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Muslim conquests in the Indian subcontinent

The Muslim conquests in the Indian subcontinent mainly took place between the 13th and the 18th centuries. Earlier Muslim conquests in the subcontinent include the invasions which started in what is now modern-day Pakistan, especially the Umayyad campaigns during the 8th century and the Rajput resistance to Muslim conquests.

Mahmud of Ghazni, Sultan of the Ghaznavid Empire, preserved an ideological link to the suzerainty of the Abbasid Caliphate and invaded vast parts of Punjab and Gujarat during the 11th century.[1][2] After the capture of Lahore and the end of the Ghaznavids, the Ghurid ruler Muhammad of Ghor laid the foundation of Muslim rule in India in 1192. In 1202, Bakhtiyar Khalji led the Muslim conquest of Bengal, marking the easternmost expansion of Islam at the time.

The Ghurid Empire soon evolved into the Delhi Sultanate in 1206, ruled by Qutb ud-Din Aibak, the founder of the Mamluk dynasty. With the Delhi Sultanate established, Islam was spread across most parts of the Indian subcontinent. In the 14th century, the Khalji dynasty under Alauddin Khalji, extended Muslim rule southwards to Gujarat, Rajasthan, and the Deccan. The successor Tughlaq dynasty temporarily expanded its territorial reach to Tamil Nadu. The disintegration of the Delhi Sultanate, mainly caused by Timur's invasion in 1398, caused several Muslim sultanates and dynasties to emerge across the Indian subcontinent, such as the Gujarat Sultanate, Malwa Sultanate, Khandesh Sultanate, Bahmani Sultanate, Jaunpur Sultanate, Madurai Sultanate, and the wealthy and powerful Bengal Sultanate, a major trading nation in the world.[3] Some of these, however, were followed by Hindu reconquests and resistance from the native powers and states, such as the Telugu Nayakas, Vijayanagara,[4] and Rajput states.

The Delhi Sultanate was replaced by the Mughal Empire in 1526, which was one of the three gunpowder empires. Emperor Akbar gradually enlarged the Mughal Empire to include a large portion of the subcontinent. Under Akbar the great, who stressed the importance of religious tolerance and winning over the goodwill of the subjects, a multicultural empire came into being with various non-Muslim subjects being actively integrated into the mughal empires bureaucracy and military machinery. The economic and territorial zenith of the Mughals was reached at the end of the 17th century, when under the reign of emperor Aurangzeb the empire witnessed the full establishment of Islamic Sharia through the Fatawa al-Alamgir.

The Mughals went into a sudden decline immediately after achieving their peak following the death of Aurangzeb in 1707, due to a lack of competent and effective rulers among Aurangzeb's successors. Other factors included the expensive and bloody Mughal-Rajput Wars[5] and the Mughal–Maratha Wars.[6] The Afsharid ruler Nader Shah's invasion in 1739 was an unexpected attack which demonstrated the weakness of the Mughal Empire.[7] This provided opportunities for various regional states such as Rajput states, Mysore Kingdom, Nawabs of Bengal and Murshidabad, Maratha Empire, Sikh Empire, and Nizams of Hyderabad to declare their independence and exercising control over large regions of the Indian subcontinent further accelerating the geopolitical disintegration of the Indian subcontinent.[8]

The Maratha Empire replaced Mughals as the dominant power of the subcontinent from 1720 to 1818. The Muslim conquests in Indian subcontinent came to a halt after the Battle of Plassey (1757), the Battle of Buxar (1764), Anglo-Mysore Wars (1767–1799), Anglo-Maratha Wars (1775–1818) and Anglo-Sikh Wars (1845–1848) as the British East India Company seized control of much of the Indian subcontinent up till 1857. Throughout the 18th century, European powers continued to exert a large amount of political influence over the Indian subcontinent, and by the end of the 19th century most of the Indian subcontinent came under European colonial domination, most notably the British Raj until 1947.

First phase (8th to 10th centuries) edit

Early Muslim presence edit

Islam in South Asia existed in communities along the Arab coastal trade routes in Sindh, Bengal, Gujarat, Kerala, and Ceylon.[citation needed] The religion originated and had gained early acceptance in the Arabian Peninsula. The first incursion by the new Muslim successor states of the Arab world occurred around 636 AD or 644 AD, during the Rashidun Caliphate, long before any Arab army reached the frontier of India by land.[9] Uthman ibn Abi al-As al-Thaqafi, the governor of Bahrain and Oman, had dispatched naval expeditions against the ports and positions of the Sasanian Empire, and further east to the borders of India,[10] as confirmed by the contemporary Armenian historian Sebeos who confirms Arab naval raids against the Sasanian littoral.[10] Uthman, on his own initiative, according to the history of al-Baladhuri, had also launched the first Arab naval raids against the ports of the Indian subcontinent, these raids targeted Thane (near modern Mumbai), Debal and Bharuch.[11][12] The assault on Thane, the first Arab raid on India, was commanded by Uthman's brother al-Hakam and was a success, the Arabs returning to Oman without incurring any fatalities.[13] The following raid on Debal was commanded by another brother, al-Mughira.[14] Al-Hakam also led the raid on Bharuch.[15] The raids were probably launched in c. 636 according to al-Baladhuri.[16] These expeditions were not sanctioned by Caliph Umar and Uthman escaped punishment only because there were no Arab casualties.[17] The raid on Debul may have occurred in 643 AD and may have faced defeat, but it is unlikely Umar was still the Caliph and Uthman was unlikely to disobey his directive on sea raids, and the source reporting this is deemed unreliable.[18][better source needed][19][20] The motivation for these expeditions may have been to seek plunder or to attack pirates to safeguard Arabian trade in the Arabian Sea, not to start the conquest of India.[21] Shortly after the Muslim conquest of Persia, the connection between the Sindh and Islam was established by the initial Muslim missions during the Rashidun Caliphate.

Rashidun Caliphate and the frontier kingdoms edit

 
Arab campaigns in the Indian Subcontinent.
  Desert areas (Registan Desert and Thar Desert)
  Kingdom of Sindh (c. 632– 711 AD)
then, Caliphal province of Sind (712-854 AD)
  Maitraka Kingdom (c.475–c.776 AD)

The kingdoms of Kapisa-Gandhara in modern-day Afghanistan, Zabulistan, and Sindh (which then held Makran) in modern-day Pakistan, all of which were culturally part of Indian subcontinent since ancient times, were known as "The Frontier of Al Hind" to the Arabs.[22] Makran had been conquered by Chach of Aror in 631 AD, but ten years later, it was described as "under the government of Persia" by Xuanzang, who had visited the region in 641.[23]

The first clash between a ruler of an Indian kingdom and the Arabs took place in 643, when Arab forces defeated Rutbil, the King of Zabulistan in Sistan.[24] Arabs led by Suhail b. Abdi and Hakam al Taghilbi later defeated a Sindhi army in the Battle of Rasil in 644 beside the Indian Ocean sea coast,[citation needed] then reached the Indus River.[25] Caliph Umar ibn Al-Khattab denied them permission to cross the river or operate in Makran and the Arabs returned home.[26] Al-Hakim ibn Jabalah al-Abdi, who attacked Makran in the year 649 AD, was an early partisan of Ali ibn Abu Talib.[27]

Abdullah ibn Aamir led the invasion of Khurasan in 650 AD, and his general Rabi b. Ziyad Al Harithi attacked Sistan and took Zaranj and surrounding areas in 651 while Ahnaf ibn Qais conquered the Hepthalites of Herat and advanced up to Balkh by 653. Arab conquests now bordered the Kingdoms of Kapisa, Zabul and Sindh in modern-day Afghanistan and Pakistan. The Arabs levied annual tributes on the newly captured areas, and after leaving 4,000 men garrisons at Merv and Zaranj, retired to Iraq instead of pushing on against the frontier of India.[28] Caliph Uthman b. Affan sanctioned an attack against Makran in 652, and sent a recon mission to Sindh in 653. The mission described Makran as inhospitable, and Caliph Uthman, probably assuming the country beyond the Indus was much worse, forbade any further incursions into Indian subcontinent.[29] During the caliphate of Ali, many Hindus of Sindh had come under the influence of Shi'ism[30] and some even participated in the Battle of Camel and died fighting for Ali.[27]

Under the Umayyads (661–750 AD), many Shias sought asylum in the region of Sindh, to live in relative peace in the remote area. Ziyad Hindi was one of those refugees.[31]

Umayyad expansion in Al Hind edit

Mu'awiya I established the Umayyad rule over the Arabs after the First Fitna in 661 AD, and resumed expansion of the Muslim empire. Al-Baladuri wrote that, "In the year 44 H. (664 A.D.), and in the days of the Khalif Mu'awiya, Muhallib son of Abu Safra made war upon the same frontier, and advanced as far as Banna [Bannu] and Alahwar [Lahore], which lie between Multan and Kabul."[32]

After 663-665 CE, the Arabs launched an invasion against Kapisa, Zabul and what is now Pakistani Balochistan. Abdur Rahman b. Samurra besieged Kabul in 663 AD, while Haris b Marrah advanced against Kalat after marching through Fannazabur and Quandabil and moving through the Bolan Pass. King Chach of Sindh sent an army against the Arabs, the Arabs were trapped when the enemy blocked the mountain passes, Haris was killed and his army was annihilated.[citation needed] Al-Muhallab ibn Abi Sufra took a detachment through the Khyber pass towards Multan in Southern Punjab in modern-day Pakistan in 664 AD, then pushed south into Kikan,[33] and may have also raided Quandabil. Turki Shah and Zunbil expelled Arabs from their respective kingdoms by 670, and Zunbil began assisting in organizing resistance against the Arabs in Makran.[citation needed]

This was the beginning of a prolonged struggle between the rulers of Kabul and Zabul in modern-day and Pakistan against successive Arab governors of Sistan, Khurasan and Makran. The Kabul Shahi kings and their Zunbil kinsmen successfully blocked access to the Khyber Pass and Gomal Pass routes into India from 653 to 870 AD,[34] while modern Balochistan, Pakistan, comprising the areas of Kikan or Qiqanan, Nukan, Turan, Buqan, Qufs, Mashkey and Makran, would face several Arab expeditions between 661 and 711 AD.[35] The Arabs launched several raids against these frontier lands, but repeated rebellions in Sistan and Khurasan between 653 and 691 AD diverted much of their military resources in order to subdue these breakaway provinces and away from expansion into Al Hind. Muslim control of these areas ebbed and flowed repeatedly as a result until 870 AD. Arab troops disliked being stationed in Makran.[36] Fierce resistance stalled Arab progress repeatedly in the "frontier zone".[25][37] and the Arabs had to focus on tribute extraction instead of systematic conquest as a result.

Battles in Makran and Zabulistan edit

Arabs launched several campaigns in eastern Balochistan between 661 and 681 AD. Four Arab commanders were killed during these campaigns, however, Sinan b. Salma managed to conquer parts of Makran including the Chagai area,[citation needed] and established a permanent base of operations by 673 AD.[38] Rashid b. Amr, the next governor of Makran, subdued Mashkey in 672 CE.[citation needed] Munzir b. Jarood Al Abadi managed to garrison Kikan and conquer Buqan by 681 CE, while Ibn Harri Al Bahili conducted several campaigns to secure the Arab hold on Kikan, Makran and Buqan by 683 AD.[39][better source needed][40] Zunbil saw off Arab campaigns in 668, 672 and 673 by paying tribute. Although Arabs occupied the areas south of Helmand in 673 permanently[38] Zunbil defeated Yazid b. Salm's army in 681 AD at Junzah, and Arabs had to pay 500,000 dirhams as ransom to get free their prisoners.[41]

Al Hajjaj and the East edit

Al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf Al Thaqifi, who had played a crucial role during the Second Fitna for the Umayyad cause, was appointed the governor of Iraq in 694 AD. Hajjaj received governorship of Khurasan and Sistan in 697 and he sponsored Muslim expansions in Makran, Sistan, Transoxiana and Sindh.[42][43]

Campaigns in Makran and Zabul edit

The Arab's hold on Makran weakened when Arab rebels seized the province, and Hajjaj had to send expeditions under three governors between 694 and 707 AD before Makran was partially recovered by 694 AD.[citation needed] Al Hajjaj also fought against Zunbil in 698 and 700 AD. The 20,000 strong army led by Ubaidullah ibn Abu Bakra was trapped by the armies of Zunbil and Turki Shah near Kabul in 698 AD, and lost 15,000 men to thirst and hunger, earning this force the title of the "Doomed Army".[44][45] Abd al-Rahman ibn Muhammad ibn al-Ash'ath next led 20,000 troops each from Kufa and Basra (Dubbed the "Peacock Army" due to the splemdor of ther equipment and participation numerous members of Arab nobility)[46] in a successful campaign in 700 AD, but when he wanted to stop during winter, Al-Hajjaj's insulting rebuke[47] led to mutiny.[48] The mutiny was put down by 704 AD, and Al-Hajjaj granted a 7-year truce to Zunbil.

Umayyad expansion in Sind and Multan edit

 
Muhammad ibn Qasim's Campaigns in Sindh.
  Desert areas (Registan Desert and Thar Desert)
  Kingdom of Sindh (c. 632–712 AD)
  Maitraka Kingdom (c. 475–c. 776 AD)
  Umayyad Caliphate (c. 710 AD)

Meds pirates operated from their bases at Kutch, Debal and Kathiawar[49] and during one of their raids had kidnapped Muslim women travelling from Sri Lanka to Arabia, thus providing the casus belli[50][51] against Sindh Raja Dahir.[52] Raja Dahir of Sindh had previously refused to return Arab rebels from Sindh[20][53] and furthermore, he now expressed his inability to punish the pirates.[citation needed] Hajjaj sent two expeditions to Sindh, bothy of which were defeated.[54][55] Al Hajjaj next equipped an army built around 6,000 Syrian cavalry and detachments of mawali from Iraq, six thousand camel riders, and a baggage train of 3,000 camels under his Nephew Muhammad bin Qasim to Sindh. His artillery of five catapults were sent to Debal by sea[56] ("manjaniks").

Conquest of Sindh edit

Muhammad bin Qasim departed from Shiraz in 710 AD, the army marched along the coast to Tiaz in Makran, where the army of Makran joined him, and the combined force moved to the Kech valley.[citation needed] Muhammad subdued the restive towns of Fannazbur and Armabil,[57] finally completing the conquest of Makran. Then the army met up with the reinforcements and catapults sent by sea near Debal and took Debal through assault.[56] From Debal, the Arabs moved towards north along the Indus, clearing the region up to Budha. Some towns like Nerun and Sadusan (Sehwan) surrendered peacefully. Muhammad bin Qasim moved back to Nerun to resupply and receive reinforcements sent by Hajjaj.[58] The Arabs crossed the Indus further South and defeated the army of Dahir, who was killed.[59][60] Brahmanabad, then Alor (Aror) and finally Multan, were captured alongside other in-between towns with only light Muslim casualties.[61] Arabs marched up to the foothills of Kashmir along the Jhelum in 713 AD,[62] and stormed the Al-Kiraj (probably the Kangra valley).[63] Muhammad was deposed after the death of Caliph Walid in 715 . Jai Singh, son of Dahir captured Brahmanabad and Arab rule was restricted to the Western shore of the Indus.[64] Sindh was briefly lost to the caliph when the rebel Yazid b. Muhallab took over Sindh in 720.[65]

Last Umayyad campaigns in Al Hind edit

 
Early Arab conquest of what is now Pakistan by Muhammad bin Qasim for Umayyad caliphate rule c. 711 AD.

Junaid b. Abd Al Rahman Al Marri became the governor of Sindh in 723 AD. He conquered Debal, defeated and killed Jai Singh,[citation needed] secured Sindh and Southern Punjab and then stormed Al Kiraj (Kangra valley) in 724 AD.[63][66] Junaid next attacked a number of Hindu kingdoms in what is now Rajasthan, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh aiming at permanent conquest, but the chronology and area of operation of the campaigns during 725–743 is difficult to follow because accurate, complete information is lacking.[63] The Arabs moved east from Sindh in several detachments[17] and probably attacked from both the land and the sea, occupying Mirmad (Marumada, in Jaisalmer), Al-Mandal (perhaps Okhamandal in Gujarat) or Marwar,[67] and raiding Dahnaj, not identified, al-Baylaman (Bhilmal) and Jurz (Gurjara country—north Gujarat and southern Rajasthan),[68] attacking Barwas (Broach), and sacking Vallabhi.[69] Gurjara king Siluka[70] repelled Arabs from "Stravani and Valla", probably the area North of Jaisalmer and Jodhpur, and the invasion of Malwa but were ultimately defeated by Bappa Rawal and Nagabhata I in 725 AD near Ujjain.[71] Arabs lost control over the newly conquered territories and part of Sindh due to Arab tribal infighting and Arab soldiers deserting the newly conquered territory[72] in 731 AD.

Al Hakam b. Awana Al Kalbi in 733 AD, founded the garrison city of Al Mahfuza ("The Well Guarded") similar to Kufa, Basra and Wasit, on the eastern side of a lake near Brahmanabad.[63] Hakam next attempted to reclaim the conquests of Junaid in Al Hind. Arab records merely state that he was successful, Indian records at Navasari[73] details that Arab forces defeated "Kacchella, Saindhava, Saurashtra, Cavotaka, Maurya and Gurjara" kings. The city of Al Mansura ("The Victorious") was founded near Al Mahfuza to commemorate pacification of Sindh by Amr b. Muhammad in c. 738.[63] Al Hakam next invaded the Deccan in 739 with the intention of permanent conquest, but was decisively defeated at Navsari by the viceroy Avanijanashraya Pulakeshin of the Chalukya Empire serving Vikramaditya II. Arab rule was restricted to the west of Thar desert.

Last days of Abbasid Caliphate control edit

When the Abbasid Revolution overthrew the Umayyads in 750 AD after the Third Fitna, Sindh became independent and was captured by Musa b. K'ab al Tamimi in 752 AD.[74] Zunbil had defeated the Arabs in 728 AD, and saw off two Abbasid invasions in 769 and 785. Abbasids attacked Kabul several times and collected tribute between 787 and 815 AD and extracted tribute after each campaign. Abbasid's Governor of Sindh, Hisham (in office 768–773) raided Kashmir, recaptured parts of Punjab from Karkota control,[75] and launched naval raids against ports of Gujarat.[76] These raids like other Abbasid Naval raids launched in 776 and 779 AD, gained no territory. Arabs occupied Sindian (Southern Kutch) in 810, only to lose it in 841.[77] Civil war erupted in Sindh in 842 AD, and the Habbari dynasty occupied Mansurah, and by 871, five independent principalities had emerged, with the Banu Habbari clan controlling in Mansurah, Banu Munabbih occupying Multan, Banu Madan ruling in Makran, and Makshey and Turan falling to other rulers, all outside direct Caliphate control.[78] Ismaili missionaries found a receptive audience among both the Sunni and non-Muslim populations in Multan, which became a center of the Ismaili sect of Islam. The Saffarid Dynasty of Zaranj occupied Kabul and the kingdom of Zunbil permanently in 871 AD. A new chapter of Muslim conquests began when the Samanid Dynasty took over the Saffarid Kingdom and Sabuktigin seized Ghazni.

Later Muslim invasions edit

After the Decline of the Caliphate, Muslim incursions resumed under the later Turkic and Central Asian dynasties like the Saffarid dynasty and the Samanid Dynasty with more local capitals. They supplanted the Abbasid Caliphate and expanded their domains both northwards and eastwards. Continuous raids from these empires in the north-west of India led to the loss of stability in the Indian kingdoms, and led to the establishment of Islam in the heart of India.

Second phase (11th to 13th centuries) edit

Ghaznavid Sultanate edit

Under Sabuktigin, the Ghaznavid Empire found itself in conflict with the Kabul Shahi Raja Jayapala in the east. When Sabuktigin died and his son Mahmud ascended the throne in 998 AD, Ghazni was engaged in the North with the Qarakhanids when the Shahi Raja renewed hostilities in east once again.

In the early 11th century, Mahmud of Ghazni launched seventeen expeditions into Indian subcontinent. In 1001, Sultan Mahmud of Ghazni defeated Raja Jayapala of the Hindu Shahi Dynasty of Gandhara (in modern Afghanistan), in the Battle of Peshawar and marched further towards the west of Peshawar (in modern Pakistan) and, in 1005, made it the center for his forces.

In 1030, Al Biruni reported on the devastation caused during the conquest of Gandhara and much of northwest India by Mahmud of Ghazni following his defeat of Jayapala in the Battle of Peshawar in 1001:

Now in the following times no Muslim conqueror passed beyond the frontier of Kabul and the river Sindh until the days of the Turks, when they seized the power in Ghazna under the Sâmânî dynasty, and the supreme power fell to the lot of Nasir-addaula Sabuktagin. This prince chose the holy war as his calling, and therefore called himself al-Ghazi ("the warrior/invader"). In the interest of his successors, he constructed, to weaken the Indian frontier, those roads on which afterwards his son Yamin-addaula Mahmud marched into India during a period of thirty years and more. God be merciful to both father and son! Mahmud utterly ruined the prosperity of the country, and performed there wonderful exploits, by which the Hindus became like atoms of dust scattered in all directions, and like a tale of old in the mouth of the people. Their scattered remains cherish, of course, the most inveterate aversion towards all Muslims. This is the reason, too, why Hindu sciences have retired far away from those parts of the country conquered by us, and have fled to places which our hand cannot yet reach, to Kashmir, Benares, and other places. And there the antagonism between them and all foreigners receives more and more nourishment both from political and religious sources.[79]

During the closing years of the tenth and the early years of the succeeding century of our era, Mahmud the first Sultan and Musalman of the Turk dynasty of kings who ruled at Ghazni, made a succession of inroads twelve or fourteen in number, into Gandhar – the present Peshwar valley – in the course of his proselytizing invasions of Hindustan.[80]

Fire and sword, havoc and destruction, marked his course everywhere. Gandhar which was styled the Garden of the North was left at his death a weird and desolate waste. Its rich fields and fruitful gardens, together with the canal which watered them (the course of which is still partially traceable in the western part of the plain), had all disappeared. Its numerous stone built cities, monasteries, and topes with their valuable and revered monuments and sculptures, were sacked, fired, razed to the ground, and utterly destroyed as habitations.[80]

The Ghaznavid conquests were initially directed against the Ismaili Fatimids of Multan, who were engaged in an ongoing struggle with the provinces of the Abbasid Caliphate in conjunction with their compatriots of the Fatimid Caliphate in North Africa and the Middle East; Mahmud apparently hoped to curry the favor of the Abbasids in this fashion. However, once this aim was accomplished, he moved onto the looting of Indian temples and monasteries. By 1027, Mahmud had captured parts of North India and obtained formal recognition of Ghazni's sovereignty from the Abbasid Caliph, al-Qadir Billah.

Ghaznavid's rule in Northwestern India (modern Afghanistan and Pakistan) lasted over for 175 years, from 1010 to 1187. It was during this period that Lahore assumed considerable importance, apart from being the second capital, and later the only capital of the Ghaznavid Empire.

At the end of his reign, Mahmud's empire extended from Kurdistan in the west to Samarkand in the Northeast, and from the Caspian Sea to the Punjab in the west. Although his raids carried his forces across Northern and Western India, only Punjab came under his permanent rule while Kashmir, the Doab, Rajasthan, and Gujarat remained nominal under the control of the local Indian dynasties. In 1030, Mahmud fell gravely ill and died at age 59. As with the invaders of three centuries ago, Mahmud's armies reached temples in Varanasi, Mathura, Ujjain, Maheshwar, Jwalamukhi, Somnath and Dwarka.

Ghurid Empire edit

 
Map of the Ghurid dynasty at its greatest extent in the early 13th century under Ghiyath al-Din Muhammad and Muhammad of Ghor

Mu'izz al-Din, better known as Shahāb-ud-Din Muhammad Ghori was a conqueror from the region of Ghor in modern Afghanistan. Before 1160, the Ghaznavid Empire covered an area running from central Iran east to the Punjab, with capitals at Ghazni on the banks of Ghazni river in present-day Afghanistan, and at Lahore in present-day Pakistan. In 1173, Muhammad of Ghor was crowned Ghazni. In 1186, he conquered Lahore ending the Ghaznavid empire and bringing the last of Ghaznavid territory under his control. His early campaigns in the Indian Subcontinent were against the Qarmatians of Multan.

In 1191, he invaded the territory of Prithviraj III of Ajmer, who ruled his territory from Delhi to Ajmer in present-day Rajasthan, but was defeated at the First Battle of Tarain.[81] The following year, Mu'izz al-Din assembled 120,000 horsemen and once again invaded India. Mu'izz al-Din's army met Prithviraj's army again at Tarain, and this time Mu'izz al-Din won; Govindraj was slain, Prithviraj executed[82] and Mu'izz al-Din advanced onto Delhi. Within a year, Mu'izz al-Din controlled North-Western Rajasthan and Northern Ganges-Yamuna Doab. After these victories in India, and Mu'izz al-Din's establishment Delhi as the capital of his Indian provinces, Multan was also incorporated as a major part of his empire. Mu'izz al-Din then returned east to Ghazni to deal with the threat on his eastern frontiers from the Turks of the Khwarizmian Empire, whiles his armies continued to advance through Northern India, raiding as far as Bengal.

Mu'izz al-Din returned to Lahore after 1200. In 1206, Mu'izz al-Din had to travel to Lahore to crush a revolt. On his way back to Ghazni his caravan rested at Damik near Sohawa (which is near the city of Jhelum in the Punjab province of modern-day Pakistan). He was assassinated on 15 March 1206, while offering his evening prayers by the assassins from the Ismaili Muslim sect.[83][84]

Third phase (13th to 16th centuries) edit

Delhi Sultanate edit

 
Mamluk Dynasty

Muhammad's Ghorid successors established the first dynasty of the Delhi Sultanate, while the Mamluk Dynasty in 1211 (however, the Delhi Sultanate is traditionally held to have been founded in 1206) seized the reins of the empire. Mamluk means "slave" and referred to the Turkic slave soldiers who became rulers. The territory under control of the Muslim rulers in Delhi expanded rapidly.

