Class 7 - History
Class 7 - History
Class 7 - History
1. The Mughal Empire illustrate how the Akbarnama and the Ain-i-Akbari are used to reconstruct history.
2. Abul Fazl wrote the Akbar Nama and Ain-i-Akbari, books on Akbar and his administration.
3. Todar Mal, Akbar's revenue minister, introduced the tax revenue system called zabt that was used all over
the Mughal Empire.
4. Mansabdars were Mughal government officials with mansabs.
5. The Mughals descended from two great lineages; maternally, they descended from the house of Mongol
emperor Genghis Khan, and paternally from the Turco-Mongol emperor Timur.
6. They were known as Mughals because of their Mongolian descent.
7. Mughals were very proud of their Timurid ancestry because Timur had captured Delhi in 1398.
8. Babur ascended the throne of Ferghana in 1494 when he was only 12 years old. But he soon fled because of
the invasion of the Uzbegs.
9. Babur captured Kabul in 1504 and took over Delhi in 1526 by defeating Ibrahim Lodi at Panipat
10. Humayun became king after Babur, but internal problems and his defeat to Sher Khan at Chausa and Kanauj
forced him to flee to Iran where he received the help of the Safavid Shah and recaptured Delhi in 1555.
11. Akbar was 13 years old when he became the king. And as Akbar attained full power he relieved his regent
Bairam Khan of his duties and then began conquests against the Suris, the Afghans, the kingdoms of Malwa
and Gondwana, and the Sisodiyas. Akbar also crushed the revolt of his brother Mirza Hakim and the
Uzbegs.
12. Akbar launched military campaigns in Gujarat, eastern Bihar, West Bengal, and Orissa, and suppressed
15. In his final years as emperor Akbar faced a rebellion from his son and future emperor, Prince Salim.
16. Jehangir continued the campaigns started by his father, and also won total control over the Sisodiyas.
17. Jehangir was also under a lot of pressure due the rebellions by his son, Prince Khurram, and by Nur Jahan's
Ahmednagar began, the Bundelas were defeated, and Orchha was seized.
19. Finally, in the Deccan, Shah Jahan annexed Ahmednagar and became an ally of the kingdom of Bijapur.
20. But in final years of Shah Jahan as emperor a battle began between his sons for the throne.
21. Prince Akbar rebelled against Aurangzeb under the guidance of the Deccan sultanate, but he lost and fled
to Safavid Iran.
22. Aurangzeb launched campaigns against the Deccan sultanate and annexed Bijapur and Golconda.
23. Aurangzeb faced another rebellion by the Sikhs, the Ahoms, the Marathas, the Rajputs, and the Jats, and
25. They followed coparcenary inheritance (where the empire is equally divided among the sons).
26. The Mughals enrolled people of all races and religions into government jobs, and they were known as
mansabdars.
27. Mansabdar means a man with a mansab (a position or rank), and mansabdari was a grading system to
29. Mansabdars received specific numbers of sawars or cavalry men who were registered by the government,
31. During Akbar's rule, a mansabdar's salary was roughly equal to the revenue the Mughal Empire got from his
jagir.
32. The Mughals called all middlemen zamindars (landlords) and assigned to them the task of collecting taxes.
33. Akbar's revenue minister Todar Mal carried out a survey of crop yields, prices, and areas cultivated for a 10-
(learned religious men) such as Brahmans, Catholic priests, Zoroastrian priests, etc.
39. The Sisiodiya Rajputs did not accept Mughal supremacy for a long time, but after they were defeated, they
dogmas are bigots. This eventually led to his idea of sulh-i-kul or universal peace and tolerance towards all
religions.
41. Mansabdars created new provinces such as Hyderabad and Awadh, but in theory they still considered the