Chapter 2: Reshaping India’s Political Map Class 8th Social Science (Exploring Society: India and Beyond) ncert solution

Reshaping India’s Political Map — Full Solutions | @edugrown
⚔ Chapter 2  |  Tapestry of the Past  |  Grade 8

Reshaping India’s
Political Map
— Complete Solutions

Every Think About It, Let’s Explore, Don’t Miss Out and end-of-chapter question answered in detail, with chapter figures embedded throughout.

Qutub Minar Delhi aerial@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.1 — Aerial view of the Qutub Minar complex, Delhi

Opener · Page 21The Big Questions

Three questions that frame the entire chapter. Here are comprehensive answers drawing on the full narrative.

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Big Question 1How did foreign invasions and the rise of new dynasties reshape India’s political boundaries during this period?
Answer

Between the 11th and 17th centuries, waves of invasions from beyond the Hindu Kush mountains by Turkic, Afghan and Mughal forces fundamentally transformed India’s political map in several ways:

PhaseKey EventPolitical Reshaping
Delhi Sultanate (1206–1526)Five successive dynasties: Mamluks, Khiljis, Tughlaqs, Sayyids, LodisNorthern India consolidated under one foreign rule for the first time since the Mauryas; Delhi became the dominant political centre; but Eastern Gangas (Odisha-Bengal) and Hoysalas (south) resisted and remained independent
Ala-ud-din Khilji (c.1296–1316)Campaigns into south India via general Malik Kafur; also repelled Mongol invasionsSultanate extended its military reach to Srirangam, Madurai, Chidambaram; extracted tribute but did not permanently annex the south
Muhammad bin Tughlaq (c.1325–1351)Briefly unified most of the subcontinent; moved capital to DaulatabadFirst time since Mauryas that one power controlled most of the subcontinent; but overreach led to revolts and breakaway sultanates
Regional powers rise (14th–15th c.)Vijayanagara Empire (1336), Bahmani Sultanate (1347), Rajput Mewar resurgence, Eastern Gangas, Ahom kingdomSultanate territory shrank; a multi-polar political map replaced the single Sultanate dominance
Mughals (1526–18th c.)Babur’s First Battle of Panipat (1526) ended the Lodi Sultanate; Akbar and Aurangzeb expanded empireMost of the subcontinent under one empire by Aurangzeb’s time; but regional powers (Ahoms, Marathas, Sikhs, Rajputs) persistently chipped at Mughal control
India political map Tughlaq Lodi period@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.3 — Territories under the Tughlaqs and Lodis vs regional powers in south and east (13th–15th centuries)
Key pattern: No single power was ever able to permanently control the whole subcontinent. Every dominant empire faced resistance from regional kingdoms, tribes and communities, creating a constantly shifting political map.
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Big Question 2How did Indian society respond to invasions? How did India’s economy adapt during times of political instability?
Answer

Society’s Responses

  • Military resistance: Kingdoms like the Eastern Gangas, Hoysalas, Ahoms, Vijayanagara Empire, Rajputs and Sikhs actively fought back, using both conventional armies and guerrilla tactics. The Musunuri Nayakas united 75 Telugu chieftains to drive out Mughal forces from Warangal.
  • Cultural resilience: Even as rulers changed, communities preserved their traditions, languages, arts and temple customs. Blending of indigenous and foreign elements created new cultural forms — in music, painting, architecture and literature.
  • Religious and spiritual movements: The Bhakti and Sufi movements grew partly in response to the religious tensions of the period, promoting devotion, equality and compassion across community lines.
  • Adaptation: Jati and guild (shreni) systems, hundi (credit) networks and temple-based economies allowed economic life to continue largely independently of whoever held political power at the top.

Economic Adaptations

  • Decentralised trade: Merchant communities like the Marwaris developed parallel credit systems (hundi) that worked across political boundaries, making them less vulnerable to plunder by any one ruler.
  • Temple economies: Temples served as economic hubs — they held donated land, funded irrigation, provided credit to merchants and housed pilgrims, creating self-sustaining economic ecosystems largely independent of royal politics.
  • Agricultural continuity: At the village level, traditional self-governance structures (panchayats) and agricultural practices continued. Irrigation infrastructure — canals, tanks, Persian wheels — expanded during this period.
  • Maritime trade: Coastal trading cities like Calicut, Mangalore, Surat and Masulipatnam continued to thrive, exporting textiles, spices and crafts while importing silk, horses and metals. India remained a net exporter.
Key insight: India’s economy was far more than the sum of its rulers’ decisions. Its agrarian foundations, artisanal industries and community-based credit and trade systems proved highly resilient, keeping the subcontinent among the world’s wealthiest regions even through political upheaval.
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Big Question 3What impact did this period have on the lives of the people?
Answer

Negative impacts on ordinary people

  • Military plunder: Campaigns by the Sultanate and later Mughal forces raided villages, destroyed temples and seats of learning, and disrupted agricultural production and trade.
  • Heavy taxation: Land revenue was typically one-fifth of produce, but some sultans raised it to half. Combined with taxes on trade at every stage and the jizya (tax on non-Muslims), the peasantry and artisans bore a crushing burden.
  • Enslavement: Both the Sultanate and Mughal campaigns enslaved thousands of war captives; enslaved people were used as labour or sold into Central Asian markets.
  • Famine: The peasantry suffered several severe famines; relief depended entirely on the benevolence of the particular ruler in power at the time.
  • Religious persecution: Temples were destroyed and iconoclasm practised by several sultans and Mughal rulers; jizya and pilgrimage taxes imposed economic burdens on non-Muslim communities. Sikhs, Sufis, Jains and Zoroastrians also faced persecution under Aurangzeb.
  • Forced displacement: Muhammad bin Tughlaq’s forced relocation of the population from Delhi to Daulatabad caused great loss of life. Military campaigns repeatedly displaced populations from their homes.

Positive developments

  • Cultural flowering: Art, architecture, music, miniature painting and literature flourished under patronage from Sultanate courts, the Vijayanagara Empire and the Mughals. The Taj Mahal, Qutub Minar complex, Vitthala Temple at Hampi, and Konark Sun Temple are all from this era.
  • Administrative development: Systems like the iqta (Sultanate) and mansabdari-jagirdari (Mughal) introduced organised revenue collection. Todar Mal’s land surveys were a landmark in governance.
  • Infrastructure: Roads, bridges, canals and new cities were built, facilitating trade and movement.
  • Peaceful daily coexistence: Despite top-level violence and persecution, ordinary people of different faiths and communities generally lived peacefully side by side, economically dependent on each other.

In-TextThink About It & Let’s Explore

All activity boxes from pages 26–52, answered in detail with supporting figures.

