Delhi sultanate

Delhi sultanate
Principal Muslim sultanate in northern India during the 13th to the 16th centuries.

Its creation owed much to the campaigns of Muḥammad of Ghūr and his lieutenant Quṭb al-Dīn Aybak between 1175 and 1206. During the reign of Sultan Iltutmish (1211–36), a permanent capital was established at Delhi and political ties with Ghūr were severed. From 1290 to 1320, under the Khaljī dynasty, the sultanate was an imperial power. Its power was shattered by Timur's invasion (1398–99), but it somewhat recovered under the Lodī (Afghan) dynasty (1451–1526). It fell again to Bābur (1526), was reestablished briefly, then finally was subsumed into Akbar's Mughal Empire in 1556.

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▪ Muslim kingdom, India
      principal Muslim sultanate in north India from the 13th to the 16th century. Its creation owed much to the campaigns of Muʿizz al-Dīn Muḥammad ibn Sām (Muʿizz-ud-Dīn Muḥammad ibn Sām) (Muḥammad of Ghūr; brother of Sultan Ghiyā al-Dīn of Ghūr) and his lieutenant Quṭb al-Dīn Aibak (Quṭb-ud-Dīn Aybak) between 1175 and 1206 and particularly to victories at the battles of Taraōrī (Tarāorī, Battles of) in 1192 and Chandawar in 1194.

      The Ghūrid soldiers of fortune in India did not sever their political connection with Ghūr (now Ghowr, in present Afghanistan) until Sultan Iltutmish (reigned 1211–36) had made his permanent capital at Delhi, had repulsed rival attempts to take over the Ghūrid conquests in India, and had withdrawn his forces from contact with the Mongol armies, which by the 1220s had conquered Afghanistan. Iltutmish also gained firm control of the main urban strategic centres of the North Indian Plain, from which he could keep in check the refractory Rajput chiefs. After Iltutmish's death, a decade of factional struggle was followed by nearly 40 years of stability under Ghiyā al-Dīn Balban, sultan in 1266–87. During this period Delhi remained on the defensive against the Mongols and undertook only precautionary measures against the Rajputs.

      Under the sultans of the Khaljī dynasty (1290–1320), the Delhi sultanate became an imperial power. ʿAlāʾ al-Dīn (reigned 1296–1316) conquered Gujarat (Gujarāt) (c. 1297) and the principal fortified places in Rajasthan (Rājasthān) (1301–12) and reduced to vassalage the principal Hindu kingdoms of southern India (1307–12). His forces also defeated serious Mongol onslaughts by the Chagatais of Transoxania (1297–1306).

       Muḥammad ibn Tughluq (reigned 1325–51) attempted to set up a Muslim military, administrative, and cultural elite in the Deccan, with a second capital at Daulatabad, but the Deccan Muslim aristocracy threw off the overlordship of Delhi and set up (1347) the Bahmanī sultanate. Muḥammad's successor, Fīrūz Shah Tughluq (reigned 1351–88), made no attempt to reconquer the Deccan.

      The power of the Delhi sultanate in north India was shattered by the invasion (1398–99) of Turkic conqueror Timur (Tamerlane), who sacked Delhi itself. Under the Sayyid Dynasty (c. 1414–51) the sultanate was reduced to a country power continually contending on an equal footing with other petty Muslim and Hindu principalities. Under the Lodī (Afghan) dynasty (Lodī dynasty) (1451–1526), however, with large-scale immigration from Afghanistan, the Delhi sultanate partly recovered its hegemony, until the Mughal leader Bābur destroyed it at the First Battle of Panipat (Pānīpat, Battles of) on April 21, 1526. After 15 years of Mughal rule, the Afghan Shēr Shah of Sūr (Shēr Shāh of Sūr) reestablished the sultanate in Delhi, which fell again in 1555 to Bābur's son and successor, Humāyūn, who died in January 1556. At the Second Battle of Panipat (Nov. 5, 1556), Humāyūn's son Akbar definitively defeated the Hindu general Hemu, and the sultanate became submerged in the Mughal Empire.

      The Delhi sultanate made no break with the political traditions of the later Hindu period—namely, that rulers sought paramountcy rather than sovereignty. It never reduced Hindu chiefs to unarmed impotence or established an exclusive claim to allegiance. The sultan was served by a heterogeneous elite of Turks, Afghans, Khaljīs, and Hindu converts; he readily accepted Hindu officials and Hindu vassals. Threatened for long periods with Mongol invasion from the northwest and hampered by indifferent communications, the Delhi sultans perforce left a large discretion to their local governors and officials.

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Universalium. 2010.

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