Jalal al din Muhammad Akbar, The Mughal Empire
Abu al-Fath Jalal al-Din Muhammad Akbar |
Akbar(born October 15, 1542, Umarkot [now in Sindh province, Pakistan]—died c. October 25, 1605, Agra, India), the greatest of the Mughal emperors of India. He reigned from 1556 to 1605 and extended Mughal power over most of the Indian subcontinent. In order to preserve the unity of his empire, Akbar adopted programs that won the loyalty of the non-Muslim populations of his realm. He reformed and strengthened his central administration and also centralized his financial system and reorganized tax-collection processes. Although he never renounced Islam, he took an active interest in other religions, persuading Hindus, Parsis, and Christians, as well as Muslims, to engage in religious discussion before him. Illiterate himself, he encouraged scholars, poets, painters, and musicians, making his court a centre of culture.
Abū al-Fatḥ Jalāl al-Dīn Muḥammad Akbar was descended from
Turks, Mongols, and Iranians—the three peoples who predominated in the political elites of
northern India in medieval times.
Among his ancestors were Timur (Tamerlane) and Genghis Khan. His father, Humāyūn, driven from
his capital of Delhi by
the Afghan usurper Shēr Shah of Sūr, was vainly trying to
establish his authority in the Sindh region (now Sindh province, Pakistan). Soon Humāyūn had to leave India for Afghanistan and Iran, where the shah lent him some troops.
Humāyūn regained his throne in 1555, 10 years after Shēr Shah’s death. Akbar,
at the age of 13, was made governor of the Punjab region (now largely occupied
by Punjab state,
India, and Punjab province,
Pakistan).
Humāyūn
had barely established his authority when he died in 1556. Within a few months,
his governors lost several important places, including Delhi itself, to Hemu,
a Hindu minister who claimed the throne for himself. But on November 5, 1556, a
Mughal force defeated Hemu at the Second Battle of Panipat (near present-day Panipat, Haryana state, India), which commanded
the route to Delhi, thus ensuring Akbar’s succession.
At Akbar’s accession his rule extended over little
more than the Punjab and the area around Delhi, but, under the guidance of his
chief minister, Bayram Khan, his authority was gradually consolidated and
extended. The process continued after Akbar forced Bayram Khan to retire in
1560 and began to govern on his own—at first still under household influences
but soon as an absolute monarch.
Akbar first attacked Malwa,
a state of strategic and economic importance commanding the route through the Vindhya Range to
the plateau region of the Deccan (peninsular India) and containing
rich agricultural land; it fell to him in 1561.
Toward
the zealously independent Hindu Rajputs (warrior
ruling class) inhabiting the rugged hilly Rajputana region,
Akbar adopted a policy of conciliation and conquest. Successive Muslim rulers
had found the Rajputs dangerous, however weakened by disunity. But in 1562,
when Raja Bihari
Mal of Amber (now Jaipur), threatened by a succession dispute,
offered Akbar his daughter in marriage, Akbar accepted the offer. The Raja
acknowledged Akbar’s suzerainty, and his sons prospered in Akbar’s service.
Akbar followed the same feudal policy toward the other Rajput chiefs.
They were allowed to hold their ancestral territories, provided that they
acknowledged Akbar as emperor,
paid tribute, supplied troops when required, and concluded a marriage alliance
with him. The emperor’s service was also opened to them and their sons, which
offered financial rewards as well as honour.
However, Akbar showed no mercy to those who refused to acknowledge his supremacy. When, after protracted fighting in Mewar, Akbar captured the historic fortress of Chitor (now Chittaurgarh) in 1568, he massacred its inhabitants. Even though Mewar did not submit, the fall of Chitor prompted other Rajput rajas to accept Akbar as emperor in 1570 and to conclude marriage alliances with him, although the state of Marwar held out until 1583.
One
of the notable features of Akbar’s government was the extent of Hindu, and
particularly Rajput, participation. Rajput princes attained the highest ranks,
as generals and as provincial governors, in the Mughal service. Discrimination against non-Muslims was
reduced by abolishing the taxation of
pilgrims and the tax payable by non-Muslims in lieu of military service. Yet
Akbar was far more successful than any previous Muslim ruler in winning the
cooperation of Hindus at all levels in his administration. The further
expansion of his territories gave them fresh opportunities.
In
1573 Akbar conquered Gujarat, an area with many ports that dominated
India’s trade with western Asia, and then turned east toward Bengal. A rich country
with a distinctive culture, Bengal was difficult to rule from Delhi because of
its network of rivers, always apt to flood during the summer monsoon. Its Afghan
ruler, declining to follow his father’s example and acknowledge Mughal
suzerainty, was forced to submit in 1575. When he rebelled and was defeated and
killed in 1576, Akbar annexed Bengal.
Toward
the end of his reign, Akbar embarked on a fresh round of conquests. The Kashmir region was subjugated in 1586,
Sindh in 1591, and Kandahār (Afghanistan) in 1595. Mughal troops
now moved south of the Vindhya Range into the Deccan. By 1601 Khandesh, Berar,
and part of Ahmadnagar had been added to Akbar’s
empire. His last years were troubled by the rebellious behaviour of his son
Prince Salīm (later the emperor Jahāngīr),
who was eager for power.
Akbar maintained a luxurious and
brilliant court at which elaborate ceremonies emphasized his distance from
other men, though he was careful to cultivate public opinion outside
court circles. Every morning at dawn he stood at an open window to be seen and
reverenced by the people. Foreign observers commented on the graceful manner in
which he accepted little gifts from the people and showed himself ready to hear
the complaint of any man who dared to approach him.
Physically,
he was strong and could withstand hardship on campaigns. Although he seems to
have been no more than 5 feet 7 inches (170 cm) tall, he impressed observers as
a dominating personality. Clearly, although he was illiterate, he had a
powerful and original mind. His unprejudiced inquiries into Christian doctrines
misled the Jesuit missionaries he invited to his court into thinking that he
was on the point of conversion. He persuaded the Muslim theologians at his
court to accept him as arbiter on points of Islamic law in
dispute among them. Although that seems to have been little more than an
expression of his systematic approach to problems, the orthodox were offended.
He gave further offense by the religious discussions he encouraged between
Muslims, Hindus, Parsis, and Christians. Those discussions were continued by a
small group of courtiers who shared with Akbar a taste for mysticism. Although
their doctrines and ceremonies, known as the Divine Faith (Dīn-e Ilāhī), assigned a
central place to Akbar himself, it would be an oversimplification to ascribe
political motives to those developments.
Begun in 1570 and abandoned in 1586, Akbar’s capital of Fatehpur Sikri, near Delhi, is evidence of the resources he could command. Its combination of Hindu and Muslim architectural styles symbolizes the contact of cultures that he encouraged. Similarly, he commissioned the translation of Sanskrit classics into Persian and gave illustrated copies to his courtiers. He also received with enthusiasm the European pictures brought by the Jesuits, and his painters incorporated European techniques of realism and perspective into the distinctive Mughal painting style (characterized by a vivid treatment of the physical world) that began to develop during his reign. Akbar’s reign was an example of the stimulating effects of cultural encounter. It has also often been portrayed as a model for future governments—strong, benevolent, tolerant, and enlightened. Effective government in a country as geographically vast and as socially complex as India demands a wide measure of social support. Akbar understood that need and satisfied it.
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