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Let’s Explore · Page 26Looking at Fig. 2.6, why do you think Ala-ud-din Khilji called himself ‘the second Alexander’?
Answer
Ala ud din Khilji coin Sikander Sani@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.6 — Coin of Ala-ud-din Khilji inscribed ‘Sikander Sani’ (the second Alexander)

Ala-ud-din Khilji claimed the title ‘Sikander Sani’ (second Alexander) for several compelling reasons:

  • Military conquests parallel to Alexander’s: Like Alexander the Great, who conquered a vast empire stretching from Greece to northwest India, Ala-ud-din Khilji conquered large parts of north and central India, and sent his general Malik Kafur deep into the south — reaching Srirangam, Madurai, Chidambaram and possibly Rameswaram. He came closer to uniting the subcontinent than anyone since the Mauryas.
  • Repelling invasion: Just as Alexander was seen as an invincible conqueror, Ala-ud-din successfully repelled multiple Mongol invasions, saving northwestern India from the Mongol Empire that had already overrun much of Asia. This defensive success reinforced his claim to be a great military ruler.
  • Propaganda and legitimacy: Calling himself the second Alexander was a political act. The coin inscription in Persian linked him to a universally recognised symbol of greatness and invincibility, bolstering his prestige among both his courtiers and his rivals. Alexander (called ‘Sikander’ in Persian and Arabic tradition) was revered across the Islamic world as an ideal ruler and conqueror.
  • Cultural context: In the Islamic and Persian world, Alexander had been mythologised as a near-divine conqueror and even a prophet in some traditions. Invoking his name was a claim to that same near-mythical status.
Note: The coin itself is significant evidence — rulers used coins for propaganda, announcing their titles and claims to anyone who used currency in their realm. Minting ‘Sikander Sani’ on silver coins ensured the claim reached everyone in the Sultanate’s economic sphere.
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Let Us Explore · Page 26What kind of resources do you think were needed to maintain an army and wage war in those days? Discuss in groups the various types of expenditure involved, from weapons or food for soldiers to animals used in warfare, road construction, etc.
Answer

Maintaining a medieval army and waging war required enormous and diverse resources across several categories:

CategorySpecific Resources NeededWho Provided
PersonnelSoldiers, cavalry riders, elephant mahouts, archers, engineers, spies, cooks, doctors, camp followersRecruited from conquered areas, slaves, mercenaries, tribal allies
Weapons & armourSwords, spears, bows and arrows, shields, armour, daggers; later: gunpowder, matchlock guns, field artillery, cannons (from Babur’s time)Skilled blacksmiths and armouries near military camps; later, Portuguese trade for firearms
War animalsWar horses (very expensive; India imported most horses from Arabia and Central Asia), war elephants (used as battering rams and psychological weapons), camels (transport and cavalry), oxen (supply carts)Purchased from traders (horses from Persian Gulf), captured, or bred; the Vijayanagara kings paid Portuguese in gold for horses
Food & waterGrain (wheat, rice, barley, millet) for soldiers; fodder for animals; water supply for campsPlundered from villages along the campaign route; tax revenues; granaries maintained along major roads
FinanceCoins (silver tanka, copper dam, rupaya) to pay soldiers; to buy supplies; to bribe local officialsTax revenue (land, trade); plunder from conquered areas; tribute from vassals
InfrastructureRoads for rapid troop movement; bridges; forts as supply bases and refuge; canals for water supplyForced labour (corvee); organised engineering corps
Intelligence & communicationSpy networks; messenger systems; maps of routes and riversState-employed agents; local informants
Context: The Sultanate’s wealth was largely derived from plunder from military campaigns, taxes on common people and trade at every stage. Malik Kafur’s southern campaigns were explicitly funded by the plunder of temples and cities encountered along the way. This is why constant warfare was both economically necessary (it generated loot) and economically destructive (it disrupted trade and agriculture).
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Think About It · Page 28Why do we use the term ‘image’ rather than common terms like ‘idol’ or ‘icon’? What do classical Indian texts use?
Answer

The choice of the word ‘image’ is a deliberate exercise in linguistic neutrality and respect:

  • ‘Idol’ and ‘icon’ are pejorative terms in the context of Judaism, Christianity and Islam, whose orthodox traditions strongly condemn the worship of physical representations of God (called ‘idolatry’). Using these words to describe the sacred objects of Hindu, Buddhist or Jain worship carries a built-in negative judgement — implying the practice is primitive or wrong.
  • ‘Image’ is neutral in English. It simply describes a physical visual representation, without implying any judgement about whether worshipping it is right or wrong. This is important for fair, respectful historical writing about a practice central to hundreds of millions of people.
  • Classical Indian terminology: India’s own texts have a rich vocabulary for these objects: murti (form, literally that which has been made), vigraha (form/body of a deity), pratima (likeness/representation), and rupa (form/appearance). None of these carry any negative connotation — they simply describe a physical form through which the divine is made accessible to human senses and devotion.
Broader lesson: The words we choose in historical writing can embed value judgements from one culture’s perspective into the description of another culture’s practices. Choosing neutral, inclusive language — or the community’s own terms — is fundamental to honest, fair historical scholarship.
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Think About It · Page 29The Musunuri Nayakas rallied over 75 chieftains and expelled Muhammad bin Tughlaq’s army from Warangal (1330–1336). Do you think it would have been an easy task to bring together 75 leaders in those days?
Answer
Narasimhadeva I statue@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.8 — Narasimhadeva I, ruler of the Eastern Ganga kingdom, who also resisted the Delhi Sultanate

No, it would have been an extremely difficult task, for several practical and political reasons:

  • Competing local interests: Each chieftain would have had his own territory to protect, his own rivalries with neighbouring chiefs, and his own assessment of whether joining the confederacy was in his personal interest. Getting 75 independent leaders to agree on a single shared goal and strategy was a monumental challenge.
  • No modern communication: Without telegraph, telephone or fast mail, coordinating 75 leaders across a wide geographic area relied entirely on messengers on horseback or foot. Arranging meetings, transmitting plans, responding to emergencies — all took days or weeks.
  • No legal framework: There was no formal treaty mechanism, no written constitution for the confederacy. Everything depended on personal trust, honour agreements, and the persuasive ability of the Musunuri leaders to hold the alliance together even under pressure.
  • Fear of reprisal: Muhammad bin Tughlaq’s army was one of the largest and most powerful in the world at the time. Joining a rebellion against it required extraordinary courage — failure would mean destruction of one’s territory, family and people.
  • What made it remarkable: The success of the Musunuri Nayakas in building this confederacy shows exceptional diplomatic skill, credibility, and a powerful shared sense of identity and purpose. It is an early and inspiring example of coalition-building for collective resistance against a stronger common enemy.
Historical significance: This confederacy directly contributed to the weakening of the Tughlaq Sultanate in the south and created the political space out of which the Vijayanagara Empire emerged in 1336 — just a few years after these events.
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Let’s Explore · Page 31Why do you think such locations were chosen for many medieval forts? Discuss pros and cons. (Hint: think of issues of strategy, security, vulnerability, etc.)
Answer
Kumbhalgarh Fort Aravalli hills@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.10 — Kumbhalgarh Fort in the Aravalli hills: 36 km wall, one of the longest in the world, built by Rana Kumbha in the 15th century

Medieval forts like Kumbhalgarh were typically built on hills, mountain passes, or rocky outcrops. Here is a balanced analysis of this choice:

Pros (Advantages of hilltop / elevated locations)

  • Natural defence: Steep slopes, cliffs and rocky terrain made direct assault extremely difficult and costly for attacking armies. Enemies had to climb while defending archers and soldiers had the high ground advantage.
  • Strategic visibility: From a height, defenders could see enemy armies approaching from miles away, giving time to prepare, send for reinforcements, or close gates.
  • Smaller garrison needed: A well-positioned hill fort could be defended by a much smaller force than would be needed on flat ground, because the terrain itself did most of the defensive work.
  • Psychological advantage: A massive fort on a hill projected power and invincibility, discouraging attack and intimidating enemies and neighbours.
  • Control of passes: Many forts were placed at mountain passes (like Haldighati), giving the controlling power the ability to tax and regulate movement of armies, traders and civilians through the pass.
  • Refuge: Hilltop forts served as places of last resort — the civilian population and the royal family could retreat there in times of invasion.