Several Turko-Afghan dynasties ruled from Delhi: the Mamluk (1206–1290), the Khalji (1290–1320), the Tughlaq (1320–1414), the Sayyid (1414–51), and the Lodhi (1451–1526). By the mid-century, Bengal and much of central India was under the Delhi Sultanate.

Tughlaq invasions edit

 
Delhi Sultanate reached its zenith under the Tughlaq dynasty.[85]

The Tughlaqs conquered Delhi with the support of the Khokhar tribes who formed the vanguard of the army.[86][87][full citation needed] The Tughlaqs claimed to be "bound to all Indians by ties of blood and relation".[88][89] Under the first ruler of the dynasty, Ghiyath al-Din Tughlaq, the Tughlaq court wrote a war ballad known as the Vaar in the Punjabi language, describing the introduction of Ghazi Malik's rise to the throne.[90] This was the earliest known Vaar in Punjabi poetry.[91] The Tughalqs attacked and plundered Malwa, Gujarat, Mahratta, Tilang, Kampila, Dhur-samundar, Mabar, Lakhnauti, Chittagong, Sunarganw and Tirhut.[92] The Tughlaqs chose Daulatabad in southern India as the second administrative capital of the Delhi Sultanate.[93] The Delhi Sultanate forced migration of the Muslim population of Delhi, including his royal family, the nobles, Syeds, Sheikhs and 'Ulema to settle in Daulatabad. The purpose of transferring the entire Muslim elite to Daulatabad was to act as propagandists who would adapt Islamic religious symbolism to the rhetoric of empire, and so the Sufis could by persuasion bring many of the inhabitants of the Deccan to become Muslim.[94] These elite colonists from the capital of Delhi were Urdu-speakers, who carried the Urdu language to the Deccan.[95]

During the time of Delhi Sultanate, the Vijayanagara Empire resisted attempts of Delhi Sultanate to establish dominion in the Southern India, serving as a barrier against invasion by the Muslims.[96]

 
Bakhtiyar Khilji's massacre of Buddhist monks in Bihar, India. Khilji destroyed the Nalanda and Vikramshila universities during his raids across North Indian plains, massacring many Buddhist and Brahmin scholars.[97][98]

The Sultans of Delhi enjoyed cordial, if superficial, relations with Muslim rulers in the Near East but owed them no allegiance. They based their laws on the Quran and the sharia and permitted non-Muslim subjects to practice their own religions if they paid the jizya (poll tax). They ruled from urban centers, while military camps and trading posts provided the nuclei for towns that sprang up in the countryside.

Perhaps the most significant contribution of the Sultanate was its temporary success in insulating the subcontinent from the potential devastation of the Mongol invasion from Central Asia in the 13th century, which nonetheless led to the capture of Afghanistan and western Pakistan by the Mongols (see the Ilkhanate Dynasty). Under the Sultanate, "Indo-Muslim" fusion left lasting monuments in architecture, music, literature, and religion. In addition it is surmised that the language of Urdu (literally meaning "horde" or "camp" in various Turkic dialects) was born during the Delhi Sultanate period as a result of the mingling of Sanskritic Hindi and the Persian, Turkish, Arabic favoured by the Muslim invaders of India[citation needed].

The Sultanate suffered significantly from the sacking of Delhi in 1398 by Timur, but revived briefly under the Lodi Dynasty. This was the final dynasty of the Sultanate before it was conquered by Zahiruddin Babur in 1526, who subsequently founded the Mughal dynasty that ruled from the 16th to the 18th centuries.

Timur edit

Tīmūr bin Taraghay Barlas, known in the West as Tamerlane or "Timur the lame", was a 14th-century warlord of Turco-Mongol descent.[99] He had conquered much of western and central Asia, and founded the Timurid Empire (1370–1507) in Central Asia which survived until 1857 as the Mughal dynasty of India.

 
Timur defeats the Sultan of Delhi, Nasir-u Din Mehmud, in the winter of 1397–1398

Informed about civil war in South Asia, Timur began a trek starting in 1398 to invade the reigning Sultan Nasir-u Din Mehmud of the Tughlaq Dynasty in the north Indian city of Delhi.[100] His campaign was politically pretexted that the Muslim Delhi Sultanate was too tolerant toward its "Hindu" subjects, but that could not mask the real reason being to amass the wealth of the Delhi Sultanate.[101]

Timur crossed the Indus River at Attock (now Pakistan) on 24 September. In Haryana, his soldiers killed about 50 to 100 Hindu civilians each.[102]

Timur's invasion did not go unopposed, however, and he did meet some resistance during his march to Delhi, most notably with the Sarv Khap coalition in northern India, as well as the Governor of Meerut. Although impressed and momentarily stalled by the valour of Ilyaas Awan, Timur was able to continue his relentless approach to Delhi, arriving in 1398 to combat the armies of Sultan Mehmud, already weakened by an internal battle for ascension within the royal family.

The Sultan's army was easily defeated on 17 December 1398. Timur entered Delhi and the city was sacked, destroyed, and left in ruins. Before the battle for Delhi, Timur executed more than 100,000 "Hindu" captives.[99][100]

Timur himself recorded the invasions in his memoirs, which were collectively known as Tuzk-i-Timuri.[99][100][103][104] Timur's purported autobiography, the Tuzk-e-Taimuri ("Memoirs of Temur") is a later fabrication, although most of the historical facts are accurate.[99]

Historian Irfan Habib wrote that in the 14th century, the word "Hindu" (people of "Al-Hind", "Hind" being "India") included "both Hindus and Muslims" in religious connotations.[105]

When Timur entered Delhi after defeating Mahmud Toghloq's forces, he granted an amnesty in return for protection money (mâl-e amâni). But on the fourth day he ordered that all the people of the city be enslaved; and so they were. Thus reports Yahya, who here inserts a pious prayer in Arabic for the victims' consolation ("To God we return, and everything happens by His will"). Yazdi, on the other hand, does not have any sympathy to waste on these wretches. He records that Timur had granted protection to the people of Delhi on 18 December 1398, and the collectors had begun collecting the protection money. But large groups of Timur's soldiers began to enter the city and, like birds of prey, attacked its citizens. The "pagan Hindus" (Henduân-e gabr) having had the temerity to begin immolating their women and themselves, the three cities of Delhi were put to sack by Timur's soldiers. "Faithless Hindus", he adds, had gathered in the Congregation Mosque of Old Delhi and Timur's officers put them ruthlessly to slaughter there on 29 December. Clearly, Yazdi's "Hindus" included Muslims as well.[105]

Timur left Delhi in approximately January 1399. In April he had returned to his own capital beyond the Oxus (Amu Darya). Immense quantities of spoils were taken from India. According to Ruy Gonzáles de Clavijo, 90 captured elephants were employed merely to carry precious stones looted from his conquest, which was used to erect a mosque at Samarkand – what historians today believe is the enormous Bibi-Khanym Mosque. Ironically, the mosque was constructed too quickly and suffered from disrepair within a few decades of its construction.

Regional sultanates edit

Kashmir was conquered by the Shah Mir dynasty in the 14th century. Regional kingdoms such as Bengal, Gujarat, Malwa, Khandesh, Jaunpur, and Bahmanis expanded at the expense of the Delhi Sultanate. Gaining conversions to Islam was easier under regional Sultanates.[106]

Deccan sultanates edit

 
Map of five Deccan Sultanates before Battle of Talikota.

The term of Deccan Sultanates[107] was used for five Muslim dynasties that ruled several late medieval Indian kingdoms, namely Adil Shahi Sultanate,[108] Qutb Shahi Sultanate,[109] Nizam Shahi Sultanate,[110] Bidar Sultanate,[111] and Berar Sultanate[112] in South India. The Deccan Sultanates ruled the Deccan Plateau between the Krishna River and the Vindhya Range. These sultanates became independent during the separation of the Bahmani Sultanate, another Muslim empire.

 
Victory of Deccan Sultanates in Battle of Talikota.

The ruling families of all these five sultanates were of diverse origin; the Qutb Shahi dynasty of Golconda Sultanate was of Iranian Turkmen origin,[113] the Barid Shahi dynasty of Bidar Sultanate being founded by a Georgian noble,[114] the Adil Shahi dynasty of Bijapur Sultanate was founded by a Georgian slave[115] while Nizam Shahi dynasty of Ahmadnagar Sultanate and Imad Shahi dynasty of Berar Sultanate were of Hindu lineage (Ahmadnagar being Brahmin[116] and Berar being Kanarese[117]).

Fourth phase (16th to 18th centuries) edit

Mughal Empire edit

 
The Mughal Empire in 1700

India in the early 16th century presented a fragmented picture of rulers who lacked concern for their subjects and failed to create a common body of laws or institutions.[citation needed] Outside developments also played a role in shaping events. The circumnavigation of Africa by the Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama in 1498 allowed Europeans to challenge Muslim control of the trading routes between Europe and Asia. In Central Asia and Afghanistan, shifts in power pushed Babur of the Timurid dynasty (in present-day Uzbekistan) southward, first to Kabul and then to the heart of Indian subcontinent. The dynasty he founded endured for more than two centuries.

Babur edit

 
Babur and the Mughal Army at the Urvah valley in Gwalior.

A descendant of both Genghis Khan and Timur, Babur combined strength and courage with a love of beauty, and military ability with cultivation. He concentrated on gaining control of Northwestern India, doing so in 1526 by defeating the last Lodhi Sultan in the First battle of Panipat, a town north of Delhi. Babur then turned to the tasks of persuading his Central Asian followers to stay on in India and of overcoming other contenders for power, like the Rajputs and the Afghans. He succeeded in both tasks but died shortly thereafter in 1530. The Mughal Empire was one of the largest centralized states in pre-modern history and was the precursor to the British Indian Empire.

Babur was followed by his great-grandson, Shah Jahan (1628–1658), builder of the Taj Mahal and other magnificent buildings. Two other towering figures of the Mughal era were Akbar (r. 1556–1605) and Aurangzeb (r. 1658–1707). Both rulers expanded the empire greatly and were able administrators. However, Akbar was known for his religious tolerance and administrative genius while Aurangzeb was a pious Muslim and fierce advocate of more orthodox Islam.

Aurangzeb edit

While some rulers were zealous in their spread of Islam, others were relatively liberal. The Mughal emperor Akbar, an example of the latter established a new religion, Din E Elahi, which included beliefs from different faiths and even build many temples in his empire. He abolished the jizya twice. In contrast, his great-grandson Aurangazeb was a more religious and orthodox ruler. Aurangzeb's Deccan campaign saw one of the largest death tolls in South Asian history, with an estimated 4.6 million people killed during his reign, Muslims and Hindus alike.[119] An estimated of 2.5 million of Aurangzeb's army were killed during the Mughal–Maratha Wars (100,000 annually during a quarter-century), while 2 million civilians in war-torn lands died due to drought, plague and famine.[120][119] In the century-and-a-half that followed the death of Aurangzeb, effective Muslim control started weakening. Succession to imperial and even provincial power, which had often become hereditary, was subject to intrigue and force. The mansabdari system gave way to the zamindari system, in which high-ranking officials took on the appearance of hereditary landed aristocracy with powers of collecting rents. As Delhi's control waned, other contenders for power emerged and clashed, thus preparing the way for the eventual British takeover.

Durrani Empire edit

 
Ahmad Shah Durrani and his coalition defeated the Maratha Empire, during the Third Battle of Panipat and restored the Mughal emperor Shah Alam II.[121]

Ahmed Shah Abdali – a Pashtun – embarked on conquest in South Asia starting in 1747.[122] In the short time of just over a quarter of a century, he forged one of the largest Muslim empires of the 18th century. The high point of his conquests was his victory over the powerful Marathas in the Third Battle of Panipat, which occurred in 1761. In the Indian subcontinent, his empire stretched from the Indus at Attock all the way to the eastern Punjab. Uninterested in long-term of conquest or in replacing the Mughal Empire, he became increasingly pre occupied with revolts by the Sikhs.[citation needed] Vadda Ghalughara took place under the Muslim provincial government based at Lahore to wipe out the Sikhs, with non-combatant women, children and old men being killed, an offensive that had begun with the Mughals, with the Chhota Ghallughara.[123] but after two months Sikh Misls again assembled and defeated Durranis in Battle of Harnaulgarh, Sikhs Capture Sirhind Labore Multan His empire began to unravel decade before his death in 1772.

Decline of the Muslim rule edit

Maratha Empire edit

 
Maratha Empire (yellow area) at its zenith in 1760, stretching from the Deccan to present-day Pakistan

The single most important power to emerge in the Mughal dynasty was the Maratha Confederacy (1674–1818).[124] The Marathas are responsible, to a large extent for ending Mughal rule in India.[125] The Maratha Empire ruled large parts of India following the decline of the Mughals. The long and futile war bankrupted one of the most powerful empires in the world. Mountstuart Elphinstone termed this a demoralizing period for the Muslims as many of them lost the will to fight against the Maratha Empire.[126][127][128] The Maratha empire at its peak stretched from Trichinopoly (present day Tiruchirappalli in Tamil Nadu) in the south to the Afghan border in the north.[129][130] In early 1771, Mahadji, a notable Maratha general, recaptured Delhi and installed Shah Alam II as the puppet ruler on the Mughal throne. In north India, the Marathas thus regained the territory and the prestige lost as result of the defeat at Panipath in 1761.[131] A considerable portion of the Indian subcontinent came under the sway of the British Empire after the Third Anglo-Maratha War, which ended the Maratha Empire in 1818.

Sikh Empire edit

 
Sikh Empire, established by Ranjit Singh in North-west India

In the Punjab, Mughal power waned in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Successive bands of Sikhs attacked Lahore, and by 1780 partitioned it among themselves. Ranjit Singh unified the Sikh misldhars (commanders) and made Lahore the administrative capital of a new Sikh Empire in 1799.[132] In Afghanistan Zaman Shah Durrani was defeated by powerful Barakzai chief Fateh Khan who appointed Mahmud Shah Durrani as the new ruler of Afghanistan and appointed himself as Wazir of Afghanistan.[133] Sikhs however were now superior to the Afghans and started to annex Afghan provinces. The biggest victory of the Sikh Empire over the Durrani Empire came in the Battle of Attock fought in 1813 between Sikh and Wazir of Afghanistan Fateh Khan and his younger brother Dost Mohammad Khan. The Afghans were routed by the Sikh army and the Afghans lost over 9,000 soldiers in this battle. Dost Mohammad was seriously injured whereas his brother Wazir Fateh Khan fled back to Kabul fearing that his brother was dead.[134] In 1819 the last Afghan ruled Indian Province of Kashmir was conquered by Sikhs who registered another crushing victory over Afghan General Jabbar Khan.[135]

Impact on India, Islam and Muslims in India edit

Considering the complex history of the Muslim conquests of India, their recollection and legacy is controversial.

20th-century American historian Will Durant wrote about medieval India, "The Islamic conquest of India is probably the bloodiest story in history."[136]

In contrast, there are other historians such as American historian Audrey Truschke and Indian historian Romila Thapar, who claim that such views are unfounded or exaggerated.[137][138]

Conversion theories edit

 
Ruins of the Surya Temple at Martand, which was destroyed due to the iconoclastic policies of Sikandar Butshikan, photo taken by John Burke in 1868.
 
Somnath temple in ruins, 1869
 
Front view of the present Somnath Temple
The Somnath temple was first attacked by Mahmud of Ghazni and repeatedly rebuilt .

Considerable controversy exists both in scholarly and public opinion about the conversions to Islam typically represented by the following schools of thought:[139]

  1. The bulk of Muslims are descendants of migrants from the Iranian Plateau or Arabs.[140]
  2. Conversions occurred for non-religious reasons of pragmatism and patronage such as social mobility among the Muslim ruling elite or for relief from taxes.[139][141]
  3. Conversion was a result of the actions of Sunni Sufi saints and involved a genuine change of heart.[139]
  4. Conversion came from Buddhists and the en masse conversions of lower castes for social liberation and as a rejection of the oppressive Hindu caste strictures.[142]
  5. A combination, initially made under duress followed by a genuine change of heart.[139]
  6. As a socio-cultural process of diffusion and integration over an extended period of time into the sphere of the dominant Muslim civilisation and global polity at large.[143]

Embedded within this lies the concept of Islam as a foreign imposition and Hinduism being a natural condition of the natives who resisted, resulting in the failure of the project to Islamize the Indian subcontinent and is highly embroiled within the politics of the partition and communalism in India.[139]

Historians such as Will Durant described Islamic invasions of India as "The bloodiest story in history.[136] Jadunath Sarkar contends that several Muslim invaders were waging a systematic jihad against Hindus in India to the effect that "Every device short of massacre in cold blood was resorted to in order to convert heathen subjects".[144]

Hindus who converted to Islam however were not completely immune to persecution due to the caste system among Muslims in India established by Ziauddin al-Barani in the Fatawa-i Jahandari,[145] where they were regarded as an "Ajlaf" caste and subjected to discrimination by the "Ashraf" castes.[146][page needed] Others argue that, during the Muslim conquests in the Indian subcontinent, Indian-origin religions experienced persecution from various Muslim conquerors[147] who massacred Hindus, Jains and Buddhists, attacked temples and monasteries, and forced conversions on the battlefield.[148]

Disputers of the "conversion by the sword theory" point to the presence of the large Muslim communities found in Southern India, Sri Lanka, Western Burma, Bangladesh, Southern Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines coupled with the distinctive lack of equivalent Muslim communities around the heartland of historical Muslim empires in the Indian subcontinent as a refutation to the "conversion by the sword theory". The legacy of the Muslim conquest of South Asia is a hotly debated issue and argued even today.

Muslim invaders were not all simply raiders. Later rulers fought on to win kingdoms and stayed to create new ruling dynasties. The practices of these new rulers and their subsequent heirs (some of whom were born to Hindu wives) varied considerably. While some were uniformly hated, others developed a popular following. According to the memoirs of Ibn Battuta who travelled through Delhi in the 14th century, one of the previous sultans had been especially brutal and was deeply hated by Delhi's population. Batuta's memoirs also indicate that Muslims from the Arab world, Persia and Anatolia were often favoured with important posts at the royal courts, suggesting that locals may have played a somewhat subordinate role in the Delhi administration. The term "Turk" was commonly used to refer to their higher social status. S.A.A. Rizvi (The Wonder That Was India – II) however points to Muhammad ibn Tughluq as not only encouraging locals but promoting artisan groups such as cooks, barbers and gardeners to high administrative posts. In his reign, it is likely that conversions to Islam took place as a means of seeking greater social mobility and improved social standing.[149][self-published source?]

Numerous temples were destroyed by Muslim conquerors.[150] Richard M. Eaton lists a total of 80 temples that were desecrated by Muslim conquerors,[151] but notes this was not unusual in medieval India where numerous temples were also desecrated by Hindu and Buddhist kings against rival Indian kingdoms during conflicts between devotees of different Hindu deities, and between Hindus, Buddhists and Jains.[152][153][154] He also notes there were many instances of the Delhi Sultanate, which often had Hindu ministers, ordering the protection, maintenance and repairing of temples, according to both Muslim and Hindu sources, and that attacks on temples had significantly declined under the Mughal Empire.[151]

K. S. Lal, in his book Growth of Muslim Population in Medieval India, claimed that between 1000 and 1500 the Indian population decreased by 30 million,[155] but stated his estimates were tentative and did not claim any finality.[156][157][158] His work has come under criticism by historians such as Simon Digby (SOAS, University of London) and Irfan Habib for its agenda and lack of accurate data in pre-census times.[159][160] Different population estimates by economics historians Angus Maddison and Jean-Noël Biraben also indicate that India's population did not decrease between 1000 and 1500, but increased by tens of millions during that time.[161][162] The Indian population estimates from other economic historians including Colin Clark, John D. Durand and Colin McEvedy also show there was a population increase in India between 1000 and 1500.[163]

Expansion of trade edit

 
Cheraman Juma Masjid in Kerala

Islam's impact was the most notable in the expansion of trade. The first contact of Muslims with India was the Arab attack on a nest of pirates near modern-day Mumbai to safeguard their trade in the Arabian Sea. Around the same time, many Arabs settled at Indian ports- giving rise to small Muslim communities. The growth of these communities was not only due to conversion but also the fact that many Hindu kings of south India (such as those from Cholas) hired Muslims as mercenaries.[164]

A significant aspect of the Muslim period in world history was the emergence of Islamic Sharia courts capable of imposing a common commercial and legal system that extended from Morocco in the West to Mongolia in the North East and Indonesia in the South East. While southern India was already in trade with Arabs/Muslims, northern India found new opportunities. As the Hindu and Buddhist kingdoms of Asia were subjugated by Islam, and as Islam spread through Africa, it became a highly centralising force that facilitated in the creation of a common legal system that allowed letters of credit issued in say Egypt or Tunisia to be honoured in India or Indonesia (sharia has laws on the transaction of business with both Muslims and non-Muslims[citation needed]). To cement their rules, Muslim rulers initially promoted a system in which there was a revolving door between the clergy, the administrative nobility and the mercantile classes. The travels of explorer Muhammad Ibn-Abdullah Ibn-Batuta were eased because of this system. He served as an Imam in Delhi, as a judicial official in the Maldives, and as an envoy and trader in the Malabar. There was never a contradiction in any of his positions because each of these roles complemented the other. Islam created a compact under which political power, law and religion became fused in a manner so as to safeguard the interests of the mercantile class. This led world trade to expand to the maximum extent possible in the medieval world. Sher Shah Suri took initiatives in improvement of trade by abolishing all taxes which hindered progress of free trade. He built large networks of roads and constructed Grand Trunk Road (1540–1544), which connects Chittagong to Kabul; parts of it are still in use today. The geographic regions add to the diversity of languages and politics.

Cultural influence edit

The divide and rule policies, two-nation theory, and subsequent partition of British India in the wake of Independence from the British Empire has polarised the sub-continental psyche, making objective assessment hard in comparison to the other settled agricultural societies of India from the North West. Muslim rule differed from these others in the level of assimilation and syncretism that occurred. They retained their identity and introduced legal and administrative systems that superseded existing systems of social conduct and ethics. While this was a source of friction it resulted in a unique experience the legacy of which is a Muslim community strongly Islamic in character while at the same time distinctive and unique among its peers.

The impact of Islam on Indian culture has been inestimable. It permanently influenced the development of all areas of human endeavour – language, dress, cuisine, all the art forms, architecture and urban design, and social customs and values. Conversely, the languages of the Muslim invaders were modified by contact with local languages, to Urdu, which uses the Arabic script. This language was also known as Hindustani, an umbrella term used for the vernacular terminology of Hindi as well as Urdu, both major languages in South Asia today derived primarily from Sanskrit grammatical structures and vocabulary.

Muslim rule saw a greater urbanisation of India and the rise of many cities and their urban cultures. The biggest impact was upon trade resulting from a common commercial and legal system extending from Morocco to Indonesia. This change of emphasis on mercantilism and trade from the more strongly centralised governance systems further clashed with the agricultural based traditional economy and also provided fuel for social and political tensions.

A related development to the shifting economic conditions was the establishment of Karkhanas, or small factories and the import and dissemination of technology through India and the rest of the world. The use of ceramic tiles was adopted from architectural traditions of Iraq, Iran, and Central Asia. Rajasthan's blue pottery was a local variation of imported Chinese pottery. There is also the example of Sultan Abidin (1420–1470) sending Kashmiri artisans to Samarqand to learn book-binding and paper making. Khurja and Siwan became renowned for pottery, Moradabad for brass ware, Mirzapur for carpets, Firozabad for glass wares, Farrukhabad for printing, Sahranpur and Nagina for wood-carving, Bidar and Lucknow for bidriware, Srinagar for papier-mache, Benaras for jewellery and textiles, and so on. On the flip-side encouraging such growth also resulted in higher taxes on the peasantry.

Numerous Indian scientific and mathematical advances and the Hindu numerals were spread to the rest of the world[165] and much of the scholarly work and advances in the sciences of the age under Muslim nations across the globe were imported by the liberal patronage of arts and sciences by the rulers. The languages brought by Islam were modified by contact with local languages leading to the creation of several new languages, such as Urdu, which uses the modified Arabic script, but with more Persian words. The influences of these languages exist in several dialects in India today.

Islamic and Mughal architecture and art is widely noticeable in India, examples being the Taj Mahal and Jama Masjid. At the same time, Muslim rulers destroyed many of the ancient Indian architectural marvels and converted them into Islamic structures, most notably at Varanasi, Mathura, Ayodhya and the Kutub Complex in New Delhi.

