Why this chapter matters for UPSC: The Mughal Empire is one of the most tested periods in UPSC GS1 — the six great Mughals, mansabdari system, Akbar's religious policy, Aurangzeb's policies and the empire's decline, and Mughal art/architecture are all direct Prelims and Mains topics.


PART 1 — Quick Reference Tables

The Six Great Mughals

EmperorReignKey ContributionBattle/Event
Babur1526–1530Founded empire; Baburnama (autobiography)1st Battle of Panipat (1526) vs Ibrahim Lodi; Battle of Khanwa (1527) vs Rana Sanga
Humayun1530–1540; 1555–1556Lost empire to Sher Shah; regained with Safavid helpBattles of Chausa and Kanauj (1540) — lost to Sher Shah Suri
Akbar1556–1605Greatest Mughal; consolidated empire; religious tolerance; mansabdari; Fatehpur Sikri2nd Battle of Panipat (1556) vs Hemu; Haldighati (1576) vs Rana Pratap
Jahangir1605–1627Art patron; Nur Jahan's influence; Tuzuk-i-JahangiriRebellion of son Khurram (later Shah Jahan)
Shah Jahan1628–1658Taj Mahal; Red Fort; Mughal architecture peak; Peacock ThroneCaptured Deccan (Bijapur, Golconda tribute); deposed by Aurangzeb
Aurangzeb1658–1707Largest Mughal territory; imposed jizya; Deccan wars; downfall beganMaratha resistance; Deccan quagmire; succession wars after his death

Mansabdari System

FeatureDetail
MansabA rank that determined salary and military obligation
ZatPersonal rank; determined salary (paid in cash or jagir/land revenue rights)
SawarNumber of cavalrymen the mansabdar must maintain
Rank range10 to 10,000 (highest ranks held by princes); most nobles 500–5,000
AppointmentBy the Emperor personally; NOT hereditary
JagirdarsMansabdars who received jagirs (land revenue rights) instead of cash salary
InnovationStandardised administrative hierarchy; ensured military loyalty to emperor

PART 2 — Detailed Notes

Akbar — The Greatest Mughal

UPSC Connect

UPSC GS1 — Akbar's policies:

Akbar (1556–1605) is considered the greatest Mughal for consolidating a diverse empire through pragmatic and inclusive policies:

Religious policy:

  • Sulh-i-kul ("Peace with all"): Universal tolerance; no persecution of any religion
  • Din-i-Ilahi (1582): A syncretic "divine faith" combining elements of Islam, Hinduism, Zoroastrianism, Christianity; Akbar as spiritual guide; only ~18–19 followers — more a court experiment than a religion
  • Abolished jizya (tax on non-Muslims): Removed in 1564; (Aurangzeb later reimposed it in 1679)
  • Ibadat Khana (House of Worship, 1575): Built at Fatehpur Sikri; invited scholars of all religions to debate — Hindus, Jains, Zoroastrians, Christians (Jesuit priests), Sufi Muslims
  • Married Rajput princess Jodha Bai — political and cultural integration

Administrative reforms:

  • Mansabdari system: Standardised hierarchy; ensured nobles' loyalty and military capability
  • Todar Mal's revenue system: Land measured accurately; different rates for different soil quality; fixed assessment (zabti system in some areas); basis of Mughal revenue administration
  • Ain-i-Akbari (Abul Fazl): Detailed statistical record of empire — revenues, provinces, population, prices
  • Included Rajput nobles in highest mansab ranks — first Mughal emperor to truly integrate Rajputs

Fatehpur Sikri:

  • New capital built near Agra (1571); abandoned ~1585 — Akbar moved to Lahore primarily due to north-western frontier unrest; water shortage is a secondary/contested reason
  • Contains: Buland Darwaza (Gate of Victory — 54m high; built to commemorate Gujarat conquest), Panch Mahal (5-storey pleasure palace), Diwan-i-Khas, Diwan-i-Am, Jama Masjid, tomb of Sheikh Salim Chishti (Sufi saint whose prayers Akbar credited for the birth of his son Jahangir)
  • UNESCO World Heritage Site

Mughal Revenue System

Explainer

Mughal land revenue: Land was the primary source of Mughal income (~50-60% of total revenue).

Todar Mal's reforms (under Akbar):

  • Ain-i-Dahsala (Ten-year settlement, 1580): Average of last 10 years' produce and prices determined the assessment — stable and fair
  • Zabti (measurement system): Land actually measured using bamboo rods with iron links (eliminating rope stretching fraud)
  • Land classified by quality: Polaj (best, always cultivated), Parauti (fallow rotated), Chachar (fallow 3–4 years), Banjar (waste/uncultivated)
  • Revenue assessed at 1/3rd of produce; paid in cash (monetisation of rural economy)

Jagir system:

  • Mansabdars received jagirs (rights to collect revenue from designated areas) instead of salary
  • This was NOT the same as land ownership — jagirdars collected revenue but the peasants' rights were protected
  • Jagirs were transferred periodically (like iqtas) to prevent entrenchment

Aurangzeb and the Empire's Decline

Explainer

Aurangzeb (1658–1707): The most complex and controversial Mughal emperor.

