The Ilbari Turks (1206-90)

The Ilbari Turks (1206-90)

Qutubuddin Aibak (1206-10)

The slave and deputy of Muhammad in India, Aibak became the first independent Muslå ruler in India after the death of Muhammad. He founded the Slave dynasty (or Mamluk dynasty). Aibak could not consolidate the territorial gains made by him as his reign was too short. But he was a generous ruler and he was called Lakhbhakshya (giver of lakhs). He built the Qawattul Islam mosque at Delhi and the Adhai Din Ka Jhonpra at Ajmer besides starting the construction of the Qutub Minar. He died while playing chaugan or polo and was succeeded by his son, Aram Baksh (1210-11). Iltutmish (1211-1236): Aram Baksh was an inefficient ruler and so the nobles requested Iltutmish, the governor of Badaun, besides being a prominent slave and son-in-law of Aibak, to take over. He defeated Aram Shah and became the Sultan. First, he secured his throne from his rivals like Nasiruddin Qabaicha (who was killed in 1228) and Tajiddin Yalduz (killed in the third battle of Tarain in 1226), who were also the slaves of Muhammad of Ghur. It was during his reign that the great Mongol invader Chengiz Khan reached the borders of India but turned back. Iltutmish also crushed several Rajput kingdoms thereby strengthening Muslim rule in India. He completed the Qutub Minar and used to associate himself closely with Sufi saints. He was also progressive as seen by the fact that he nominated his daughter Razia to the Delhi throne ignoring his sons. He was the first Sultan to introduce a purely Arabic coinage with the standard being the silver tanka (175 g) and below it, the copper jital. The absence of an accepted law of succession and the weakness of Iltutmish’s successors, with the exception of Razia, gave the ambitious groups of Amirs (or nobles) unlimited opportunity to the power of ‘king-makers, the empire was plunged into chaos and disorder which jeopardised its solidarity.

 

Iltụtmish, in his lifetime, had attempted to groom his successors by giving equal opportunities to his children, Rukn-ud-din Feroz Shah and Razia, to prove their mettle but Razia proved more capable and in 1231 AD., he issued a proclamation appointing her as his successor. The wisdom of a woman surpassing a grown-up son was questioned by a number of Amirs. However, Iltutmish was convinced of Razia’s superiority and ability to administer. However, contrary to Iltutmish’s wishes, Shah Turkan, the mother of Iltutmish’s eldest surviving son, had her son crowned as Rukn-ud-din. When another son of Iltutmish rebelled in Avadh, Rukn-ud-din marched out of the capital to suppress the rebellion. This gave Raziya the opportunity to seize the throne and put her brother to death. Raziya (1237-1240): After ascending the throne, she promoted her supporters to high positions and did the same for her rivals, so as to appease them and avoid military confrontation. After consolidating her position, she made the mistake of promoting non-Turkish nobles to higher posts and her preference for an Abyssinian officer, Jamaluddin Yakut, who was appointed as Amir-Akhtar (master of stables) proved very costly. She also was determined to carve out an independent monarchy, free from the stranglehold of the nobility. She also discarded the female attire and the purdah, rode at the head of the armies and held open courts. All this was too much for the dominant Turkish nobility to digest. The provincial governors of Bhatinda and Lahore rebelled and though Razia’s diplomatic skills succeeded in winning over the former, she was defeated and executed by the latter. But it should be said that Razia was an efficient and popular ruler and an able diplomat. As the first-ever female ruler of a Muslim kingdom, she never allowed her sex to impair the efficiency of the state. What she lacked in military strength, she made up by being adept in the art of diplomacy. It has been said by a contemporary historian, Minhas-Us-Siraj that her sex was her greatest drawback which was not tolerated by the male-dominated nobility, otherwise she was capable of being a great ruler.