Migration of Hindus edit

 
Copper Inscription by one of the Baise (22) King of Doti, Raika Mandhata Shahi on Saka Era, 1612 CE

Few groups of Hindus including Rajputs were entering what is today Nepal before the fall of Chittor due to regular invasions of Muslims in India.[166] After the fall of Chittorgarh in 1303 by the Alauddin Khilji of the Khalji dynasty, Rajputs from the region immigrated in large groups into what is today Nepal due to heavy religious persecution. The incident is supported by both the Rajput and Nepalese traditions.[167][168][169][166][note 1] Historian John T Hitchcock and John Whelpton contends that the regular invasions by Muslims led to heavy influx of Rajputs with Brahmins from the 12th century.[173][174]

The entry of Rajputs in central region of what is today Nepal were easily assisted by Khas Malla rulers who had developed a large feudatory state covering more than half of the Greater Nepal.[166] The Hindu immigrants including Rajputs were mixed into the Khas society quickly as a result of much resemblance.[166] Also, the Magar tribesmen of the Western region of what is today Nepal welcomed the immigrant Rajput chiefs with much cordiality.[175]

Religious policies edit

General effect edit

Parts of India have been subject to Muslim rule from the period of Muhammad ibn Qasim till the fall of the Mughal Empire. While there is a tendency to view the Muslim conquests and Muslim empires as a prolonged period of violence against Hindu culture,[note 2] in between the periods of wars and conquests, there were harmonious Hindu-Muslim relations in most Indian communities,[176] and the Indian population grew during the medieval Muslim times. No populations were expelled based on their religion by either the Muslim or Hindu kings, nor were attempts made to annihilate a specific religion.[176]

According to Romila Thapar, with the onset of Muslim rule all Indians, higher and lower caste were lumped together in the category of "Hindus". While higher-caste Indians regarded lower castes to be impure, they were now regarded as belonging to a similar category, which partly explains the belief among many higher caste Indians "Hinduism in the last one thousand years has been through the most severe persecution that any religion in the world has ever undergone." Thapar further notes that "The need to exaggerate the persecution at the hands of the Muslim is required to justify the inculcation of anti-Muslim sentiments among the Hindus of today."[177] Hindutva-allies have even framed the Muslim violence against Hindu expressions of faith as a "Hindu Holocaust".[178]

Romila Thapar states that the belief in a severe persecution in the last millennium brushes away the "various expressions of religious persecution in India prior to the coming of the Muslims and particularly between the Śaiva and the Buddhist and Jaina sects". She questions what persecution means, and if it means religious conversions, she doubts that conversions can be interpreted as forms of persecution. It is quite correct to mention that Muslim iconoclasts destroyed temples and the broke images of Hindus, states Thapar, it should also be mentioned that Muslim rulers made donations to Hindu sects during their rule.[177]

During the Islamic rule period, states David Lorenzen, there was state-sponsored persecution against Hindus, yet it was sporadic and directed mostly at Hindu religious monuments.[179] According to Deepa Ollapally, the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb was clearly discriminatory towards Hindu and all other non-Muslims, displaying an "unprecedented level of religious bigotry", but perhaps this was a consequence of the opposition he faced from a number of his family members.[180] During the medieval span, she states, "episodes of direct religious persecution of Hindus were rare", as were communal riots between Hindus and Muslims.[181]

Destruction of religious architecture edit

According to Wink, the mutilation and destruction of Hindu religious idols and temples were an attack on Hindu religious practice,[182][failed verification][note 3] and the Muslim destruction of religious architecture was a means to eradicate the vestiges of Hindu religious symbols. Muslim texts of this period justify it based on their contempt and abhorence for idols and idolators in Islamic thought.[186][note 4] Jackson notes that the Muslim historians of the medieval era viewed the creation and expansion of Islamic Sultanates in Hindustan as "holy war" and a religious conquest, characterizing Muslim forces as "the army of Islam" and the Hindus as infidels.[188][189] Yet, states Jackson, these records need to be interpreted and relied upon with care given their tendencies to exaggerate. This was not a period of "uncompromising iconoclasm", states Jackson. Cities that quickly surrendered to the Islamic army, says Jackson, "got a better deal" for their religious monuments.[188]

According to Richard Davis, targeting sacred temples was not unique to Muslim rulers in India. Some Hindu kings too, prior to the formation of first Islamic sultanates in India, expropriated sacred idols from temples and took it back to their capitals as a political symbol of victory. However, the sacred temples, icons and the looted image carried away was still sacred and treated with respect by the victorious Hindu king and his forces, states Richard Davis. There is hardly any evidence of "mutilation of divine images and intentional defilement" of Hindu sacred icons or temples by armies in control of Hindu rulers. The evidence that is available suggests that the victorious Hindu kings undertook significant effort to house the expropriated images in new, grand temples within their kingdom.[190] According to Wink, Hindu destruction of Buddhist and Jain places of worship took place before the 10th century, but the evidence for such 'Hindu iconoclasm' is incidental, too vague, and unconvincing.[191] According to Wink, mutilation and defilement of sacred icons is rarely evidenced in Hindu texts, in contrast to Muslim texts on the Islamic iconoclasm in India.[192]

Effect on Hindu learning edit

The destruction of temples and educational institutions, the killings of learned monks and the scattering of students, led to a widespread decline in Hindu education.[citation needed] With the fall of Hindu kings, science research and philosophy faced some setbacks due to a lack of funding, royal support, and an open environment.[citation needed] Despite unfavourable treatment under the Muslim rule, Brahmanical education continued and was also patronised by rulers like Akbar and others. Bukka Raya I, one of the founders of Vijaynagar Empire, had taken steps to rehabilitate Hindu religious and cultural institutions which suffered a serious setback under Muslim rule. Buddhists centres of learning decayed, leading to the rise to prominence of Brahmanical institutions.[193]

While Sanskrit language and research on Vedantic philosophy faced a period of struggle, with Muslim rulers often targeting well-established and well-known educational institutions that were often suffering at the time, the traditional educational institutions in villages continued as before,[193] vernacular regional languages based on Sanskrit thrived. A lot of Vedantic literature got translated into these languages between 12th to 15th centuries.[194]

Muhammad bin-Qasim and the Chachnama edit

Muslim conquest of the Indian subcontinent began in early 8th century CE with a Muhammad ibn Qasim-led army. This campaign is narrated in the 13th-century surviving manuscript of Chach Nama by Bakr Kūfī, which was claimed to be based on an earlier Arabic record.[195]

Content edit

The Chach Nama mentions temple demolitions, mass executions of resisting Sindhi forces and the enslavement of their dependents; kingdoms ruled by Hindu and Buddhist kings were attacked, their wealth plundered, tribute (kharaj) settled and hostages taken, often as slaves to Iraq.[196][197] According to André Wink, a historian specializing in Indo-Islamic period in South Asia, these Hindus were given the choice to either convert to Islam and join the Arab armies, or be sealed (tattooing the hands) and pay Jizya (a tax).[198] The Chach Nama and evidence in other pre-11th century Persian texts suggests that these Hindu Jats also suffered restrictions and discrimination as non-Muslims, as was then usual elsewhere for the non-Muslim subjects (ahl adh-dhimma) per the Islamic law (Sharia), states Wink.[198]

Yohanan Friedmann however finds that Chachnama holds most of the contemporary religious as well as political authority to have collaborated with the invaders, and those who promptly surrendered were not only gifted with huge sums of money but also entrusted to rule conquered territories.[199] Friedmann also notes that bin-Qasim "gave his unqualified blessing to the characteristic features of the society"—he reappointed every deposed Brahmin (of Brahmanabad) to their jobs, exempted them from Jizya, allowed holding of traditional festivals, and granted protection to temples but enforced the caste-hierarchy with enhanced vigor, drawing from Sharia, as evident from his treatment of Jats.[199] Overall, Friedmann concludes that the conquest, as described in the Chach Nama, did "not result in any significant changes in the structure of Indian society".[199]

According to Johnson and Koyama, quoting Bosworth, there were "certainly massacres in the towns" in the early stages of campaign against pagan Hindus in Sind, but eventually they were granted dhimmi status and peace treaties were made with them.[200]

After the conquest of Sindh, Qasim chose the Hanafi school of Islamic law which stated that, when under Muslim rule, people of Indic religions such as Hindus, Buddhists, and Jains are to be regarded as dhimmis (from the Arab term) as well as "People of the Book" and are required to pay jizya for religious freedom.[51]

Doubtful source edit

The historicity of Chachnama has been questioned. Francesco Gabrieli considers the Chach Nama to be a "historical romance" which was "a late and doubtful source" for information about bin-Qasim and must be carefully sieved to locate the facts; on such a reading, he admired bin-Qasim's proclamations concerning "principle of tolerance and religious freedom".[201]Peter Hardy takes a roughly similar stance and lenses the work as a work of "political theory". Manan Ahmed Asif criticizes the very premises of recovering portions of Chachnama as a historical chronicle of Muslim conquest; he argues that the site and times of production dictated its entire content, and that it must be read in entirety, as an original work in the genre of "political theory" where history is creatively extrapolated with romantic fiction to gain favor in the court of Nasiruddin Qabacha.[202] Wink states that some scholars treat Chachnama and other Muslim texts of its era, as "largely pseudo-history". He concurs that the skepticism about each individual source is justified and Chachnama is part fiction.[203][204] Yet, adds Wink, taken together the common elements in these diverse sources suggest that Hindus were treated as dhimmis and targeted for certain discriminatory measures prescribed in the Sharia, as well as entitled to protection and limited religious freedoms in a Muslim state.[203]

Early sultanates (11th–12th century) edit

Muslim texts of that period are replete with iconoclast rhetoric, descriptions of mass-slaughter of Hindus, and repeat ad nauseam that "the army of Islam obtain[ed] abundant wealth and unlimited riches" from the conquered sites.[205] The Hindus are described in these Islamic texts as infidels, Hindustan as war zone ("Dar-al-Harb"), and attacks on pagan Hindus as a part of a holy war (jihad), states Peter Jackson.[206] However, states Wink, this killing was not systematic and "was normally confined to the 'fighting men'" though the wars and episodes of routine violence did precipitate a great famine with civilian casualties in tens of thousands.[207] The pervasive and most striking feature of the Arabic literature on Sind and Hind of the 11th to 13th-century is its constant obsession with idol worship and polytheism in the Indian subcontinent.[208][209] There is piecemeal evidence of iconoclasm that began in Sind region, but the wholesale and more systematic onslaught against major Hindu religious monuments is evidenced in North India.[210]

Richard Eaton, Sunil Kumar, Romila Thapar, Richard H. Davis and others argue that these iconoclastic actions were not primarily driven by religious zeal, but were politically strategic acts of destruction in that temples in medieval India were sites associated with sovereignty, royal power, money, and authority.[152][211][212][213] According to Wink, the iconoclasm was a product of "religious, economic and political" motives and the practice undoubtedly escalated due to the "vast amounts of immobilized treasure" in these temples.[214] As the Indo-Islamic conquests of the 11th and 12th centuries moved beyond Panjab and the Himalayan foothills of the northwest into the Ganges-Yamuna Doab region, states Andre Wink, "some of the most important sacred sites of Indian culture were destroyed and desecrated,"[205] and their broken parts consistently reused to make Islamic monuments.[215][note 5] Phyllis Granoff notes that "medieval Indian religious groups faced a serious crisis as invading Muslim armies sacked temples and defaced sacred image".[217]

The 11th and 12th centuries additionally witnessed the rise of irregulars and then Banjara-like groups who adopted Islam. These were "marauding bands" who caused much suffering and destruction in the countryside as they searched for food and supplies during the violent campaign of Ghurids against Hindustan.[218] The religious icons of Hindus were one of the targets of these Islamic campaigns.[219]

The 11th to 13th-century period did not witness any systematic attempts at forced conversions of Hindus into Muslims, nor is there evidence of widespread Islamicization in al-Hind that emerged from the violent conquest. The political power shifted from Hindu kings to Muslim sultans in conquered areas. If some temples were not destroyed in these areas, it did result in a loss to Hindu temple building patronage and an uprooting of Hindu sacred geography.[220]

The second half of the 13th-century witnessed raids on Hindu kingdoms by Muslim forces controlling the northwest and north India, states Peter Jackson.[221] These did not lead to sustained persecution of the Hindus in the targeted kingdoms, because the Muslim armies merely looted the Hindus, took cattle and slaves, then left. The raids caused suffering, yet also rallied the Islamic faithfuls and weakened the infidel prince by weakening his standing among his Hindu subjects.[221] These raids were into Rajput kingdoms, those in central India, Lakhnawti–Awadh, and in eastern regions such as Bihar.[222]

Numerous Islamic texts of that era, states Wink, also describe "forced transfer of enslaved Indian captives (ghilman-o-jawari, burda, sabaya), specially women and children" over the 11th century from Hindustan.[223][224]

Delhi Sultanate (13th–16th century) edit

The Delhi Sultanate started in the 13th-century and continued through the early 16th century, when the Mughal conquest replaced it. The Delhi Sultans of this period saw themselves first and foremost as Islamic rulers, states Peter Jackson, for the "people of Islam".[225] They were emphatically not "sultan of the Hindus". The Muslim texts of the Delhi Sultanate era treated Hindus with disdain, remarking "Hindus are never interesting in themselves, but only as converts, as capitation tax payers, or as corpses".[225] These medieval Muslim rulers were "protecting and advancing the Islamic faith", with two Muslim texts of this period remarking that the Sultan had a duty "eradicate infidelity and humiliate his Hindu subjects".[225]

Some of the conquered Hindu subjects of the Delhi Sultanate served these Sultans, who states Jackson, were "doubtless usually slaves". These Hindus built the mosques of this era as well as developed the Indo-Islamic architecture, some served the court in roles such as treasurers, clerks, minting of new coins, and others. These Hindus were not persecuted, instead some were rewarded with immunities and tax exemptions.[226] Additionally, captured Hindu slaves were added as infantry troops in the Sultanate's army for their campaign against other Hindu kingdoms.[226] Some Sultans adopted Indian customs such as ceremonial riding of elephants by kings, thus facilitating the public perception of the new monarch. This suggest that the Sultans cultivated some Hindus to serve their aims, rather than indiscriminately persecute every Hindu.[226]

In general, Hindu subjects of Delhi Sultanate were generally accepted as people with dhimmi status, not equal to Muslims, but "protected", subject to Jizya tax and with a list of restrictions.[227] Early Sultans of the Delhi Sultanate exempted the Brahmins from having to pay Jizya, thus dividing the Hindus and placing the discriminatory tax burden entirely on the non-Brahmin strata of the Hindu society. Firuz Shah was the first to impose the Jizya on Brahmins, and wrote in his autobiography that countless Hindus converted to Islam when he issued the edict that conversion would release them of the requirement to pay Jizya.[228] This discrimination against Hindus was in force in the latter half of the 14th century, states Jackson, yet it is difficult to establish if and how this was enforced outside of the major centers under Muslim control.[228]

The Muslim commanders of Delhi Sultanate regularly raided Hindu kingdoms for plunder, mulct their treasuries and looted the Hindu temples therein, states Jackson.[229] These conquests of Delhi Sultanate armies damaged or destroyed many Hindu temples. Yet, in a few instances, after the war, the Sultans let the Hindus repair and reconstruct their temples. Such instances, states Jackson, has been cited by the Indian scholar P.B. Desai as evidence of "striking degree of tolerance" by Muslim Sultans. But, this happened in frontier areas after they had recently been conquered and placed in direct Muslim rule, where the Sultan's authority was "highly precarious".[230] Within regions that was already under firm control of the Delhi Sultanate, the direct evidence of this is meagre. One example referred to is of a claimed request from the king of China to build a temple in India, as recorded by Ibn Battuta. That is questionable and has no corroborating evidence, states Jackson. Similar few examples near Delhi, such as one for Sri Krishna Bhagwan temple, cannot be verified whether they were ever built either.[230]

Some modern era Indian texts mention that Hindu and Jain temples of Delhi Sultanate era received endowments from Muslim authorities, presenting these as evidence of lack of persecution during this period. It is "not beyond the bounds of possibility" that in some instances this happened.[231] But generally, states Jackson, the texts and even the memoirs written by the some Sultans themselves describe how they "set about destroying new temples and replacing them with mosques", and in one case depopulated a town of Hindus and resettled Muslims there. Jackson clarifies that the evidence suggests that the destroyed temples were "new temples", and not the old one's near Delhi whose devotees were already paying regular Jizya to the Sultan's treasuries.[231] In some cases, the policies on destroying or letting Hindus worship in their old temples changed as Sultans changed.[231]

The Muslim nobles and advisors of the Sultans championed persecution of Hindus. The Muslim texts of that era, states Jackson, frequently mention themes such as the Hindu "infidels must on no account be allowed to live in ease and affluence", they should not be treated as "Peoples of the Book" and the Sultan should "at least refrain from treating Hindus with honour or permitting idolatry in the capital".[232][233] Failure to slaughter the Hindus has led to polytheism taking root. Another wazir while theoretically agreeing to these view, stated that this would not be practical given the small population of Muslims and such a policy should be deferred till Muslims were in a stronger position. If eradication of Hindus is not possible, suggested another Muslim official, then the Hindus should at least be insulted, disgraced and dishonored.[232] These views were not exceptions, rather consistent with Islamic thinking of that era and are "commonly encountered in polemical writing against the infidel in different parts of the Islamic world at different times", states Jackson.[232][234] This antagonism towards Hindus may have other general reasons, such as the fear of apostasy given the tendency of everyday Muslims to join in with Hindus as they celebrated their religious festivals. Further, the succession struggle after the death of a Sultan usually led to political maneuvering by the next Sultan, where depending on the circumstances, the victor championed either the orthodox segment of the Islamic clergy and jurists, or gave concessions to the Hindus and other groups for support when the Sultanate facing a military threat from outside.[232]

Madurai Sultanate edit

First campaigns edit

The army of Ala al-Din Khalji from Delhi Sultanate began their first campaign in 1310 against the Hindu kingdom in Madurai region – called Ma'bar by court historians, under the pretext of helping Sundar Pandya. According to Mehrdad Shokoohy – a scholar of Islamic studies and architectural history in Central and South Asia – this campaign lasted for a year during which Madurai and other Tamil region cities were overrun by the Muslims, the Hindu temples were demolished and the towns looted.[235] A detailed record about the campaign by Amir Khusrau the destruction and plunder.[235]

A second destructive campaign was launched by Mubarak Shah, Ala al-Din Khalji's successor. While the looted wealth was sent to Delhi, a Muslim governor was appointed for the region.[235] The governor later rebelled, founded the short lived Madurai Sultanate and renamed himself as Sultan Ahsan Shah in 1334. The successive sultans of the new Sultanate did not have the support of the regional Hindu population. The Madurai Sultanate's army, states Shokoohy, "often exercised fierce and brutal repressive methods on the local people".[236] The Sultanate faced constant battles with neighboring Hindu states and assassination by its own nobles. Sultan Sikandar Shah was the last sultan. He was killed by the invading forces of Vijayanagara Empire army in 1377.[236]

The Muslim literature of this period record the motive of the Madurai Sultans. For example, Sultan Shams al-Din Adil Shah's general is described as leaving for "holy war against the infidels and taking from them great wealth and a vast amount of booty".[237] Another record states, "he engaged in a holy war (ghaza) and killed a great number of infidels".[237] Madurai region has several Islamic shrines with tombs built during this period, such as one for Ala al-Din and Shams al-Din. In this shrine, the inner columns are irregular and vary in form showing evidence of "reused material". The "destruction of temples and the re-use of their materials", states Shokoohy, was a "practice of the early Sultanates of North India, and we may assume that this tradition was brought to the south by the sultans of Ma'bar".[238]

The Madurai Sultanate "sacked and desecrated Hindu temples throughout the Tamil country", and these were restored and reconsecrated for worship by the Vijayanagara rulers, states the Indologist Crispin Branfoot.[239]

Mughal Empire edit

The Mughal emperor Akbar has been a celebrated unusual example of tolerance. Indologist Richard Eaton writes that from Akbar's time to today, he has attracted conflicting labels, "from a strict Muslim to an apostate, from a free-thinker to a crypto-Hindu, from a Zoroastrian to a proto-Christian, from an atheist to a radical innovator". As a youth, states Eaton, Akbar studied Islam under both Shia and Sunni tutors, but as an adult he looked back with regret on his early life, confessing that in those days he had "persecuted men into conformity with my faith and deemed it Islam". In his later years he felt "an internal bitterness, acknowledging that his soul had been 'seized with exceeding sorrow'" for what he had done before launching his campaign to "treat all Mughal subjects, regardless of religion, on a basis of legal equality before the state".[240]

Aurangzeb edit

The reign of Aurangzeb (1658-1707) witnessed one of the strongest campaigns of religious violence in the Mughal Empire's history. Aurangzeb is a controversial figure in modern India, often remembered as a "vile oppressor of Hindus".[241] During his rule Aurangzeb expanded the Mughal Empire, conquering much of southern India through long bloody campaigns against non-Muslims. He forcibly converted Hindus to Islam and destroyed Hindu temples.[242][243] He also re-introduced the jizya, a tax on non-Muslims,[244] which had been suspended for the previous 100 years by his great-grandfather Akbar.[245]

Aurangzeb ordered the desecration and destruction of temples when conquering new lands and putting down rebellions, punishing political leaders by destroying the temples that symbolized their power.[153] In 1669 he issued orders to all his governors of provinces to "destroy with a willing hand the schools and temples of the infidels, and that they were strictly enjoined to put an entire stop to the teaching and practice of idolatrous forms of worship".[246] According to Richard Eaton these orders appear to have been directed not toward Hindu temples in general, but towards a more narrowly defined "deviant group".[247] The number of Hindu temples destroyed or desecrated under Aurangzeb's rule is unclear, but may have been grossly exaggerated,[note 6] and he probably built more temples than he destroyed.[249] According to Ikram, "Aurangzeb tried to enforce strict Islamic law by ordering the destruction of newly built Hindu temples. Later, the procedure was adopted of closing down rather than destroying the newly built temples in Hindu localities. It is also true that very often the orders of destruction remained a dead letter."[250] Some temples were destroyed entirely; in other cases mosques were built on their foundations, sometimes using the same stones. Idols in temples were smashed, and the city of Mathura was temporarily renamed as Islamabad in local official documents.[246][251]

The persecution during the Islamic period targeted non-Hindus as well.[note 7] In some cases, such as towards the end of Mughal era, the violence and persecution was mutual. Hindus too attacked and damaged Muslim tombs, even when the troops had orders not to harm religious refuges of Muslims. These "few examples of disrespect for Islamic sites", states Indologist Nicholas Gier, "pale in comparison to the great destruction of temples and general persecution of Hindus by Muslims for 500 years".[253] Sources document brutal episodes of persecution. Sikh texts, for example, document their "Guru Teg Bahadur accompanying sixteen Hindu Brahmins on a quest to stop Mughal persecution of Hindus; they were arrested and commanded to convert to Islam on pain of torture and death", states Gier, "they all refused, and in November 1675, Mati Das was sawed in half, Dayal Das was boiled alive, Sati Das was burned alive, and Teg Bahadar was beheaded."[254]

Iconoclasm edit

During the Muslim conquest of Sindh edit

Records from the campaign recorded in the Chach Nama record the destruction of temples during the early 8th century when the Umayyad governor of Damascus, al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf,[255] mobilized an expedition of 6000 cavalry under Muhammad bin Qasim in 712.

Historian Upendra Thakur records the persecution of Hindus and Buddhists:

Muhammad triumphantly marched into the country, conquering Debal, Sehwan, Nerun, Brahmanadabad, Alor and Multan one after the other in quick succession, and in less than a year and a half, the far-flung Hindu kingdom was crushed ... 'There was a fearful out-break of religious bigotry in several places and temples were wantonly desecrated. At Debal, Nairun and Aror temples were demolished and converted into mosques'.[256]

Iconoclasm under the Delhi Sultanate edit

Iconoclasm under the Delhi Sultanate
 
Kakatiya Kala Thoranam (Warangal Gate) built by the Kakatiya dynasty in ruins; one of the many temple complexes destroyed by the Delhi Sultanate.[153]
 
Artistic rendition of the Kirtistambh at Rudra Mahalaya Temple. The temple was destroyed by Alauddin Khalji.
 
Rani ki vav is a stepwell, built by the Chaulukya dynasty, located in Patan; the city was sacked by Sultan of Delhi Qutb-ud-din Aybak between 1200 and 1210, and it was destroyed by Allauddin Khilji in 1298.[citation needed]
 
Pillar and ceiling carvings with a damaged madanakai at Hoysaleswara Temple. The temple was twice sacked and plundered by the Delhi Sultanate.[257]

Historian Richard Eaton has tabulated a campaign of destruction of idols and temples by Delhi Sultans, intermixed with instances of years where the temples were protected from desecration.[153][151][152] In his paper, he has listed 37 instances of Hindu temples being desecrated or destroyed in India during the Delhi Sultanate, from 1234 to 1518, for which reasonable evidence is available.[151][258][259] He noted that this was not unusual in medieval India, as there were numerous recorded instances of temple desecration by Hindu and Buddhist kings against rival Indian kingdoms between 642 and 1520, involving conflict between devotees of different Hindu deities, as well as between Hindus, Buddhists and Jains.[153][152][154] He also noted there were also many instances of Delhi sultans, who often had Hindu ministers, ordering the protection, maintenance and repairing of temples, according to both Muslim and Hindu sources. For example, a Sanskrit inscription notes that Sultan Muhammad bin Tughluq repaired a Siva temple in Bidar after his Deccan conquest. There was often a pattern of Delhi sultans plundering or damaging temples during conquest, and then patronizing or repairing temples after conquest. This pattern came to an end with the Mughal Empire, where Akbar's chief minister Abu'l-Fazl criticized the excesses of earlier sultans such as Mahmud of Ghazni.[151]

In many cases, the demolished remains, rocks and broken statue pieces of temples destroyed by Delhi sultans were reused to build mosques and other buildings. For example, the Qutb complex in Delhi was built from stones of 27 demolished Hindu and Jain temples by some accounts.[260] Similarly, the Muslim mosque in Khanapur, Maharashtra was built from the looted parts and demolished remains of Hindu temples.[261] Muhammad bin Bakhtiyar Khalji destroyed Buddhist and Hindu libraries and their manuscripts at Nalanda and Odantapuri Universities in 1193 CE at the beginning of the Delhi Sultanate.[154][262]

The first historical record in this period of a campaign of destruction of temples and defacement of faces or heads of Hindu idols lasted from 1193 through 1194 in Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh under the command of Ghuri. Under the Mamluks and Khaljis, the campaign of temple desecration expanded to Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and Maharashtra, and continued through the late 13th century.[153] The campaign extended to Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu under Malik Kafur and Ulugh Khan in the 14th century, and by the Bahmanis in the 15th century.[154] Orissa temples were destroyed in the 14th century under the Tughlaqs.

