VIII. Society and Culture under the Sultanate
*Industry and Trade*
== *Learning,
Literature, and the Arts*
[[107]]
WHILE the
historians of the Delhi Sultanate have left full accounts that make
possible
a reconstruction of military and political affairs, unfortunately no
such
records exist for social and economic history. Scattered comments in
the
histories, however, as well as such works as the Travels of Ibn
Battuta,
the narrative poems of Amir Khusrau, and the table talk of Hazrat
Nizam-ud-din,
illuminate the social life of the time.
Muslim society
during the
period was dominated by the Turkish rulers and nobles who sought to
maintain
their position not only against non-Muslims or the Muslims of
indigenous
origin, but also against other non-Turkish immigrants, or over other
Turks
whose long separation from the Turkish homeland marked them off
themselves.
It can be argued that most of the sultans and nobles were ultimately
Turkish
in origin, even though they bear different designations, but the first
hundred years of the Delhi Sultanate was clearly a period of Turkish
supremacy:
rule by groups that regarded themselves as Turks, and heirs of a
definite
cultural and historical tradition. During this time they produced not
only
three great rulers, Iltutmish, Ala-ud-din Khalji, and Balban, but also
a great poet—Amir Khusrau.
One of the most
interesting
features of Islamic society during the sultanate is the long struggle
of
Indian Muslims—Hindu and Buddhist converts or their descendants—to
assert
themselves. They tried to gain power in the middle of the thirteenth
century,
but Balban and other Turkish nobles were too powerful for them. Their
position
gradually improved under the Khaljis, and under the Tughluqs a distinct
change can be seen. Ghiyas-ud-din Tughluq had an Indian mother,
Muhammed
Tughluq appointed a Hindu as the governor of Upper Sind, and the
dominant
personality of the reign of Firuz Tughluq was Khan-i-Jahan, a Hindu
convert
from Telingana.
Although it took
a long time
for the Indo-Muslims to reach positions [[108]] of power,
local
usages and customs influenced social life and behavior at an early
period.
The Indian
pan (betel leaf) soon became popular among the Muslims;
the use of spices for seasoning food became common; and standard Muslim
dishes such as pilau were transformed. The newcomers also adopted
Indian
headgear; but, more significantly, religious ceremonies, especially
those
related to marriage and death, showed a definite Indian influence. The
popularity of music, as well as its forms, reflected the local
atmosphere.
The lives of the
Muslim upper
classes, especially in Delhi, were modeled on those of their Turkish
and
Persian counterparts, with the sports of a society that valued the
horse—polo,
riding, racing—being the chief outdoor amusements; these were the
prerogatives
of the rich. All classes enjoyed chess and backgammon, although the
more
orthodox regarded them with disapproval. Most of the Muslims, at least
during the earliest period of the sultanate, were city dwellers, many
of
them attached to the garrisons. For this reason there was a good deal
of
communal life among the ordinary people. There were, for example,
bakeries
instead of individual kitchens, and hammams (Turkish baths) in the
larger
towns.
As for the
Hindus, their
social life was relatively unchanged, although during military
operations
they suffered losses in property and life. Even when the harsh laws of
war gave place to peace, the Hindus were burdened by certain handicaps.
The loss of sovereignty itself was a major loss, especially in the case
of the Brahmans and the Kshatriyas. The sultanate period was more
difficult
for them than any other period of Muslim rule. The liberal and
conciliatory
policy adopted by Muhammad ibn Qasim had given place to a new
relationship,
and the integration of the Hindu population into the political and
administrative
structure was not to come about until later. Muslim conquest of Sind
and
Multan and even of Lahore and Peshawar had not led to the same tensions
and conflicts which followed their domination over the heart of
Aryavarta.
Even the indirect effect of the Mongol invasion of Muslim lands led to
a stiffening of attitude, as the Muslim refugees, who had suffered so
much
at the hands of the pagan Mongols, were not disposed to be friendly
towards
the non-Muslims of India.