The brief reigns of Bahram (1240-42 AD) and Masud (1242-46 AD), one a brother and the other a nephew of Razia, witnessed the rise of the Chahalgani or the Famous Forty, (a group of forty nobles) to the highest peak of power. While the kingdom shrank in size, and corruption and lawlessness prevailed, the Turkish nobles enjoyed power which surpassed the But the period of chaos came to an end in 1246 AD when Nasiruddin Manmu Iltutmish, in connivance with a leading noble, Balban, came to the throne by king” made Balban his minister and never took an active part in state affairs. Balban carried the administration on the Sultan’s name and used his position to achieve his twin objectives 01 strengthening his position and consolidating the state. To achieve this, he eliminated his rivals, crushed the Hindu revolts and took measures to keep the Mongols away from the northwest frontiers.

Balban (1266-1287): He is said to have poisoned the Sultan and ascended the throne in 1266 AD. He knew that the real threat to the monarchy came from the Chahalgani’s intrigues and their scramble for power. He introduced rigorous court discipline and new customs, such as Sijada (prostration) and Paibos (kissing the Sultan’s feet) to prove his superiority over the nobles. He also introduced the Persian festival of Nauroz to impress the nobles and subjects with his wealth and power: A picked body of fearsome soldiers protected the throne. The court was an austere assembly where jest and laughter were seldom heard. He persistently brought home the message that the monarch was the vice-regent of God and next in sanctity only to the prophet. Instead of expanding the sultanate, Balban gave top priority to restoring peace in the region surrounding Delhi. Balban established a separate diwan-i-arz (military department and reorganised the army. His repeated attacks on the Mewati strongholds and villages stopped their frequent raids of Delhi. The roads became safe for travel, and trade and agriculture improved leading to further urbanisation.

Balban’s successors were extremely weak and as soon as Balban died, the affairs of the State fell into disorder. After his death, the Amirs, in a bid to regain their former glory and power appointed Balban’s son Kaigubad to the throne. Kaiqubad gave himself to luxury and pleasure, and left the government in the hands of one, Malik Nizam-ud-din. Soon, Nizam-ud-din earned the displeasure of the nobles who got him assassinated.

Jalal-Ud-Din Khilji, the Governor of Samana and the army commander murdered him and claimed the throne for himself by exercising the age-old right.

The Khaljis

The greatest consensus regarding the origin of the Khaljis is that they were origin who had settled in Afghanistan and assimilated the Afghan habits and manners to an each that they were treated apart from the Turks. 

Jalaluddin Khalji (1290-961)

Though a brave general in his youth, he proved to be an efficient sultan. This provoked rebellions and the Hindu rajas were on the verge of declaring independence. It was at this time that Ali Gurshasp, the nephew of the sultan brutally murdered him when the latter had gone to receive the former after his successful expedition to Devagiri. Ali Gurshasp, then the governor of Kara, ascended the throne as Alauddin Khalji. 

Alauddin Khalji (1296-1316)

He was one of the most powerful rulers in Indian history. Besides launching a series of expeditions to expand the sultanate, he also issued a series of administrative and economic regulations to make the state more secure. The early years of the sultan were turbulent due to rebellions by various nobles. An analysis by Alauddin to the causes of the rebellions convinced him that the general prosperity of his officials. inter-marriages between the families of the grandees, inefficiency in the espionage system and drinking liquor were the root causes of rebellion. Alauddin, therefore, passed four ordinances By the first he confiscated all grants of tax-free land and seized Muslim religious endowments Secondly, the intelligence system was reorganised, and all secret transactions in the houses of the nobility were immediately reported to the Sultan. Thirdly, the public sale of liquor and totally stopped. The fourth ordinance forbade social gatherings in noblemen’s senior officials was allowed to arrange marriages between members of their fam Sultan’s prior consent.