Beyond destruction and desecration, the sultans of the Delhi Sultanate in some cases had forbidden reconstruction or repair of damaged Hindu, Jain and Buddhist temples. In certain cases, the Sultanate would grant a permit for repairs and construction of temples if the patron or religious community paid jizya (fee, tax). For example, according to Ibn Battuta's account, a proposal by the Yuan dynasty emperor of China to repair Himalayan Buddhist temples destroyed by the Sultanate army was refused, on the grounds that such temple repairs were only allowed if the Chinese agreed to pay jizya tax to the treasury of the Sultanate.[263][264][265] According to Eva De Clercq, an expert in the study of Jainism, the Delhi Sultans did not strictly prohibit construction of new temples in the sultanate, Islamic law notwithstanding.[266] In his memoirs, Firoz Shah Tughlaq describes how he destroyed temples and built mosques instead and killed those who dared build new temples.[267] Other historical records from wazirs, amirs and the court historians of various Sultans of the Delhi Sultanate describe the grandeur of idols and temples they witnessed in their campaigns and how these were destroyed and desecrated.[268]

Nalanda edit

In 1193, the Nalanda University complex was destroyed by Afghan KhaljiGhilzai Muslims under Bakhtiyar Khalji; this event is seen as the final milestone in the decline of Buddhism in India. He also burned Nalanda's major Buddhist library and Vikramshila University,[269] as well as numerous Buddhist monasteries in India. When the Tibetan translator, Chag Lotsawa Dharmasvamin (Chag Lo-tsa-ba, 1197–1264), visited northern India in 1235, Nalanda was damaged, looted, and largely deserted, but still standing and functioning with seventy students.

Mahabodhi, Sompura, Vajrasan and other important monasteries were found to be untouched. The Ghuri ravages only afflicted those monasteries that lay in the direct path of their advance and were fortified in the manner of defensive forts.

By the end of the 12th century, following the Muslim conquest of the Buddhist stronghold in Bihar, Buddhism, having already declined in the South, declined in the North as well because survivors retreated to Nepal, Sikkim and Tibet or escaped to the South of the Indian sub-continent.

Martand edit

 
Ruins of the Surya Temple at Martand, which was destroyed due to the iconoclastic policies of Sikandar Butshikan, photo taken by John Burke in 1868

The Martand Sun Temple was built by the third ruler of the Karkota dynasty, Lalitaditya Muktapida, in the 8th century CE.[270] The temple was completely destroyed on the orders of the Muslim ruler Sikandar Butshikan in the early 15th century, with demolition lasting a year. He is remembered for his strenuous efforts to convert the Hindus of Kashmir to Islam. These efforts included the destruction of numerous old temples, prohibition of Hindu rites and rituals, and even the wearing of clothes in the Hindu style.[271]

Vijayanagara edit

The city flourished between the 14th century and 16th century, during the height of the Vijayanagara Empire. During this time, it was often in conflict with the kingdoms which rose in the Northern Deccan, and which are often collectively termed the Deccan Sultanates. The Vijaynagara Empire successfully resisted Muslim invasions for centuries. But in 1565, the empire's armies suffered a massive and catastrophic defeat at the hands of an alliance of the Sultanates, and the capital was taken. The victorious armies then razed, depopulated and destroyed the city over several months. The empire continued its slow decline, but the original capital was not reoccupied or rebuilt.

Somnath edit

Around 1024 CE, during the reign of Bhima I, Mahmud of Ghazni raided Gujarat, and plundered the Somnath temple. According to an 1169 inscription, Bhima rebuilt the temple. This inscription does not mention any destruction caused by Mahmud, and states that the temple had "decayed due to time".[272] In 1299, Alauddin Khalji's army under the leadership of Ulugh Khan defeated Karandev II of the Vaghela dynasty, and sacked the Somnath temple.[272] In 1665, the temple, was once again ordered to be destroyed by Mughal emperor Aurangzeb.[273] In 1702, he ordered that if Hindus had revived worship there, it should be demolished completely.[274]

 
Ruins of Nalanda University
 
Sri Krishna Temple in Hampi
 
Somnath temple in ruins, 1869
 
Front view of the present Somnath Temple
The Somnath temple was first attacked by Muslim Turkic invader Mahmud of Ghazni and repeatedly rebuilt after being demolished by successive Muslim rulers.

