divorce her 201 Another of his wives was Gauhar un Nissa Begum the daughter of Shaikh Muhammad Bakhtiyar and the sister of Shaikh Jamal Bakhtiyar Their dynasty was called Din Laqab and had been living for a long time in Chandwar and Jalesar near Agra 202 He married the daughter of Jagmal Rathore son of Rao Viramde of Merta in 1562 203 His next marriage took place in 1564 to the daughter of Miran Mubarak Shah the ruler of Khandesh In 1564 he sent presents to the court with a request that his daughter be married to Akbar Miran s request acceded and an order was issued Itimad Khan was sent with Miran s ambassadors and when he came near the fort of Asir which was Miran s residence Miran welcomed Itimad with honor and despatched his daughter with Itimad A large number of nobles accompanied her The marriage took place in September 1564 when she reached Akbar s court 204 As a dowry Mubarak Shah ceded Bijagarh and Handia to his imperial son in law 205 He married another Rajput princess in 1570 Raj Kunwari daughter of Kanha the brother of Rai Kalyan Mal the ruler of Bikanir 206 The marriage took place in 1570 when Akbar came to this part of the country Kalyan made a homage to Akbar and requested that his brother s daughter be married to him Akbar accepted his proposal and the marriage was arranged 207 He also married Bhanmati daughter of Bhim Raj another brother of Rai Kalyan Mal 206 He also married Nathi Bai daughter of Rawal Har Rai the ruler of Jaisalmer in 1570 208 209 210 Rawal had sent a request that his daughter be married to Akbar The proposal was accepted by Akbar Raja Bhagwan Das was despatched on this service The marriage ceremony took place after Akbar s return from Nagor 211 She was the mother of Princess Mahi Begum who died on 8 April 1577 212 In 1570 Narhardas a grandson of Rao Viramde of Merta married his sister Puram Bai to Akbar in return for Akbar s support of Keshodas s claims on Merta 213 214 Another of his wives was Bhakkari Begum the daughter of Sultan Mahmud of Bhakkar 215 On 2 July 1572 Akbar s envoy I timad Khan reached Mahmud s court to escort his daughter to Akbar Itimad Khan brought with him for Sultan Mahmud an elegant dress of honor a bejeweled scimitar belt a horse with a saddle and reins and four elephants Mahmud celebrated the occasion by holding extravagant feasts for fifteen days On the day of the wedding the festivities reached their zenith and the ulema saints and nobles were adequately honored with rewards Mahmud offered 30 000 rupees in cash and kind to Itimad Khan and farewelled his daughter with a grand dowry and an impressive entourage 216 She came to Ajmer and waited upon Akbar The gifts of Sultan Mahmud carried by the delegation were presented to the ladies of the imperial harem 217 His ninth wife was Qasima Banu Begum 185 the daughter of Arab Shah The marriage took place in 1575 A great feast was given and the high officers and other pillars of the state were present 218 In 1577 the Rawal Askaran of Dungarpur State petitioned a request that his daughter might be married to Akbar Akbar had regard for his loyalty and granted his request 219 Rai Loukaran and Rajah Birbar servants of the Rajah were sent from Dihalpur to do the honor of conveying his daughter The two delivered the lady to Akbar s court where the marriage took place on 12 July 1577 220 His eleventh wife was Bibi Daulat Shad 185 She was the mother of Princess Shakr un Nissa Begum and Princess Aram Banu Begum 221 born on 22 December 1584 222 223 His next wife was the daughter of Shams Chak a Kashmiri The marriage took place on 3 November 1592 Shams belonged to the great men of the country and had long cherished this wish 224 In 1593 he married the daughter of Qazi Isa and the cousin of Najib Khan Najib told Akbar that his uncle had made his daughter a present for him Akbar accepted his representation and on 3 July 1593 he visited Najib Khan s house and married Qazi Isa s daughter 225 At some point Akbar took into his harem Rukmavati a daughter of Rao Maldev of Marwar by his mistress Tipu Gudi This was a dolo union as opposed to formal marriage representing the bride s lower status in her father s household and serving as an expression of vassalage to an overlord The dating of this event is not recorded 226 227 Death Gate of Akbar s mausoleum at Sikandra Agra 1795 On 3 October 1605 Akbar fell ill from an attack of dysentery 228 from which he never recovered He is believed to have died on 27 October 1605 He was buried at his mausoleum in Sikandra Agra which lies a kilometer next to the tomb of Mariam uz Zamani his favourite and chief consort 229 6 7 LegacyAkbar left a rich legacy both for the Mughal Empire as well as the Indian subcontinent in general He firmly entrenched the authority of the Mughal Empire in India and beyond after it had been threatened by the Afghans during his father s reign 230 establishing its military and diplomatic superiority 231 During his reign the nature of the state changed to a secular and liberal one with emphasis on cultural integration He also introduced several far sighted social reforms including prohibiting sati legalizing widow remarriage and raising the age of marriage Folk tales revolving around him and Birbal one of his navratnas are popular in India He and his Hindu wife Mariam uz Zamani in the