Historical Encyclopaedia of Turks & Afghans in India
₹5,950
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ISBN : 9788130717197
Volumes : Set in 3 Volumes
Author : Wolseley Haig
Pages : 1174 pp
Year of Publishing : 2014
Binding : Hardbound
Publisher : Cosmo Publications
This work deals generally with the history of India under Muhammadan rule from the time of the earliest invasions of the Muslims to the overthrow of the Lodi dynasty on the field of Panipat and the establishment of Babur the Timurid on the throne of Delhi, and covers the period unfortunately described by that usually careful scholar, the late Mr. Edward Thomas, as that of the “Pathan Kings” of Delhi. Of the five dynasties which occupied the throne of Delhi during this period, from about 1200 to 1526, three were Turkish, or of Turkish descent; one claimed to be of Arab blood, and one was Afghan, but probably not Pathan.Mr Thomas’s misnomer, after clinging obstinately, for many years, to this period of Indian history, has been generally discarded, and the period is now known as that of the Sultanate, or Kingdom, of Delhi, as distinguished from the Empire of the Timurids founded by Babur. This distinction is not entirely accurate, or satisfactory, for it suggests that the earlier Muslim rulers were content with a comparatively small kingdom in the neighborhood of their capital, whereas for nearly half a century they ruled virtually the whole sub-continent of India, two at least of them being emperors of India in a truer sense than any of the first four Timurids, and the ruin of their empire covered the greater part of India with a number of independent Muslim states. The work follows the history of these rulers during the thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth centuries; the consolidating and extending of their authority; followed by half a century of empire, and then the disintegration of that empire.