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  • Notes On Medieval India – Political Formations – For WBCS Mains.
    Posted on June 12th, 2018 in Paper III : General Studies I
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    Notes On Medieval India-Political Formations-For WBCS Mains.

    মধ্যযুগীয় ভারত সম্পর্কিত নোট – রাজনৈতিক গঠন – WBCS মেইনসের জন্য।

    Medieval history is a very important section of W.B.C.S Exam syllabus and History is a reasonably popular optional subject that candidates choose in the WBCS mains exam. It is an important subject as far as the WBCS is concerned because history is covered in the  prelims exam and also in the general studies papers in the mains. If you are an WBCS aspirant you cannot get by without studying history.For a period that has come to be so strongly associated with the Islamic influence and rule in India, Medieval Indian history went for almost three whole centuries under the so-called indigenous rulers, that included the Chalukyas, the Pallavas, the Pandyas, the Rashtrakutas, the Muslims rulers and finally the Mughal Empire. The most important dynasty to emerge in the middle of the 9thcentury was that of the Cholas.Continue Reading Notes On Medieval India-Political Formations-For WBCS Mains.

    The Palas

    Between 8th and 10th centuries A.D., a number of powerful empires dominated the eastern and northern parts of India. The Pala king Dharmpala, son of Gopala reigned from the late 8th century A.D. to early 9th century A.D. Nalanda University and Vikramashila University were founded by Dharmpala.Consulting previous years question papers is very important regarding the preparation of this subject.It should also be known, that what to study and what not to while preparing for this exam.

    The Senas

    After the decline of the Palas, the Sena dynasty established its rule in Bengal. The founder of the dynasty was Samantasena. The greatest ruler of the dynasty was Vijaysena. He conquered the whole of Bengal and was succeeded by his son Ballalasena. He reigned peacefully but kept his dominions intact. He was a great scholar and wrote four works including one on astronomy. The last ruler of this dynasty was Lakshamanasena under whose reign the Muslims invaded Bengal, and the empire fell.

    The Pratihara

    The greatest ruler of the Pratihara dynasty was Mihir Bhoja. He recovered Kanauj (Kanyakubja) by 836, and it remained the capital of the Pratiharas for almost a century. He built the city Bhojpal (Bhopal). Raja Bhoja and other valiant Gujara kings faced and defeated many attacks of the Arabs from west.

    Between 915-918 A.D, Kanauj was attacked by a Rashtrakuta king, who devastated the city leading to the weakening of the Pratihara Empire. In 1018, Kannauj then ruled by Rajyapala Pratihara was sacked by Mahmud of Ghazni. The empire broke into independent Rajput states.

    The Rashtrakutas

    This dynasty, which ruled from Karnataka, is illustrious for several reasons. They ruled the territory vaster than that of any other dynasty. They were great patrons of art and literature. The encouragement that several Rashtrakuta kings provided to education and literature is unique, and the religious tolerance exercised by them was exemplary.

    The Chola Empire of the South

    It emerged in the middle of the 9th century A.D., covered a large part of Indian peninsula, as well as parts of Sri Lanka and the Maldives Islands.

    The first important ruler to emerge from the dynasty was Rajaraja Chola I and his son and successor Rajendra Chola. Rajaraja carried forward the annexation policy of his father. He led armed expedition to distant lands of Bengal, Odisha and Madhya Pradesh.

    The successors of Rajendra I, Rajadhiraj and Rajendra II were brave rulers who fought fiercely against the later Chalukya kings, but could not check the decline of Chola Empire. The later Chola kings were weak and incompetent rulers. The Chola Empire thus lingered on for another century and a half, and finally came to an end with the invasion of Malik Kafur in the early 14th century A.D.

    During the first half of the eighteenth century, the boundaries of the Mughal Empire were
    reshaped by the emergence of a number of independent kingdoms. In this post, we will read about the emergence of new political groups in the subcontinent during the first half of the eighteenth century – roughly from 1707, when Aurangzeb died, till the third battle of Panipat in 1761.

    The Mughal Crisis

    • Emperor Aurangzeb had depleted the military and financial resources of his empire by fighting a long war in the Deccan.
    • Nobles who were appointed as governors (subadars) controlled the offices of revenue and military administration (diwani and faujdari) which gave them extraordinary political, economic and military powers over vast regions of the Mughal Empire.
    • Peasant and zamindari rebellions in many parts of northern and western India added to these problems.

    Emergence of New States

    • Through the 18th century, the Mughal Empire gradually fragmented into a number of independent, regional states.
    • It can be divided into three overlapping groups:
    1. States that were old Mughal provinces like Awadh, Bengal, and Hyderabad. Although extremely powerful and quite independent, the rulers of these states did not break their formal ties with the Mughal emperor.
    2. States that had enjoyed considerable independence under the Mughals as watan jagirs. These included several Rajput principalities.
    3. States under the control of Marathas, Sikhs and others like the Jats. They all had seized their independence from the Mughals after a long-drawn armed struggle.