Cons (Disadvantages)

  • Water and supply challenges: Getting food, water, weapons and animals up steep slopes was logistically difficult and expensive. In a long siege, running out of water or grain was the main threat to defenders (not enemy assault).
  • Limited space: Hilltops have limited flat area, restricting the size of the garrison, stables, granaries and civilian population that could shelter inside.
  • Distance from agricultural land: Hilltop forts are necessarily distant from the fertile plains where food was grown, requiring elaborate supply chains.
  • Not suitable for all terrain: Coastal regions, river plains and deserts required different defensive strategies. The Ahoms, for example, relied on rivers and forests rather than forts.
Kumbhalgarh specifically: Its 36-km wall — one of the longest continuous walls in the world — enclosed a self-sufficient ecosystem within the Aravalli hills, including temples, palaces, water tanks, gardens and villages. This turned the limitation of limited hilltop space into an advantage by enclosing a very large area within the walls.
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Think About It · Page 32Have you noticed the term pati in titles like ‘Gajapati’? Pati means ‘lord’ or ‘master’. The Vijayanagara kings were called ‘Narapati’, Bahmani rulers ‘Ashwapati’, and Maratha rulers ‘Chhatrapati’. Can you guess what these three terms mean?
Answer

The suffix -pati comes from Sanskrit and means lord, master or protector. Prefixed with different words, it creates meaningful royal titles that reflected the particular power or domain the ruler claimed to command:

TitlePrefix MeaningFull MeaningWho Used It
NarapatiNara = human being / manLord of men / King of peopleVijayanagara kings — emphasising their sovereignty over human subjects and communities
AshwapatiAshwa = horseLord of horsesBahmani Sultanate rulers — horses were the most important and expensive military asset of the period; India depended on imported war horses from Arabia and Central Asia. Claiming lordship over horses signalled military supremacy.
ChhatrapatiChhattra = royal umbrella/canopyLord of the royal canopy or Sovereign LordMaratha rulers (notably Shivaji) — the chhattra (umbrella) was a universal symbol of sovereignty across South Asia; holding it over oneself signalled independent kingship, not a subordinate status
GajapatiGaja = elephantLord of elephantsRulers of Odisha (Eastern Ganga successors) — war elephants were the tanks of ancient and medieval warfare; Odisha was famous for its elephant-mounted armies
Insight: These titles were carefully chosen to communicate the particular strength of each dynasty: horses for the Deccan Sultanate’s cavalry power, elephants for Odisha’s military tradition, the royal canopy for Maratha claims to sovereign independence. Titles were political statements, not just names.
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Let’s Explore · Page 35In Fig. 2.14, what elements do you observe? What do they tell you about life then? (Hint: observe the weapons, the animals, the activities.)
Answer
Vitthala temple panel Hampi@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.14 — A sculpted panel from the Vitthala temple, Vijayanagara (Hampi)
Vitthala temple great hall musical pillars@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.13 — The mahamandapa (great hall) of the Vitthala temple with famous musical pillars

The sculpted panel from the Vitthala temple at Hampi (Fig. 2.14) is a richly carved frieze running along the temple wall, depicting everyday and military life in the Vijayanagara Empire. A careful observation reveals:

What is visible in the panel

  • Soldiers and weapons: Figures carrying spears, swords, shields and bows reflect the military emphasis of Vijayanagara society — the empire was constantly at war with the Deccan Sultanates and needed a large standing army.
  • War elephants and horses: The presence of elephants in war formation and horses (possibly being paraded or ridden) reflects their crucial military role. Horses were particularly precious as India depended on expensive imports from Arabia.
  • Hunting and sport: Figures in hunting poses reflect the royal pastimes of the Vijayanagara court and the martial culture of the aristocracy.
  • Everyday activities: Musicians, dancers and other figures suggest the temple served as a cultural centre — consistent with the text’s description of Krishnadevaraya patronising poets and scholars in Telugu, Sanskrit and Kannada.
  • Animals: The variety of animals depicted (elephants, horses, dogs in hunting) tells us about the fauna of the region and the role of animals in both military and civilian life.

What this tells us about life in the Vijayanagara Empire

  • The empire was highly militarised: constant warfare required a professional standing army supported by elephants and cavalry.
  • Temple walls were used as historical records — carving military victories, royal scenes and daily life on temple walls was a way of preserving history and glorifying the king who built the temple.
  • The empire enjoyed a cultural renaissance: the intricate carving, the musical pillars and the lavish hall reflect the great wealth and artistic patronage of Krishnadevaraya’s court.
  • The Portuguese traveller Domingo Paes described Vijayanagara as as large as Rome and with markets “full of laden oxen” — a city of extraordinary abundance and activity.
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Think About It · Page 37What strikes you in Babur’s impressions of India? Discuss in groups.
Answer
Battle of Panipat Baburnama cannons@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.15 — The Battle of Panipat (1526) as depicted in a copy of the Baburnama; note the use of cannons

Babur’s impressions of India as recorded in his autobiography Baburnama are striking for several reasons:

What is remarkable about Babur’s observations

  • Contradictory feelings: Babur was simultaneously critical and admiring. He found India a “country of few charms” (he missed Central Asia’s culture and landscape), yet acknowledged it had “masses of gold and silver” and “countless artisans and workmen of every sort.” This contradiction — cultural nostalgia alongside practical appreciation — is very human.
  • Intellectual curiosity: Despite being a brutal conqueror, Babur’s autobiography reveals a man who was genuinely curious — he catalogued birds, trees and the flora of India with a naturalist’s interest. He admired the architecture. This makes him a complex, three-dimensional historical figure rather than simply a villain.
  • Honesty about India’s wealth as his motive: Babur openly acknowledges that India’s material wealth was a key reason he chose to stay and build an empire rather than return to Central Asia. This is a rare candid admission of the economic motives behind conquest.
  • Critical eye on climate: His observations about the fine air of India’s rainy season and the landscape show he was adjusting to a very different environment from his Central Asian homeland.
  • Dual nature — cultured and cruel: The Baburnama also records his pride in erecting “towers of skulls” from the slaughtered people of cities he conquered. This jarring combination of cultural refinement and extreme violence characterises many historical conquerors.
Discussion prompt: What does it mean when someone is both a lover of poetry and birds AND a mass murderer? History is full of such contradictions. Understanding them requires both acknowledging the atrocities and understanding the full person — as the textbook’s ‘Note on History’s Darker Periods’ advises.
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Think About It · Page 40Why do you think Akbar employed different strategies to expand his empire, while the earlier rulers of Delhi relied mostly on military might?
Answer
Akbar court scholars Jesuits@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.17 — Akbar in his court receiving scholars, including two Jesuits (dressed in black)
Panch Mahal Fatehpur Sikri Akbar@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.18 — Panch Mahal at Fatehpur Sikri, a city built by Akbar near present-day Agra