[[109]]
All these
factors make the sultanate a period of tensions and conflicts. The
theory
of Turkish racial superiority which held sway during the rule of early
Slave kings was not favorable to the employment of Hindus—or even
indigenous
Muslims—in high civil and military appointments, as was the case under
the Arabs in Sind or even under the Ghaznavids. It would, however, be
wrong
to think that the Hindus were completely excluded from service. In
rural
areas the Hindu landed aristocracy still occupied a position of
prestige
and power, and the muqaddams, the chaudharis, and the khuts had
important
roles in the administration. The land system was not altered, and the
Hindu
peasant must have led much the same kind of life as he did before the
coming
of the Muslims. Trade and commerce also remained in Hindu control, for
to the Muslim invader from Central Asia, the complex Hindu banking
system
would be unfamiliar and unworkable. The Hindu merchant might be heavily
assessed, or, during a war have his movable goods confiscated, but he
was
too much a part of the intricate commercial structure to be easily
replaced.
The money-lender thrived under the new, as under the old, dispensation.
We hear, for example, about the large incomes of the Muslim grandees
and
the splendor of their households, but Barani leaves us in no doubt that
most, if not all, borrowed from the Hindu money lenders. "The maliks
and
the khans and the nobles of those days were constantly in debt, owing
to
their excessive generosity, expenditures, and beneficence. Except in
their
public halls no gold or silver could be found, and they had no savings
on account of their excessive liberality. The wealth and riches of the
Multani merchants and the shahs [money lenders] were from the interest
realized from the old maliks and nobles of Delhi, who borrowed money
from
them to the maximum limit, and repaid their debts along with additional
gifts from their [lands]. Whenever a malik or a khan held a banquet and
invited notables, his agents would rush to the Multanis and shahs, sign
documents, and borrow money with interest."/1/
That the money lenders recovered their money along with interest
(forbidden
under Islamic law), is an [[110]] indication of how vital they
were
to the system. Even the powerful Ala-ud-din Khalji who, seeing the
danger
to his government from the power of the Hindu rural chiefs, made a
determined
attempt to curb their power and reduce their wealth, found it necessary
to make Hindu traders the main instrument of his price control measures./2/
Industry and Trade
Hindus occupied
an important
role in foreign, as in domestic, trade, although foreign Muslim
merchants,
known as khurasani, also had a large share of it. The rulers of
the coastal kingdoms in the Deccan accorded to foreign merchants
certain
extra-territorial rights and special concessions, in consideration of
the
heavy taxes which they paid to the treasury. An organized class of
brokers
handled the business on the coast and inside the country. The imports
consisted
mainly of certain luxury items for the upper classes, and a general
supply
of all kinds of horses and mules, in which India was deficient. Hindus
had never attached any importance to cavalry, but seeing the success of
the Muslim horsemen, they started to substitute horses for elephants.
The
exports included large quantities of food-grains and cloth. Among the
agricultural
products were wheat, millet, rice, pulses, oilseeds, scents, medicinal
herbs, and sugar. Some of the countries around the Persian Gulf
depended
on the subcontinent for their entire food supply. Cotton cloth and
other
textiles were especially important items of export, particularly to
Southeast
Asia and East Africa, although some reached Europe. They were carried
by
the Arabs to the Red Sea and from there found their way to Damascus and
Alexandria, from where they were distributed to the Mediterranean
countries
and beyond.
Many industries
of considerable
size and importance developed during this period, the most important of
which were textiles, various items of metal work, sugar, indigo, and in
certain localities, paper. The Indian textile industry is very old, but
the variety of cloth produced was originally limited. Taking advantage
of the local talent, the [[111]] Muslims introduced a number
of
fine varieties of textiles, most of which had Persian or Arabic origin.
Bengal was the main center of this industry, but Gujarat rivaled it as
a supplier of the export trade during the sultanate period.
Next in
importance were a
number of industries connected with metal work: the manufacture of
swords,
guns, and knives, as well as household needs such as trays and basins.
Manufacture of sugar was also carried on on a fairly large scale, and
in
Bengal enough was produced to leave a surplus for export after meeting
the local demand. Paper-making was a minor industry, of which little is
known except that Delhi was the center of a considerable market.