See also edit

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Scottish scholar Francis Buchanan-Hamilton doubts the first tradition of Rajput influx to what is today Nepal which states that Rajputs from Chittor came to Ridi Bazaar in 1495 A.D. and went on to capture the Gorkha Kingdom after staying in Bhirkot.[170] He mentions the second tradition which states that Rajputs reached Palpa through Rajpur at Gandak river.[171] The third tradition mentions that Rajputs reached Palpa through Kumaon and Jumla.[172]
  2. ^ Will Durant called the Muslim conquest of India "probably the bloodiest story in history".[136]
  3. ^ Devout Hindus cherish the manifestation of the divine everywhere such as in icons, people, and sacred places.[183] Hinduism is "embedded in a sacred iconography, a sacred prosopography and a sacred geography", states Wink, images were considered "'aids' in contemplating the divine".[184] These form the fundamental structure behind Hindu pilgrimage, mythology, festivals, and community just like the other major Indian religions.[185][failed verification]
  4. ^ The Muslim court historians describe the desecrated sacred cities of Hindus in demeaning terms. For example, they describe Mathura – a sacred city of Krishna tradition in Hinduism – as "the work of demons (jinn)", and refer to the sacred idols as well as their worshippers (Hindus) as "devils" (shayatin).[187] The architecture of Hindu temples underwent change under the Muslim rulers and incorporated Islamic influences. The Vrindavan temples, built under Akbar, lack ornamentation as imagery was generally prohibited.[150]
  5. ^ Some of the evidence of desecration and destruction of Hindu sacred monuments is independent of the Muslim texts of the period. It is found in Islamic monuments built during this period. As examples, the Qutb mosque in Delhi shows its "reliance on disassembled temple materials", as do the Caurasi Kambha mosque near Bharatpur, the Jami Masjid at Sultankot (also called Ukha mandir mosque), the 'idgah in Bayana.[216]
  6. ^ Number of temples destroyed:
    * Avari (2013, p. 115) citing a 2000 study, writes "Aurangzeb was perhaps no more culpable than most of the Sultans before him; they desecrated the temples associated with Hindu power, not all temples. It is worth noting that, in contrast to the traditional claim of hundreds of Hindu temples having been destroyed by Aurangzeb, a recent study suggests a modest figure of just fifteen destructions."
    * Truschke 2017, p. 85: "Nobody knows the exact number of temples demolished or pillaged on Aurangzeb's orders, and we never will. Richard Eaton, the leading authority on the subject, puts the number of confirmed temple destructions during Aurangzeb's rule at just over a dozen, with fewer tied to the emperor's direct commands. Other scholars have pointed out additional temple demolitions not counted by Eaton, such as two orders to destroy the Somanatha Temple in 1659 and 1706 (the existence of a second order suggests that the first was never carried out). Aurangzeb also oversaw temple desecrations. For example, in 1645 he ordered mihrabs (prayer niches, typically located in mosques) erected in Ahmedabad's Chintamani Parshvanath Temple, built by the Jain merchant Shantidas. Even adding in such events, however, to quote Eaton, "the evidence is almost always fragmentary, incomplete, or even contradictory". Given this, there were probably more temples destroyed under Aurangzeb than we can confirm (perhaps a few dozen in total?), but here we run into a dark curtain drawn across an unknown past."
    In contrast, the historian Abraham Eraly estimates Aurangzeb era destruction to be significantly higher; "in 1670, all temples around Ujjain were destroyed"; and later, "300 temples were destroyed in and around Chitor, Udaipur and Jaipur" among other Hindu temples destroyed elsewhere in campaigns through 1705.[248]
  7. ^ Avari writes, "Aurangzeb's religious policy caused friction between him and the ninth Sikh guru, Tegh Bahadur. In both Punjab and Kashmir the Sikh leader was roused to action by Aurangzeb's excessively zealous Islamic policies. Seized and taken to Delhi, he was called upon by Aurangzeb to embrace Islam and, on refusal, was tortured for five days and then beheaded in November 1675. Two of the ten Sikh gurus thus died as martyrs at the hands of the Mughals.[252]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Heathcote 1995, p. 6
  2. ^ Anjum 2007, p. 234
  3. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 1998, pp. 187–190
  4. ^ Chaurasia 2004, pp. 1–4
  5. ^ Haig 1928, p. 322
  6. ^ Marshman 2010, p. 93
  7. ^ Browne 1924, p. 121
  8. ^ Copland et al. 2012, p. 161
  9. ^ Wink. Vol. I 2002, p. 201
  10. ^ a b Hoyland 2015, p. 85.
  11. ^ Baloch 1953, p. 243.
  12. ^ Friedmann 1970, p. 253.
  13. ^ Ishaq 1945, pp. 109, 112.
  14. ^ Ishaq 1945, p. 109.
  15. ^ Baloch 1946, p. 251.
  16. ^ Ishaq 1945, p. 110.
  17. ^ a b al-Balādhurī 1924, p. 209: "'Uthmân ibn-abu-l-'Âși ath-Thaķafi ... sent his brother, al-Hakam, to al-Bahrain, and went himself to 'Umân, and sent an army across to Tânah. When the army returned, he wrote to 'Umar, informing him of this expedition and its result. 'Umar wrote to him in reply, ' ... By Allah, I swear that if they had been smitten, I would exact from thy tribe the equivalent.' Al-Hakam sent an expedition against Barwaș [Broach] also, and sent his brother, al-Mughîrah ibn-abu-l-'Âsi, to the gulf of ad-Daibul, where he met the enemy in battle and won a victory."
  18. ^ Khushalani 2006, p. 221
  19. ^ El Hareir & M'Baye 2011, p. 594
  20. ^ a b Fredunbeg 1900, p. 57
  21. ^ Sen 1999, p. 346
  22. ^ Mehta 1979, pp. 31–32: "[p. 31] Northwestern India: ... Modern Afghanistan was part of ancient India ... The northern part, called Kabul (or Kabulistan) ... Zabul (or Zabulistan), the southern region ... [p. 32] The lower Indus valley, to the south of Multan and including Sind and Mekran ... [fn. 11] Udabhandapur ... town was mentioned by Alberuni as the capital of Gandhara, the ancient name for the northwestern part of India."
  23. ^ Wink. Vol. I 2002, pp. 133–134
  24. ^ Wink. Vol. I 2002, pp. 119–120
  25. ^ a b Wink. Vol. I 2002, p. 129
  26. ^ Crawford 2014, p. 192
  27. ^ a b Maclean 1989, p. 126
  28. ^ Morony 2012, pp. 214–216
  29. ^ Elliot 1853, p. 9
  30. ^ Rizvi 1986, p. 138
  31. ^ Rezavi 2006, p. 283
  32. ^ Elliot 1867, p. 116
  33. ^ Wink. Vol. I 2002, pp. 122, 129
  34. ^ al-Balādhurī 1924, pp. 141–151
  35. ^ Fredunbeg 1900, pp. 71–79
  36. ^ Hoyland 2015, p. 191
  37. ^ Kennedy 2007, pp. 194–196
  38. ^ a b al-Balādhurī 1924, p. 212
  39. ^ Khushalani 2006, p. 76
  40. ^ al-Balādhurī 1924, p. 213
  41. ^ al-Balādhurī 1924, p. 148: "Yazîd ibn-Ziyâd proceeded against them [the people of Kabul] and attacked them in Junzah, but he and many of those with him were killed, and the rest put to flight ... ransomed abu-'Ubaidah for 500,000 dirhams."
  42. ^ Hoyland 2015, p. 150
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muslim, conquests, indian, subcontinent, mainly, took, place, between, 13th, 18th, centuries, earlier, muslim, conquests, subcontinent, include, invasions, which, started, what, modern, pakistan, especially, umayyad, campaigns, during, century, rajput, resista. The Muslim conquests in the Indian subcontinent mainly took place between the 13th and the 18th centuries Earlier Muslim conquests in the subcontinent include the invasions which started in what is now modern day Pakistan especially the Umayyad campaigns during the 8th century and the Rajput resistance to Muslim conquests Mahmud of Ghazni Sultan of the Ghaznavid Empire preserved an ideological link to the suzerainty of the Abbasid Caliphate and invaded vast parts of Punjab and Gujarat during the 11th century 1 2 After the capture of Lahore and the end of the Ghaznavids the Ghurid ruler Muhammad of Ghor laid the foundation of Muslim rule in India in 1192 In 1202 Bakhtiyar Khalji led the Muslim conquest of Bengal marking the easternmost expansion of Islam at the time The Ghurid Empire soon evolved into the Delhi Sultanate in 1206 ruled by Qutb ud Din Aibak the founder of the Mamluk dynasty With the Delhi Sultanate established Islam was spread across most parts of the Indian subcontinent In the 14th century the Khalji dynasty under Alauddin Khalji extended Muslim rule southwards to Gujarat Rajasthan and the Deccan The successor Tughlaq dynasty temporarily expanded its territorial reach to Tamil Nadu The disintegration of the Delhi Sultanate mainly caused by Timur s invasion in 1398 caused several Muslim sultanates and dynasties to emerge across the Indian subcontinent such as the Gujarat Sultanate Malwa Sultanate Khandesh Sultanate Bahmani Sultanate Jaunpur Sultanate Madurai Sultanate and the wealthy and powerful Bengal Sultanate a major trading nation in the world 3 Some of these however were followed by Hindu reconquests and resistance from the native powers and states such as the Telugu Nayakas Vijayanagara 4 and Rajput states The Delhi Sultanate was replaced by the Mughal Empire in 1526 which was one of the three gunpowder empires Emperor Akbar gradually enlarged the Mughal Empire to include a large portion of the subcontinent Under Akbar the great who stressed the importance of religious tolerance and winning over the goodwill of the subjects a multicultural empire came into being with various non Muslim subjects being actively integrated into the mughal empires bureaucracy and military machinery The economic and territorial zenith of the Mughals was reached at the end of the 17th century when under the reign of emperor Aurangzeb the empire witnessed the full establishment of Islamic Sharia through the Fatawa al Alamgir The Mughals went into a sudden decline immediately after achieving their peak following the death of Aurangzeb in 1707 due to a lack of competent and effective rulers among Aurangzeb s successors Other factors included the expensive and bloody Mughal Rajput Wars 5 and the Mughal Maratha Wars 6 The Afsharid ruler Nader Shah s invasion in 1739 was an unexpected attack which demonstrated the weakness of the Mughal Empire 7 This provided opportunities for various regional states such as Rajput states Mysore Kingdom Nawabs of Bengal and Murshidabad Maratha Empire Sikh Empire and Nizams of Hyderabad to declare their independence and exercising control over large regions of the Indian subcontinent further accelerating the geopolitical disintegration of the Indian subcontinent 8 The Maratha Empire replaced Mughals as the dominant power of the subcontinent from 1720 to 1818 The Muslim conquests in Indian subcontinent came to a halt after the Battle of Plassey 1757 the Battle of Buxar 1764 Anglo Mysore Wars 1767 1799 Anglo Maratha Wars 1775 1818 and Anglo Sikh Wars 1845 1848 as the British East India Company seized control of much of the Indian subcontinent up till 1857 Throughout the 18th century European powers continued to exert a large amount of political influence over the Indian subcontinent and by the end of the 19th century most of the Indian subcontinent came under European colonial domination most notably the British Raj until 1947 Contents 1 First phase 8th to 10th centuries 1 1 Early Muslim presence 1 2 Rashidun Caliphate and the frontier kingdoms 1 3 Umayyad expansion in Al Hind 1 4 Battles in Makran and Zabulistan 1 5 Al Hajjaj and the East 1 6 Campaigns in Makran and Zabul 1 7 Umayyad expansion in Sind and Multan 1 8 Conquest of Sindh 1 9 Last Umayyad campaigns in Al Hind 1 10 Last days of Abbasid Caliphate control 1 11 Later Muslim invasions 2 Second phase 11th to 13th centuries 2 1 Ghaznavid Sultanate 2 2 Ghurid Empire 3 Third phase 13th to 16th centuries 3 1 Delhi Sultanate 3 1 1 Tughlaq invasions 3 1 2 Timur 3 2 Regional sultanates 3 3 Deccan sultanates 4 Fourth phase 16th to 18th centuries 4 1 Mughal Empire 4 1 1 Babur 4 1 2 Aurangzeb 4 2 Durrani Empire 5 Decline of the Muslim rule 5 1 Maratha Empire 5 2 Sikh Empire 6 Impact on India Islam and Muslims in India 6 1 Conversion theories 6 2 Expansion of trade 6 3 Cultural influence 6 4 Migration of Hindus 7 Religious policies 7 1 General effect 7 1 1 Destruction of religious architecture 7 1 2 Effect on Hindu learning 7 2 Muhammad bin Qasim and the Chachnama 7 2 1 Content 7 2 2 Doubtful source 7 3 Early sultanates 11th 12th century 7 4 Delhi Sultanate 13th 16th century 7 5 Madurai Sultanate 7 5 1 First campaigns 7 6 Mughal Empire 7 6 1 Aurangzeb 8 Iconoclasm 8 1 During the Muslim conquest of Sindh 8 2 Iconoclasm under the Delhi Sultanate 8 3 Nalanda 8 4 Martand 8 5 Vijayanagara 8 6 Somnath 9 See also 10 Notes and references 10 1 Notes 10 2 Footnotes 11 Bibliography 12 External linksFirst phase 8th to 10th centuries editEarly Muslim presence edit Islam in South Asia existed in communities along the Arab coastal trade routes in Sindh Bengal Gujarat Kerala and Ceylon citation needed The religion originated and had gained early acceptance in the Arabian Peninsula The first incursion by the new Muslim successor states of the Arab world occurred around 636 AD or 644 AD during the Rashidun Caliphate long before any Arab army reached the frontier of India by land 9 Uthman ibn Abi al As al Thaqafi the governor of Bahrain and Oman had dispatched naval expeditions against the ports and positions of the Sasanian Empire and further east to the borders of India 10 as confirmed by the contemporary Armenian historian Sebeos who confirms Arab naval raids against the Sasanian littoral 10 Uthman on his own initiative according to the history of al Baladhuri had also launched the first Arab naval raids against the ports of the Indian subcontinent these raids targeted Thane near modern Mumbai Debal and Bharuch 11 12 The assault on Thane the first Arab raid on India was commanded by Uthman s brother al Hakam and was a success the Arabs returning to Oman without incurring any fatalities 13 The following raid on Debal was commanded by another brother al Mughira 14 Al Hakam also led the raid on Bharuch 15 The raids were probably launched in c 636 according to al Baladhuri 16 These expeditions were not sanctioned by Caliph Umar and Uthman escaped punishment only because there were no Arab casualties 17 The raid on Debul may have occurred in 643 AD and may have faced defeat but it is unlikely Umar was still the Caliph and Uthman was unlikely to disobey his directive on sea raids and the source reporting this is deemed unreliable 18 better source needed 19 20 The motivation for these expeditions may have been to seek plunder or to attack pirates to safeguard Arabian trade in the Arabian Sea not to start the conquest of India 21 Shortly after the Muslim conquest of Persia the connection between the Sindh and Islam was established by the initial Muslim missions during the Rashidun Caliphate Rashidun Caliphate and the frontier kingdoms edit See also Rashidun Caliphate and Rashidun nbsp Arab campaigns in the Indian Subcontinent Desert areas Registan Desert and Thar Desert Zunbils Turk Shahis Kingdom of Kashmir Kingdom of Sindh c 632 711 AD then Caliphal province of Sind 712 854 AD Maitraka Kingdom c 475 c 776 AD The kingdoms of Kapisa Gandhara in modern day Afghanistan Zabulistan and Sindh which then held Makran in modern day Pakistan all of which were culturally part of Indian subcontinent since ancient times were known as The Frontier of Al Hind to the Arabs 22 Makran had been conquered by Chach of Aror in 631 AD but ten years later it was described as under the government of Persia by Xuanzang who had visited the region in 641 23 The first clash between a ruler of an Indian kingdom and the Arabs took place in 643 when Arab forces defeated Rutbil the King of Zabulistan in Sistan 24 Arabs led by Suhail b Abdi and Hakam al Taghilbi later defeated a Sindhi army in the Battle of Rasil in 644 beside the Indian Ocean sea coast citation needed then reached the Indus River 25 Caliph Umar ibn Al Khattab denied them permission to cross the river or operate in Makran and the Arabs returned home 26 Al Hakim ibn Jabalah al Abdi who attacked Makran in the year 649 AD was an early partisan of Ali ibn Abu Talib 27 Abdullah ibn Aamir led the invasion of Khurasan in 650 AD and his general Rabi b Ziyad Al Harithi attacked Sistan and took Zaranj and surrounding areas in 651 while Ahnaf ibn Qais conquered the Hepthalites of Herat and advanced up to Balkh by 653 Arab conquests now bordered the Kingdoms of Kapisa Zabul and Sindh in modern day Afghanistan and Pakistan The Arabs levied annual tributes on the newly captured areas and after leaving 4 000 men garrisons at Merv and Zaranj retired to Iraq instead of pushing on against the frontier of India 28 Caliph Uthman b Affan sanctioned an attack against Makran in 652 and sent a recon mission to Sindh in 653 The mission described Makran as inhospitable and Caliph Uthman probably assuming the country beyond the Indus was much worse forbade any further incursions into Indian subcontinent 29 During the caliphate of Ali many Hindus of Sindh had come under the influence of Shi ism 30 and some even participated in the Battle of Camel and died fighting for Ali 27 Under the Umayyads 661 750 AD many Shias sought asylum in the region of Sindh to live in relative peace in the remote area Ziyad Hindi was one of those refugees 31 Umayyad expansion in Al Hind edit See also Umayyad Caliphate Mu awiya I established the Umayyad rule over the Arabs after the First Fitna in 661 AD and resumed expansion of the Muslim empire Al Baladuri wrote that In the year 44 H 664 A D and in the days of the Khalif Mu awiya Muhallib son of Abu Safra made war upon the same frontier and advanced as far as Banna Bannu and Alahwar Lahore which lie between Multan and Kabul 32 After 663 665 CE the Arabs launched an invasion against Kapisa Zabul and what is now Pakistani Balochistan Abdur Rahman b Samurra besieged Kabul in 663 AD while Haris b Marrah advanced against Kalat after marching through Fannazabur and Quandabil and moving through the Bolan Pass King Chach of Sindh sent an army against the Arabs the Arabs were trapped when the enemy blocked the mountain passes Haris was killed and his army was annihilated citation needed Al Muhallab ibn Abi Sufra took a detachment through the Khyber pass towards Multan in Southern Punjab in modern day Pakistan in 664 AD then pushed south into Kikan 33 and may have also raided Quandabil Turki Shah and Zunbil expelled Arabs from their respective kingdoms by 670 and Zunbil began assisting in organizing resistance against the Arabs in Makran citation needed This was the beginning of a prolonged struggle between the rulers of Kabul and Zabul in modern day and Pakistan against successive Arab governors of Sistan Khurasan and Makran The Kabul Shahi kings and their Zunbil kinsmen successfully blocked access to the Khyber Pass and Gomal Pass routes into India from 653 to 870 AD 34 while modern Balochistan Pakistan comprising the areas of Kikan or Qiqanan Nukan Turan Buqan Qufs Mashkey and Makran would face several Arab expeditions between 661 and 711 AD 35 The Arabs launched several raids against these frontier lands but repeated rebellions in Sistan and Khurasan between 653 and 691 AD diverted much of their military resources in order to subdue these breakaway provinces and away from expansion into Al Hind Muslim control of these areas ebbed and flowed repeatedly as a result until 870 AD Arab troops disliked being stationed in Makran 36 Fierce resistance stalled Arab progress repeatedly in the frontier zone 25 37 and the Arabs had to focus on tribute extraction instead of systematic conquest as a result Battles in Makran and Zabulistan edit Arabs launched several campaigns in eastern Balochistan between 661 and 681 AD Four Arab commanders were killed during these campaigns however Sinan b Salma managed to conquer parts of Makran including the Chagai area citation needed and established a permanent base of operations by 673 AD 38 Rashid b Amr the next governor of Makran subdued Mashkey in 672 CE citation needed Munzir b Jarood Al Abadi managed to garrison Kikan and conquer Buqan by 681 CE while Ibn Harri Al Bahili conducted several campaigns to secure the Arab hold on Kikan Makran and Buqan by 683 AD 39 better source needed 40 Zunbil saw off Arab campaigns in 668 672 and 673 by paying tribute Although Arabs occupied the areas south of Helmand in 673 permanently 38 Zunbil defeated Yazid b Salm s army in 681 AD at Junzah and Arabs had to pay 500 000 dirhams as ransom to get free their prisoners 41 Al Hajjaj and the East edit See also Abbasid Caliphate Al Hajjaj ibn Yusuf Al Thaqifi who had played a crucial role during the Second Fitna for the Umayyad cause was appointed the governor of Iraq in 694 AD Hajjaj received governorship of Khurasan and Sistan in 697 and he sponsored Muslim expansions in Makran Sistan Transoxiana and Sindh 42 43 Campaigns in Makran and Zabul edit The Arab s hold on Makran weakened when Arab rebels seized the province and Hajjaj had to send expeditions under three governors between 694 and 707 AD before Makran was partially recovered by 694 AD citation needed Al Hajjaj also fought against Zunbil in 698 and 700 AD The 20 000 strong army led by Ubaidullah ibn Abu Bakra was trapped by the armies of Zunbil and Turki Shah near Kabul in 698 AD and lost 15 000 men to thirst and hunger earning this force the title of the Doomed Army 44 45 Abd al Rahman ibn Muhammad ibn al Ash ath next led 20 000 troops each from Kufa and Basra Dubbed the Peacock Army due to the splemdor of ther equipment and participation numerous members of Arab nobility 46 in a successful campaign in 700 AD but when he wanted to stop during winter Al Hajjaj s insulting rebuke 47 led to mutiny 48 The mutiny was put down by 704 AD and Al Hajjaj granted a 7 year truce to Zunbil Umayyad expansion in Sind and Multan edit Main articles Umayyad conquest of Sindh and Umayyad campaigns in India nbsp Muhammad ibn Qasim s Campaigns in Sindh Desert areas Registan Desert and Thar Desert Zunbils Turk Shahis Kingdom of Kashmir Kingdom of Sindh c 632 712 AD Maitraka Kingdom c 475 c 776 AD Umayyad Caliphate c 710 AD Meds pirates operated from their bases at Kutch Debal and Kathiawar 49 and during one of their raids had kidnapped Muslim women travelling from Sri Lanka to Arabia thus providing the casus belli 50 51 against Sindh Raja Dahir 52 Raja Dahir of Sindh had previously refused to return Arab rebels from Sindh 20 53 and furthermore he now expressed his inability to punish the pirates citation needed Hajjaj sent two expeditions to Sindh bothy of which were defeated 54 55 Al Hajjaj next equipped an army built around 6 000 Syrian cavalry and detachments of mawali from Iraq six thousand camel riders and a baggage train of 3 000 camels under his Nephew Muhammad bin Qasim to Sindh His artillery of five catapults were sent to Debal by sea 56 manjaniks Conquest of Sindh edit Muhammad bin Qasim departed from Shiraz in 710 AD the army marched along the coast to Tiaz in Makran where the army of Makran joined him and the combined force moved to the Kech valley citation needed Muhammad subdued the restive towns of Fannazbur and Armabil 57 finally completing the conquest of Makran Then the army met up with the reinforcements and catapults sent by sea near Debal and took Debal through assault 56 From Debal the Arabs moved towards north along the Indus clearing the region up to Budha Some towns like Nerun and Sadusan Sehwan surrendered peacefully Muhammad bin Qasim moved back to Nerun to resupply and receive reinforcements sent by Hajjaj 58 The Arabs crossed the Indus further South and defeated the army of Dahir who was killed 59 60 Brahmanabad then Alor Aror and finally Multan were captured alongside other in between towns with only light Muslim casualties 61 Arabs marched up to the foothills of Kashmir along the Jhelum in 713 AD 62 and stormed the Al Kiraj probably the Kangra valley 63 Muhammad was deposed after the death of Caliph Walid in 715 Jai Singh son of Dahir captured Brahmanabad and Arab rule was restricted to the Western shore of the Indus 64 Sindh was briefly lost to the caliph when the rebel Yazid b Muhallab took over Sindh in 720 65 Last Umayyad campaigns in Al Hind edit Main article Caliphate campaigns in India nbsp Early Arab conquest of what is now Pakistan by Muhammad bin Qasim for Umayyad caliphate rule c 711 AD Junaid b Abd Al Rahman Al Marri became the governor of Sindh in 723 AD He conquered Debal defeated and killed Jai Singh citation needed secured Sindh and Southern Punjab and then stormed Al Kiraj Kangra valley in 724 AD 63 66 Junaid next attacked a number of Hindu kingdoms in what is now Rajasthan Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh aiming at permanent conquest but the chronology and area of operation of the campaigns during 725 743 is difficult to follow because accurate complete information is lacking 63 The Arabs moved east from Sindh in several detachments 17 and probably attacked from both the land and the sea occupying Mirmad Marumada in Jaisalmer Al Mandal perhaps Okhamandal in Gujarat or Marwar 67 and raiding Dahnaj not identified al Baylaman Bhilmal and Jurz Gurjara country north Gujarat and southern Rajasthan 68 attacking Barwas Broach and sacking Vallabhi 69 Gurjara king Siluka 70 repelled Arabs from Stravani and Valla probably the area North of Jaisalmer and Jodhpur and the invasion of Malwa but were ultimately defeated by Bappa Rawal and Nagabhata I in 725 AD near Ujjain 71 Arabs lost control over the newly conquered territories and part of Sindh due to Arab tribal infighting and Arab soldiers deserting the newly conquered territory 72 in 731 AD Al Hakam b Awana Al Kalbi in 733 AD founded the garrison city of Al Mahfuza The Well Guarded similar to Kufa Basra and Wasit on the eastern side of a lake near Brahmanabad 63 Hakam next attempted to reclaim the conquests of Junaid in Al Hind Arab records merely state that he was successful Indian records at Navasari 73 details that Arab forces defeated Kacchella Saindhava Saurashtra Cavotaka Maurya and Gurjara kings The city of Al Mansura The Victorious was founded near Al Mahfuza to commemorate pacification of Sindh by Amr b Muhammad in c 738 63 Al Hakam next invaded the Deccan in 739 with the intention of permanent conquest but was decisively defeated at Navsari by the viceroy Avanijanashraya Pulakeshin of the Chalukya Empire serving Vikramaditya II Arab rule was restricted to the west of Thar desert Last days of Abbasid Caliphate control edit Further information Anarchy at Samarra When the Abbasid Revolution overthrew the Umayyads in 750 AD after the Third Fitna Sindh became independent and was captured by Musa b K ab al Tamimi in 752 AD 74 Zunbil had defeated the Arabs in 728 AD and saw off two Abbasid invasions in 769 and 785 Abbasids attacked Kabul several times and collected tribute between 787 and 815 AD and extracted tribute after each campaign Abbasid s Governor of Sindh Hisham in office 768 773 raided Kashmir recaptured parts of Punjab from Karkota control 75 and launched naval raids against ports of Gujarat 76 These raids like other Abbasid Naval raids launched in 776 and 779 AD gained no territory Arabs occupied Sindian Southern Kutch in 810 only to lose it in 841 77 Civil war erupted in Sindh in 842 AD and the Habbari dynasty occupied Mansurah and by 871 five independent principalities had emerged with the Banu Habbari clan controlling in Mansurah Banu Munabbih occupying Multan Banu Madan ruling in Makran and Makshey and Turan falling to other rulers all outside direct Caliphate control 78 Ismaili missionaries found a receptive audience among both the Sunni and non Muslim populations in Multan which became a center of the Ismaili sect of Islam The Saffarid Dynasty of Zaranj occupied Kabul and the kingdom of Zunbil permanently in 871 AD A new chapter of Muslim conquests began when the Samanid Dynasty took over the Saffarid Kingdom and Sabuktigin seized Ghazni Later Muslim invasions edit After the Decline of the Caliphate Muslim incursions resumed under the later Turkic and Central Asian dynasties like the Saffarid dynasty and the Samanid Dynasty with more local capitals They supplanted the Abbasid Caliphate and expanded their domains both northwards and eastwards Continuous raids from these empires in the north west of India led to the loss of stability in the Indian kingdoms and led to the establishment of Islam in the heart of India Second phase 11th to 13th centuries editGhaznavid Sultanate edit Main article Ghaznavid campaigns in India Under Sabuktigin the Ghaznavid Empire found itself in conflict with the Kabul Shahi Raja Jayapala in the east When Sabuktigin died and his son Mahmud ascended the throne in 998 AD Ghazni was engaged in the North with the Qarakhanids when the Shahi Raja renewed hostilities in east once again In the early 11th century Mahmud of Ghazni launched seventeen expeditions into Indian subcontinent In 1001 Sultan Mahmud of Ghazni defeated Raja Jayapala of the Hindu Shahi Dynasty of Gandhara in modern Afghanistan in the Battle of Peshawar and marched further towards the west of Peshawar in modern Pakistan and in 1005 made it the center for his forces In 1030 Al Biruni reported on the devastation caused during the conquest of Gandhara and much of northwest India by Mahmud of Ghazni following his defeat of Jayapala in the Battle of Peshawar in 1001 Now in the following times no Muslim conqueror passed beyond the frontier of Kabul and the river Sindh until the days of the Turks when they seized the power in Ghazna under the Samani dynasty and the supreme power fell to the lot of Nasir addaula Sabuktagin This prince chose the holy war as his calling and therefore called himself al Ghazi the warrior invader In the interest of his successors he constructed to weaken the Indian frontier those roads on which afterwards his son Yamin addaula Mahmud marched into India during a period of thirty years and more God be merciful to both father and son Mahmud utterly ruined the prosperity of the country and performed there wonderful exploits by which the Hindus became like atoms of dust scattered in all directions and like a tale of old in the mouth of the people Their scattered remains cherish of course the most inveterate aversion towards all Muslims This is the reason too why Hindu sciences have retired far away from those parts of the country conquered by us and have fled to places which our hand cannot yet reach to Kashmir Benares and other places And there the antagonism between them and all foreigners receives more and more nourishment both from political and religious sources 79 During the closing years of the tenth and the early years of the succeeding century of our era Mahmud the first Sultan and Musalman of the Turk dynasty of kings who ruled at Ghazni made a succession of inroads twelve or fourteen in number into Gandhar the present Peshwar valley in the course of his proselytizing invasions of Hindustan 80 Fire and sword havoc and destruction marked his course everywhere Gandhar which was styled the Garden of the North was left at his death a weird and desolate waste Its rich fields and fruitful gardens together with the canal which watered them the course of which is still partially traceable in the western part of the plain had all disappeared Its numerous stone built cities monasteries and topes with their valuable and revered monuments and sculptures were sacked fired razed to the ground and utterly destroyed as habitations 80 The Ghaznavid conquests were initially directed against the Ismaili Fatimids of Multan who were engaged in an ongoing struggle with the provinces of the Abbasid Caliphate in conjunction with their compatriots of the Fatimid Caliphate in North Africa and the Middle East Mahmud apparently hoped to curry the favor of the Abbasids in this fashion However once this aim was accomplished he moved onto the looting of Indian temples and monasteries By 1027 Mahmud had captured parts of North India and obtained formal recognition of Ghazni s sovereignty from the Abbasid Caliph al Qadir Billah Ghaznavid s rule in Northwestern India modern Afghanistan and Pakistan lasted over for 175 years from 1010 to 1187 It was during this period that Lahore assumed considerable importance apart from being the second capital and later the only capital of the Ghaznavid Empire At the end of his reign Mahmud s empire extended from Kurdistan in the west to Samarkand in the Northeast and from the Caspian Sea to the Punjab in the west Although his raids carried his forces across Northern and Western India only Punjab came under his permanent rule while Kashmir the Doab Rajasthan and Gujarat remained nominal under the control of the local Indian dynasties In 1030 Mahmud fell gravely ill and died at age 59 As with the invaders of three centuries ago Mahmud s armies reached temples in Varanasi Mathura Ujjain Maheshwar Jwalamukhi Somnath and Dwarka Ghurid Empire edit Main article Indian campaigns of Muhammad of Ghor nbsp Map of the Ghurid dynasty at its greatest extent in the early 13th century under Ghiyath al Din Muhammad and Muhammad of GhorMu izz al Din better known as Shahab ud Din Muhammad Ghori was a conqueror from the region of Ghor in modern Afghanistan Before 1160 the Ghaznavid Empire covered an area running from central Iran east to the Punjab with capitals at Ghazni on the banks of Ghazni river in present day Afghanistan and at Lahore in present day Pakistan In 1173 Muhammad of Ghor was crowned Ghazni In 1186 he conquered Lahore ending the Ghaznavid empire and bringing the last of Ghaznavid territory under his control His early campaigns in the Indian Subcontinent were against the Qarmatians of Multan In 1191 he invaded the territory of Prithviraj III of Ajmer who ruled his territory from Delhi to Ajmer in present day