Akbar’s shift from pure military force to a combination of military power and political strategy reflects a clear-eyed recognition of the limitations of brute force:

  • Scale of the empire: As the empire grew to cover most of the subcontinent, pure military suppression became impossible. You simply cannot station enough soldiers everywhere. Akbar needed willing partners in governance, not just conquered subjects constantly waiting to rebel.
  • Sustainability: The Delhi sultans’ average reign was only about 9 years — largely because their purely military model created constant resentment and rebellion. Akbar saw that a different approach was needed to build a lasting empire. His own long 50-year reign proved this insight correct.
  • Experience from early failures: Even Akbar himself used brutal force early (the Chittor massacre of 30,000 civilians). But he found that this generated fierce, sustained resistance. He seems to have gradually concluded that marriage alliances, abolishing the jizya and welcoming Rajput nobles into his court were more effective at building loyalty than massacres.
  • Religious evolution: As Abul Fazl recorded, Akbar himself came to believe that forcing conversion was wrong. His promotion of sulh-i-kul (peace with all / tolerance of all faiths) was both a moral evolution and a political strategy — in a religiously diverse empire, tolerance made governance far easier.
  • Economic rationale: A stable, expanding empire was vastly more profitable than a restive, constantly rebellious one. Merchants, farmers and artisans produced far more wealth in peace than in war. The mansabdari system and Todar Mal’s revenue reforms required a degree of administrative stability that pure military force could never provide.
Historical pattern: Across history, conquerors who built lasting empires (like the Romans, the Mauryas, and the later Mughals under Akbar) combined military power with political accommodation, co-optation and cultural patronage. Those who relied only on force (like the early Sultanate rulers) typically built empires that lasted only as long as they could suppress resistance by force.
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Let’s Explore · Page 41Compare the maps in Figs. 2.3, 2.12 and 2.16. What differences do you notice? What is the ‘reshaping’ that has occurred?
Answer
Tughlaq Lodi territories map India@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.3 — Tughlaqs & Lodis (13th–15th c.): northern empire with independent south and east
Vijayanagara Deccan Sultanates map@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.12 — Vijayanagara Empire and Deccan Sultanates (15th–16th c.)
Mughal Empire Akbar Aurangzeb regional powers map@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.16 — Mughal Empire under Akbar (1605) and Aurangzeb (1700), plus regional powers

Key differences between the three maps

AspectFig. 2.3 (13th–15th c.)Fig. 2.12 (15th–16th c.)Fig. 2.16 (16th–18th c.)
Dominant powerDelhi Sultanate (Tughlaq / Lodi) in northVijayanagara in south; Bahmani Sultanate / Deccan Sultanates in DeccanMughal Empire covering most of subcontinent; then shrinking with regional powers rising
South IndiaIndependent: Hoysalas and Eastern Gangas resist SultanateVijayanagara Empire dominant; Deccan Sultanates north of itMughal expansion under Aurangzeb reaches deep into Deccan; Vijayanagara gone (destroyed 1565)
North IndiaSultanate control; Rajput states partially independentLodi Sultanate in north; independent Bengal, Gujarat sultanatesMughal Empire; Rajput territories (Mewar, Marwar) as semi-autonomous regions; Sikh Empire in northwest
NortheastNot shown under Sultanate controlNot under Deccan powersAhom Kingdom shown as independent, having repulsed Mughal expansion
Key political trendSingle-power north; independent southSouth gains powerful empire; north fragmentingMaximum territorial extent under Mughals, followed by emergence of regional powers everywhere

The ‘reshaping’ that occurred

  • The most dramatic reshaping is the rise and fall of the Vijayanagara Empire — absent from Fig. 2.3, dominant in Fig. 2.12, and destroyed by 1565 (thus absent again from Fig. 2.16).
  • The Mughal consolidation in Fig. 2.16 represents the greatest political unification since the Mauryas, yet even this is accompanied by persistent independent zones: Mewar, the Ahom kingdom, and later the Sikh Empire.
  • Across all three maps, no power ever controlled the entire subcontinent — there is always some region that remained independent.
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Think About It · Page 43Delhi sultans’ average reign was ~9 years. Mughal emperors up to Aurangzeb averaged 27 years. All Mughal rulers averaged 16 years. What do you make of these numbers?
Answer

The contrast in average reign length between the Delhi Sultanate (9 years) and the Mughal Empire (27 years up to Aurangzeb) is historically very revealing:

What the numbers tell us

  • Political stability: A longer average reign suggests greater political stability, more effective succession planning, and more durable loyalty from nobles and officials. The Mughals were far more stable than the Sultanate.
  • Succession violence in the Sultanate: The 9-year average reflects the text’s observation that almost two out of three sultans seized power by eliminating their predecessors. This constant, violent churn at the top made the Sultanate fundamentally unstable — each succession was a crisis.
  • Mughal system worked better, but also had violent successions: Despite the Mughal improvements, the succession of Shah Jahan was still brutally violent (Aurangzeb killed siblings, imprisoned his father). The 27-year figure reflects longer reigns once power was secured — but getting to the throne was still often bloody.
  • The 16-year overall Mughal average: This lower figure (vs 27 for the first five emperors) shows that the empire’s later rulers (after Aurangzeb’s death in 1707) reigned for much shorter periods as the empire rapidly declined — almost mirroring the Sultanate’s pattern, as Mughal power disintegrated.
  • Sulh-i-kul paid off: Akbar’s political strategies — marriage alliances, welcoming Rajputs, abolishing jizya, promoting tolerance — built broader-based support for Mughal rule, which translated into longer, more stable reigns for the first five emperors.
  • Aurangzeb’s reversal and consequences: Aurangzeb reimposed jizya and pilgrimage taxes, destroyed temples and banned music, eroding the broad-based support Akbar had built. His 49-year reign was long but spent fighting constant wars — and after his death, the empire collapsed rapidly.
Pattern: Longer reigns generally reflect rulers who balanced military force with political accommodation and cultural patronage. Short reigns reflect over-reliance on force alone. The numbers make the history argument visible at a glance.
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Let’s Explore · Page 45Aurangzeb wrote in his last letters: “I came alone and am going away alone. I know not who I am and what I have been doing. I have not done well for the country and the people, and of the future there is no hope. I was helpless [in life] and I am departing helpless.” What do these words tell us about Aurangzeb? How do you feel about them?
Answer
Aurangzeb court 17th century painting@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.20 — Aurangzeb in his court, holding a hawk (17th-century painting)