The above regulations were aimed at controlling the Muslim nobles, but the village headmen called khuts and muqaddams were also very rich. They often offered military help to the rebels. The Sultan’s revenue regulations reduced this class to poverty and reduced them down to the level of the ordinary peasants. The Sultan could not realise his imperialistic ambitions without a well-equipped and efficient standing army which seems to be around 4,75,000 cavalrymen. His military reforms included the introduction of Dagh (branding of horses) and Chehra (descriptive roll of soldiers), insistence on a regular muster of the army, abolition of the iqtas of the royal troopers and the payment of their salaries in cash. All these reforms eliminated the earlier existing malpractices in the army, besides making the army an effective fighting force. In order to keep his army satisfied with their salary, the Sultan introduced strict price-control measures. To enforce these measures, he established four separate markets in Delhi. The supply of grain was ensured by collecting tax in kind in the Doab and keeping it in the royal storehouses. The farmers were ordered to sell their grain for cash at fixed prices and were not allowed to sell grain elsewhere. The shahna (market controller), the barids (intelligence officers) and the munhias (secret agents) submitted their independent reports on these markets to the Sultan. Even a minor violation of the rules was not tolerated. Every merchant was registered with the commerce ministry and had to sign a bond guaranteeing a regular supply of the goods in which they traded. The prices fixed for the Delhi market were also applied in the provincial capitals and towns. His other financial reforms included an increase of land revenue to 50 per cent of the gross production and the elimination of all middlemen and the creation of a new department, the diwan-i-mustakhraj, to enquire into the revenue arrears, to collect them, etc. Alauddin’s army brought him success both against the Mongols and the Hindu kingdoms. The early part of his reign was marked by successive Mongol invasions. The first two invasions by the Mongol army were beaten back, but in 1297 the third invader, Qutlugh Khwaja, came up to Kili near Delhi. In 1303, the Mongols again reached Siri but were defeated.

Alauddin sent an army in 1299 under the command of his brothers Nusrat Khan and Ulugh Khan to conquer Gujarat. Alauddin’s army besieged Anhilwara, the capital of Raja Karan. While the Raja and his daughter (Deval Devi) escaped, his wife (Kamla Devi) was captured and sent to Delhi where the Sultan married her. The eunuch Kafur Hazardinari, later called Malik Kafur, was purchased here. Nusrat Khan and Ulugh Khan next attacked Hamir Deva of Ranthambhor. Nusrat Khan was killed, and only after the Sultan’s arrival, the siege was brought to a successful conclusion. In 1302-03, an army was sent against Prataparudra Deva of Warangal, who, however, succeeded in defeating the invaders. The Sultan’s armies also conquered Ujjain, Mandu, Dhar and Chanderi, and governors were appointed for these areas. In 1303, the Sultan himself marched against Chittor, a campaign motivated, according to a legend, to capture the beautiful queen, Padmini (the story is mentioned in Malik Mohammad Jayasi’s Padmavat). The Rajputs fought valiantly to the last man but were defeated. Alauddin also marched against Marwar, where the ruler ultimately submitted. Alauddin’s greatest achievement was the conquest of the Deccan and the far south, which were ruled by three important Hindu dynasties – the Kakatiyas of Warangal, the Hoyasalas of Dvarasamudra and the Pandyas of Madurai. Alauddin did not annex their countries but fleeced their treasuries and forced them to pay annual tributes. In 1306-07, he sent an army under Malik Kafur who defeated Raja Ramachandra of Devagiri for withholding tribute. In 1309, Malik Kafur defeated Prataparudra Deva II of Warangal and an enormous booty was collected. In 1311, Malik Kafur marched against the Hoyasala kingdom and the ruler Raja Vira Ballala III agreed to become the Sultan’s vassal by paying a huge tribute. In 1312, Kafur marched against the Pandya kingdom and its ruler Vira Pandya fled the capital, enabling Kafur to seize immense booty. Kafur was accorded a royal welcome by the Sultan on his arrival in Delhi and was made the malik naib with a pure Turkish lineage. For these reasons, he regulated his life according to the precepts of the Quran, discarded all non-Muslim practices and did his utmost to enforce the Shariat in public affairs and administration. Going by his policies, we can say that he was a religious bigot. Firstly, he restored the power and prestige of the Ulema (Muslim priestly class) and consulted them in all matters. Earlier, both Alauddin Khalji and Muhammad bin Tughlaq did not bother to seek the advice of the Ulema. Secondly, as a true champion of the Islamic faith, he considered it his duty to suppress Hinduism and put down idolatry. He broke the idols of the Jwalamukhi temple at Kangra and the Jagganath temple at Puri. Thirdly, he gave material incentives like jagirs to encourage Hindus to convert to Islam. Fourthly, he ordered that Haj pilgrims’ expenses be paid from the state’s treasury. And lastly, he enforced the payment of jizya strictly and even extended it to Brahmans who were earlier exempted from it.