These industries
were mainly
privately owned, but the government equipped and managed large-scale
karkhanas,
or factories, for supplying its requirements. The royal factories at
Delhi
sometimes employed as many as four thousand weavers for silk alone. The
example of the sultan of Delhi was followed by the rulers of the
regional
kingdoms, and the contribution of the state to the development of the
industry
was not a minor one.
In certain
aspects of social
life, the Hindus had virtual autonomy during the sultanate. This was in
accordance with the established axiom of Islamic law that while Muslims
are governed by the Shariat, non-Muslim zimmis are subject to
their
own laws and social organization, but it was also a product of the
Indian
situation. The Muslim rulers from the days of the Arab occupation of
Sind
accepted the right of the village and caste panchayats to settle the
affairs
of their community. This meant that the Hindu villages remained small
autonomous
republics, as they had been since ancient times, and in commerce and
industry
the Hindu guilds were supreme. This position continued throughout the
Muslim
rule, but during the sultanate, when the provincial administration had
not been properly organized, Hindu autonomy outside the principal towns
was particularly effective.
It is often
forgotten—and
Muslim court chroniclers were not anxious to mention it—that a large
number
of independent or quasi-independent Hindu chiefs remained after the
establishment
of the sultanate. Some of them were rajas, or kings; others were only
petty
chieftains, controlling a few villages. Many of them belonged to old [[112]]
families, but new principalities grew up even after the establishment
of
Muslim power at Delhi. Rajputs often found new kingdoms for themselves
in remote, easily defended areas in Rajputana and the Himalayas. From
such
movements during the sultanate come also some of the large landed
estates
still held by Rajputs in Oudh and in Bihar. In these predominantly
Hindu
areas the old religion was fostered, and its cultural expressions kept
alive even in the periods of greatest Islamic power.
Learning, Literature, and the Arts
After the sack of
Baghdad
in 1258, Delhi was perhaps the most important cultural center in the
Muslim
East. Heir to the traditions of Ghazni and Lahore, its importance
increased
when the Mongols destroyed the cultural centers of Central and Western
Asia, and the poets, scholars and men of letters from these areas took
refuge in Muslim India. Balban, who gave high offices of the state only
to persons of good families, welcomed these distinguished refugees, and
many illustrious families of Muslim India trace their origin to this
period.
This influx bore fruit in a large number of works, many of which are
lost,
but the contemporary historians attest to their worth. During the reign
(1296–1316) of Ala-ud-din Khalji the general prosperity engendered by
his
conquests enabled the nobles, and not just the sultan, to become
literary
patrons. This probably explains why Barani could devote fourteen pages
to an account of the scholars, poets, preachers, philosophers,
physicians,
astronomers, and historians who thronged Delhi in the days of
Ala-ud-din
Khalji. If the surviving poetry of Khusrau, the historical works of
Barani,
and the table talk of Hazrat Nizam-ud-din Auliya are any indication of
the cultural vitality and richness of the age, one can well understand
why Amir Khusrau and others felt that Delhi was the metropolis of the
Muslim
East.
Yet despite the
cultural
eminence of the capital, it cannot be claimed that the sultanate is a
period
marked by that solid scholarship and study of sciences which
distinguished
Baghdad and Cordova. The reason is obvious. Learned and gifted men had
come to India, but [[113]] without their libraries. Those who
were
escaping with their lives could not be expected to carry heavy loads of
books over long distances. We get a glimpse of this in the case of
Fakhr-i-Mudabbir,
who fled from Ghazni without even his family papers, and had to wait
for
an opportunity to go back to reclaim them. The result was that only
those
cultural activities gained prominence which, like poetry,
belles-lettres,
local history, architecture, and music, were not dependent on
accumulated
stores of knowledge.
Probably for the
same reason—the
lack of libraries—great educational institutions of the kind found in
Baghdad
and Cairo did not develop in India. There were, however, schools and
colleges
in Delhi and all the important provincial capitals.