These remarkable last words of Aurangzeb reveal a profoundly different person from the all-powerful emperor history records. They are extraordinary for several reasons:

What these words reveal about Aurangzeb

  • Self-doubt and regret: After 49 years of absolute rule, commanding the largest empire in Mughal history, Aurangzeb admits he doesn’t know “who I am and what I have been doing.” This is a confession of profound self-doubt from a man who spent his entire reign projecting certainty and divine authority.
  • Awareness of failure: He explicitly acknowledges “I have not done well for the country and the people.” This suggests he was aware, at the end, that his policies — constant warfare in the Deccan, religious intolerance, heavy taxation — had damaged rather than served his subjects.
  • Sense of futility: “Of the future there is no hope” reflects his awareness that the empire he had spent his life building was already beginning to fracture. His long Deccan campaigns had depleted the treasury; rebellions were multiplying; he sensed what historians would later confirm — the Mughal Empire would rapidly collapse after his death.
  • Deep personal loneliness: “I came alone and am going away alone” speaks to the profound isolation of absolute power. He had killed brothers, imprisoned his own father, and alienated many subjects through his policies. At the end, despite commanding an empire, he died feeling utterly alone.
  • Religious sincerity: The phrase also reflects a genuinely devout Muslim’s consciousness of standing before God at death — a recognition that whatever worldly power he wielded, before the divine he was just another fallible human being.
How to feel about these words: The textbook’s approach is instructive here: we acknowledge the terrible acts (destroying temples, persecuting communities, executing Guru Tegh Bahadur) and respect their victims’ suffering. At the same time, these words humanise Aurangzeb — a reminder that even the most powerful and feared rulers are, in the end, human beings capable of doubt, regret and loneliness. History is enriched by holding both truths simultaneously.
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Let’s Explore · Page 48Discuss in class how the paik system affected the daily lives of the people in the Ahom kingdom, both in terms of challenges and benefits, and helped the king manage both the army and the economy.
Answer

The paik system was a unique form of service obligation in the Ahom kingdom: every able-bodied man was required to provide labour or military service to the state in exchange for land rights. This system had profound effects on daily life:

Benefits of the paik system

  • For the king (military): The system allowed the Ahom ruler to mobilise a very large fighting force very quickly without maintaining a large standing army year-round — this was far less expensive than keeping full-time soldiers on permanent payroll. The Battle of Saraighat (1671) saw Lachit Borphukan mobilise 10,000 paiks against a Mughal force of 30,000.
  • For the king (economy): Labour for public works — building roads, irrigation systems, embankments along the Brahmaputra, granaries and administrative buildings — was available without having to pay wages. This allowed the Ahom state to build and maintain infrastructure without a large treasury.
  • For the common person (land): In exchange for their service, paiks received rights to agricultural land. This gave ordinary families a degree of economic security and a stake in the Ahom state’s survival.
  • Social cohesion: Universal service meant that all communities — including the Ahoms and the various local communities they assimilated — had a shared stake in the kingdom’s defence. This created broad-based loyalty.

Challenges of the paik system

  • Disruption to family farming: When a man was called for service (labour or military duty), the family lost his agricultural labour. During planting or harvest seasons, this could seriously threaten food security for the family.
  • Dangerous military service: Being called to fight in battles like Saraighat meant real risk of death or injury. Families could lose their male members with no system of compensation.
  • Limited freedom of movement: Paiks were tied to their land and service obligations; they could not freely move to other areas or change their occupation without affecting their service duty.
  • Potential for exploitation: The system depended on the fairness of local officials who managed the allocation of service. Corruption or abuse by these officials could impose disproportionate burdens on some families.
Historical significance: The paik system is an example of how the Ahoms adapted governance to their specific geographic and demographic context. In a region of forests, rivers and hills (ideal for guerrilla warfare) with a relatively small population, this system was far more efficient than the mansabdari or iqta systems used by the Sultanate and Mughals on the open plains.
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Let’s Explore · Page 49How did the Ahoms use the rivers, hills and forests of Assam to their advantage? Can you think of ways in which the geography helped them build defences and fight wars?
Answer
Battle of Saraighat plaque memorial@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.24 — Plaque commemorating the Battle of Saraighat (1671), with an Ahom boat in the foreground (Saraighat War Memorial Park)

The Ahoms were masters at using their natural environment as a weapon of war. Geography was their greatest asset against numerically superior Mughal forces:

How rivers were used

  • The Brahmaputra as a defensive barrier: The Brahmaputra is one of the world’s largest rivers — wide, fast-flowing and difficult to cross, especially with a large army. The Ahoms were expert boatmen and could control river crossings, prevent Mughal troops from crossing, and use the river for rapid movement of their own forces.
  • Naval warfare: The Ahoms developed a highly effective river navy. At the Battle of Saraighat (1671), Lachit Borphukan used smaller, faster Ahom boats to outmanoeuvre the larger Mughal river fleet, eventually defeating a force three times larger. The Mughal general Ram Singh himself praised Ahom soldiers for being “expert in rowing boats, in shooting arrows, in digging trenches, and in wielding guns and cannons.”
  • Flooding and embankments: The Ahoms had deep knowledge of the Brahmaputra’s seasonal flooding patterns and could use strategically cut embankments to deliberately flood areas where Mughal troops were positioned.

How forests and hills were used

  • Guerrilla warfare base: Dense forests provided perfect cover for Ahom guerrilla tactics — small groups could strike quickly, then melt back into the forest before the larger Mughal force could respond effectively.
  • Intelligence advantage: Ahom communities knew every trail, river crossing, seasonal path and hiding place in their terrain. This local knowledge was invaluable for ambushes and for evading pursuit by a larger army that was effectively “blind” in the forest.
  • Supply disruption: Ahom forces could cut Mughal supply lines travelling through forested areas, weakening invading armies through attrition without major pitched battles.
  • Natural fortifications: Hills and river islands provided natural defensive positions that required far fewer defenders to hold against a larger force.
Key lesson: The Ahoms’ success against the Mughals demonstrates that a smaller, less-equipped force can defeat a much larger one if it has superior knowledge of terrain and is willing to fight on its own terms. This is the essence of guerrilla strategy, later used by many independence movements worldwide.
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Think About It · Page 52Why do you think Guru Tegh Bahadur endured torture rather than convert? Why did he think his sacrifice would make a difference? What values did the Sikh Gurus and the Khalsa embody? How are they relevant today?
Answer
Guru Gobind Singh miniature painting@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.26 — Miniature painting of Guru Gobind Singh, 10th and last Sikh Guru, founder of the Khalsa

Why Guru Tegh Bahadur chose martyrdom over conversion

  • Principle of religious freedom: Guru Tegh Bahadur went to Aurangzeb specifically to defend Kashmiri Pandits who had sought his protection from forced conversion. Converting himself would have betrayed not just his own faith, but the principle he stood for: that no one should be forced to change their religion.
  • Power of witness and sacrifice: He understood, in a deep spiritual and political sense, that his refusal — even unto death — would send a message more powerful than any army. A Guru who compromised under torture would have shattered the faith and courage of his community; a Guru who died rather than compromise would inspire his community for generations.
  • Legacy and institutional change: His martyrdom directly inspired his son Guru Gobind Singh to establish the Khalsa — a martial brotherhood committed to justice and protection of the weak. This institutional response meant the sacrifice led to lasting, organised resistance rather than just a moment of tragedy.