Military Campaigns

Firuz led several feeble military expeditions to Bengal, Kangra and Sind but only to assert the tottering central authority. Between 1353 and 1358 he made pathetic efforts to recover Bengal but virtually failed though the ruler of Bengal, Sikandar agreed to accept his suzerainty. The Sultan however did better in Orissa, whose ruler was Raja Gajpati. Firuz seized Cuttack and destroyed the Jagannatha temple at Puri. He then attacked Nagarkot in the Kangra region. The Raja submitted and offered to pay tribute. The Sultan collected 1,300 Sanskrit manuscripts from the Jwalamukhi and other temples and got them translated to Persian. The last years of the Sultan’s reign were marked by a precipitous decline in central political control. Firuz abdicated in 1387, crowning Prince Muhammad king. Two months later, Firuz’s slaves. numbering about a lakh, rebelled, forcing Muhammad to flee. Firuz appointed his grandson. Tughlaq Shah II, his heir, and died one year later at the ripe age of 82.

After Firuz’s death, the sultanate disintegrated further. The Sharqi kingdom of Jaunpur came into existence in 1394. Malwa and Gujarat also broke away. When Timur arrived upon the scene in 1398-99, the fate of the Tughlaq dynasty was sealed. He crossed the Indus, marched through Punjab and though Delhi submitted without much of a fight, Timur’s army sacked it for three days and indiscriminately massacred both Hindus and Muslims. His invasion, though was merely a plundering raid, delivered the death blow to the Tughlaq dynasty. 

The Sayyids (1414-51)

After the Tughlaqs, the representative of Timur in India called Khizr Khan captured power and started the Sayyid dynasty. But the sultanate had shrunk in size with many Rajput kingdoms and provinces declaring independence. The Sayyid rulers Mubarak Shah, Muhammad Shah and Alam Shah were in the grip of the nobility and were weak. In 1451, Bahlul Lodhi, a leading noble captured power from the Sayyids in 1489. 

The Lodis (1451-1526)

Bahlul Lodhi (1451-89) was an able ruler who extended the sultanate up to the borders of Bihar. He was succeeded by a more capable son Nizam Khan. Sikandar (1489-1517): The new Sultan, assuming the title of Sikandar, crushed Hussain Shah Sharqi of Jaunpur and liquidated the Rajput uprisings in the neighbouring region. From 1506 to 1517, the Sultan tried to capture Gwalior (ruled by the Tomar ruler, Raja Man Singh), but could capture only Chanderi. Sikandar enhanced the prestige of the sultanate without alienating the Afghan nobility. He also took a keen interest in the development of agriculture and regularly examined the price schedules for the markets. He used to write under the pen name, Gulrukhi.

Ibrahim (1517-26)

The Afghan nobles made strong efforts to undermine the Sultan’s autocracy by forcing him to make his younger brother Jalal the independent ruler of the Jaunpur region Civil war broke out between the two brothers, which ended in the capture and execution of Jalal The civil war enabled Rana Sanga of Mewar to invade the Lodi territories and defeat the Sultan It also enabled some of the Lodi nobles to conspire against the Sultan and invite Babur to invade India. He died on the battlefield of Panipat in 1526 fighting against Babur.

Administration

The government established by the Turks was a compromise between the Islamic political ideas and institutions on the one hand and the existing Rajput system of government on the other. Consequently, many elements of the Rajput political system, with or without changes, became a part and parcel of the Turkish administration in India.

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