popular culture known as Jodha Bai are widely popular as the latter is believed to have been the prime inspiration and driving force for Akbar s promotion of secularism and universal benevolence Sulh i Qul Bhavishya Purana is a minor Purana that depicts the various Hindu holy days and includes a section devoted to the various dynasties that ruled India dating its oldest portion to 500 CE and newest to the 18th century It contains a story about Akbar in which he is compared to the other Mughal rulers The section called Akbar Bahshaha Varnan written in Sanskrit describes his birth as a reincarnation of a sage who immolated himself on seeing the first Mughal ruler Babur who is described as the cruel king of Mlecchas Muslims In this text it is stated that Akbar was a miraculous child and that he would not follow the previous violent ways of the Mughals 232 233 Citing Akbar s melding of the disparate fiefdoms of India into the Mughal Empire as well as the lasting legacy of pluralism and tolerance that underlies the values of the modern republic of India Time magazine included his name in its list of top 25 world leaders 15 On the other hand his legacy is explicitly negative in Pakistan for the same reasons Historian Mubarak Ali while studying the image of Akbar in Pakistani textbooks observes that Akbar is conveniently ignored and not mentioned in any school textbook from class one to matriculation as opposed to the omnipresence of emperor Aurangzeb He quotes historian Ishtiaq Hussain Qureshi who said that due to his religious tolerance Akbar had so weakened Islam through his policies that it could not be restored to its dominant position in the affairs A common thread among Pakistani historians is to blame Akbar s Rajput policy In a conclusion after analyzing many textbooks Mubarak Ali says that Akbar is criticized for bringing Muslims and Hindus together as one nation and putting the separate identity of the Muslims in danger This policy of Akbar contradicts the theory of Two Nation and therefore makes him an unpopular figure in Pakistan 234 IssueAkbar s sons were Hassan Mirza b 19 October 1564 d 5 November 1564 twin with Hussain Mirza with Mariam uz Zamani Begum 235 Hussain Mirza b 19 October 1564 d 29 October 1564 twin with Hassan Mirza with Mariam uz Zamani Begum 235 Shahzada Salim b 31 August 1569 d 28 October 1627 with Mariam uz Zamani Begum He succeeded Akbar to the throne Murad Mirza b 15 June 1570 d 12 May 1599 with Mariam uz Zamani Begum or a concubine Fostered by Salima Sultan Begum for the first few years and then returned to his mother s care before 1575 Daniyal Mirza b 11 September 1572 d 19 March 1605 with a concubine Fostered by Mariam uz Zamani Begum Shahzada Khusrao d infancy with a niece Rai Kalyan Mal of Bikaner citation needed Akbar s daughters were Fatima Banu Begum c 1562 d infancy 236 237 Shahzada Khanam b 21 November 1569 with Bibi Salima Fostered by Mariam Makani Married to Muzaffar Hussain Mirza Timurid Prince Mahi Begum d 7 April 1577 with Nathi Bai Shakr un Nissa Begum d 1 January 1653 with Bibi Daulat Shad Married to Shahrukh Mirza Firoze Khannum b 1575 with a concubine Fostered by Mariam uz Zamani Begum citation needed Aram Banu Begum b 22 December 1584 d 17 June 1624 with Bibi Daulat ShadHe had also adopted several children including Kishnavati Bai d August 1609 daughter of Sekhavat Kachvahi Durjan Sal Akbar took her as his own and had her married to Sawai Raja Sur Singh of Marwar She became the mother of Maharaja Gaj Singh of Marwar and Manbhavati Bai wife of Parviz Mirza 238 In popular cultureThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Akbar news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Films and televisionShahenshah Akbar is a 1943 Indian Hindi language film about the emperor directed by G R Sethi Akbar was portrayed in the award winning 1960 Hindi movie Mughal e Azam The great Mughal in which his character was played by Prithviraj Kapoor The Government of India s Films Division produced Akbar a documentary film about the emperor in 1967 which was directed by Shanti S Varma It won the National Film Award for Best Educational Motivational Instructional Film Om Shivpuri played Akbar in the 1978 movie Bhakti Mein Shakti Akbar Saleem Anarkali is a 1979 Indian Telugu language film about the Anarkali legend directed by N T Rama Rao with Rao also portraying the role of Akbar Akbar was portrayed by Amjad Khan in the 1979 movie Meera Akbar was portrayed by Hrithik Roshan in the 2008 Bollywood film Jodhaa Akbar Akbar and Birbal were portrayed in the Hindi series Akbar Birbal aired on Zee TV in the late 1990s where Akbar s role was played by Vikram Gokhale A television series called Akbar the Great directed by Akbar Khan was aired on DD National in the 1990s Since 2013 2015 a television series called Jodha Akbar aired on Zee TV in which the role of Akbar was played by actor Rajat Tokas In the Motu Patlu episode Motu Akbar The Great John fools Motu into believing he s playing as Akbar in a Hit Film 239 Akbar was portrayed by Uday Tikekar in EPIC channel s critically acclaimed historical drama Siyaasat based on the novel The Twentieth Wife In Sony TV s historical drama Bharat Ka Veer Putra Maharana Pratap Akbar was at first portrayed by Krip Suri and later by Avinesh Rekhi Akbar is portrayed