Rajasthan but was defeated at the First Battle of Tarain 81 The following year Mu izz al Din assembled 120 000 horsemen and once again invaded India Mu izz al Din s army met Prithviraj s army again at Tarain and this time Mu izz al Din won Govindraj was slain Prithviraj executed 82 and Mu izz al Din advanced onto Delhi Within a year Mu izz al Din controlled North Western Rajasthan and Northern Ganges Yamuna Doab After these victories in India and Mu izz al Din s establishment Delhi as the capital of his Indian provinces Multan was also incorporated as a major part of his empire Mu izz al Din then returned east to Ghazni to deal with the threat on his eastern frontiers from the Turks of the Khwarizmian Empire whiles his armies continued to advance through Northern India raiding as far as Bengal Mu izz al Din returned to Lahore after 1200 In 1206 Mu izz al Din had to travel to Lahore to crush a revolt On his way back to Ghazni his caravan rested at Damik near Sohawa which is near the city of Jhelum in the Punjab province of modern day Pakistan He was assassinated on 15 March 1206 while offering his evening prayers by the assassins from the Ismaili Muslim sect 83 84 Third phase 13th to 16th centuries editDelhi Sultanate edit Main article Delhi Sultanate nbsp Mamluk DynastyMuhammad s Ghorid successors established the first dynasty of the Delhi Sultanate while the Mamluk Dynasty in 1211 however the Delhi Sultanate is traditionally held to have been founded in 1206 seized the reins of the empire Mamluk means slave and referred to the Turkic slave soldiers who became rulers The territory under control of the Muslim rulers in Delhi expanded rapidly Several Turko Afghan dynasties ruled from Delhi the Mamluk 1206 1290 the Khalji 1290 1320 the Tughlaq 1320 1414 the Sayyid 1414 51 and the Lodhi 1451 1526 By the mid century Bengal and much of central India was under the Delhi Sultanate Tughlaq invasions edit nbsp Delhi Sultanate reached its zenith under the Tughlaq dynasty 85 The Tughlaqs conquered Delhi with the support of the Khokhar tribes who formed the vanguard of the army 86 87 full citation needed The Tughlaqs claimed to be bound to all Indians by ties of blood and relation 88 89 Under the first ruler of the dynasty Ghiyath al Din Tughlaq the Tughlaq court wrote a war ballad known as the Vaar in the Punjabi language describing the introduction of Ghazi Malik s rise to the throne 90 This was the earliest known Vaar in Punjabi poetry 91 The Tughalqs attacked and plundered Malwa Gujarat Mahratta Tilang Kampila Dhur samundar Mabar Lakhnauti Chittagong Sunarganw and Tirhut 92 The Tughlaqs chose Daulatabad in southern India as the second administrative capital of the Delhi Sultanate 93 The Delhi Sultanate forced migration of the Muslim population of Delhi including his royal family the nobles Syeds Sheikhs and Ulema to settle in Daulatabad The purpose of transferring the entire Muslim elite to Daulatabad was to act as propagandists who would adapt Islamic religious symbolism to the rhetoric of empire and so the Sufis could by persuasion bring many of the inhabitants of the Deccan to become Muslim 94 These elite colonists from the capital of Delhi were Urdu speakers who carried the Urdu language to the Deccan 95 During the time of Delhi Sultanate the Vijayanagara Empire resisted attempts of Delhi Sultanate to establish dominion in the Southern India serving as a barrier against invasion by the Muslims 96 nbsp Bakhtiyar Khilji s massacre of Buddhist monks in Bihar India Khilji destroyed the Nalanda and Vikramshila universities during his raids across North Indian plains massacring many Buddhist and Brahmin scholars 97 98 The Sultans of Delhi enjoyed cordial if superficial relations with Muslim rulers in the Near East but owed them no allegiance They based their laws on the Quran and the sharia and permitted non Muslim subjects to practice their own religions if they paid the jizya poll tax They ruled from urban centers while military camps and trading posts provided the nuclei for towns that sprang up in the countryside Perhaps the most significant contribution of the Sultanate was its temporary success in insulating the subcontinent from the potential devastation of the Mongol invasion from Central Asia in the 13th century which nonetheless led to the capture of Afghanistan and western Pakistan by the Mongols see the Ilkhanate Dynasty Under the Sultanate Indo Muslim fusion left lasting monuments in architecture music literature and religion In addition it is surmised that the language of Urdu literally meaning horde or camp in various Turkic dialects was born during the Delhi Sultanate period as a result of the mingling of Sanskritic Hindi and the Persian Turkish Arabic favoured by the Muslim invaders of India citation needed The Sultanate suffered significantly from the sacking of Delhi in 1398 by Timur but revived briefly under the Lodi Dynasty This was the final dynasty of the Sultanate before it was conquered by Zahiruddin Babur in 1526 who subsequently founded the Mughal dynasty that ruled from the 16th to the 18th centuries Timur edit Main article Timur Timur bin Taraghay Barlas known in the West as Tamerlane or Timur the lame was a 14th century warlord of Turco Mongol descent 99 He had conquered much of western and central Asia and founded the Timurid Empire 1370 1507 in Central Asia which survived until 1857 as the Mughal dynasty of India nbsp Timur defeats the Sultan of Delhi Nasir u Din Mehmud in the winter of 1397 1398Informed about civil war in South Asia Timur began a trek starting in 1398 to invade the reigning Sultan Nasir u Din Mehmud of the Tughlaq Dynasty in the north Indian city of Delhi 100 His campaign was politically pretexted that the Muslim Delhi Sultanate was too tolerant toward its Hindu subjects but that could not mask the real reason being to amass the wealth of the Delhi Sultanate 101 Timur crossed the Indus River at Attock now Pakistan on 24 September In Haryana his soldiers killed about 50 to 100 Hindu civilians each 102 Timur s invasion did not go unopposed however and he did meet some resistance during his march to Delhi most notably with the Sarv Khap coalition in northern India as well as the Governor of Meerut Although impressed and momentarily stalled by the valour of Ilyaas Awan Timur was able to continue his relentless approach to Delhi arriving in 1398 to combat the armies of Sultan Mehmud already weakened by an internal battle for ascension within the royal family The Sultan s army was easily defeated on 17 December 1398 Timur entered Delhi and the city was sacked destroyed and left in ruins Before the battle for Delhi Timur executed more than 100 000 Hindu captives 99 100 Timur himself recorded the invasions in his memoirs which were collectively known as Tuzk i Timuri 99 100 103 104 Timur s purported autobiography the Tuzk e Taimuri Memoirs of Temur is a later fabrication although most of the historical facts are accurate 99 Historian Irfan Habib wrote that in the 14th century the word Hindu people of Al Hind Hind being India included both Hindus and Muslims in religious connotations 105 When Timur entered Delhi after defeating Mahmud Toghloq s forces he granted an amnesty in return for protection money mal e amani But on the fourth day he ordered that all the people of the city be enslaved and so they were Thus reports Yahya who here inserts a pious prayer in Arabic for the victims consolation To God we return and everything happens by His will Yazdi on the other hand does not have any sympathy to waste on these wretches He records that Timur had granted protection to the people of Delhi on 18 December 1398 and the collectors had begun collecting the protection money But large groups of Timur s soldiers began to enter the city and like birds of prey attacked its citizens The pagan Hindus Henduan e gabr having had the temerity to begin immolating their women and themselves the three cities of Delhi were put to sack by Timur s soldiers Faithless Hindus he adds had gathered in the Congregation Mosque of Old Delhi and Timur s officers put them ruthlessly to slaughter there on 29 December Clearly Yazdi s Hindus included Muslims as well 105 Timur left Delhi in approximately January 1399 In April he had returned to his own capital beyond the Oxus Amu Darya Immense quantities of spoils were taken from India According to Ruy Gonzales de Clavijo 90 captured elephants were employed merely to carry precious stones looted from his conquest which was used to erect a mosque at Samarkand what historians today believe is the enormous Bibi Khanym Mosque Ironically the mosque was constructed too quickly and suffered from disrepair within a few decades of its construction Regional sultanates edit Kashmir was conquered by the Shah Mir dynasty in the 14th century Regional kingdoms such as Bengal Gujarat Malwa Khandesh Jaunpur and Bahmanis expanded at the expense of the Delhi Sultanate Gaining conversions to Islam was easier under regional Sultanates 106 Deccan sultanates edit Main articles Deccan sultanates and Battle of Talikota nbsp Map of five Deccan Sultanates before Battle of Talikota The term of Deccan Sultanates 107 was used for five Muslim dynasties that ruled several late medieval Indian kingdoms namely Adil Shahi Sultanate 108 Qutb Shahi Sultanate 109 Nizam Shahi Sultanate 110 Bidar Sultanate 111 and Berar Sultanate 112 in South India The Deccan Sultanates ruled the Deccan Plateau between the Krishna River and the Vindhya Range These sultanates became independent during the separation of the Bahmani Sultanate another Muslim empire nbsp Victory of Deccan Sultanates in Battle of Talikota The ruling families of all these five sultanates were of diverse origin the Qutb Shahi dynasty of Golconda Sultanate was of Iranian Turkmen origin 113 the Barid Shahi dynasty of Bidar Sultanate being founded by a Georgian noble 114 the Adil Shahi dynasty of Bijapur Sultanate was founded by a Georgian slave 115 while Nizam Shahi dynasty of Ahmadnagar Sultanate and Imad Shahi dynasty of Berar Sultanate were of Hindu lineage Ahmadnagar being Brahmin 116 and Berar being Kanarese 117 Fourth phase 16th to 18th centuries editMughal Empire edit Main article Mughal Empire nbsp The Mughal Empire in 1700India in the early 16th century presented a fragmented picture of rulers who lacked concern for their subjects and failed to create a common body of laws or institutions citation needed Outside developments also played a role in shaping events The circumnavigation of Africa by the Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama in 1498 allowed Europeans to challenge Muslim control of the trading routes between Europe and Asia In Central Asia and Afghanistan shifts in power pushed Babur of the Timurid dynasty in present day Uzbekistan southward first to Kabul and then to the heart of Indian subcontinent The dynasty he founded endured for more than two centuries nbsp The Mughal Emperor Akbar shoots the Rajput warrior Jaimal during the Siege of Chittorgarh in 1567 nbsp Bullocks dragging siege guns up hill during Mughal Emperor Akbar s attack on Ranthambhor Fort in 1568 nbsp The Mughal Army commanded by Akbar attack members of the Sannyasa during the Battle of Thanesar nbsp Mughal Emperor Akbar attempts to dissuade the young Hindu girl from committing sati 118 nbsp The Mughal Emperor Akbar fights Pehlwani with his Hindu general Raja Man Singh I of Jaipur nbsp Rajput women committing Jauhar during Akbar s invasion nbsp A War elephant executing the opponents of the Emperor Akbar Babur edit Main article Babur nbsp Babur and the Mughal Army at the Urvah valley in Gwalior A descendant of both Genghis Khan and Timur Babur combined strength and courage with a love of beauty and military ability with cultivation He concentrated on gaining control of Northwestern India doing so in 1526 by defeating the last Lodhi Sultan in the First battle of Panipat a town north of Delhi Babur then turned to the tasks of persuading his Central Asian followers to stay on in India and of overcoming other contenders for power like the Rajputs and the Afghans He succeeded in both tasks but died shortly thereafter in 1530 The Mughal Empire was one of the largest centralized states in pre modern history and was the precursor to the British Indian Empire Babur was followed by his great grandson Shah Jahan 1628 1658 builder of the Taj Mahal and other magnificent buildings Two other towering figures of the Mughal era were Akbar r 1556 1605 and Aurangzeb r 1658 1707 Both rulers expanded the empire greatly and were able administrators However Akbar was known for his religious tolerance and administrative genius while Aurangzeb was a pious Muslim and fierce advocate of more orthodox Islam Aurangzeb edit Main article Aurangzeb While some rulers were zealous in their spread of Islam others were relatively liberal The Mughal emperor Akbar an example of the latter established a new religion Din E Elahi which included beliefs from different faiths and even build many temples in his empire He abolished the jizya twice In contrast his great grandson Aurangazeb was a more religious and orthodox ruler Aurangzeb s Deccan campaign saw one of the largest death tolls in South Asian history with an estimated 4 6 million people killed during his reign Muslims and Hindus alike 119 An estimated of 2 5 million of Aurangzeb s army were killed during the Mughal Maratha Wars 100 000 annually during a quarter century while 2 million civilians in war torn lands died due to drought plague and famine 120 119 In the century and a half that followed the death of Aurangzeb effective Muslim control started weakening Succession to imperial and even provincial power which had often become hereditary was subject to intrigue and force The mansabdari system gave way to the zamindari system in which high ranking officials took on the appearance of hereditary landed aristocracy with powers of collecting rents As Delhi s control waned other contenders for power emerged and clashed thus preparing the way for the eventual British takeover Durrani Empire edit Main article Durrani Empire See also Ahmad Shah Durrani and List of Pashtun empires and dynasties nbsp Ahmad Shah Durrani and his coalition defeated the Maratha Empire during the Third Battle of Panipat and restored the Mughal emperor Shah Alam II 121 Ahmed Shah Abdali a Pashtun embarked on conquest in South Asia starting in 1747 122 In the short time of just over a quarter of a century he forged one of the largest Muslim empires of the 18th century The high point of his conquests was his victory over the powerful Marathas in the Third Battle of Panipat which occurred in 1761 In the Indian subcontinent his empire stretched from the Indus at Attock all the way to the eastern Punjab Uninterested in long term of conquest or in replacing the Mughal Empire he became increasingly pre occupied with revolts by the Sikhs citation needed Vadda Ghalughara took place under the Muslim provincial government based at Lahore to wipe out the Sikhs with non combatant women children and old men being killed an offensive that had begun with the Mughals with the Chhota Ghallughara 123 but after two months Sikh Misls again assembled and defeated Durranis in Battle of Harnaulgarh Sikhs Capture Sirhind Labore Multan His empire began to unravel decade before his death in 1772 Decline of the Muslim rule editSee also Maratha Empire and Sikh Empire Maratha Empire edit nbsp Maratha Empire yellow area at its zenith in 1760 stretching from the Deccan to present day PakistanThe single most important power to emerge in the Mughal dynasty was the Maratha Confederacy 1674 1818 124 The Marathas are responsible to a large extent for ending Mughal rule in India 125 The Maratha Empire ruled large parts of India following the decline of the Mughals The long and futile war bankrupted one of the most powerful empires in the world Mountstuart Elphinstone termed this a demoralizing period for the Muslims as many of them lost the will to fight against the Maratha Empire 126 127 128 The Maratha empire at its peak stretched from Trichinopoly present day Tiruchirappalli in Tamil Nadu in the south to the Afghan border in the north 129 130 In early 1771 Mahadji a notable Maratha general recaptured Delhi and installed Shah Alam II as the puppet ruler on the Mughal throne In north India the Marathas thus regained the territory and the prestige lost as result of the defeat at Panipath in 1761 131 A considerable portion of the Indian subcontinent came under the sway of the British Empire after the Third Anglo Maratha War which ended the Maratha Empire in 1818 Sikh Empire edit nbsp Sikh Empire established by Ranjit Singh in North west IndiaIn the Punjab Mughal power waned in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries Successive bands of Sikhs attacked Lahore and by 1780 partitioned it among themselves Ranjit Singh unified the Sikh misldhars commanders and made Lahore the administrative capital of a new Sikh Empire in 1799 132 In Afghanistan Zaman Shah Durrani was defeated by powerful Barakzai chief Fateh Khan who appointed Mahmud Shah Durrani as the new ruler of Afghanistan and appointed himself as Wazir of Afghanistan 133 Sikhs however were now superior to the Afghans and started to annex Afghan provinces The biggest victory of the Sikh Empire over the Durrani Empire came in the Battle of Attock fought in 1813 between Sikh and Wazir of Afghanistan Fateh Khan and his younger brother Dost Mohammad Khan The Afghans were routed by the Sikh army and the Afghans lost over 9 000 soldiers in this battle Dost Mohammad was seriously injured whereas his brother Wazir Fateh Khan fled back to Kabul fearing that his brother was dead 134 In 1819 the last Afghan ruled Indian Province of Kashmir was conquered by Sikhs who registered another crushing victory over Afghan General Jabbar Khan 135 Impact on India Islam and Muslims in India editSee also Persecution of Hindus Medieval persecution by Muslim rulers and Persecution of Buddhists India Considering the complex history of the Muslim conquests of India their recollection and legacy is controversial 20th century American historian Will Durant wrote about medieval India The Islamic conquest of India is probably the bloodiest story in history 136 In contrast there are other historians such as American historian Audrey Truschke and Indian historian Romila Thapar who claim that such views are unfounded or exaggerated 137 138 Conversion theories edit nbsp Ruins of the Surya Temple at Martand which was destroyed due to the iconoclastic policies of Sikandar Butshikan photo taken by John Burke in 1868 nbsp Somnath temple in ruins 1869 nbsp Front view of the present Somnath TempleThe Somnath temple was first attacked by Mahmud of Ghazni and repeatedly rebuilt Considerable controversy exists both in scholarly and public opinion about the conversions to Islam typically represented by the following schools of thought 139 The bulk of Muslims are descendants of migrants from the Iranian Plateau or Arabs 140 Conversions occurred for non religious reasons of pragmatism and patronage such as social mobility among the Muslim ruling elite or for relief from taxes 139 141 Conversion was a result of the actions of Sunni Sufi saints and involved a genuine change of heart 139 Conversion came from Buddhists and the en masse conversions of lower castes for social liberation and as a rejection of the oppressive Hindu caste strictures 142 A combination initially made under duress followed by a genuine change of heart 139 As a socio cultural process of diffusion and integration over an extended period of time into the sphere of the dominant Muslim civilisation and global polity at large 143 Embedded within this lies the concept of Islam as a foreign imposition and Hinduism being a natural condition of the natives who resisted resulting in the failure of the project to Islamize the Indian subcontinent and is highly embroiled within the politics of the partition and communalism in India 139 Historians such as Will Durant described Islamic invasions of India as The bloodiest story in history 136 Jadunath Sarkar contends that several Muslim invaders were waging a systematic jihad against Hindus in India to the effect that Every device short of massacre in cold blood was resorted to in order to convert heathen subjects 144 Hindus who converted to Islam however were not completely immune to persecution due to the caste system among Muslims in India established by Ziauddin al Barani in the Fatawa i Jahandari 145 where they were regarded as an Ajlaf caste and subjected to discrimination by the Ashraf castes 146 page needed Others argue that during the Muslim conquests in the Indian subcontinent Indian origin religions experienced persecution from various Muslim conquerors 147 who massacred Hindus Jains and Buddhists attacked temples and monasteries and forced conversions on the battlefield 148 Disputers of the conversion by the sword theory point to the presence of the large Muslim communities found in Southern India Sri Lanka Western Burma Bangladesh Southern Thailand Indonesia Malaysia and the Philippines coupled with the distinctive lack of equivalent Muslim communities around the heartland of historical Muslim empires in the Indian subcontinent as a refutation to the conversion by the sword theory The legacy of the Muslim conquest of South Asia is a hotly debated issue and argued even today Muslim invaders were not all simply raiders Later rulers fought on to win kingdoms and stayed to create new ruling dynasties The practices of these new rulers and their subsequent heirs some of whom were born to Hindu wives varied considerably While some were uniformly hated others developed a popular following According to the memoirs of Ibn Battuta who travelled through Delhi in the 14th century one of the previous sultans had been especially brutal and was deeply hated by Delhi s population Batuta s memoirs also indicate that Muslims from the Arab world Persia and Anatolia were often favoured with important posts at the royal courts suggesting that locals may have played a somewhat subordinate role in the Delhi administration The term Turk was commonly used to refer to their higher social status S A A Rizvi The Wonder That Was India II however points to Muhammad ibn Tughluq as not only encouraging locals but promoting artisan groups such as cooks barbers and gardeners to high administrative posts In his reign it is likely that conversions to Islam took place as a means of seeking greater social mobility and improved social standing 149 self published source Numerous temples were destroyed by Muslim conquerors 150 Richard M Eaton lists a total of 80 temples that were desecrated by Muslim conquerors 151 but notes this was not unusual in medieval India where numerous temples were also desecrated by Hindu and Buddhist kings against rival Indian kingdoms during conflicts between devotees of different Hindu deities and between Hindus Buddhists and Jains 152 153 154 He also notes there were many instances of the Delhi Sultanate which often had Hindu ministers ordering the protection maintenance and repairing of temples according to both Muslim and Hindu sources and that attacks on temples had significantly declined under the Mughal Empire 151 K S Lal in his book Growth of Muslim Population in Medieval India claimed that between 1000 and 1500 the Indian population decreased by 30 million 155 but stated his estimates were tentative and did not claim any finality 156 157 158 His work has come under criticism by historians such as Simon Digby SOAS University of London and Irfan Habib for its agenda and lack of accurate data in pre census times 159 160 Different population estimates by economics historians Angus Maddison and Jean Noel Biraben also indicate that India s population did not decrease between 1000 and 1500 but increased by tens of millions during that time 161 162 The Indian population estimates from other economic historians including Colin Clark John D Durand and Colin McEvedy also show there was a population increase in India between 1000 and 1500 163 Expansion of trade edit nbsp Cheraman Juma Masjid in KeralaIslam s impact was the most notable in the expansion of trade The first contact of Muslims with India was the Arab attack on a nest of pirates near modern day Mumbai to safeguard their trade in the Arabian Sea Around the same time many Arabs settled at Indian ports giving rise to small Muslim communities The growth of these communities was not only due to conversion but also the fact that many Hindu kings of south India such as those from Cholas hired Muslims as mercenaries 164 A significant aspect of the Muslim period in world history was the emergence of Islamic Sharia courts capable of imposing a common commercial and legal system that extended from Morocco in the West to Mongolia in the North East and Indonesia in the South East While southern India was already in trade with Arabs Muslims northern India found new opportunities As the Hindu and Buddhist kingdoms of Asia were subjugated by Islam and as Islam spread through Africa it became a highly centralising force that facilitated in the creation of a common legal system that allowed letters of credit issued in say Egypt or Tunisia to be honoured in India or Indonesia sharia has laws on the transaction of business with both Muslims and non Muslims citation needed To cement their rules Muslim rulers initially promoted a system in which there was a revolving door between the clergy the administrative nobility and the mercantile classes The travels of explorer Muhammad Ibn Abdullah Ibn Batuta were eased because of this system He served as an Imam in Delhi as a judicial official in the Maldives and as an envoy and trader in the Malabar There was never a contradiction in any of his positions because each of these roles complemented the other Islam created a compact under which political power law and religion became fused in a manner so as to safeguard the interests of the mercantile class This led world trade to expand to the maximum extent possible in the medieval world Sher Shah Suri took initiatives in improvement of trade by abolishing all taxes which hindered progress of free trade He built large networks of roads and constructed Grand Trunk Road 1540 1544 which connects Chittagong to Kabul parts of it are still in use today The geographic regions add to the diversity of languages and politics Cultural influence edit Further information Indo Persian culture The divide and rule policies two nation theory and subsequent partition of British India in the wake of Independence from the British Empire has polarised the sub continental psyche making objective assessment hard in comparison to the other settled agricultural societies of India from the North West Muslim rule differed from these others in the level of assimilation and syncretism that occurred They retained their identity and introduced legal and administrative systems that superseded existing systems of social conduct and ethics While this was a source of friction it resulted in a unique experience the legacy of which is a Muslim community strongly Islamic in character while at the same time distinctive and unique among its peers The impact of Islam on Indian culture has been inestimable It permanently influenced the development of all areas of human endeavour language dress cuisine all the art forms architecture and urban design and social customs and values Conversely the languages of the Muslim invaders were modified by contact with local languages to Urdu which uses the Arabic script This language was also known as Hindustani an umbrella term used for the vernacular terminology of Hindi as well as Urdu both major languages in South Asia today derived primarily from Sanskrit grammatical structures and vocabulary Muslim rule saw a greater urbanisation of India and the rise of many cities and their urban cultures The biggest impact was upon trade resulting from a common commercial and legal system extending from Morocco to Indonesia This change of emphasis on mercantilism and trade from the more strongly centralised governance systems further clashed with the agricultural based traditional economy and also provided fuel for social and political tensions A related development to the shifting economic conditions was the establishment of Karkhanas or small factories and the import and dissemination of technology through India and the rest of the world The use of ceramic tiles was adopted from architectural traditions of Iraq Iran and Central Asia Rajasthan s blue pottery was a local variation of imported Chinese pottery There is also the example of Sultan Abidin 1420 1470 sending Kashmiri artisans to Samarqand to learn book binding and paper making Khurja and Siwan became renowned for pottery Moradabad for brass ware Mirzapur for carpets Firozabad for glass wares Farrukhabad for printing Sahranpur and Nagina for wood carving Bidar and Lucknow for bidriware Srinagar for papier mache Benaras for jewellery and textiles and so on On the flip side encouraging such growth also resulted in higher taxes on the peasantry Numerous Indian scientific and mathematical advances and the Hindu numerals were spread to the rest of the world 165 and much of the scholarly work and advances in the sciences of the age under Muslim nations across the globe were imported by the liberal patronage of arts and sciences by the rulers The languages brought by Islam were modified by contact with local languages leading to the creation of several new languages such as Urdu which uses the modified Arabic script but with more Persian words The influences of these languages exist in several dialects in India today Islamic and Mughal architecture and art is widely noticeable in India examples being the Taj Mahal and Jama Masjid At the same time Muslim rulers destroyed many of the ancient Indian architectural marvels and converted them into Islamic structures most notably at Varanasi Mathura Ayodhya and the Kutub Complex in New Delhi Migration of Hindus edit Further information Rajputs of Nepal nbsp Copper Inscription by one of the Baise 22 King of Doti Raika Mandhata Shahi on Saka Era 1612 CEFew groups of Hindus including Rajputs were entering what is today Nepal before the fall of Chittor due to regular invasions of Muslims in India 166 After the fall of Chittorgarh in 1303 by the Alauddin Khilji of the Khalji dynasty Rajputs from the region immigrated in large groups into what is today Nepal due to heavy religious persecution The incident is supported by both the Rajput and Nepalese traditions 167 168 169 166 note 1 Historian John T Hitchcock and John Whelpton contends that the regular invasions by Muslims led to heavy influx of Rajputs with Brahmins from the 12th century 173 174 The entry of Rajputs in central region of what is today Nepal were easily assisted by Khas Malla rulers who had developed a large feudatory state covering more than half of the Greater Nepal 166 The Hindu immigrants including Rajputs were mixed into the Khas society quickly as a result of much resemblance 166 Also the Magar tribesmen of the Western region of what is today Nepal welcomed the immigrant Rajput chiefs with much cordiality 175 Religious policies editGeneral effect edit Parts of India have been subject to Muslim rule from the period of Muhammad ibn Qasim till the fall of the Mughal Empire While there is a tendency to view the Muslim conquests and Muslim empires as a prolonged period of violence against Hindu culture note 2 in between the periods of wars and conquests there were harmonious Hindu Muslim relations in most Indian communities 176 and the Indian population grew during the medieval Muslim times No populations were expelled based on their religion by either the Muslim or Hindu kings nor were attempts made to annihilate a specific religion 176 According to Romila Thapar with the onset of Muslim rule all Indians higher and lower caste were lumped together in the category of Hindus While higher caste Indians regarded lower castes to be impure they were now regarded as belonging to a similar category which partly explains the belief among many higher caste Indians Hinduism in the last one thousand years has been through the most severe persecution that any religion in the world has ever undergone Thapar further notes that The need to exaggerate the persecution at the hands of the Muslim is required to justify the inculcation of anti Muslim sentiments among the Hindus of today 177 Hindutva allies have even framed the Muslim violence against Hindu expressions of faith as a Hindu Holocaust 178 Romila Thapar states that the belief in a severe persecution in the last millennium brushes away the various expressions of religious persecution in India prior to the coming of the Muslims and particularly between the Saiva and the Buddhist and Jaina sects She questions what persecution means and if it means religious conversions she doubts that conversions can be interpreted as forms of persecution It is quite correct to mention that Muslim iconoclasts destroyed temples and the broke images of Hindus states Thapar it should also be mentioned that Muslim rulers made donations to Hindu sects during their rule 177 During the Islamic rule period states David Lorenzen there was state sponsored persecution against Hindus yet it was sporadic and directed mostly at Hindu religious monuments 179 According to Deepa Ollapally the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb was clearly discriminatory towards Hindu and all other non Muslims displaying an unprecedented level of religious bigotry but perhaps this was a consequence of the opposition he faced from a number of his family members 180 During the medieval span she states episodes of direct