Values the Sikh Gurus and the Khalsa embody

  • Equality: From Guru Nanak’s message of Ik Onkar (One God for all), Sikhism fundamentally rejected caste hierarchy and the idea that some humans are spiritually superior to others. The Khalsa brotherhood admitted members regardless of caste, class or background.
  • Seva (selfless service): The practice of seva — cooking and serving free food to all in the langar, helping those in need without expectation of reward — is central to Sikh practice. It institutionalises compassion as a daily act.
  • Justice and courage: The Khalsa was specifically committed to defending the oppressed against tyranny, even at the cost of one’s own life. The willingness to stand up against injustice, even when vastly outmatched, is central to the Sikh tradition.
  • Truthfulness: The Guru Granth Sahib teaches: “Truth is high, but higher still is truthful living.” This places ethical living above mere belief — what matters is how you act, not just what you profess.

How these values remain relevant today

  • Religious pluralism: In a world still torn by religious conflict, Sikhism’s foundational commitment to the equal dignity of all faiths is deeply relevant. Gurudwaras offer free food to people of all religions without distinction.
  • Standing up for others: Guru Tegh Bahadur’s willingness to die for the rights of people of a different faith (Kashmiri Pandits) is a model of inter-community solidarity that remains rare and precious in today’s world.
  • Seva in practice: During the COVID-19 pandemic, Sikh communities worldwide were among the first to set up mass free meal services for healthcare workers, migrants and the homeless — seva as a living tradition.
  • Courage against injustice: The Khalsa spirit of refusing to bow to oppression continues to inspire movements for civil rights, justice and human dignity across the world.

Exercise · Page 59Questions and Activities — Full Answers

Detailed solutions to all seven end-of-chapter questions from the textbook.

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Exercise Question 1Compare the political strategies of the Delhi Sultanate and the Mughals. What similarities and differences existed between them?
Detailed Answer
AspectDelhi Sultanate (1206–1526)Mughal Empire (1526–18th c.)
Primary method of expansionMilitary conquest and plunder; campaigns raided and looted cities, destroyed temples and seats of learningAlso began with military conquest; but progressively combined with political alliances, marriage, diplomacy (especially under Akbar)
SuccessionExtremely violent; ~2/3 of sultans eliminated predecessors; average reign only 9 yearsAlso violent (Aurangzeb killed brothers, imprisoned father); but average reign much longer (27 years for first five emperors)
Religious policyImposed jizya (tax on non-Muslims); frequent iconoclasm; motivated partly by religious ideology alongside plunderVaried: Akbar abolished jizya, promoted sulh-i-kul; Aurangzeb reimposed jizya, persecuted other faiths; Shah Jahan in between
Administrative systemIqta system: territories assigned to iqtadars to collect taxes for the sultan; posts not hereditaryMansabdari-jagirdari: officers (mansabdars) assigned rank (mansab) and land (jagir) to maintain troops; highly organised with checks and balances
Relationship with Indian cultureGenerally hostile to Hindu-Buddhist-Jain traditions; attacked sacred sites; engaged in slave tradeMixed: Akbar showed genuine intellectual curiosity, invited Hindu and Jain scholars, patronised translation of Sanskrit texts; Aurangzeb hostile
Revenue systemExtracted taxes from trade, agriculture and conquests; burden fell most heavily on peasantry; some contemporary reports of extreme crueltyTodar Mal’s systematic land survey (measuring output and setting fair taxes by crop type) was a landmark advance; Mughals also used rupaya silver and dam copper currency
Geographic extentPrimarily north and central India; repeatedly failed to permanently control south; shrank in later periodUnder Aurangzeb reached greatest extent, covering most of the subcontinent; but northern focus remained

Key similarities

  • Both were Muslim dynasties of foreign (Turkic-Afghan / Turkic-Mongol) origin imposing rule over a predominantly non-Muslim population.
  • Both relied on military force as the foundation of power and used plunder from campaigns to finance their military apparatus.
  • Both experienced frequent violent succession crises.
  • Both maintained elaborate court cultures, patronised architecture and the arts, and created significant built heritage.

Key differences

  • The Mughals, especially under Akbar, developed far more sophisticated political strategies — marriage alliances, religious tolerance, welcoming regional leaders into the imperial fold — that the Sultanate never matched.
  • The Mughal administrative system (mansabdari + Todar Mal’s revenue reforms) was more organised, efficient and sustainable than the Sultanate’s iqta system.
  • The Mughals produced a far richer architectural and artistic legacy (Taj Mahal, miniature paintings, Fatehpur Sikri) than the Sultanate, reflecting both greater wealth and greater cultural synthesis.
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Exercise Question 2Why did kingdoms like the Vijayanagara Empire and the Ahom Kingdom manage to resist conquest for a longer time compared to others? What geographical, military, and social factors contributed to their success?
Detailed Answer
Hampi Vijayanagara ruins Virupaksha temple@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.11 — Ruins of Vijayanagara city (present-day Hampi); the large building is the Virupaksha temple
Saraighat plaque Ahom warriors@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.24 — Saraighat War Memorial: the Ahoms defeated a Mughal force of 30,000 with 10,000 men
FactorVijayanagara EmpireAhom Kingdom
GeographyLocated in the Deccan plateau, with rocky terrain, rivers and the natural boundaries of the peninsula creating defensive advantages; capital Hampi was surrounded by granite boulders making it hard to attackThe Brahmaputra valley, dense forests, hills and marshes of Assam made large-scale Mughal invasion extremely difficult; terrain negated the Mughal’s numerical and cavalry advantage
Military strategyMaintained large standing armies; used both conventional battles and fortifications; had access to horses via Portuguese trade (keeping them from enemy kingdoms); coalition-building against Deccan SultanatesRiver navy (expert boatmen who outmaneuvered larger Mughal fleets); guerrilla warfare using forest and river terrain; paik system allowed rapid mobilisation of large numbers without permanent army cost
Social cohesionStrong cultural identity rooted in Sanskrit, Telugu and Kannada traditions; Krishnadevaraya’s patronage of religion, arts and literature built deep loyalty; welcoming of foreign traders built economic strengthThe paik system gave every family a stake in the kingdom’s survival (land rights in exchange for service); over time, the Ahoms assimilated local communities and promoted agriculture and diverse faiths, building inclusive loyalty
Economic strengthControl of rich agricultural zones and thriving trade networks (described by Domingo Paes as the “best provided city in the world”); funded massive armies and temple patronageAgricultural base sustained by the paik system’s labour; no need for expensive mercenary armies; simpler economy less vulnerable to disruption
Duration of resistance~230 years (1336–1565 destruction of Vijayanagara city); empire persisted in fragments until mid-17th century~600 years (13th century to 1826 annexation by British); never conquered by the Mughals despite 17 recorded campaigns
Common factor: Both kingdoms combined geographic advantage, distinct cultural identity, and a military strategy suited to their terrain. Neither tried to fight the Mughals on the Mughals’ own terms (open plain cavalry battles where Mughal numbers and artillery would dominate) — both found ways to leverage their unique environments and strengths.
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Exercise Question 3Imagine you are a scholar in the court of Akbar or Krishnadevaraya. Write a letter to a friend describing the politics, trade, culture, and society you are witnessing.
Creative Answer (two model letters)

