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प्रश्न
Which specific titles were assumed by the Mughal Emperors? Examine their relationship with the continental powers.
विस्तार में उत्तर
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उत्तर
- Titles assumed by Mughal emperors:
- Padshah/Padishah the standard Persianate term for “emperor” used by Mughal rulers to assert supreme sovereignty. This title embodied their imperial claim over many peoples.
- Badshah a Persian/Urdu honorific meaning “Great King”; used interchangeably in court usage to emphasize regal authority.
- Shahanshah “Shah of Shahs” or “King of Kings”; an older royal grand-title adopted from Persian/Timurid traditions to stress imperial rank above ordinary kings.
- Timurid/lineage epithets (e.g., Mirza, references to Timurids) used to emphasize descent from Timur and thus legitimate dynastic-political status in Central Asian/Persianate world.
- Religious-regal epithets rulers took regnal names and religiously toned honorifics (e.g., elements like Jalal, Nur, Zill) to combine divine sanction with temporal rule.
- Court honorifics and honor-titles (e.g., sahib, ghazi, khan prefixes/suffixes) used in different contexts to advertise military/religious credentials or noble status.
- Relationship with continental powers:
- Timurid/Central Asian identity and links the Mughals framed themselves as Timurid heirs, keeping cultural and dynastic ties to Central Asian polities; exile and refuge (e.g., Humayun at the Safavid court) show personal/dynastic links with continental dynasties.
- Diplomatic and cultural exchange with Safavid Persia the Mughals maintained exchanges (marriage, refuge, art, court culture) and occasional rivalry over frontier territories; Persian court culture deeply influenced Mughal titulature and protocol.
- Military confrontation from continental invaders large-scale invasions from continental rulers (e.g., Nadir Shah’s sack of Delhi in 1739) punctured Mughal power and reshaped political balance on the subcontinent.
- Engagement with European continental powers early Mughal policy combined tolerance and pragmatic hospitality toward European missions and traders (e.g., Akbar’s farman allowing Jesuits to build a church), while granting commercial privileges to Portuguese, Dutch, English, French merchants. This opened long-term commercial and diplomatic links that later had major political consequences.
- From ceremonial equals to commercial partners to coerced suzerainty initially Europeans were treated as trading communities and diplomatic missions; over the 17th–18th centuries the East India Company’s growing power shifted the relationship from commerce/diplomacy to political dominance (the Company gained diwani rights in Bengal in 1765, marking a decisive change).
- Ruler’s ideology vs. continental realities Mughal grand titles and claims (universal emperor of diverse peoples) expressed an imperial ideology; in practice, interaction with continental powers involved a mix of diplomacy, cultural exchange, trade agreements, and at times military defeat or loss of territory.
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2019-2020 (March) Outside Delhi Set 3