    Hyderabad

    • Nizam-ul-Mulk Asaf Jah, the founder of Hyderabad state, was appointed by Mughal Emperor Farrukh Siyar.
    • He was entrusted first with the governorship of Awadh, and later given charge of the Deccan.
    • He ruled quite independently without seeking any direction from Delhi or facing any interference.
    • The state of Hyderabad was constantly engaged in a struggle against the Marathas to the west and with independent Telugu warrior chiefs (nayakas)

    Awadh

    • Burhan-ul-Mulk Sa‘adat Khan was appointed subadar of Awadh in 1722.
    • Awadh was a prosperous region, controlling the rich alluvial Ganga plain and the main trade route between north India and Bengal.
    • Burhan-ul-Mulk held the combined offices of subadari, diwani and faujdari.
    • Burhan-ul-Mulk tried to decrease Mughal influence in the Awadh region by reducing the number of office holders (jagirdars) appointed by the Mughals.
    • The state depended on local bankers and mahajans for loans.
    • It sold the right to collect the tax to the highest bidders. These “revenue farmers” (ijaradars) agreed to pay the state a fixed sum of money. So they were also given considerable freedom in the assessment and collection of taxes.
    • These developments allowed new social groups, like moneylenders and bankers, to influence the management of the state’s revenue system, something which had not occurred in the past.

    Bengal

    • Bengal gradually broke away from Mughal control under Murshid Quli Khan who was appointed as the naib, deputy to the governor of the province and he was neither a formal subadar .
    • Like the rulers of Hyderabad and Awadh, he also commanded the revenue administration of the state.
    • In an effort to reduce Mughal influence in Bengal he transferred all Mughal jagirdars to Orissa and ordered a major reassessment of the revenues of Bengal.
    • Revenue was collected in cash with great strictness from all zamindars.

    The Watan Jagirs of the Rajputs

    • Many Rajput kings, particularly those belonging to Amber and Jodhpur, were permitted to enjoy considerable autonomy in their watan jagirs.
    • In the 18th century, these rulers now attempted to extend their control over adjacent regions.
    • So Raja Ajit Singh of Jodhpur held the governorship of Gujarat and Sawai Raja Jai Singh of Amber was governor of Malwa.
    • They also tried to extend their territories by seizing portions of imperial territories neighbouring their watans.

    Seizing Independence

    The Sikhs

    • The organisation of the Sikhs into a political community during the seventeenth century helped in regional state-building in the Punjab.
    • Guru Gobind Singh fought against the Rajaput and Mughal rulers, after this death, it was under Banda Bahadur’s the fight continued.
    • The entire body used to meet at Amritsar at the time of Baisakhi and Diwali to take collective decisions known as “resolutions of the Guru (gurmatas)”.
    • A system called rakhi was introduced, offering protection to cultivators on the payment of a tax of 20 per cent of the produce.
    • Their well-knit organization enabled them to put up a successful resistance to the Mughal governors first and then to Ahmad Shah Abdali who had seized the rich province of the Punjab and the Sarkar of Sirhind from the Mughals.
    • The Khalsa declared their sovereign rule by striking their own coin in 1765. The coin was same as that of Band Bahadur’s time.
    • Maharaja Ranjit Singh reunited the groups and established his capital at Lahore in 1799.

    The Marathas

    • Another powerful regional kingdom to arise out of a sustained opposition to the Mughal rule.
    • Shivaji (1627-1680) carved out a stable kingdom with the support of powerful warrior families (deshmukhs). Groups of highly mobile, peasant- pastoralists (kunbis) provided the backbone of the Maratha army.
    • Poona became the capital of the Maratha kingdom.
    • After Shivaji, Peshwas[principal minister s] developed a very successful military organisation by raiding cities and by engaging Mughal armies in areas where their supply lines and reinforcements could be easily disturbed.
    • By the 1730s, the Maratha king was recognised as the overlord of the entire Deccan peninsula. He possessed the right to levy chauth[25 per cent of the land revenue claimed by zamindars]. and sardeshmukhi[9-10 per cent of the land revenue paid to the head revenue collector in the Deccan] in the entire region.
    • The frontiers of Maratha domination expanded, after raiding Delhi in 1737, but these areas were not formally included in the Maratha empire but were made to pay tribute as a way of accepting Maratha sovereignty.
    • These military campaigns made other rulers hostile towards the Marathas. As a result, they were not inclined to support the Marathas during the third battle of Panipat in 1761.
    • By all accounts cities[Malwa, Ujjain etc] were large and prosperous and functioned as important ant commercial and cultural centers show the effective administration capacities of Marathas.

    The Jats

    • Jats too consolidated their power during the late 17th and 18th-centuries.
    • Under their leader, Churaman, they acquired control over territories situated to the west of the city of Delhi, and by the 1680s they had begun dominating the region between the two imperial cities of Delhi and Agra.
    • The Jats were prosperous agriculturists, and towns like Panipat and Ballabhgarh became important trading centers in the areas dominated by them.
    • When Nadir Shah (Shah of Iran) sacked Delhi in 1739, many of the city’s notables took refuge there.
    • His son Jawahir Shah had troops and assembled some another from Maratha and Sikh to fight Mughal.

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