by Kiku Sharda in BIG Magic s sitcom Akbar Birbal Saurabh Raj Jain portrayed Akbar in the follow up sitcom by BIG Magic Hazir Jawab Birbal Abhishek Nigam portrayed Akbar in BIG MAGIC s historical drama Akbar Rakht Se Takht Tak Ka Safar citation needed Mohammed Iqbal Khan played the role of Akbar in ABP News documentary series Bharatvarsh Akbar Rakht Se Takht Ka Safar is a 2017 Indian drama television series tracing Akbar s journey to the Mughal throne Abhishek Nigam portrayed the role of Akbar Shahbaz Khan played the role of Akbar in the Colors television show Dastaan E Mohabbat Salim Anarkali Ali Asgar portrayed the emperor in the 2020 Indian comedy television series Akbar Ka Bal Birbal FictionAkbar is a principal character in Indu Sundaresan s award winning novel The Twentieth Wife 2002 as well as in its sequel The Feast of Roses 2003 A fictionalised Akbar plays an important supporting role in Kim Stanley Robinson s 2002 novel The Years of Rice and Salt Akbar is also a major character in Salman Rushdie s 2008 novel The Enchantress of Florence Bertrice Small is known for incorporating historical figures as primary characters in her romance novels and Akbar is no exception He is a prominent figure in two of her novels and mentioned several times in a third which takes place after his death In This Heart of Mine the heroine becomes Akbar s fortieth wife for a time while Wild Jasmine and Darling Jasmine centre around the life of his half British daughter Yasaman Kama Begum alias Jasmine In Kunal Basu s The Miniaturist the story revolves around a young painter during Akbar s time who paints his own version of the Akbarnamu Akbar is mentioned as Raja Baadshah in the Chhattisgarhi folktale of Mohna de gori kayina Akbar is the main character in Empire of the Moghul Ruler of the World by Alex Rutherford the third book in a sextet based on the six great Mughal Emperors of the Mughal Dynasty Video gamesAkbar is featured in the video game Sid Meier s Civilization IV Beyond the Sword as a great general available in the game Akbar is also the AI Personality of India in the renowned game Age of Empires III The Asian Dynasties See alsoAkbar II Ashoka List of people known as the Great Maharana PratapNotes a b c Official sources such as contemporary biographer Abu l Fazl record Akbar s birth name and date as Jalal ud din Muhammad Akbar and 15 October 1542 However based on recollections of Humayun s personal attendant Jauhar historian Vincent Arthur Smith holds that Akbar was born on 23 November 1542 the fourteenth day of Sha aban which had a full moon and was originally named Badr ud din The full moon of religion According to Smith the recorded date of birth was changed at the time of Akbar s circumcision ceremony in March 1546 in order to throw off astrologers and sorcerers and the name accordingly changed to Jalal ud din Splendour of Religion 19 References Kishori Saran Lal 1999 Theory and Practice of Muslim State in India Aditya Prakashan p 67 ISBN 978 81 86471 72 2 It may be recalled that as an adolescent Akbar had earned the title of Ghazi by beheading the defenseless infidel Himu Under Akbar and Jahangir five or six hundred thousand human beings were killed says emperor Jahangir a b Eraly Abraham 2004 The Mughal Throne The Saga of India s Great Emperors Phoenix pp 115 116 ISBN 978 0 7538 1758 2 Akbar Mughal emperor Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 18 January 2013 Chandra Satish 2005 Medieval India from Sultanat to the Mughals Revised ed New Delhi Har Anand Publications p 95 ISBN 978 8124110669 a b c Jahangir Emperor of Hindustan 1999 The Jahangirnama Memoirs of Jahangir Emperor of India Translated by Thackston Wheeler M Oxford University Press p 437 ISBN 978 0 19 512718 8 Ruqayya Sultan Begam the daughter of Mirza Hindal and wife of His Majesty Arsh Ashyani Akbar had passed away in Akbarabad She was His Majesty s chief wife Since she did not have children when Shahjahan was born His Majesty Arsh Ashyani entrusted that unique pearl of the caliphate to the begam s care and she undertook to raise the prince She departed this life at the age of eighty four a b c Hindu Shah Muhammad Qasim 1595 1612 Gulshan I Ibrahimi Vol 2 p 223 Akbur after this conquest made pilgrimage to Khwaja Moyin ood Deen Chishty at Ajmere and returned to Agra from whence he proceeded to visit the venerable Sheikh Sulim Chishty in the village of Seekry As all the king s children had hitherto died he solicited the Sheikh s prayers who consoled him by assuring him he would soon have a son who would live to a good old age Shortly after his favourite sooltana being then pregnant on Wednesday the 17th of Rubbee ool Awul in the year 997 was delivered of a son who was called Sulim a b Mehta J L 1981 Advance Study in the history of Medieval India Mughal Empire Vol II Sterling Publisher Private Limited ISBN 8120704320 Bihari Mal gave rich dowry to his daughter and sent his son Bhagwan Das with a contingent of Rajput soldiers to escort his newly married sister to Agra as per Hindu custom Akbar was deeply impressed by the highly dignified sincere and princely conduct of his Rajput relations He took Man Singh the youthful son of Bhagwant Das into the royal service Akbar was fascinated by the charm and accomplishments of his Rajput wife he developed real love