religious persecution of Hindus were rare as were communal riots between Hindus and Muslims 181 Destruction of religious architecture edit According to Wink the mutilation and destruction of Hindu religious idols and temples were an attack on Hindu religious practice 182 failed verification note 3 and the Muslim destruction of religious architecture was a means to eradicate the vestiges of Hindu religious symbols Muslim texts of this period justify it based on their contempt and abhorence for idols and idolators in Islamic thought 186 note 4 Jackson notes that the Muslim historians of the medieval era viewed the creation and expansion of Islamic Sultanates in Hindustan as holy war and a religious conquest characterizing Muslim forces as the army of Islam and the Hindus as infidels 188 189 Yet states Jackson these records need to be interpreted and relied upon with care given their tendencies to exaggerate This was not a period of uncompromising iconoclasm states Jackson Cities that quickly surrendered to the Islamic army says Jackson got a better deal for their religious monuments 188 According to Richard Davis targeting sacred temples was not unique to Muslim rulers in India Some Hindu kings too prior to the formation of first Islamic sultanates in India expropriated sacred idols from temples and took it back to their capitals as a political symbol of victory However the sacred temples icons and the looted image carried away was still sacred and treated with respect by the victorious Hindu king and his forces states Richard Davis There is hardly any evidence of mutilation of divine images and intentional defilement of Hindu sacred icons or temples by armies in control of Hindu rulers The evidence that is available suggests that the victorious Hindu kings undertook significant effort to house the expropriated images in new grand temples within their kingdom 190 According to Wink Hindu destruction of Buddhist and Jain places of worship took place before the 10th century but the evidence for such Hindu iconoclasm is incidental too vague and unconvincing 191 According to Wink mutilation and defilement of sacred icons is rarely evidenced in Hindu texts in contrast to Muslim texts on the Islamic iconoclasm in India 192 Effect on Hindu learning edit The destruction of temples and educational institutions the killings of learned monks and the scattering of students led to a widespread decline in Hindu education citation needed With the fall of Hindu kings science research and philosophy faced some setbacks due to a lack of funding royal support and an open environment citation needed Despite unfavourable treatment under the Muslim rule Brahmanical education continued and was also patronised by rulers like Akbar and others Bukka Raya I one of the founders of Vijaynagar Empire had taken steps to rehabilitate Hindu religious and cultural institutions which suffered a serious setback under Muslim rule Buddhists centres of learning decayed leading to the rise to prominence of Brahmanical institutions 193 While Sanskrit language and research on Vedantic philosophy faced a period of struggle with Muslim rulers often targeting well established and well known educational institutions that were often suffering at the time the traditional educational institutions in villages continued as before 193 vernacular regional languages based on Sanskrit thrived A lot of Vedantic literature got translated into these languages between 12th to 15th centuries 194 Muhammad bin Qasim and the Chachnama edit Muslim conquest of the Indian subcontinent began in early 8th century CE with a Muhammad ibn Qasim led army This campaign is narrated in the 13th century surviving manuscript of Chach Nama by Bakr Kufi which was claimed to be based on an earlier Arabic record 195 Content edit The Chach Nama mentions temple demolitions mass executions of resisting Sindhi forces and the enslavement of their dependents kingdoms ruled by Hindu and Buddhist kings were attacked their wealth plundered tribute kharaj settled and hostages taken often as slaves to Iraq 196 197 According to Andre Wink a historian specializing in Indo Islamic period in South Asia these Hindus were given the choice to either convert to Islam and join the Arab armies or be sealed tattooing the hands and pay Jizya a tax 198 The Chach Nama and evidence in other pre 11th century Persian texts suggests that these Hindu Jats also suffered restrictions and discrimination as non Muslims as was then usual elsewhere for the non Muslim subjects ahl adh dhimma per the Islamic law Sharia states Wink 198 Yohanan Friedmann however finds that Chachnama holds most of the contemporary religious as well as political authority to have collaborated with the invaders and those who promptly surrendered were not only gifted with huge sums of money but also entrusted to rule conquered territories 199 Friedmann also notes that bin Qasim gave his unqualified blessing to the characteristic features of the society he reappointed every deposed Brahmin of Brahmanabad to their jobs exempted them from Jizya allowed holding of traditional festivals and granted protection to temples but enforced the caste hierarchy with enhanced vigor drawing from Sharia as evident from his treatment of Jats 199 Overall Friedmann concludes that the conquest as described in the Chach Nama did not result in any significant changes in the structure of Indian society 199 According to Johnson and Koyama quoting Bosworth there were certainly massacres in the towns in the early stages of campaign against pagan Hindus in Sind but eventually they were granted dhimmi status and peace treaties were made with them 200 After the conquest of Sindh Qasim chose the Hanafi school of Islamic law which stated that when under Muslim rule people of Indic religions such as Hindus Buddhists and Jains are to be regarded as dhimmis from the Arab term as well as People of the Book and are required to pay jizya for religious freedom 51 Doubtful source edit The historicity of Chachnama has been questioned Francesco Gabrieli considers the Chach Nama to be a historical romance which was a late and doubtful source for information about bin Qasim and must be carefully sieved to locate the facts on such a reading he admired bin Qasim s proclamations concerning principle of tolerance and religious freedom 201 Peter Hardy takes a roughly similar stance and lenses the work as a work of political theory Manan Ahmed Asif criticizes the very premises of recovering portions of Chachnama as a historical chronicle of Muslim conquest he argues that the site and times of production dictated its entire content and that it must be read in entirety as an original work in the genre of political theory where history is creatively extrapolated with romantic fiction to gain favor in the court of Nasiruddin Qabacha 202 Wink states that some scholars treat Chachnama and other Muslim texts of its era as largely pseudo history He concurs that the skepticism about each individual source is justified and Chachnama is part fiction 203 204 Yet adds Wink taken together the common elements in these diverse sources suggest that Hindus were treated as dhimmis and targeted for certain discriminatory measures prescribed in the Sharia as well as entitled to protection and limited religious freedoms in a Muslim state 203 Early sultanates 11th 12th century edit Muslim texts of that period are replete with iconoclast rhetoric descriptions of mass slaughter of Hindus and repeat ad nauseam that the army of Islam obtain ed abundant wealth and unlimited riches from the conquered sites 205 The Hindus are described in these Islamic texts as infidels Hindustan as war zone Dar al Harb and attacks on pagan Hindus as a part of a holy war jihad states Peter Jackson 206 However states Wink this killing was not systematic and was normally confined to the fighting men though the wars and episodes of routine violence did precipitate a great famine with civilian casualties in tens of thousands 207 The pervasive and most striking feature of the Arabic literature on Sind and Hind of the 11th to 13th century is its constant obsession with idol worship and polytheism in the Indian subcontinent 208 209 There is piecemeal evidence of iconoclasm that began in Sind region but the wholesale and more systematic onslaught against major Hindu religious monuments is evidenced in North India 210 Richard Eaton Sunil Kumar Romila Thapar Richard H Davis and others argue that these iconoclastic actions were not primarily driven by religious zeal but were politically strategic acts of destruction in that temples in medieval India were sites associated with sovereignty royal power money and authority 152 211 212 213 According to Wink the iconoclasm was a product of religious economic and political motives and the practice undoubtedly escalated due to the vast amounts of immobilized treasure in these temples 214 As the Indo Islamic conquests of the 11th and 12th centuries moved beyond Panjab and the Himalayan foothills of the northwest into the Ganges Yamuna Doab region states Andre Wink some of the most important sacred sites of Indian culture were destroyed and desecrated 205 and their broken parts consistently reused to make Islamic monuments 215 note 5 Phyllis Granoff notes that medieval Indian religious groups faced a serious crisis as invading Muslim armies sacked temples and defaced sacred image 217 The 11th and 12th centuries additionally witnessed the rise of irregulars and then Banjara like groups who adopted Islam These were marauding bands who caused much suffering and destruction in the countryside as they searched for food and supplies during the violent campaign of Ghurids against Hindustan 218 The religious icons of Hindus were one of the targets of these Islamic campaigns 219 The 11th to 13th century period did not witness any systematic attempts at forced conversions of Hindus into Muslims nor is there evidence of widespread Islamicization in al Hind that emerged from the violent conquest The political power shifted from Hindu kings to Muslim sultans in conquered areas If some temples were not destroyed in these areas it did result in a loss to Hindu temple building patronage and an uprooting of Hindu sacred geography 220 The second half of the 13th century witnessed raids on Hindu kingdoms by Muslim forces controlling the northwest and north India states Peter Jackson 221 These did not lead to sustained persecution of the Hindus in the targeted kingdoms because the Muslim armies merely looted the Hindus took cattle and slaves then left The raids caused suffering yet also rallied the Islamic faithfuls and weakened the infidel prince by weakening his standing among his Hindu subjects 221 These raids were into Rajput kingdoms those in central India Lakhnawti Awadh and in eastern regions such as Bihar 222 Numerous Islamic texts of that era states Wink also describe forced transfer of enslaved Indian captives ghilman o jawari burda sabaya specially women and children over the 11th century from Hindustan 223 224 Delhi Sultanate 13th 16th century edit The Delhi Sultanate started in the 13th century and continued through the early 16th century when the Mughal conquest replaced it The Delhi Sultans of this period saw themselves first and foremost as Islamic rulers states Peter Jackson for the people of Islam 225 They were emphatically not sultan of the Hindus The Muslim texts of the Delhi Sultanate era treated Hindus with disdain remarking Hindus are never interesting in themselves but only as converts as capitation tax payers or as corpses 225 These medieval Muslim rulers were protecting and advancing the Islamic faith with two Muslim texts of this period remarking that the Sultan had a duty eradicate infidelity and humiliate his Hindu subjects 225 Some of the conquered Hindu subjects of the Delhi Sultanate served these Sultans who states Jackson were doubtless usually slaves These Hindus built the mosques of this era as well as developed the Indo Islamic architecture some served the court in roles such as treasurers clerks minting of new coins and others These Hindus were not persecuted instead some were rewarded with immunities and tax exemptions 226 Additionally captured Hindu slaves were added as infantry troops in the Sultanate s army for their campaign against other Hindu kingdoms 226 Some Sultans adopted Indian customs such as ceremonial riding of elephants by kings thus facilitating the public perception of the new monarch This suggest that the Sultans cultivated some Hindus to serve their aims rather than indiscriminately persecute every Hindu 226 In general Hindu subjects of Delhi Sultanate were generally accepted as people with dhimmi status not equal to Muslims but protected subject to Jizya tax and with a list of restrictions 227 Early Sultans of the Delhi Sultanate exempted the Brahmins from having to pay Jizya thus dividing the Hindus and placing the discriminatory tax burden entirely on the non Brahmin strata of the Hindu society Firuz Shah was the first to impose the Jizya on Brahmins and wrote in his autobiography that countless Hindus converted to Islam when he issued the edict that conversion would release them of the requirement to pay Jizya 228 This discrimination against Hindus was in force in the latter half of the 14th century states Jackson yet it is difficult to establish if and how this was enforced outside of the major centers under Muslim control 228 The Muslim commanders of Delhi Sultanate regularly raided Hindu kingdoms for plunder mulct their treasuries and looted the Hindu temples therein states Jackson 229 These conquests of Delhi Sultanate armies damaged or destroyed many Hindu temples Yet in a few instances after the war the Sultans let the Hindus repair and reconstruct their temples Such instances states Jackson has been cited by the Indian scholar P B Desai as evidence of striking degree of tolerance by Muslim Sultans But this happened in frontier areas after they had recently been conquered and placed in direct Muslim rule where the Sultan s authority was highly precarious 230 Within regions that was already under firm control of the Delhi Sultanate the direct evidence of this is meagre One example referred to is of a claimed request from the king of China to build a temple in India as recorded by Ibn Battuta That is questionable and has no corroborating evidence states Jackson Similar few examples near Delhi such as one for Sri Krishna Bhagwan temple cannot be verified whether they were ever built either 230 Some modern era Indian texts mention that Hindu and Jain temples of Delhi Sultanate era received endowments from Muslim authorities presenting these as evidence of lack of persecution during this period It is not beyond the bounds of possibility that in some instances this happened 231 But generally states Jackson the texts and even the memoirs written by the some Sultans themselves describe how they set about destroying new temples and replacing them with mosques and in one case depopulated a town of Hindus and resettled Muslims there Jackson clarifies that the evidence suggests that the destroyed temples were new temples and not the old one s near Delhi whose devotees were already paying regular Jizya to the Sultan s treasuries 231 In some cases the policies on destroying or letting Hindus worship in their old temples changed as Sultans changed 231 The Muslim nobles and advisors of the Sultans championed persecution of Hindus The Muslim texts of that era states Jackson frequently mention themes such as the Hindu infidels must on no account be allowed to live in ease and affluence they should not be treated as Peoples of the Book and the Sultan should at least refrain from treating Hindus with honour or permitting idolatry in the capital 232 233 Failure to slaughter the Hindus has led to polytheism taking root Another wazir while theoretically agreeing to these view stated that this would not be practical given the small population of Muslims and such a policy should be deferred till Muslims were in a stronger position If eradication of Hindus is not possible suggested another Muslim official then the Hindus should at least be insulted disgraced and dishonored 232 These views were not exceptions rather consistent with Islamic thinking of that era and are commonly encountered in polemical writing against the infidel in different parts of the Islamic world at different times states Jackson 232 234 This antagonism towards Hindus may have other general reasons such as the fear of apostasy given the tendency of everyday Muslims to join in with Hindus as they celebrated their religious festivals Further the succession struggle after the death of a Sultan usually led to political maneuvering by the next Sultan where depending on the circumstances the victor championed either the orthodox segment of the Islamic clergy and jurists or gave concessions to the Hindus and other groups for support when the Sultanate facing a military threat from outside 232 Madurai Sultanate edit First campaigns edit The army of Ala al Din Khalji from Delhi Sultanate began their first campaign in 1310 against the Hindu kingdom in Madurai region called Ma bar by court historians under the pretext of helping Sundar Pandya According to Mehrdad Shokoohy a scholar of Islamic studies and architectural history in Central and South Asia this campaign lasted for a year during which Madurai and other Tamil region cities were overrun by the Muslims the Hindu temples were demolished and the towns looted 235 A detailed record about the campaign by Amir Khusrau the destruction and plunder 235 A second destructive campaign was launched by Mubarak Shah Ala al Din Khalji s successor While the looted wealth was sent to Delhi a Muslim governor was appointed for the region 235 The governor later rebelled founded the short lived Madurai Sultanate and renamed himself as Sultan Ahsan Shah in 1334 The successive sultans of the new Sultanate did not have the support of the regional Hindu population The Madurai Sultanate s army states Shokoohy often exercised fierce and brutal repressive methods on the local people 236 The Sultanate faced constant battles with neighboring Hindu states and assassination by its own nobles Sultan Sikandar Shah was the last sultan He was killed by the invading forces of Vijayanagara Empire army in 1377 236 The Muslim literature of this period record the motive of the Madurai Sultans For example Sultan Shams al Din Adil Shah s general is described as leaving for holy war against the infidels and taking from them great wealth and a vast amount of booty 237 Another record states he engaged in a holy war ghaza and killed a great number of infidels 237 Madurai region has several Islamic shrines with tombs built during this period such as one for Ala al Din and Shams al Din In this shrine the inner columns are irregular and vary in form showing evidence of reused material The destruction of temples and the re use of their materials states Shokoohy was a practice of the early Sultanates of North India and we may assume that this tradition was brought to the south by the sultans of Ma bar 238 The Madurai Sultanate sacked and desecrated Hindu temples throughout the Tamil country and these were restored and reconsecrated for worship by the Vijayanagara rulers states the Indologist Crispin Branfoot 239 Mughal Empire edit The Mughal emperor Akbar has been a celebrated unusual example of tolerance Indologist Richard Eaton writes that from Akbar s time to today he has attracted conflicting labels from a strict Muslim to an apostate from a free thinker to a crypto Hindu from a Zoroastrian to a proto Christian from an atheist to a radical innovator As a youth states Eaton Akbar studied Islam under both Shia and Sunni tutors but as an adult he looked back with regret on his early life confessing that in those days he had persecuted men into conformity with my faith and deemed it Islam In his later years he felt an internal bitterness acknowledging that his soul had been seized with exceeding sorrow for what he had done before launching his campaign to treat all Mughal subjects regardless of religion on a basis of legal equality before the state 240 Aurangzeb edit The reign of Aurangzeb 1658 1707 witnessed one of the strongest campaigns of religious violence in the Mughal Empire s history Aurangzeb is a controversial figure in modern India often remembered as a vile oppressor of Hindus 241 During his rule Aurangzeb expanded the Mughal Empire conquering much of southern India through long bloody campaigns against non Muslims He forcibly converted Hindus to Islam and destroyed Hindu temples 242 243 He also re introduced the jizya a tax on non Muslims 244 which had been suspended for the previous 100 years by his great grandfather Akbar 245 Aurangzeb ordered the desecration and destruction of temples when conquering new lands and putting down rebellions punishing political leaders by destroying the temples that symbolized their power 153 In 1669 he issued orders to all his governors of provinces to destroy with a willing hand the schools and temples of the infidels and that they were strictly enjoined to put an entire stop to the teaching and practice of idolatrous forms of worship 246 According to Richard Eaton these orders appear to have been directed not toward Hindu temples in general but towards a more narrowly defined deviant group 247 The number of Hindu temples destroyed or desecrated under Aurangzeb s rule is unclear but may have been grossly exaggerated note 6 and he probably built more temples than he destroyed 249 According to Ikram Aurangzeb tried to enforce strict Islamic law by ordering the destruction of newly built Hindu temples Later the procedure was adopted of closing down rather than destroying the newly built temples in Hindu localities It is also true that very often the orders of destruction remained a dead letter 250 Some temples were destroyed entirely in other cases mosques were built on their foundations sometimes using the same stones Idols in temples were smashed and the city of Mathura was temporarily renamed as Islamabad in local official documents 246 251 The persecution during the Islamic period targeted non Hindus as well note 7 In some cases such as towards the end of Mughal era the violence and persecution was mutual Hindus too attacked and damaged Muslim tombs even when the troops had orders not to harm religious refuges of Muslims These few examples of disrespect for Islamic sites states Indologist Nicholas Gier pale in comparison to the great destruction of temples and general persecution of Hindus by Muslims for 500 years 253 Sources document brutal episodes of persecution Sikh texts for example document their Guru Teg Bahadur accompanying sixteen Hindu Brahmins on a quest to stop Mughal persecution of Hindus they were arrested and commanded to convert to Islam on pain of torture and death states Gier they all refused and in November 1675 Mati Das was sawed in half Dayal Das was boiled alive Sati Das was burned alive and Teg Bahadar was beheaded 254 Iconoclasm editDuring the Muslim conquest of Sindh edit Records from the campaign recorded in the Chach Nama record the destruction of temples during the early 8th century when the Umayyad governor of Damascus al Hajjaj ibn Yusuf 255 mobilized an expedition of 6000 cavalry under Muhammad bin Qasim in 712 Historian Upendra Thakur records the persecution of Hindus and Buddhists Muhammad triumphantly marched into the country conquering Debal Sehwan Nerun Brahmanadabad Alor and Multan one after the other in quick succession and in less than a year and a half the far flung Hindu kingdom was crushed There was a fearful out break of religious bigotry in several places and temples were wantonly desecrated At Debal Nairun and Aror temples were demolished and converted into mosques 256 Iconoclasm under the Delhi Sultanate edit Main article Delhi Sultanate Temple desecration Iconoclasm under the Delhi Sultanate nbsp Kakatiya Kala Thoranam Warangal Gate built by the Kakatiya dynasty in ruins one of the many temple complexes destroyed by the Delhi Sultanate 153 nbsp Artistic rendition of the Kirtistambh at Rudra Mahalaya Temple The temple was destroyed by Alauddin Khalji nbsp Rani ki vav is a stepwell built by the Chaulukya dynasty located in Patan the city was sacked by Sultan of Delhi Qutb ud din Aybak between 1200 and 1210 and it was destroyed by Allauddin Khilji in 1298 citation needed nbsp Pillar and ceiling carvings with a damaged madanakai at Hoysaleswara Temple The temple was twice sacked and plundered by the Delhi Sultanate 257 Historian Richard Eaton has tabulated a campaign of destruction of idols and temples by Delhi Sultans intermixed with instances of years where the temples were protected from desecration 153 151 152 In his paper he has listed 37 instances of Hindu temples being desecrated or destroyed in India during the Delhi Sultanate from 1234 to 1518 for which reasonable evidence is available 151 258 259 He noted that this was not unusual in medieval India as there were numerous recorded instances of temple desecration by Hindu and Buddhist kings against rival Indian kingdoms between 642 and 1520 involving conflict between devotees of different Hindu deities as well as between Hindus Buddhists and Jains 153 152 154 He also noted there were also many instances of Delhi sultans who often had Hindu ministers ordering the protection maintenance and repairing of temples according to both Muslim and Hindu sources For example a Sanskrit inscription notes that Sultan Muhammad bin Tughluq repaired a Siva temple in Bidar after his Deccan conquest There was often a pattern of Delhi sultans plundering or damaging temples during conquest and then patronizing or repairing temples after conquest This pattern came to an end with the Mughal Empire where Akbar s chief minister Abu l Fazl criticized the excesses of earlier sultans such as Mahmud of Ghazni 151 In many cases the demolished remains rocks and broken statue pieces of temples destroyed by Delhi sultans were reused to build mosques and other buildings For example the Qutb complex in Delhi was built from stones of 27 demolished Hindu and Jain temples by some accounts 260 Similarly the Muslim mosque in Khanapur Maharashtra was built from the looted parts and demolished remains of Hindu temples 261 Muhammad bin Bakhtiyar Khalji destroyed Buddhist and Hindu libraries and their manuscripts at Nalanda and Odantapuri Universities in 1193 CE at the beginning of the Delhi Sultanate 154 262 The first historical record in this period of a campaign of destruction of temples and defacement of faces or heads of Hindu idols lasted from 1193 through 1194 in Rajasthan Punjab Haryana and Uttar Pradesh under the command of Ghuri Under the Mamluks and Khaljis the campaign of temple desecration expanded to Bihar Madhya Pradesh Gujarat and Maharashtra and continued through the late 13th century 153 The campaign extended to Telangana Andhra Pradesh Karnataka and Tamil Nadu under Malik Kafur and Ulugh Khan in the 14th century and by the Bahmanis in the 15th century 154 Orissa temples were destroyed in the 14th century under the Tughlaqs Beyond destruction and desecration the sultans of the Delhi Sultanate in some cases had forbidden reconstruction or repair of damaged Hindu Jain and Buddhist temples In certain cases the Sultanate would grant a permit for repairs and construction of temples if the patron or religious community paid jizya fee tax For example according to Ibn Battuta s account a proposal by the Yuan dynasty emperor of China to repair Himalayan Buddhist temples destroyed by the Sultanate army was refused on the grounds that such temple repairs were only allowed if the Chinese agreed to pay jizya tax to the treasury of the Sultanate 263 264 265 According to Eva De Clercq an expert in the study of Jainism the Delhi Sultans did not strictly prohibit construction of new temples in the sultanate Islamic law notwithstanding 266 In his memoirs Firoz Shah Tughlaq describes how he destroyed temples and built mosques instead and killed those who dared build new temples 267 Other historical records from wazirs amirs and the court historians of various Sultans of the Delhi Sultanate describe the grandeur of idols and temples they witnessed in their campaigns and how these were destroyed and desecrated 268 Nalanda edit Main article Nalanda In 1193 the Nalanda University complex was destroyed by Afghan Khalji Ghilzai Muslims under Bakhtiyar Khalji this event is seen as the final milestone in the decline of Buddhism in India He also burned Nalanda s major Buddhist library and Vikramshila University 269 as well as numerous Buddhist monasteries in India When the Tibetan translator Chag Lotsawa Dharmasvamin Chag Lo tsa ba 1197 1264 visited northern India in 1235 Nalanda was damaged looted and largely deserted but still standing and functioning with seventy students Mahabodhi Sompura Vajrasan and other important monasteries were found to be untouched The Ghuri ravages only afflicted those monasteries that lay in the direct path of their advance and were fortified in the manner of defensive forts By the end of the 12th century following the Muslim conquest of the Buddhist stronghold in Bihar Buddhism having already declined in the South declined in the North as well because survivors retreated to Nepal Sikkim and Tibet or escaped to the South of the Indian sub continent Martand edit Main article Martand Sun Temple nbsp Ruins of the Surya Temple at Martand which was destroyed due to the iconoclastic policies of Sikandar Butshikan photo taken by John Burke in 1868The Martand Sun Temple was built by the third ruler of the Karkota dynasty Lalitaditya Muktapida in the 8th century CE 270 The temple was completely destroyed on the orders of the Muslim ruler Sikandar Butshikan in the early 15th century with demolition lasting a year He is remembered for his strenuous efforts to convert the Hindus of Kashmir to Islam These efforts included the destruction of numerous old temples prohibition of Hindu rites and rituals and even the wearing of clothes in the Hindu style 271 Vijayanagara edit Main article Hampi The city flourished between the 14th century and 16th century during the height of the Vijayanagara Empire During this time it was often in conflict with the kingdoms which rose in the Northern Deccan and which are often collectively termed the Deccan Sultanates The Vijaynagara Empire successfully resisted Muslim invasions for centuries But in 1565 the empire s armies suffered a massive and catastrophic defeat at the hands of an alliance of the Sultanates and the capital was taken The victorious armies then razed depopulated and destroyed the city over several months The empire continued its slow decline but the original capital was not reoccupied or rebuilt Somnath edit Main article Somnath Around 1024 CE during the reign of Bhima I Mahmud of Ghazni raided Gujarat and plundered the Somnath temple According to an 1169 inscription Bhima rebuilt the temple This inscription does not mention any destruction caused by Mahmud and states that the temple had decayed due to time 272 In 1299 Alauddin Khalji s army under the leadership of Ulugh Khan defeated Karandev II of the Vaghela dynasty and sacked the Somnath temple 272 In 1665 the temple was once again ordered to be destroyed by Mughal emperor Aurangzeb 273 In 1702 he ordered that if Hindus had revived worship there it should be demolished completely 274 nbsp Ruins of Nalanda University nbsp Sri Krishna Temple in Hampi nbsp Somnath temple in ruins 1869 nbsp Front view of the present Somnath TempleThe Somnath temple was first attacked by Muslim Turkic invader Mahmud of Ghazni and repeatedly rebuilt after being demolished by successive Muslim rulers Iconoclasm during the Muslim conquests in the Indian subcontinent nbsp The Somnath temple in Gujarat was repeatedly destroyed by Islamic armies and rebuilt by Hindus It was destroyed by Delhi Sultanate s army in 1299 CE 275 The present temple was reconstructed in Chaulukya style of Hindu temple architecture and completed in May 1951 276 277 nbsp The Kashi Vishwanath Temple was repeatedly destroyed by Islamic invaders such as Qutb ud Din Aibak nbsp Ruins of the Martand Sun Temple The temple was destroyed on the orders of Muslim Sultan Sikandar Butshikan in the early 15th century with demolition lasting a year nbsp The armies of Delhi Sultanate led by Muslim Commander Malik Kafur plundered the Meenakshi Temple and looted it of its valuables nbsp Kakatiya Kala Thoranam Warangal Gate built by the Kakatiya dynasty in ruins one of the many temple complexes destroyed by the Delhi Sultanate 153 nbsp Rani ki vav is a stepwell built by the Chaulukya dynasty located in Patan the city was sacked by Sultan of Delhi Qutb ud Din Aibak between 1200 and 1210 and it was destroyed by Alauddin Khalji in 1298 153 nbsp Artistic rendition of the Kirtistambh at Rudra Mahalaya Temple The temple was destroyed by Alauddin Khalji nbsp Exterior wall reliefs at Hoysaleswara Temple The temple was twice sacked and plundered by the Delhi Sultanate 257 See also editOutline of South Asian history History of Afghanistan History of India History of Pakistan History of Bangladesh History of Islam Spread of Islam Islam and other religions Islam in Asia Muslim kingdoms in the Indian subcontinent Ghazwa e Hind List of early Hindu Muslim military conflicts in the Indian subcontinent Muslim conquests of Afghanistan Decline of Buddhism in the Indian subcontinent Mughal Maratha Wars 1680 1707 Ahom Mughal conflicts 1615 1682 Aniconism Aniconism in Islam Iconoclasm Persecution of Hindus Persecution of Buddhists Conversion of non Islamic places of worship into mosquesNotes and references editNotes edit Scottish scholar Francis