Letter 1: From a scholar in Akbar’s court at Fatehpur Sikri (c. 1582)

Respected Panditji,

Greetings from this extraordinary city of Fatehpur Sikri that our Emperor Akbar has built near Agra. I write to you with a heart full of wonder, for I have witnessed things in this court that I once thought impossible.

Our Emperor, though illiterate, has established a ‘house of translation’ (Ibadat Khana) where scholars of every tradition gather — Hindu pandits, Muslim ulema, Jain acharyas, Portuguese Jesuits, Zoroastrian priests — all debating questions of God, creation and ethics while the Emperor listens with genuine curiosity. I have myself participated in discussions on the Mahabharata, which is being translated into Persian here as the Razmnama (Book of War).

The Emperor has abolished the jizya and the pilgrimage tax. He promotes what he calls sulh-i-kul — peace with all. He has entered marriage alliances with Rajput princes and welcomes their leaders into the highest ranks of his court. The change from the earlier sultans’ approach is remarkable.

As for trade — merchants from Arabia, Persia and Central Asia fill the bazaars of the cities; the streets are full of laden oxen carrying cotton textiles, silk, spices, indigo and crafts to be exported from ports like Surat. The wealth of this court is beyond description: the Emperor’s kitchens, jewels, stables of horses and elephants fill one with awe.

Yet all is not perfect. I have heard from those who survived the Chittor massacre, when the Emperor ordered 30,000 killed. The peasants in the villages still pay heavy taxes. Power here is ultimately held by the sword.

Your student in wonder,
Ramachandra Pandit, Fatehpur Sikri

Letter 2: From a scholar in Krishnadevaraya’s court at Vijayanagara (c. 1510)

Honoured Shastri,

From this magnificent city of Vijayanagara, I send you the warmest greetings. If you could see this capital as the Portuguese trader Domingo Paes has described it — as large as Rome, beautiful and full of groves and lakes and markets overflowing with goods — you would not believe such a city exists in the world.

Our great Emperor Krishnadevaraya is a warrior-poet whose mind ranges from the battlefield to the library with equal grace. He has composed the Amuktamalyada, an epic poem in Telugu celebrating the Tamil poet-saint Andal, and within it a Rajaniti setting out his vision of good governance. He patronises poets in Sanskrit, Telugu and Kannada, and has endowed the Vitthala temple with a hall whose pillars, when struck, produce musical notes.

The trade here is extraordinary: Portuguese merchants come to sell horses (which our Emperor needs desperately to match the Deccan Sultanates’ cavalry), and they are treated with great hospitality, for the Emperor fears they might sell those horses to our enemies instead. The markets are full of cotton, silk, spices, timber and jewels from across the world.

To our north, the Bahmani Sultanate has fragmented into five rival states: Bijapur, Golconda, Berar, Ahmednagar and Bidar. We fight the first two repeatedly — it is a constant dance of war and treaty.

Your servant in scholarship,
Appayya Dikshita, Vijayanagara
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Exercise Question 4How come Akbar, a ruthless conqueror in his young days, grew tolerant and benevolent after some years? What could have led to such a change?
Detailed Answer
Akbar court interfaith dialogue@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.17 — Akbar in his court engaging with scholars of multiple faiths
Ramayana Persian translation miniature painting@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.19 — Miniature painting illustrating the Persian translation of the Ramayana — made at Akbar’s court

The transformation of Akbar from a ruthless young conqueror who massacred 30,000 civilians at Chittor, to the promoter of sulh-i-kul (tolerance of all faiths) who abolished the jizya, is one of the most fascinating personal evolutions in Indian history. Several factors likely drove this change:

Practical / political factors

  • Experience of governance: As a 13-year-old emperor, Akbar relied on military force because he knew nothing else. As he matured and governed a vast, diverse empire, he learned from experience that pure force generated endless, expensive rebellion. Marriage alliances and welcoming regional leaders into his court was simply more effective at maintaining control.
  • Empire-building logic: Akbar’s goal was a unified, stable empire covering the whole subcontinent — an empire that would last. Persistent religious persecution would have made this impossible. The strategy of sulh-i-kul was the political formula that made a stable multi-religious empire feasible.
  • Rajput relationships: By entering marriage alliances with Rajput royalty and welcoming their nobles into his court, Akbar transformed potential enemies into loyal partners. This required treating their religious traditions with respect, not contempt.

Intellectual and personal factors

  • Intellectual curiosity: Despite being illiterate, Akbar was deeply curious. He listened to Hindu, Jain, Christian and Zoroastrian scholars debate theology at his Ibadat Khana. Exposure to multiple sophisticated religious traditions made simplistic religious chauvinism difficult to maintain.
  • Influence of teachers: Akbar had meaningful relationships with scholars and spiritual figures of different traditions. The Sufi tradition he was exposed to already emphasised the universality of God beyond sectarian boundaries.
  • His own words: Abul Fazl recorded Akbar reflecting that forcing others to convert was wrong, as “what constancy is to be expected from proselytes on compulsion?” This shows genuine moral reasoning, not just political calculation.
  • Age and wisdom: The brutal massacre at Chittor was committed when he was 25. By his forties and fifties, he had decades of governing a complex empire behind him. Mature leadership tends to moderate the extremes of youth.
Important caveat: Akbar’s tolerance was real but incomplete. As the text notes, non-Muslims were still kept in a minority in the highest administrative positions. His tolerance was the most enlightened of his time — but it operated within limits that modern standards would still find unjust. History must be understood in context, while being judged honestly.
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Exercise Question 5What might have happened if the Vijayanagara Empire had won the Battle of Talikota? Imagine and describe how it could have changed the political and cultural history of south India.
Creative + Analytical Answer
Vijayanagara Deccan map@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.12 — The Vijayanagara Empire and Deccan Sultanates at their heights; a Talikota victory would have transformed this balance

The Battle of Talikota (1565) was one of the most consequential battles in Indian history. A Vijayanagara victory over the combined Deccan Sultanates coalition would have had far-reaching consequences:

Immediate political consequences

  • Survival and continued dominance: Vijayanagara would have remained the most powerful empire in peninsular India, likely absorbing or subordinating the Deccan Sultanates rather than being destroyed by them. The five Deccan Sultanates (Bijapur, Golconda, Berar, Ahmednagar, Bidar) would have remained in a weakened, subordinate relationship.
  • Expansion northward: A victorious Vijayanagara might have pushed further north into the Deccan, potentially creating a counterweight to the Mughal expansion southward that was already underway under Akbar.
  • No destruction of the city: The magnificent city of Vijayanagara — one of the largest cities in the world at the time — would not have been sacked and destroyed over months. The temples, palaces, markets and cultural institutions would have survived and continued to develop.