for her and raised her to the status of chief queen She came to exercise profound impact on socio cultural environment of the entire royal household and changed the lifestyle of Akbar Salim later Jahangir heir to the throne was born of this wedlock on 30th August 1569 a b Ballhatchet Kenneth A Akbar Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 17 July 2017 Black Antony 2011 The History of Islamic Political Thought From the Prophet to the Present Edinburgh University Press p 245 ISBN 978 0748688784 Eraly Abraham 2000 Emperors of the Peacock Throne The Saga of the Great Mughals Penguin books p 189 ISBN 978 0 14 100143 2 Akbar I Encyclopaedia Iranica 29 July 2011 Retrieved 18 January 2014 a b Akbar I Oxford Reference 17 February 2012 doi 10 1093 acref 9780199546091 001 0001 ISBN 9780199546091 Fazl Abul The Akbarnama Translated by Beveridge Henry ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL pp 139 140 Syed Jawad 2011 Akbar s multiculturalism lessons for diversity management in the 21st century Canadian Journal of Administrative Sciences John Wiley amp Sons Ltd 28 4 404 doi 10 1002 CJAS 185 a b Tharoor Ishaan 4 February 2011 Top 25 Political Icons Akbar the Great Time Archived from the original on 7 February 2011 a b Murray Stuart 2009 The library an illustrated history Chicago ALA Editions Wiegand amp Davis 1994 p 273 Banjerji S K 1938 Humayun Badshah Oxford University Press Smith 1917 pp 18 19 Smith 1917 pp 12 19 Fazl Abul Akbarnama Volume I Smith 1917 p 22 a b Erskine William 1854 A History of India Under the Two First Sovereigns of the House of Taimur Baber and Humayun Volume 2 Longman Brown Green and Longmans pp 403 404 ISBN 978 1108046206 a b Mehta Jaswant Lal 1984 First published 1981 Advanced Study in the History of Medieval India Vol II 2nd ed Sterling Publishers p 189 ISBN 978 81 207 1015 3 OCLC 1008395679 a b Ferishta Mahomed Kasim 2013 History of the Rise of the Mahomedan Power in India Till the Year AD 1612 Cambridge University Press p 169 ISBN 978 1 108 05555 0 a b Eraly Abraham 2000 Emperors of the Peacock Throne the saga of the great Mughals Penguin books pp 123 272 ISBN 978 0141001432 a b Schimmel Annemarie 2005 Waghmar Burzine K ed The empire of the Great Mughals history art and culture Translated by Attwood Corinne Revised ed Lahore Sang E Meel Pub p 149 ISBN 978 1861891853 Akbar the Great Mughal Nature 150 3812 600 601 21 November 1942 Bibcode 1942Natur 150R 600 doi 10 1038 150600b0 S2CID 4084248 a b c Remembering Akbar the Great Facts about the most liberal Mughal emperor India Today 27 October 2016 Retrieved 31 January 2021 Gurdas Government of Punjab Archived from the original on 27 May 2008 Retrieved 30 May 2008 History Archived 2 August 2005 at the Wayback Machine Gurdaspur district website Smith 2002 p 337 a b Lal Ruby 2005 Domesticity and Power in the Early Mughal World Cambridge University Press p 140 ISBN 978 0 521 85022 3 a b Kulke Hermann 2004 A history of India Routledge p 205 ISBN 978 0 415 32920 0 Schimmel Annemarie 2004 The Empire of the Great Mughals History Art and Culture Reaktion Books p 88 ISBN 978 1 86189 185 3 Richards John F 1996 The Mughal Empire Cambridge University Press p 288 ISBN 978 0 521 56603 2 Elgood Robert 1995 Firearms of the Islamic World I B Tauris p 135 ISBN 978 1 85043 963 9 Gommans Jos 2002 Mughal Warfare Indian Frontiers and High Roads to Empire 1500 1700 Routledge p 134 ISBN 978 0 415 23988 2 a b c d e Eraly Abraham 2000 Emperors of the Peacock Throne The Saga of the Great Mughals Penguin Books India pp 118 124 ISBN 978 0 14 100143 2 Majumdar 1974 p 104 But the arch enemy was neither Sikandar who had become a spent force after Machiwara and Sirhind Chandra 2007 pp 226 227 a b Chandra 2007 p 227 a b c d e Richards John F 1996 The Mughal Empire Cambridge University Press pp 9 13 ISBN 978 0 521 56603 2 Morgan David O Reid Anthony eds 2010 The New Cambridge History of Islam Volume 3 The Eastern Islamic World Eleventh to Eighteenth Centuries Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 85031 5 a b c d e f g h i j k Richards John F 1996 The Mughal Empire Cambridge University Press pp 14 15 ISBN 978 0 521 56603 2 Smith 2002 p 339 Chandra 2007 p 228 a b c d e f g h i j k Eraly Abraham 2000 Emperors of the Peacock Throne The Saga of the Great Mughals Penguin Books India pp 140 141 ISBN 978 0 14 100143 2 a b Richards John F 1996 The Mughal Empire Cambridge University Press pp 17 21 ISBN 978 0 521 56603 2 a b c d e f g Chandra Satish 2005 Medieval India From Sultanat to the Mughals Part II Har Anand Publications pp 105 106 ISBN 978 81 241 1066 9 Irfan Lubna The Woman Whose Downfall Nearly Killed Akbar TheWire Retrieved 11 May 2020 a b Chandra 2007 p 231 Khan Iqtidar Alam April 1968 The Nobility under Akbar and the Development of His Religious Policy 1560 80 Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1 2 32 JSTOR 25203020 via JSTOR Khan Iqtidar Alam April 1968 The Nobility under Akbar and the Development of His Religious Policy 1560 80 Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1 2 32 JSTOR 25203020 via JSTOR Smith 2002 p 342 Chandra Satish 2001 Medieval India From Sultanat to the Mughals Part I Har Anand Publications p 107 ISBN 81 241 0522 7 Payne Tod 1994 Tod s Annals of Rajasthan The Annals of Mewar Asian Educational Services p 71 ISBN 81 