Buchanan Hamilton doubts the first tradition of Rajput influx to what is today Nepal which states that Rajputs from Chittor came to Ridi Bazaar in 1495 A D and went on to capture the Gorkha Kingdom after staying in Bhirkot 170 He mentions the second tradition which states that Rajputs reached Palpa through Rajpur at Gandak river 171 The third tradition mentions that Rajputs reached Palpa through Kumaon and Jumla 172 Will Durant called the Muslim conquest of India probably the bloodiest story in history 136 Devout Hindus cherish the manifestation of the divine everywhere such as in icons people and sacred places 183 Hinduism is embedded in a sacred iconography a sacred prosopography and a sacred geography states Wink images were considered aids in contemplating the divine 184 These form the fundamental structure behind Hindu pilgrimage mythology festivals and community just like the other major Indian religions 185 failed verification The Muslim court historians describe the desecrated sacred cities of Hindus in demeaning terms For example they describe Mathura a sacred city of Krishna tradition in Hinduism as the work of demons jinn and refer to the sacred idols as well as their worshippers Hindus as devils shayatin 187 The architecture of Hindu temples underwent change under the Muslim rulers and incorporated Islamic influences The Vrindavan temples built under Akbar lack ornamentation as imagery was generally prohibited 150 Some of the evidence of desecration and destruction of Hindu sacred monuments is independent of the Muslim texts of the period It is found in Islamic monuments built during this period As examples the Qutb mosque in Delhi shows its reliance on disassembled temple materials as do the Caurasi Kambha mosque near Bharatpur the Jami Masjid at Sultankot also called Ukha mandir mosque the idgah in Bayana 216 Number of temples destroyed Avari 2013 p 115 citing a 2000 study writes Aurangzeb was perhaps no more culpable than most of the Sultans before him they desecrated the temples associated with Hindu power not all temples It is worth noting that in contrast to the traditional claim of hundreds of Hindu temples having been destroyed by Aurangzeb a recent study suggests a modest figure of just fifteen destructions Truschke 2017 p 85 Nobody knows the exact number of temples demolished or pillaged on Aurangzeb s orders and we never will Richard Eaton the leading authority on the subject puts the number of confirmed temple destructions during Aurangzeb s rule at just over a dozen with fewer tied to the emperor s direct commands Other scholars have pointed out additional temple demolitions not counted by Eaton such as two orders to destroy the Somanatha Temple in 1659 and 1706 the existence of a second order suggests that the first was never carried out Aurangzeb also oversaw temple desecrations For example in 1645 he ordered mihrabs prayer niches typically located in mosques erected in Ahmedabad s Chintamani Parshvanath Temple built by the Jain merchant Shantidas Even adding in such events however to quote Eaton the evidence is almost always fragmentary incomplete or even contradictory Given this there were probably more temples destroyed under Aurangzeb than we can confirm perhaps a few dozen in total but here we run into a dark curtain drawn across an unknown past In contrast the historian Abraham Eraly estimates Aurangzeb era destruction to be significantly higher in 1670 all temples around Ujjain were destroyed and later 300 temples were destroyed in and around Chitor Udaipur and Jaipur among other Hindu temples destroyed elsewhere in campaigns through 1705 248 Avari writes Aurangzeb s religious policy caused friction between him and the ninth Sikh guru Tegh Bahadur In both Punjab and Kashmir the Sikh leader was roused to action by Aurangzeb s excessively zealous Islamic policies Seized and taken to Delhi he was called upon by Aurangzeb to embrace Islam and on refusal was tortured for five days and then beheaded in November 1675 Two of the ten Sikh gurus thus died as martyrs at the hands of the Mughals 252 Footnotes edit Heathcote 1995 p 6 Anjum 2007 p 234 Kulke amp Rothermund 1998 pp 187 190 Chaurasia 2004 pp 1 4 Haig 1928 p 322 Marshman 2010 p 93 Browne 1924 p 121 Copland et al 2012 p 161 Wink Vol I 2002 p 201 a b Hoyland 2015 p 85 Baloch 1953 p 243 Friedmann 1970 p 253 Ishaq 1945 pp 109 112 Ishaq 1945 p 109 Baloch 1946 p 251 Ishaq 1945 p 110 a b al Baladhuri 1924 p 209 Uthman ibn abu l Ași ath Thakafi sent his brother al Hakam to al Bahrain and went himself to Uman and sent an army across to Tanah When the army returned he wrote to Umar informing him of this expedition and its result Umar wrote to him in reply By Allah I swear that if they had been smitten I would exact from thy tribe the equivalent Al Hakam sent an expedition against Barwaș Broach also and sent his brother al Mughirah ibn abu l Asi to the gulf of ad Daibul where he met the enemy in battle and won a victory Khushalani 2006 p 221 El Hareir amp M Baye 2011 p 594 a b Fredunbeg 1900 p 57 Sen 1999 p 346 Mehta 1979 pp 31 32 p 31 Northwestern India Modern Afghanistan was part of ancient India The northern part called Kabul or Kabulistan Zabul or Zabulistan the southern region p 32 The lower Indus valley to the south of Multan and including Sind and Mekran fn 11 Udabhandapur town was mentioned by Alberuni as the capital of Gandhara the ancient name for the northwestern part of India Wink Vol I 2002 pp 133 134 Wink Vol I 2002 pp 119 120 a b Wink Vol I 2002 p 129 Crawford 2014 p 192 a b Maclean 1989 p 126 Morony 2012 pp 214 216 Elliot 1853 p 9 Rizvi 1986 p 138 Rezavi 2006 p 283 Elliot 1867 p 116 Wink Vol I 2002 pp 122 129 al Baladhuri 1924 pp 141 151 Fredunbeg 1900 pp 71 79 Hoyland 2015 p 191 Kennedy 2007 pp 194 196 a b al Baladhuri 1924 p 212 Khushalani 2006 p 76 al Baladhuri 1924 p 213 al Baladhuri 1924 p 148 Yazid ibn Ziyad proceeded against them the people of Kabul and attacked them in Junzah but he and many of those with him were killed and the rest put to flight ransomed abu Ubaidah for 500 000 dirhams Hoyland 2015 p 150 Hitti 2002 p 209 Kennedy 2007 p 196 Hoyland 2015 p 152 Kennedy 2001 p 39 Kennedy 2004 p 101 Kennedy 2007 pp 197 198 Wink Vol I 2002 p 164 Wink Vol I 2002 pp 164 165 a b Gier 2006 Berzin Alexander The Historical Interaction between the Buddhist and Islamic Cultures before the Mongol Empire First Muslim Incursion into the Indian Subcontinent Study Buddhism Retrieved 21 June 2016 El Hareir amp M Baye 2011 pp 604 605 al Baladhuri 1924 p 216 Fredunbeg 1900 p 69 a b Wink Vol I 2002 p 203 Wink Vol I 2002 p 131 Wink Vol I 2002 p 204 Kennedy 2007 p 301 Haig 1928 p 5 Wink Vol I 2002 p 205 Fredunbeg 1900 p 176 a b c d e Blankinship 1994 p 132 al Baladhuri 1924 p 225 Dahir s son Hullishah had come back to Brahmanabadh Blankinship 1994 p 131 Misra 1983 p 56 Atherton 1997 p 14 Bhandarkar 1929 pp 29 30 Wink Vol I 2002 p 208 Blankinship 1994 p 133 Misra 1983 p 45 Bhandarkar 1929 pp 30 31 Raya 1939 p 125 Majumdar 1977 p 267 Puri 1986 p 46 Wink Vol I 2002 p 208 Puri 1986 p 46 Wink Vol I 2002 p 209 Bhandarkar 1929 pp 29 30 Majumdar 1977 pp 266 267 Puri 1986 p 45 Wink Vol I 2002 p 208 Sen 1999 p 348 Elliot 1853 p 51 El Hareir amp M Baye 2011 p 613 Wink Vol I 2002 p 210 El Hareir amp M Baye 2011 p 614 Bosworth amp Asimov 1999 pp 298 301 al Biruni 1888 p 22 a b Bellew 1880 p 73 Chandra 1997 p 25 Tucker 2010 p 263 Chandra 2007 p 73 He resorted to large scale slaughter of the Khokhars and cowed them down On his way back to Ghazni he was killed by a Muslim fanatic belonging to a rival sect Bosworth 1968 p 168 The suppression of revolt in the Punjab occupied Mu izz al Din s closing months for on the way back to Ghazna he was assassinated allegedly by emissaries of the Isma ilis whom he had often persecuted during his life time 602 1206 Malik 2008 p 104 Khan 2005 p 490 Islam and the Modern Age 1996 p 19 Khan 2021 p 183 Tughluq s son Jauna s remark that I feel bound to all Indians by ties of blood and relation is significant in this context Wink Vol III 2004 p 127 Muhammad bin Tughluq was related by blood ties to all Indians Explorations Volumes 10 11 Department of English Language and Literature Government College 1984 p 19 Proceedings Punjab History Conference Volume 26 Department of Punjab Historical Studies Punjabi University 1995 ISBN 978 81 7380 120 4 Elliot 1871 pp 236 237 Ray 2019 The Sultan created Daulatabad as the second administrative centre A contemporary writer has written that the Empire had two capitals Delhi and Daulatabad Ernst 1992 p 113 Eaton 2015 p 41 Vijayanagar Encyclopedia Britannica 12 May 2023 Sanyal 2012 pp 130 1 Meston 1934 p 169 a b c d Manz 2006 a b c Elliot 1871 p 389 The Islamic World to 1600 The Mongol Invasions The Timurid Empire The University of Calgary Archived from the original on 16 August 2009 Gupta 1994 p 13 Elliot 1871 p 393 Lane Poole 1907 p 174 a b Habib 1997 p 298 Lal 1990 p 70 In conclusion it may be emphasised that even when historical forces had divided the country into a number of independent states consequent on the break up of the Delhi Sultanate the work of proselytization continued unabated Indeed it made the task of conversion easy Small regions could be dealt with in detail and severe Muslim rulers orthodox Ulema and zealous Sufis worked in them effectively It was due to extraordinary situations that the Kashmir valley and Eastern Bengal became Muslim majority regions as far back as the fifteenth century In other parts of the country where there was a Muslim ruler Muslim population grew apace in the normal and usual way Haidar amp Sardar 2015 Sen 2013 p 119 Schimmel 1975 Spooner amp Hanaway 2012 p 317 Barid Shahi dynasty Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 13 March 2019 Sewell 1884 p 178 Census of India 1991 Mahbubnagar Government of Andhra Pradesh 1994 Bosworth 1996 p 324 Chaurasia 2002 p 101 Ferishta 1829 pp 189 Ferishta 1829 pp 485 487 Young Hindu Girl Before the Mughal Emperor Akbar Archived 27 March 2020 at the Wayback Machine in The Walters Art Museum a b White 2011 p 113 Malesevic 2017 p 119 Ikram 1964 pp 254 276 Christensen 1995 p 12 Cole amp Sambhi 2005 p 86 The Marathas Encyclopedia Britannica Bal Gangadhar Tilak Encyclopedia Britannica Elphinstone amp Cowell 1866 p 27 Jaques 2007 Sarkar 1988 p 246 Mehta 2005 p 204 Mikaberidze 2011 p 43 Rathod 1994 p 8 Glover 2008 pp 11 12 Adamec 2011 p 142 Griffin 1905 p 192 Jaques 2007 p 938 a b c Durant 2014 p 459 The Mohammedan Conquest of India is probably the bloodiest story in history It is a discouraging tale for its evident moral is that civilization is a precarious thing whose delicate complex of order and liberty culture and peace may at any time be overthrown by barbarians invading from without or multiplying within The Hindus had allowed their strength to be wasted in internal division and war they had adopted religions like Buddhism and Jainism which unnerved them for the tasks of life they had failed to organize their forces for the protection of their frontiers and their capitals Truschke Audrey It is High Time We Discarded the Pernicious Myth of India s Medieval Muslim Villains The Wire Retrieved 11 March 2021 Thapar Romila 27 November 2020 That Muslims enslaved Hindus for last 1000 yrs is historically unacceptable Romila Thapar ThePrint Retrieved 11 March 2021 a b c d e van der Veer 1994 pp 27 29 Eaton 1993 p 113 Eaton 1993 p 116 Eaton 1993 pp 116 117 Eaton 1993 pp 305 306 308 Sarkar 1928 p 254 Sikand 2004 Aggarwal 1978 Franco amp Preisendanz 2007 p 248 Murphy 2013 p 16 Islam and the sub continent appraising its impact Archived from the original on 9 December 2012 Retrieved 27 November 2006 a b Allen 1991 p 362 a b c d e Eaton 2001 pp 70 77 a b c d Eaton 2000b pp 62 70 a b c d e f g h Eaton 2000a pp 283 319 a b c d Eaton 2004 Lal 1999 p 343 I have arrived at the conclusion that the population of India in A D 1000 was about 200 million and in the year 1500 it was 170 million Lal 1999 p 89 Elst 1995 p 33 Miller 2014 p 80 Digby 1975 pp 176 177 Habib 1978 pp 287 303 Maddison 2007 p 376 Biraben 2003 p 2 Maddison 2001 pp 236 241 242 McLeod 2002 p 33 History of India syllabus Archived from the original on 11 December 2005 Retrieved 5 December 2005 a b c d Pradhan 2012 p 3 Hamilton 1819 pp 129 132 Regmi 1961 p 14 Wright 1877 pp 167 168 Hamilton 1819 pp 240 244 Hamilton 1819 pp 129 132 Hamilton 1819 pp 12 13 15 16 Hitchcock 1978 pp 112 113 Whelpton 2005 p 10 Pandey 1997 p 507 a b Gier 2014 p 9 Quite apart from Akbar most Indian medieval communities experienced harmonious relations as Stuart Gordon explains No Muslim or Hindu enclaves were seized populations were not expelled on the basis of religion No prince publicly committed himself and all of his resources to the annihilation of the Other Both Hindus and Muslims were routinely and without comment recruited into all the armies of the period a b Thapar Romila 21 February 2018 Syndicated hinduism Indian Cultural Forum Retrieved 5 March 2021 Chatterji 2009 p 43 In 2003 the idea of a Hindu Holocaust Museum was proposed by French journalist and Hindutva ally Francois Gautier Lorenzen 1999 p 631 Ollapally 2008 p 29 Ollapally 2008 p 31 Wink Vol II 2002 pp 301 306 with footnotes Wink Vol II 2002 p 301 Wink Vol II 2002 pp 301 302 306 Wink Vol II 2002 pp 301 306 with footnotes Wink Vol II 2002 p 323 Wink Vol II 2002 p 327 a b Jackson 2003 pp 19 22 126 128 139 142 173 175 213 215 Jackson 2003 p Chapter 14 pp 278 289 Davis 1993 pp 22 48 Wink Vol II 2002 pp 309 310 Wink Vol II 2002 pp 308 309 a b Mehta 1986 p 287 Ikram 1964 pp 123 132 Friedmann 2006 Wink Vol I 2002 pp 51 204 205 Wink Vol I 2002 p 161 a b Wink Vol I 2002 pp 161 163 with footnotes a b c Friedmann 1984 pp 31 32 Johnson amp Koyama 2019 pp 279 280 note 3 Gabrieli 1965 pp 281 295 Asif 2016 pp 8 15 a b Wink Vol I 2002 pp 192 195 Wink Andre Wink on Asif A Book of Conquest The Chachnama and Muslim Origins in South Asia H Asia Retrieved 7 March 2021 a b Wink Vol II 2002 pp 124 Jackson 2003 pp 6 10 with footnotes Wink Vol II 2002 pp 125 126 Wink Vol II 2002 p 319 Friedmann 1975 pp 214 217 Wink Vol II 2002 pp 320 321 Dutta 2009 pp 89 92 Iyer Shrivastava amp Ticku 2017 p 3 Lycett amp Morrison 2013 pp 433 470 Wink Vol II 2002 p 321 Wink Vol II 2002 p 322 Wink Vol II 2002 p 226 Granoff 1991 pp 189 203 Wink Vol II 2002 pp 142 143 with footnotes Wink Vol II 2002 pp 319 321 Wink Vol II 2002 p 294 a b Jackson 2003 pp 123 125 with footnotes Jackson 2003 pp 123 125 139 145 with footnotes Wink Vol II 2002 p 126 Wink Vol II 2002 pp 130 135 with footnotes for specific examples of destruction and plundering in and around what is now Delhi Uttar Pradesh Gujarat eastern Rajasthan and central India a b c Jackson 2003 pp 278 279 with footnotes a b c Jackson 2003 pp 279 281 with footnotes Jackson 2003 pp 282 284 with footnotes a b Jackson 2003 pp 285 287 with footnotes Jackson 2003 pp 208 210 with footnotes a b Jackson 2003 pp 287 288 with footnotes a b c Jackson 2003 pp 288 289 with footnotes a b c d Jackson 2003 pp 290 291 293 295 with footnotes Aquil 2008 pp 177 181 Aquil 2008 pp 168 171 177 179 181 189 a b c Shokoohy 1991 pp 33 34 with footnotes a b Shokoohy 1991 pp 34 35 with footnotes a b Shokoohy 1991 pp 44 45 with footnotes Shokoohy 1991 pp 46 47 with footnotes Branfoot 2003 pp 156 157 Eaton 2019 p 233 Truschke 2017 pp 2 9 Ayalon 1986 p 271 Aurangzeb as he was according to Mughal Records FACT Francois Gautier Retrieved 15 May 2017 More links at the bottom of that page For a record of major Hindu temple destruction campaigns from 1193 to 1729 CE see Eaton 2000a pp 283 319 Smith 1919 p 438 Truschke 2017 p 70 a b Smith 1919 p 437 Eaton 2001 pp 73 75 Eraly 2000 pp 398 399 Copland et al 2012 p 119 Ikram 1964 pp 198 199 Braudel 1994 pp 232 236 Avari 2013 p 115 Gier 2014 pp 17 18 Gier 2014 pp 19 21 Fredunbeg 1900 Thakur 1959 p 15 a b Bradnock amp Bradnock 2000 p 959 Schimmel 1980 pp 7 10 Brown 1949 pp 11 25 Welch 1993 p 311 Welch amp Crane 1983 p 126 Gul amp Khan 2008 p 2 Srivastava 1966 p 305 Islam 2002 p 11 Jackson 2003 pp 287 295 De Clercq 2010 pp 293 284 Elliot 1869 pp 377 381 Elliot 1871 pp 22 219 398 471 Rahman 2002 p 292 Geer 2008 p Ixx Kaw 2004 pp 108 109 a b Yagnik amp Sheth 2005 pp 40 47 Chandra 1999 p 278 Yagnik amp Sheth 2005 p 55 Eaton 2001 p 73 item 16 of the table Gopal 1994 p 148 Jaffrelot 1996 p 84Bibliography editAdamec Ludwig W 2011 Historical Dictionary of Afghanistan Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 7957 7 Aggarwal Patrap 1978 Caste hierarchy in a Meo village of Rajasthan In Ahmad Imtiaz ed Caste and Social Stratification Among Muslims in India Manohar ISBN 978 0 8364 0050 2 Ahmad Mohammad Aziz 1939 The Foundation of Muslim Rule in India 1206 1290 A D Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 3 832 841 JSTOR 44252438 Ahmed Fouzia Farooq 2016 Muslim Rule in Medieval India Power and Religion in the Delhi Sultanate Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 78673 082 4 Allen Margaret Prosser 1991 Ornament in Indian Architecture University of Delaware Press ISBN 978 0 87413 399 8 Anjum Tanvir Summer 2007 The Emergence of Muslim Rule in India Some Historical Disconnects and 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Sultanat to the Mughals Vol 2 1st ed New Delhi Har Anand Publications OCLC 36806798 Chandra Satish 2004 Medieval India From Sultanate to the Mughals Vol 1 Revised ed Har Anand Publications ISBN 978 81 241 1064 5 Chatterji Angana P 2009 Violent Gods Hindu Nationalism in India s Present Narratives from Orissa Three Essays Collective ISBN 978 81 88789 45 0 Chaurasia Radhey Shyam 2002 History of Medieval India From 1000 A D to 1707 A D New Delhi Atlantic Publishers amp Distributors ISBN 81 269 0123 3 Chaurasia Radhey Shyam 2004 History of the Marathas New Delhi Atlantic Publishers amp Distributors ISBN 978 81 269 0394 8 Christensen Asger 1995 Aiding Afghanistan The Background and Prospects for Reconstruction in a Fragmented Society Copenhagen NIAS Books ISBN 978 87 87062 44 2 Cole W Owen Sambhi Piara Singh 2005 A Popular Dictionary of Sikhism Sikh Religion and Philosophy Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 135 79759 1 Copland Ian Mabbett Ian Roy Asim et al 2012 A history of State and Religion in India Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 84465 0 Crawford Peter 2014 The War of The Three Gods Romans Persians and the Rise of Islam Skyhorse Publishing ISBN 978 1 62914 512 9 Davis Richard 1993 Indian Art Objects as Loot Journal of Asian Studies 52 1 22 48 doi 10 2307 2059143 JSTOR 2059143 S2CID 161593825 De Clercq Eva September 2010 On Jaina ApabhraṂsa Prasastis Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 63 3 293 284 doi 10 1556 AOrient 63 2010 3 4 JSTOR 23659006 Digby Simon 1975 Reviews K S Lal Growth of Muslim population in medieval India A D 1000 1800 Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 38 1 176 177 doi 10 1017 S0041977X0004739X JSTOR 614231 S2CID 161748418 Durant Will 2014 first published 1935 The Story of Civilization Vol I New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 4767 7971 3 Dutta Ranjeeta November December 2009 Review of Demolishing Myths or Mosques and Temples Readings on History and Temple Desecration in Medieval Indi a Social Scientist 37 11 12 89 92 ISSN 0970 0293 JSTOR 27748619 Eaton Richard M 2019 India in the Persianate Age 1000 1765 Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 520 97423 4 Eaton Richard M 1993 The Rise of Islam and the Bengal Frontier 1204 1760 University of California Press Retrieved 1 May 2007 Eaton Richard Maxwell 2015 The Sufis of Bijapur 1300 1700 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 6815 5 Eaton Richard M September 2000 Temple Desecration and Indo Muslim States Journal of Islamic Studies 11 3 283 319 doi 10 1093 jis 11 3 283 Eaton Richard M 5 January 2001 Temple Desecration and Indo Muslim States Part II PDF Frontline pp 70 77 Archived from the original PDF on 6 January 2014 Alternative link Archived 21 September 2020 at the Wayback Machine Eaton Richard M 2004 Temple desecration and Muslim states in medieval India Gurgaon Hope India Publications ISBN 978 81 7871 027 3 Eaton Richard M 9 December 2000 Temple desecration in pre modern India Part I Frontline Vol 17 no 25 pp 62 70 Archived from the original on 11 December 2013 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of India The Hindu and Mahometan Periods 5th ed London John Murray Elst Koenraad 1995 The Ayodhya Debate In Pollet Gilbert ed Indian Epic Values Ramayaṇa and Its Impact Proceedings of the 8th International Ramayaạ Conference Leuven 6 8 July 1991 Peeters Publishers ISBN 978 90 6831 701 5 Eraly Abraham 2000 Emperors of the Peacock Throne The Saga of the Great Mughals Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 100143 2 Ernst Carl W 1992 Eternal Garden Mysticism History and Politics at a South Asian Sufi Center SUNY Press ISBN 978 1 4384 0212 3 Fanselow Frank S January 1989 Muslim society in Tamil Nadu India an historical perspective Journal Institute of Muslim Minority Affairs 10 1 264 289 doi 10 1080 02666958908716118 Ferishta Mahomed Kasim 1829 History of the Rise of the Mahomedan Power in India till the year A D 1612 Volume III Translated by Briggs John London Longman Rees Orme Brown and Green Franco Eli Preisendanz Karin 2007 Beyond Orientalism The Work of Wilhelm Halbfass and Its Impact on Indian 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Rewriting Indian History New Delhi Vikas Pub House ISBN 0 7069 9976 2 Geer Alexandra van der 2008 Animals in Stone Indian Mammals Sculptured Through Time Leiden Brill pp Ixx ISBN 978 90 04 16819 0 Gier Nicholas F May 2006 From Mongols to Mughals Religious Violence in India 9th 18th Centuries Pacific Northwest Regional Meeting American Academy of Religion Gonzaga University Archived from the original on 8 November 2012 Gier Nicholas F 2014 The Origins of Religious Violence An Asian Perspective Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 9223 8 Glover William J 2008 Making Lahore Modern Constructing and Imagining a Colonial City University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 5021 7 Gopal Ram 1994 Hindu culture during and after Muslim rule survival and subsequent challenges M D Publications ISBN 81 85880 26 3 Granoff Phyllis December 1991 Tales of Broken Limbs and Bleeding Wounds Responses to Muslim Iconoclasm in Medieval India East and West 41 1 4 189 203 ISSN 0012 8376 JSTOR 29756976 Griffin Lepel 1905 Ranjit Singh and the Sikh Barrier Between Our Growing Empire and Central Asia Clarendon Press Gul Sumeer Khan Samina 2008 Growth and Development of Oriental Libraries in India Library Philosophy and Practice Gupta Hari Ram 1994 History of the Sikhs Vol 1 New Delhi Munshiram Manoharlal ISBN 978 81 215 0276 4 Habib Irfan January 1978 Economic History of the Delhi Sultanate An Essay in Interpretation The Indian Historical Review IV 2 287 303 Habib Irfan 1997 Timur in the Political Tradition and Historiography of Mughal India Cahiers d Asie centrale 3 4 295 312 JSTOR 44133321 Haidar Navina Najat Sardar Marika 2015 Sultans of Deccan India 1500 1700 Opulence and Fantasy Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 0 300 21110 8 Deccan sultanates Haig Wolseley ed 1928 The Cambridge History of India Vol III Cambridge University Press Hamilton Francis 1819 An Account of the Kingdom of Nepal and the Territories Annexed to this Dominion by the House of Gorkha A Constable Heathcote T A 1995 The Military in British India The Development of British Forces in South Asia 1600 1947 Manchester University Press ISBN 978 1 78383 064 0 Hitchcock John T 1978 An Additional Perspective on the Nepali Caste System In James F Fisher ed Himalayan Anthropology The Indo Tibetan Interface Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 90 279 7700 7 Hitti Philip K 1994 History of The Arabs 10th Edition The MacMillan Press Ltd ISBN 0 333 09871 4 Hitti Philip K 2002 History of the Arabs From the Earliest Times to the Present 10th ed Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 63142 3 Hoyland Robert G 2015 In Gods Path The Arab Conquests and the Creation of An Islamic Empire Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 991636 8 Ikram S M 1964 Embree Ainslie ed Muslim Civilization in India Vol 1 Columbia University Press OCLC 409401 via Frances W Pritchett Ishaq Mohammad 1945 A Peep Into the First Arab Expeditions to India under the Companions of the Prophet Islamic Culture 19 2 109 114 Islam and the Modern Age 27 1996 https books google com books id euMKAQAAMAAJ amp q ghazi malik khokhars a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help Islam Riazul October December 2002 Theory and Practice of Jizyah in the Delhi Sultanate 14th Century Journal of the Pakistan Historical Society 50 4 11 Iyer S Shrivastava A Ticku R 23 January 2017 Holy Wars Temple desecrations in Medieval India Cambridge INET Institute doi 10 17863 cam 7847 Jackson Peter 2003 The Delhi Sultanate A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 54329 3 Jaffrelot Christophe 1996 The Hindu Nationalist Movement and Indian Politics 1925 to the 1990s C Hurst amp Co Publishers ISBN 1 85065 170 1 Jaques Tony 2007 Dictionary of Battles and Sieges Westport Conn Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 33536 5 Johnson Noel D Koyama Mark 2019 Persecution amp Toleration The Long Road to Religious Freedom Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 42502 5 Kaw M K ed 2004 Kashmir and Its People Studies in the Evolution of Kashmiri Society A P H Publishing Corporation ISBN 978 81 7648 537 1 Kennedy Hugh 2001 The Armies of The Caliphs Routledge ISBN 0 415 25092 7 Kennedy Hugh 2007 The Great Arab Conquests Phoenix ISBN 978 0 7538 2389 7 Kennedy Hugh 2004 The Prophet and The Age of The Caliphates Pearson Education Limited ISBN 978 0 582 40525 7 Khan A D 2021 A History of the Sadarat in Medieval India Vol I K K Publications Khan Rana Muhammad Sarvar 2005 The Rajputs History Clans Culture and Nobility Vol 1 Canal View Housing Society OCLC 225243214 Khushalani Gobind 2006 Chachnama Retold An Account of the Arab Conquests of Sindh Promilla amp Co ISBN 81 85002 68 1 Kulke Hermann Rothermund Dietmar 1998 A History of India 3rd ed Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 15482 6 Lal K S 1990 Indian Muslims Who are They New Delhi Voice of India ISBN 978 81 85990 10 1 Lal Kishori Saran 1999 Theory and Practice of Muslim State in India Aditya Prakashan ISBN 978 81 86471 72 2 Lane Poole Stanley 1907 Chapter IX Tinur s Account of His Invasion In Jackson A V Williams ed History of India Vol V The Grolier Society Latif Shaikh Abdul 1993 The Indian Elements in the Bureaucracy of the Delhi Sultanate Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 54 158 162 JSTOR 44142942 Lorenzen David N October 1999 Who Invented Hinduism Comparative Studies in Society and History 41 4 630 659 doi 10 1017 S0010417599003084 JSTOR 179424 S2CID 247327484 Lycett Mark T Morrison Kathleen D 2013 The Fall of Vijayanagara Reconsidered Political Destruction and Historical Construction in South Indian History Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 56 3 433 470 doi 10 1163 15685209 12341314 ISSN 0022 4995 JSTOR 43303558 Maclean Derryl N 1989 Religion and Society in Arab Sind Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 08551 0 Maddison Angus 2007 The Contours of the World Economy 1 2030 AD Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 922721 1 Maddison Angus 2001 The World Economy A Millennial Perspective PDF OECD Development Centre ISBN 92 64 02261 9 Majumdar R C 1977 Ancient India Eighth ed Delhi Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0436 4 Majumdar R C ed 1960 The History and Culture of the Indian People Vol VI Mumbai G Allen amp Unwin OCLC 664485 Majumdar R C ed 1973 The History and Culture of the Indian People Vol VII Mumbai G Allen amp Unwin OCLC 664485 Malesevic Sinisa 2017 The Rise of Organised Brutality Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 09562 5 Malik Jamal 2008 Islam in South Asia A Short History Brill Publishers ISBN 978 90 04 16859 6 Manz Beatrice F 2006 Timur Lang Encyclopaedia of Islam 2nd ed Brill doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam COM 1223 Marshman John Clark 2010 First published 1869 History of India from the Earliest Period to the Close of the East India Company s Government Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 02104 3 McLeod John 2002 The History of India Greenwood Press Daily life through history series Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 31459 9 Mehta Jaswant Lal 1979 Advanced Study in The History of Medieval India Vol I 1st ed Sterling Publishers OCLC 557595150 Mehta Jaswant Lal 1986 Advanced Study in the History of Medieval India Vol 1 2nd ed Sterling Publishers Pvt ISBN 978 81 207 0617 0 Mehta Jaswant Lal 2005 Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707 1813 New Dawn Press ISBN 1 932705 54 6 Meston James ed 1934 Hutchison s Story of the Nations London Hutchison amp Co Mikaberidze Alexander ed 2011 Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World A Historical Encyclopedia ABC Clio ISBN 978 1 59884 336 1 Retrieved 18 August 2014 Miller Sam 2014 A Strange Kind of Paradise India Through Foreign Eyes Random House ISBN 978 14 4819 220 5 Misra Ram Gopal 1983 Indian Resistance to Early Muslim Invaders up to 1206 A D Meerut City Anu Books OCLC 11866350 Morony Michael G 2012 Iran in the Early Islamic Period In Daryaee Touraj ed The Oxford Handbook of Iranian History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 939042 7 Murphy Emon 2013 The Making of Terrorism in Pakistan Historical and Social Roots of Extremism Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 56526 4 Ollapally Deepa M 2008 The Politics of Extremism in South Asia Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 87584 4 Pandey Ram Niwas 1997 Making of Modern Nepal A Study of History Art and Culture of the Principalities of Western Nepal Nirala Publications ISBN 978 81 85693 37 8 Pradhan Kumar L 2012 Thapa Politics in Nepal With Special Reference to Bhim Sen Thapa 1806 1839 New Delhi Concept Publishing Company ISBN 978 81 8069 813 2 Puri Baij Nath 1986 The History of the Gurjara Pratiharas Delhi Munshiram Manoharlal OCLC 15164632 Rahman Abdur 2002 India s Interaction with China Central and West Asia History of Science Philosophy and Culture in Indian Civilization Vol 3 2 New Delhi Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 565789 0 Rathod N G 1994 The Great Maratha Mahadaji Scindia New Delhi Sarup amp Sons p 8 ISBN 978 81 85431 52 9 Ray Aniruddha 2019 The Sultanate of Delhi 1206 1526 Polity Economy Society and Culture Routledge ISBN 978 1 000 00729 9 Raya Panchanana 1939 A Historical Review of Hindu India 300 B C to 1200 A D I M H Press OCLC 551490926 Regmi D R 1961 Modern Nepal Calcutta Firma K L Mukhopadhyay OCLC 1045947445 Rezavi S A N 2006 The Shia Muslims In Grewal J S ed Religious movements and institutions in Medieval India History of Science Philosophy and Culture in Indian Civilization Vol 7 Part 2 New Delhi Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 567703 4 Rizvi S A A 1986 A Socio Intellectual History of Isna Ashari Shi is in India Canberra Mar ifat Publishing House OCLC 1071565873 Roy Kaushik 2003 Warfare in Pre British India 1500BCE to 1740CE Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 58691 3 Sanyal Sanjeev 2012 Land of Seven Rivers History of India s Geography Penguin Books Limited ISBN 978 81 8475 671 5 Sarkar Jadunath 1988 First published 1950 Fall of the Mughal Empire 1789 1803 Vol 4 Sangam ISBN 978 0 86131 749 3 Sarkar Jadunath 1928 First published 1912 History of Aurangzeb Vol 3 3rd ed M C Sarkar and Sons Schimmel Annemarie 1975 Classical Urdu Literature from the Beginning to Iqbal Wiesbaden Otto Harrasowitz ISBN 978 3 447 01671 1 Schimmel Annemarie 1980 Islam in the Indian Subcontinent Leiden E J Brill ISBN 978 90 04 06117 0 Sen Sailendra Nath 1999 Ancient Indian History and Civilisation Second ed New Delhi New Age International Publishers ISBN 978 81 224 1198 0 Sen Sailendra 2013 A Textbook of Medieval Indian History Primus Books ISBN 978 9 38060 734 4 Sewell Robert 1884 Lists of Inscriptions and Sketch of the Dynasties of Southern India Archaeological Survey of India OCLC 85167633 Shaʻban M A 1970 The ʻAbbasid Revolution Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 07849 8 Shokoohy Mehrdad April 1991 Architecture of the Sultanate of Ma bar in Madura and Other Muslim Monuments in South India Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Third Series 1 1 31 92 doi 10 1017 S1356186300000055 JSTOR 25182270 S2CID 163145743 Siddiqi Yasin Mazhar 1971 The Office of Kotwal under the Sultans of Delhi 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Nationalism Hindus and Muslims in India University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 08256 4 Welch Anthony 1993 Architectural Patronage and the Past The Tughluq Sultans of India Muqarnas 10 311 322 doi 10 2307 1523196 JSTOR 1523196 Welch Anthony Crane Howard 1983 The Tughluqs Master Builders of the Delhi Sultanate PDF Muqarnas 1 123 166 doi 10 2307 1523075 JSTOR 1523075 Archived from the original PDF on 13 August 2016 Whelpton John 2005 A History of Nepal Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 80470 1 White Matthew 2011 Atrocitology Humanity s 100 Deadliest Achievements Canongate Books ISBN 978 0 85786 125 2 Wink Andre 2002 First published 1990 Al Hind the Making of the Indo Islamic World Vol II 3rd ed Brill Academic Publishers ISBN 0 391 04174 6 Wink Andre 2002 First published 1990 Al Hind the Making of the Indo Islamic World Vol I 3rd ed Brill Academic Publishers ISBN 0 391 04173 8 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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