Policies that historians debate:

  • Reimposed jizya (1679): Reversed Akbar's abolition; alienated Hindu zamindars and Rajput nobles
  • Destroyed Hindu temples: Some temples destroyed (disputed scale and reasons — some during rebellions, some due to religious policy); contrast with Akbar's tolerance
  • Deccan wars (1681–1707): Spent the last 26 years of his reign in the Deccan trying to conquer Bijapur, Golconda, and suppress the Marathas — military overextension
  • Maratha resistance: Shivaji's guerrilla tactics and then his successors drained Mughal resources; Aurangzeb never crushed the Marathas despite dying there

Why the empire declined after Aurangzeb:

  1. No single strong successor — 8 weak emperors in 50 years after 1707
  2. Deccan wars bankrupted the treasury
  3. Jagirdari crisis — not enough jagirs to satisfy all mansabdars; nobles became independent
  4. Maratha, Jat, Sikh, Rajput revolts during and after Aurangzeb
  5. Nadir Shah's invasion (1739): Persian ruler sacked Delhi; took the Peacock Throne and Koh-i-Noor diamond — humiliated the empire
  6. Regional powers asserted independence: Nizam of Hyderabad, Nawab of Bengal, Nawab of Awadh

Mughal Art and Architecture

MonumentBuilderPeriodNotes
Humayun's TombHaji Begum (wife); Persian architect Mirak Mirza Ghiyas1565–72First major Mughal garden tomb; UNESCO WHS; prototype for Taj Mahal
Fatehpur SikriAkbar1571New capital; Buland Darwaza; Jama Masjid; UNESCO WHS
Taj MahalShah Jahan1632–53Mausoleum for Mumtaz Mahal; Ustad Ahmad Lahauri (chief architect); UNESCO WHS; one of New Seven Wonders
Red Fort (Lal Qila), DelhiShah Jahan1638–48Administrative capital; Diwan-i-Am, Diwan-i-Khas, Pearl Mosque; UNESCO WHS
Jama Masjid, DelhiShah Jahan1644–56India's largest mosque
Agra FortAkbar (construction); Shah Jahan (modifications)1565 onwardUNESCO WHS; where Shah Jahan was imprisoned by Aurangzeb

Exam Strategy

Prelims traps:

  • Sulh-i-kul = Akbar; Din-i-Ilahi = Akbar (NOT Akbar's father or another emperor)
  • Jizya: Abolished by Akbar (1564); reimposed by Aurangzeb (1679)
  • Ibadat Khana: Built at Fatehpur Sikri — NOT Delhi or Agra
  • Buland Darwaza: Built to commemorate Gujarat conquest (NOT some other campaign)
  • Taj Mahal architect: Ustad Ahmad Lahauri — NOT a Persian architect; Indian
  • Nadir Shah's invasion: 1739 (NOT 1699 or 1750); took Peacock Throne + Koh-i-Noor
  • Humayun's Tomb = prototype for Taj Mahal (NOT Akbar's Tomb at Sikandra)
  • 2nd Battle of Panipat (1556): Akbar (with Bairam Khan as regent) vs Hemu (Hindu general of Adil Shah Sur)

Practice Questions

Prelims:

  1. The concept of "Sulh-i-kul" (peace with all), promoting universal religious tolerance, is associated with which Mughal emperor?
    (a) Babur
    (b) Humayun
    (c) Akbar
    (d) Jahangir

  2. Nadir Shah's invasion of India in 1739 resulted in the loss of which famous jewel from the Mughal treasury?
    (a) Hope Diamond
    (b) Koh-i-Noor
    (c) Orlov Diamond
    (d) Regent Diamond

  3. The Second Battle of Panipat (1556) was fought between Akbar's forces and:
    (a) Sher Shah Suri
    (b) Ibrahim Lodi
    (c) Hemu
    (d) Rana Pratap

  4. Which Mughal emperor built the Buland Darwaza at Fatehpur Sikri to commemorate his victory in Gujarat?
    (a) Akbar
    (b) Shah Jahan
    (c) Jahangir
    (d) Humayun

Mains:

  1. The decline of the Mughal Empire is often attributed to Aurangzeb's policies. Critically examine this view, considering structural factors as well. (GS1, 15 marks)