206 0350 8 Eraly Abraham 2007 The Mughal World Penguin Books India p 11 ISBN 978 0 14 100143 2 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Eraly Abraham 2000 Emperors of the Peacock Throne The Saga of the Great Mughals Penguin Books India pp 143 147 ISBN 978 0 14 100143 2 Hastings James 2003 Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics Part 10 Kessinger Publishing ISBN 0 7661 3682 5 Rana Pratap Singh Indian ruler Encyclopaedia Britannica Chandra 2007 p 232 a b Richards John F 1996 The Mughal Empire Cambridge University Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 521 56603 2 a b c d e f g Eraly Abraham 2000 Emperors of the Peacock Throne The Saga of the Great Mughals Penguin Books India pp 148 154 ISBN 978 0 14 100143 2 Pletcher Kenneth 2010 Emperors of the Peacock Throne The Saga of the Great Mughals The Rosen Publishing Group p 170 ISBN 978 1 61530 201 7 a b c The Age of Akbar columbia edu Retrieved 31 May 2013 a b c d e f Dani Ahmad Hasan Dani Chahryar Adle Irfan Habib 2002 History of Civilizations of Central Asia Development in Contrast From the Sixteenth to the Mid Nineteenth Century UNESCO pp 276 277 ISBN 978 92 3 102719 2 a b c d e f g h i j k Richards John F 1996 The Mughal Empire Cambridge University Press pp 49 51 ISBN 978 0 521 56603 2 Markovitz Claude 2002 A History of Modern India 1480 1950 Anthem Press p 93 ISBN 978 1 84331 004 4 a b c d e f g h i j Eraly Abraham 2000 Emperors of the Peacock Throne The Saga of the Great Mughals Penguin Books India pp 156 157 ISBN 978 0 14 100143 2 a b c Mehta J L 1984 First published 1981 Advanced Study in the History of Medieval India Vol II 2nd ed Sterling Publishers p 258 ISBN 978 81 207 1015 3 OCLC 1008395679 Houtsma M T 1993 E J Brill s First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 Volume 4 Brill p 711 ISBN 978 90 04 09796 4 a b c d Floor Willem Edmund Herzig 2012 Iran and the World in the Safavid Age I B Tauris p 136 ISBN 978 1 85043 930 1 Smith 1917 p 274 Gibbs J 1865 Proceedings of the Asiatic Society of Bengal Calcutta pp 4 5 Adibah Sulaiman December 2017 Akbar 1556 1605 and India unification under the mughals ResearchGate 8 12 Retrieved 31 January 2021 Sen Sailendra 2013 A Textbook of Medieval Indian History Primus Books pp 164 188 ISBN 978 93 80607 34 4 Chandra 2007 p 233 a b Chandra 2007 p 234 a b Chandra 2007 p 236 Moosvi 2008 p 160 a b Chandra 2007 p 235 Moosvi 2008 pp 164 165 Moosvi 2008 p 165 Smith 2002 p 359 a b Chandra 2007 p 238 Chandra 2007 p 237 Petersen A 1996 Dictionary of Islamic Architecture New York Routledge Economic and Social Developments under the Mughals columbia edu Retrieved 30 May 2013 a b c Levi S C 2002 The Indian Diaspora in Central Asia and Its Trade 1550 1900 Brill p 39 ISBN 978 90 04 12320 5 a b Collier Dirk 2011 The Emperor s writings Memories of Akbar the great p 326 Mughal Coins Akbar indian coins com Retrieved 20 July 2020 Coins of Akbar Mintage World 29 July 2016 Retrieved 20 July 2020 Eraly Abraham 2000 Emperors of the Peacock Throne The Saga of the Great Mughals Penguin Books India p 136 ISBN 0 14 100143 7 a b c d Chandra 2007 p 243 a b Sarkar 1984 p 37 Sarkar 1984 pp 38 40 Sarkar 1984 p 38 Maryam Juzer Kherulla 12 October 2002 Profile Tansen the mesmerizing maestro Dawn Archived from the original on 21 November 2007 Retrieved 2 October 2007 India Divided By Rajendra Prasad p 63 A History of Hindi Literature By F E Keay p 36 Habib 1997 p 256 Dodwell Henry H ed 1929 The Cambridge history of the British Empire Vol IV Cambridge The University Press p 14 OCLC 1473561 Habib 1997 pp 256 257 Habib 1997 p 259 Frances Pritchett XVI Mughal Administration Columbia edu Retrieved 18 January 2014 Frances Pritchett XIX A Century of Political Decline 1707 1803 Columbia edu Retrieved 18 January 2014 Habib 1997 p 260 Akbar s letter of invitation in John Correia Afonso Letters from the Mughal Court Bombay 1980 Gomez Oscar R 2013 Tantrism in the Society of Jesus from Tibet to the Vaticcan today Editorial MenteClara p 58 ISBN 978 987 24510 3 5 du Jarric Pierre 1926 Akbar and the Jesuits Broadway Travellers Translated by Payne C H London Harper amp Brothers Durant Will 7 June 2011 Our Oriental Heritage The Story of Civilization Simon and Schuster pp 738 ISBN 978 1 4516 4668 9 Retrieved 27 August 2012 Frances Pritchett XII Religion at Akbar s Court Columbia edu Retrieved 18 January 2014 Farooqi N R 1996 Six Ottoman Documents on Mughal Ottoman Relations During The Reign of Akbar Journal of Islamic Studies 7 1 32 doi 10 1093 jis 7 1 32 JSTOR 26195476 Retrieved 18 January 2014 Subrahmanyam Sanjay June 1994 Book Reviews Naimur Rahman Farooqi Mughal Ottoman Relations A Study of the Political and Diplomatic Relations between Mughal India and the Ottoman Empire 1556 1748 Delhi The Indian Economic amp Social History Review 31 2 249 doi 10 1177 001946469403100210 S2CID 143346476 Retrieved 18 January 2014 Farooqi Naimur Rahman 1989 Mughal Ottoman relations a study of political amp diplomatic relations between Mughal India and the Ottoman Empire 1556 1748 Delhi Idarah i Adabiyat i Delli p 114 OCLC 20894584 Moosvi 2008 p 246 Khan Iqtidar Alam 1999 Akbar and his age Northern Book Centre p 217 ISBN 978 81 7211 108 3 a b Faroqhi 2006 p 88 Faroqhi 2006 p 138 Farooqi N R 2017 An Overview of Ottoman Archival Documents and Their