Project Gutenberg's Rulers of India: Akbar, by George Bruce Malleson This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org Title: Rulers of India: Akbar Author: George Bruce Malleson Release Date: March 9, 2010 [EBook #31572] Language: English *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RULERS OF INDIA: AKBAR *** Produced by Ron Swanson RULERS OF INDIA EDITED BY SIR WILLIAM WILSON HUNTER, K.C.S.I., C.I.E. M.A. (OXFORD): LL.D. (CAMBRIDGE) AKBAR London HENRY FROWDE logo OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS WAREHOUSE AMEN CORNER, E.C. [All rights reserved] Click here for a map of 19th century British India.RULERS OF INDIA AKBAR BY COLONEL G. B. MALLESON, C.S.I. OXFORD AT THE CLARENDON PRESS: 1890 CONTENTS CHAP. I. THE ARGUMENT II. THE FAMILY AND EARLY DAYS OF BÁBAR III. BÁBAR CONQUERS KÁBUL IV. BÁBAR'S INVASIONS OF INDIA V. THE POSITION OF BÁBAR IN HINDUSTÁN VI. HUMÁYÚN AND THE EARLY DAYS OF AKBAR VII. HUMÁYÚN INVADES INDIA. HIS DEATH VIII. AKBAR'S FIGHT FOR HIS FATHER'S THRONE IX. GENERAL CONDITION OF INDIA IN THE MIDDLE OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY X. THE TUTELAGE UNDER BAIRÁM KHÁN XI. CHRONICLE OF THE REIGN XII. THE PRINCIPLES AND INTERNAL ADMINISTRATION OF AKBAR INDEX NOTE The orthography of proper names follows the system adopted by the Indian Government for the Imperial Gazetteer of India. ...
Project Gutenberg's Rulers of India: Akbar, by George Bruce Malleson This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
Title: Rulers of India: Akbar Author: George Bruce Malleson Release Date: March 9, 2010 [EBook #31572] Language: English
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RULERS OF INDIA: AKBAR ***
Produced by Ron Swanson
RULERS OF INDIA
EDITED BY SIR WILLIAM WILSON HUNTER, K.C.S.I., C.I.E. M.A. (OXFORD): LL.D. (CARIMBEDG)
AKBAR
London HENRY FROWDE logo OXFORDUNSITYIVERPRESSWESUOHERA AMENCORNER, E.C.
[All rights reserved]
Click here for a map of 19th century British India.
I crave the indulgence of the reader whilst I explain as briefly as possible the plan upon which I have written this short life of the great sovereign who firmly established the Mughal dynasty in India.1 1 For the purposes of this sketch I have referred to the following authorities:Memoirs of Bábar,written by himself, and translated by Leyden and Erskine; Erskine'sBábar and Humáyún;The Ain-í-Akbarí(Blochmann's translation);The History of India, as told by its own Historians,edited from the posthumous papers of Sir H. M. Elliot, K.C.B., by Professor Dowson; Dow'sFerishta;slEhpno'enitsHistory of India;Tod'sAnnals of Rajast'han, and various other works. The original conception of such an empire was not Akbar's own. His grandfather, Bábar, had conquered a great portion of India, but during the five years which elapsed between the conquest and his death, Bábar enjoyed but few opportunities of donning the robe of the administrator. By the rivals whom he had overthrown and by the children of the soil, Bábar was alike regarded as a conqueror, and as nothing more. A man of remarkable ability, who had spent all his life in arms, he was really an adventurer, though a brilliant adventurer, who, soaring above his contemporaries in genius, taught in the rough school of adversity, had beheld from his eyrie at Kábul the distracted condition of fertile Hindustán, and had dashed down upon her plains with a force that was irresistible. Such was Bábar, a man greatly in advance of his age, generous, affectionate, lofty in his views, yet, in his connection with Hindustán, but little more than a conqueror. He had no time to think of any other system of administration than the system with which he had been familiar all his life, and which had been the system introduced by his Afghán predecessors into India, the system of governing by means of large camps, each commanded by a general devoted to himself, and each occupying a central position in a province. It is a question whether the central idea of Bábar's policy was not the creation of an empire in Central Asia rather than of an empire in India. Into this system the welfare of the children of the soil did not enter. Possibly, if Bábar had lived, and had lived in the enjoyment of his great abilities, he might have come to see, as his grandson saw, that such a system was practically unsound; that it was wanting in the great principle of cohesion, of uniting the interests of the conquering and the conquered; that it secured no attachment, and conciliated no prejudices; that it remained, without roots, exposed to all the storms of fortune. We, who know Bábar by his memoirs, in which he unfolds the secrets of his heart, confesses all his faults, and details all his ambitions, may think that he might have done this if he had had the opportunity. But the opportunity was denied to him. The time between the first battle of Pánípat, which gave him the north-western provinces of India, and his death, was too short to allow him to think of much more than the securing of his conquests, and the adding to them of additional provinces. He entered India a conqueror. He remained a conqueror, and nothing more, during the five years he ruled at Agra. His son, Humáyún, was not qualified by nature to perform the task which Bábar had been obliged to neglect. His character, flighty and unstable, and his abilities, wanting in the constructive faculty, alike unfitted him for the duty. He ruled eight years in India without contributing a single stone to the foundation of an empire that was to remain. When, at the end of that period, his empire fell, as had fallen the kingdoms of his Afghán predecessors, and from the same cause, the absence of any roots in the soil, the result of a single defeat in the field, he lost at one blow all that Bábar had gained south of the Indus. India disappeared, apparently for ever, from the grasp of the Mughal. The son of Bábar had succumbed to an abler general, and that abler general had at once completely supplanted him. Fortunately for the Mughal, more fortunately still for the people of India, that abler general, though a man of great ability, had inherited views not differing in any one degree from those of the Afghán chiefs who had preceded him in the art of establishing a dynasty. The conciliation of the millions of Hindustán did not enter into his system. He, too, was content to govern by camps located in the districts he had conquered. The consequence was that when he died other men rose to compete for the empire. The confusion rose in the course of a few years to such a height, that in 1554, just fourteen years after he had fled from the field of Kanauj, Humáyún recrossed the Indus, and recovered Northern India. He was still young, but still as incapable of founding a stable empire as when he succeeded his father. He left behind him writings which prove that, had his life been spared, he would still have tried to govern on the old plan which had broken in the hands of so many conquerors who had gone before him, and in his own. Just before his death he drew up a system for the administration of India. It was the old system of separate camps in a fixed centre, each independent of the other, but all supervised by the Emperor. It was an excellent plan, doubtless, for securing conquered provinces, but it was absolutely deficient in any scheme for welding the several provinces and their people into one harmonious whole.