Cultural consequences

  • Continuation of the Sanskrit-Telugu-Kannada cultural renaissance: Krishnadevaraya’s patronage had created a golden age of Telugu literature, temple architecture and music. This would likely have continued and deepened under his successors.
  • Temple building: The Vijayanagara Empire was one of the greatest builders of temple complexes in Indian history (Hampi, Tirupati, temples across Karnataka and Andhra). Its survival would have meant far more of this heritage remaining intact.
  • A different cultural synthesis: Instead of the Persianate-influenced culture of the Deccan Sultanates dominating the region, a living Vijayanagara Empire would likely have produced a different kind of cultural synthesis — one more rooted in Sanskrit and Dravidian traditions, while still engaging with foreign influences through trade.

Historical uncertainties

  • Even a victorious Vijayanagara would have faced the growing Mughal Empire from the north. Whether it could have resisted Mughal expansion is unknowable.
  • Internal rebellions from the Nayaka governors (who eventually fragmented the empire anyway after Talikota) might still have occurred.
  • The Portuguese, already established at Goa, would still have been seeking trade advantage, complicating the political landscape.
Historical imagination: What-if history (counterfactual history) is a useful exercise in understanding why actual historical outcomes mattered. The destruction of Vijayanagara in 1565 was a genuine catastrophe for south Indian art, architecture and political culture — imagining its survival helps us appreciate what was actually lost.
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Exercise Question 6Many values promoted by early Sikhism, including equality, seva (service), and justice, remain relevant today. Select one of these values and discuss how it remains relevant in contemporary society.
Detailed Answer (Seva as the focus)
Guru Gobind Singh painting@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.26 — Guru Gobind Singh, who established the Khalsa — a brotherhood committed to justice, equality and service

I will focus on Seva (selfless service to others without expectation of reward) — perhaps the most distinctive and enduring contribution of early Sikhism to human ethical thought.

What Seva means in the Sikh tradition

Seva is not just charity or volunteerism. It is a spiritual discipline — the belief that serving other human beings is a form of serving God, because the divine presence (Waheguru) resides in every person. The most visible expression of seva is the langar (community kitchen) attached to every gurudwara, where free food is served to everyone regardless of religion, caste, gender or economic status.

How Seva remains deeply relevant today

  • Combating inequality: In a world of extreme wealth inequality, the langar embodies the radical idea that every human being deserves dignity, nourishment and welcome. There are no VIP tables in a langar — everyone sits on the same floor and is served the same food.
  • Disaster relief: During the COVID-19 pandemic, Sikh communities across India, the UK, the USA and Canada set up large-scale free meal services for healthcare workers, stranded migrants, the homeless and the elderly — often being the first on the ground in crisis situations. This is seva in practice.
  • Community building: In an increasingly fragmented, individualistic society, seva creates genuine community bonds. Working side by side to cook and serve food, clean the temple, or help a neighbour builds the social fabric that modern societies are losing.
  • Counter to transactional giving: Modern philanthropy is often transactional — giving to get recognition, tax benefits or social status. Seva demands the opposite: service given anonymously, without expectation of credit or return. This is a challenging and counter-cultural ideal.
  • Environmental seva: Modern Sikh eco-theology extends seva to the environment: serving the Earth by protecting it, conserving water, planting trees — recognising that the natural world too is part of the divine creation to be served, not just exploited.
Personal relevance: Seva can be practised at any scale — from helping a neighbour, to volunteering at a community kitchen, to choosing a career in medicine or teaching as a form of service. The Sikh tradition teaches that small, daily acts of selfless service are as spiritually valuable as grand gestures. In a competitive, self-focused world, this is a profoundly needed counter-culture.
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Exercise Question 7Imagine you are a trader in a port city (Surat, Calicut or Hooghly). Describe the scenes you see as regards goods, people you trade with, movement of ships, etc.
Creative Answer — Surat (c. 1590, during Akbar’s reign)
Persian wheel irrigation Vijayanagara@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.29 — A Persian wheel for drawing irrigation water: agricultural surplus supported the trade economy
Vijayanagara land grant copper plate@EDUGROWN
Fig. 2.30 — A Vijayanagara land grant on copper plate: the equivalent of modern property deeds
From the diary of Vasudeva Seth, cloth merchant, Surat (1592)

This morning the tide brought in three ships from Hormuz (in Persia), their holds full of fine silk, rose water, dried fruits and — most valuable of all — a consignment of thoroughbred Arabian horses destined for the Mughal imperial stables at Agra. The horses alone will fetch a fortune; our Emperor’s cavalry commanders pay any price for fine mounts.

The harbour is never still. Portuguese carracks with their great square sails and their cannon ports visible along the hulls ride at anchor alongside our lighter Indian dhows and the sleeker Arab boom boats. The Portuguese maintain a stranglehold on the sea lanes here — our ships must carry a cartaz, a permit from them, or risk being stopped and taxed. We pay, reluctantly, for there is no other choice.

On the quayside, a hundred languages compete with the cries of porters and the lowing of cattle. I recognise Arab merchants in their white robes negotiating with my Gujarati colleagues over bales of indigo and fine Dacca muslin. A group of Armenian merchants examine a consignment of pepper and cardamom from the Malabar coast. Three Jain traders from my own community bargain with a Persian over coral and pearls.

My own cargo today: 20 bales of the finest cotton cloth from the weavers of Broach, each piece so fine you can read a letter through it. The Arabs call it ‘woven air.’ I shall send half to Hormuz and Basra, where it fetches three times the price here; the rest goes overland to the Mughal court, where the fashion for our cloth seems insatiable. In return, I am taking silver — for India sells more than it buys, and silver flows in like water.

By evening, I have settled accounts with a Persian, a Portuguese factor, two Arab merchants and a Rajput caravan leader whose camels will carry my goods north to Agra. We use the hundi system — I give the Rajput a written instruction, and at Agra my cousin will honour it without any coin changing hands here. No one can rob a piece of paper.

Surat is not always peaceful. Taxes and tolls multiply at every checkpoint between here and Agra. The Portuguese extort us at sea. And last year a Mughal official’s excessive demands nearly stopped the trade entirely until the merchants of our community jointly refused to deal until the rate was reduced. We have no army, but we have something more powerful: we are the ones who make the empire’s treasury flow.

— Vasudeva Seth
Exploring Society: India and Beyond  |  Grade 8 Part 1  —  Chapter 2: Reshaping India’s Political Map
Solutions compiled for educational purposes by @edugrown

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