Relevance for Medieval Indian History The Medieval History Journal 20 1 192 229 doi 10 1177 0971945816687687 S2CID 164261762 Farooqi Naimur Rahman 1989 Mughal Ottoman relations a study of political amp diplomatic relations between Mughal India and the Ottoman Empire 1556 1748 Delhi Idarah i Adabiyat i Delli pp 118 119 OCLC 20894584 Farooqi Naimur Rahman 1989 Mughal Ottoman relations a study of political amp diplomatic relations between Mughal India and the Ottoman Empire 1556 1748 Delhi Idarah i Adabiyat i Delli pp 20 21 OCLC 20894584 Majumdar 1984 p 158 Ali 2006 p 94 a b Majumdar 1984 p 153 Ali 2006 pp 327 328 Majumdar 1984 p 154 Majumdar 1984 pp 154 155 Majumdar 1984 pp 153 154 Ali 2006 p 327 Majumdar 1984 p 155 Smith 1917 p 292 Asia in the Making of Europe Volume III A Century of Advance Book 1 by Donald F Lach Edwin J Van Kley p 393 1 Habib 1997 p 80 a b c Chandra 2007 p 253 Chandra 2007 p 252 Hasan 2007 p 72 a b Habib 1997 p 81 Doniger Wendy March 2014 On Hinduism Oxford ISBN 978 0199360079 OCLC 858660095 Habib 1997 p 85 a b c Habib 1997 p 86 Ali 2006 pp 165 166 a b c Chandra 2007 p 254 Ali 2006 p 159 Hasan 2007 p 79 Hasan 2007 pp 82 83 Keene Henry George 1879 The Turks in India London W H Allen OCLC 613242467 Chandra 2007 p 255 Chandra 2007 p 256 Din i Ilahi Britannica Online Encyclopedia Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 18 July 2009 Gomez Oscar R 2013 Tantrism in the Society of Jesus from Tibet to the Vaticcan today Editorial MenteClara p 51 ISBN 978 987 24510 3 5 Sharma Sri Ram 1988 The Religious Policy of the Mughal Emperors Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers p 42 ISBN 81 215 0395 7 Smith 2002 p 348 Roychoudhury Makhanlal 1941 The Din i Ilahi or The Religion of Akbar University of Calcutta p 279 OCLC 3312929 Majumdar 1984 p 138 Koka Aziz 1594 King s College Collection MS 194 This letter is preserved in Cambridge University Library p ff 5b 8b Conder Josiah 1828 The Modern Traveller a popular description R H Tims p 282 Deefholts Margaret Deefholts Glenn Acharya Quentine 2006 The Way We Were Anglo Indian Cronicles Calcutta Tiljallah Relief Inc p 87 ISBN 0 9754639 3 4 Ali 2006 pp 163 164 Ali 2006 p 164 Habib 1997 p 96 Chua 2007 p 187 Chua 2007 p 126 a b Collingham 2006 p 30 a b Collingham 2006 p 31 Sanghmitra Jain Dharma ke Prabhavak Acharya Jain Vishwa Bharati Ladnu Sen Amartya 2005 The Argumentative Indian Allen Lane pp 288 289 ISBN 0 7139 9687 0 Akbar arranged for discussions involving not only mainstream Hindu and Muslim philosophers but Jains and others Arguing with Jains Akbar would remain sceptical of their rituals and yet become convinced by their argument for vegetarianism and end up deploring the eating of all flesh Truschke Audrey Jains and the Mughals JAINpedia Truschke Audrey 2012 Setting the Record Wrong A Sanskrit Vision of Mughal Conquests South Asian History and Culture 3 3 373 doi 10 1080 19472498 2012 693710 S2CID 145619920 Ahmedabad turned Akbar veggie The Times of India 23 November 2009 Retrieved 23 November 2009 p 137 Poetry of Kings The Classical Hindi Literature of Mughal India by Allison Busch Habib Irfan September October 1992 Akbar and Technology Social Scientist 20 9 10 3 15 doi 10 2307 3517712 JSTOR 3517712 Richards John F 1996 The Mughal Empire Cambridge University Press p 35 ISBN 978 0 521 56603 2 Jahangir 1600s Tuzk e Jahangiri Memoirs of Jahangir Codrington K de B March 1943 Portraits of Akbar the Great Mughal 1542 1605 The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs 82 480 64 67 JSTOR 868499 Garbe Richard von 1909 Akbar Emperor of India Chicago The Open Court Publishing Company Richards John F 1996 The Mughal Empire Cambridge University Press p 15 ISBN 978 0 521 56603 2 Hardwar Archived 20 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Ain e Akbari by Abul Fazl Allami Volume I A I N 22 The A bda r Kha nah p 55 Translated from the original Persian by Heinrich Blochmann and Colonel Henry Sullivan Jarrett Asiatic society of Bengal Calcutta 1873 1907 1200 1750 University of Hamburg Archived from the original on 22 February 2008 Retrieved 30 May 2008 a b Sangari 2007 p 497 Sangari 2007 p 475 a b Art Access Indian Himalayan and Southeast Asian artic edu The Art Institute of Chicago Archived from the original on 19 September 2009 Retrieved 20 February 2010 Jahangir amp Thackston 1999 p 40 a b c d Burke S M 1989 Akbar The Greatest Mogul Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers pp 142 143 144 Beveridge Volume II 1907 p 88 Jahangir amp Thackston 1999 p 140 Chaudhary S N Roy 2011 Restoration of Split Milk Gyan Publishing House p 77 ISBN 9788121210461 The mother of Jahangir was a pious Hindu princess the most favourite queen of Akbar Esposito John L 1999 The Oxford History of Islam Oxford University Press New York ISBN 9780195107999 OCLC 40838649 Jodha Bai s 474th birth anniversary 17 facts about the Queen Mother Lal 1980 p 322 a b Safdar Aiysha Khan Muhammad Azam January June 2021 History of Indian Ocean A South Indian perspective PDF Journal of Indian Studies 7 1 186 The most influential queen of the Mughal Emperor Akbar 1542 1605 and mother of Emperor Jahangir was the beautiful Empress Mariam uz Zamani commonly known as Jodha Bai Akbar allowed his favourite and most loved wife to build ships for trade and Haj pilgrims at the Khizri Darwaza on the River Ravi Mehta J L 1981 Advance Study in the history of Medieval India Vol III Sterling Publisher Private Limited ISBN 8120704320 Bihari Mal gave rich dowry to his daughter and sent his son Bhagwan Das with a contingent of Rajput soldiers to escort his newly married sister to Agra as per Rajput custom Akbar was deeply impressed by the highly dignified sincere and princely conduct of his Rajput relations He took Man Singh the youthful son of Bhagwant Das into the royal service Akbar was fascinated by the charm and accomplishments of his Rajput wife he developed real love for her and raised her to the status of chief queen She came to exercise a profound impact on the socio cultural environment of the entire royal household and changed the lifestyle of Akbar Salim later Jahangir the heir to the throne was born of this wedlock on 30th August 1569 Price Mahor David ed 1829 Tarikh i Salim Shahi Beveridge Volume II 1907 pp 240 243 Fazl Abul 1590 Ain I Akbari Vol 3 p 49 When the world conquering armies had been deputed the Shahinshah proceeded stage by stage On the day that he reached Sirohi Madhu Singh and a number of men were sent to fetch that nursling of fortune s garden Shahzada Sultan Daniel who had been conveyed from Ajmir to Amber so that he might be brought back to Ajmir and might come under the shadow of the Presence In order to do honour to Rajah Bhagwan Das his auspicious sister who held high rank in the imperial harem was sent off in order so that she might be present at the mourning for her brother Bhupat who had fallen in the battle of Sarnal Mubarak Abul Fazl 1593 Ain i Akbari p 36 Lal Muni 1977 Akbar V P House Private ltd Delhi p 229 Koch Ebba 1990 Mughal architecture p 90 Jahangir amp Thackston 1999 p 397 Abd ul Qadir bin Maluk Shah 1884 Muntakhab ut Tawarikh by Al Badaoni translated from the original Persian by W H Lowe Volume II Asiatic Society of Bengal Calcutta pp 59 60 Maulavi Abdur Rahim Ma asir al Umara by Nawab Shams ud Daulah Shahnawaz Khan Volume II Persian Asiatic Society of Bengal Calcutta pp 564 566 The Mertiyo Rathors of Merta Rajasthan Vol II pp 366 367 Beveridge Volume II 1907 p 352 Quddusi Mohd Ilyas 2002 Khandesh under the Mughals 1601 1724 A D mainly based on Persian sources Islamic Wonders Bureau p 4 a b Raj kanwari A Persian historiography in India 2003 pp 78 79 ISBN 9788173915376 Fazl Abu l Akbarnama Vol II p 518 Beveridge Volume II 1907 p 518 Manchanda Bindu Jaisalmer The City of Golden Sands and Strange Spirits Jaisalmer India p 24 Somani Ramavallabha History of Jaisalmer p 55 Beveridge Volume II 1907 pp 518 519 Beveridge Volume II 1907 p 283 The Mertiyo Rathors of Merta Rajasthan Vol I p 4 The Mertiyo Rathors of Merta Rajasthan Vol II p 362 Hasan Siddiqi Mahmudul 1972 History of the Arghuns and Tarkhans of Sindh 1507 1593 An Annotated Translation of the Relevant Parts of Mir Ma sums Ta rikh i Sindh with an Introduction amp Appendices Institute of Sindhology University of Sind p 166 Ahsan Aitzaz 2005 The Indus Saga Roli Books Private Limited ISBN 978 9 351 94073 9 Akhtar Muhammad Saleem 1983 Sindh under the Mughals An Introduction to translation of and commentary on the Mazhar i Shahjahani of Yusuf Mirak 1044 1634 pp 78 79 81 Beveridge Volume III 1907 pp 167 168 Beveridge Volume III 1907 p 278 Beveridge Volume III 1907 p 295 Jahangir amp Thackston 1999 p 39 Akbarnama of Abu l Fazl Volume III p 661 One of the occurrences was the birth of Aram Banu Begam On 12 Dai 22 December 1584 divine month and the 19th degree of Sagittarius and according to the calculation of the Indians one degree and 54 minutes that night gleaming jewel of fortune appeared and glorified the harem of the Shahinshah Beveridge Volume III 1907 p 661 Beveridge Volume III 1907 p 958 Beveridge Volume III 1907 p 985 Sreenivasan Ramya 2006 Indrani Chatterjee Richard M Eaton eds Drudges dancing girls concubines female slaves in the Rajput polity 1500 1850 Slavery and South Asian History Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press 152 159 ISBN 0 253 11671 6 Chandra Satish 1993 Mughal Religious Policies the Rajputs amp the Deccan New Delhi India Vikas Publishing House pp 17 18 ISBN 978 0 7069 6385 4 Remembering Akbar the Great Facts about the most liberal Mughal emperor India Today 27 October 2016 Retrieved 31 January 2021 Majumdar 1984 pp 168 169 Habib 1997 p 79 Majumdar 1984 p 170 Meenakshi Khanna 2007 Cultural History of Medieval India Berghahn Books pp 34 35 ISBN 978 81 87358 30 5 Retrieved 30 June 2013 The Imperial and Asiatic Quarterly Review and Oriental and Colonial Record Oriental Institute 1900 pp 158 161 Retrieved 29 June 2013 Ali Mubarak September October 1992 Akbar in Pakistani Textbooks Social Scientist 20 9 10 73 76 doi 10 2307 3517719 JSTOR 3517719 a b Lal 1980 p 133 Prasad Beni 1940 History of Jahangir p 2 Early Abraham Emperors Of The Peacock Throne The Saga of the Great Moghuls His first child was a daughter Fatima Banu Begum but she died in infancy and so did the first sons born to him twins named Hasan and Husain born in 1564 they lived only a month The Mertiyo Rathors of Merta Rajasthan Volume II p 51 Motu Akbar The Great Motu Patlu in Hindi 3D Animation Cartoon for Kids As on Nickelodeon retrieved 23 August 2022BibliographyAli M Athar 2006 Mughal India Studies in Polity Ideas Society and Culture Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 569661 5 Chandra Satish 2007 History of Medieval India New Delhi Orient Longman ISBN 978 81 250 3226 7 Chua Amy 2007 Day of Empire How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance and Why They Fall Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 51284 8 Collingham Lizzie 2006 Curry A Tale of Cooks and Conquerors Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 532001 5 Faroqhi Suraiya 2006 The Ottoman Empire and the World Around It I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84511 122 9 Habib Irfan 1997 Akbar and His India New Delhi Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 563791 5 Hasan Nurul 2007 Religion State and Society in Medieval India New Delhi Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 569660 8 Lal Muni 1980 Akbar University of Michigan ISBN 9780706910766 Majumdar R C ed 1974 History and Culture of the Indian People Vol VII Bombay Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan Majumdar R C 1984 The Mughul Empire Bombay Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan Moosvi Shireen 2008 People Taxation and Trade in Mughal India New Delhi Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 569315 7 Nath R 1982 History of Mughal Architecture Abhinav Publications ISBN 978 81 7017 159 1 Sangari Kumkum 2007 Akbar The Name of a Conjuncture In Grewal J S ed The State and Society in Medieval India New Delhi Oxford University Press pp 475 501 ISBN 978 0 19 566720 2 Sarkar Jadunath 1984 A History of Jaipur New Delhi Orient Longman ISBN 81 250 0333 9 Smith Vincent Arthur 1917 Akbar the Great Mogul 1542 1605 Oxford at The Clarendon Press Smith Vincent A 2002 First published 1919 The Oxford History of India Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 561297 4 Beveridge Henry 1907 Akbarnama of Abu l Fazl ibn Mubarak Volume II Asiatic Society Calcutta Beveridge Henry 1907 Akbarnama of Abu l Fazl ibn Mubarak Volume III Asiatic Society Calcutta Jahangir Emperor Thackston Wheeler McIntosh 1999 The Jahangirnama memoirs of Jahangir Emperor of India Washington D C Freer Gallery of Art Arthur M Sackler Gallery Smithsonian Institution New York Oxford University Press pp 168 316 ISBN 978 0 19 512718 8 Wiegand Wayne A Davis Donald G eds 1994 India Encyclopedia of Library History Garland Publishing Inc ISBN 0 8240 5787 2 Further readingAbu l Fazl ibn Mubarak Akbar namah Edited with commentary by Muhammad Sadiq Ali Kanpur Lucknow Nawal Kishore 1881 83 Three Vols Persian Abu al Fazl ibn Mubarak Akbarnamah Edited by Maulavi Abd Al Rahim Bibliotheca Indica Series Calcutta Asiatic Society of Bengal 1877 1887 Three Vols Persian Henry Beveridge Trans The Akbarnama of Ab ul Fazl Bibliotheca Indica Series Calcutta Asiatic Society of Bengal 1897 Three Vols Haji Muhammad Arif Qandahari Tarikh i Akbari Better known as Tarikh i Qandahari edited amp Annotated by Haji Mu in d Din Nadwi Dr Azhar Ali Dihlawi amp Imtiyaz Ali Arshi Rampur Raza Library 1962 Persian Marti Escayol Maria Antonia Antoni de Montserrat in the Mughal Garden of good government European construction of Indian nature Word Image Text Studies in Literary and Visual Culture ed Shormistha Panja et al Orient Blackswan New Delhi 2009 ISBN 978 81 250 3735 4 Satyananda Giri Akbar Trafford Publishing 2009 ISBN 978 1 4269 1561 1 John Correia Afonso Letters from the Mughal court Bombay 1980 Augustus Frederick 1890 The Emperor Akbar a contribution towards the history of India in the 16th century Vol 1 Translated by Annette Susannah Beveridge Thacker Spink and Co Calcutta Augustus Frederick 1890 Gustav von Buchwald ed The Emperor Akbar a contribution towards the history of India in the 16th century Vol 2 Translated by Annette Susannah Beveridge Thacker Spink and Co Calcutta Malleson Colonel G B 1899 Akbar and the Rise of the Mughal Empire Rulers of India series Oxford at the Clarendon Press Garbe Dr Richard von 1909 Akbar Emperor of India A Picture of Life and Customs from the Sixteenth Century The Opencourt Publishing Company Chicago Akbar Emperor of India by Richard von Garbe 1857 1927 ebook The Adventures of Akbar by Flora Annie Steel 1847 1929 ebook Havell E B 1918 The History of Aryan Rule in India from the earliest times to the death of Akbar Frederick A Stokes Co New York Moreland W H 1920 India at the death of Akbar An economic study Macmillan amp Co London Monserrate Father Antonio 1922 The commentary of Father Monserrate S J on his journey to the court of Akbar Oxford University Press Shrivastava A L 1957 A short history of Akbar the Great Shiva Lal Agarwala External links Wikiquote has quotations related to Akbar Wikimedia Commons has media related to Akbar I Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Akbar Jellaladin Mahommed Jalaluddin Muhammad Akbar The Great Akbar Emperor of Indiaby Richard von Garbe at Project Gutenberg History of the friendship between Akbar and Birbal The Drama of Akbar by Muhammad Husain Azad from 1922 AkbarTimurid dynastyBorn 14 October 1542 Died 27 October 1605Regnal titlesPreceded byHumayun Mughal Emperor1556 1605 Succeeded byJahangir Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Akbar amp oldid 1142075435, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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