In Muslim
society, teaching
and the promotion of educational enterprises are regarded as necessary
marks of religious vocation, and the Muslim state is expected to
facilitate
this by providing teachers with ample means of subsistence. This was
the
procedure generally adopted during Muslim rule in India, and the
official
in charge of religious endowments, the sadr-i-jahan, arranged
for
the grant of tax-free lands to imams, qazis, and other religious groups
who provided education, particularly in Islamic subjects. This
education
was usually on the elementary level, but the system also provided for
the
maintenance of scholars who had specialized in different branches of
learning.
We find even nobles and distinguished men of affairs teaching subjects
in which they had become proficient. Hazrat Nizam-ud-din Auliya, for
example,
studied under Shams-ul-Mulk, who became the wazir of Balban. The
children
of nobles were taught at their own residences by private tutors, whose
guidance was often available for other students also.
For advanced
students madrasas,
or colleges, were set up by pious and public-spirited rulers, and this
activity received special attention during the early period. Two major
madrasas called Muizziya and Nasiriya were established during the
beginning
of Muslim rule at Delhi. Details about these madrasas are lacking, but
probably one of them was the college built by Iltutmish and repaired a
century later by Firuz Tughluq. Similar steps to establish educational
institutions were taken by Muslim rulers in the distant provinces, and
we read [[114]] of Muhammad Bakhtiyar Khalji setting up
madrasas
at Devkot and other places in Bengal. Firuz Tughluq was unusual in that
he looked after the institutions established by his predecessors;
probably
most of these establishments fell into decay when the original founders
passed away, and the grants made for the madrasas were diverted to
other
purposes.
Historians give
little information
about the staff or the curriculum of madrasas, but some details are
available
for one founded by Firuz Tughluq near Hauz-i-Alai in Delhi. Barani has
given a lengthy account of the beautiful building and gardens which
provided
a center around which people built their houses. Both Barani and
Mutahar,
a well-known poet, praise the comprehensive knowledge of Maulana
Jala-ud-din
Rumi, the head of the institution. The main subjects taught seem to
have
been religious—tafsir (interpretation of the Quran), hadith
(tradition), and fiqh (jurisprudence).
The intellectual
activity
of the schools owed much to the refugee scholars from Central Asia,
Persia,
and Iraq who came to Delhi in the thirteenth century. After this influx
had ceased and the Mongols had established their rule in the
northwestern
borderland, communication between Central Asia and northern India
became
difficult. It appears that in the Deccan, where contact was maintained
with Iran by the sea route, intellectual activity during the later
centuries
encompassed a wider range than was the position in the north. In
northern
India, apart from religious subjects, literature, history, mysticism,
and
ethics were the principal subjects studied. In the Deccan, scientific
subjects
also received attention. The great Bahmani king, Firuz (1397–1422), for
example, encouraged botany, geometry, and logic. He was interested also
in astronomy, and in 1407 started work on an observatory near
Daulatabad.
The untimely death of Hakim Hashim Gilani, the astronomer who was to
supervise
the observatory, put an end to the project. When Sayyid Gisu Daraz, who
has left a large number of books on mysticism and who was famous for
his
knowledge of religious subjects, reached the Deccan, Firuz went to meet
him. The historian Firishta records that the sultan found the saint
lacking
in solid scholarship, and made no secret of his disappointment. The
fact
that Firuz was not alone in intellectual pursuits is evident from the [[115]]
account of a prince who used to teach students mathematics
(including
Euclid), theology, and rhetoric./3/
Promotion of learning in the Deccan was largely the work of Persian
statesmen
and scholars whom the rulers had attracted from Iran, and an
interesting
monument to the age is the ruined college of the Bahmani minister,
Mahmud
Gawan, in Bidar. It was a magnificent building, as can be seen from its
beautiful minarets and facade, but it was badly damaged during the wars
of the Deccan kings with Aurangzeb.
The one
scientific subject
that received considerable attention in the schools was medicine. The
earliest
work on medicine, of which an imperfect manuscript copy has survived,
was
written about 1329 in the reign of Muhammad bin Tughluq. Its author,
Zia
Muhammad, went to the Deccan under the orders of the sultan. His book,
Majmua-i-ziai,
based on Arabic and Indian sources, gives local counterparts for
Arabian
medicines as well as the prescriptions of Hindu physicians. Following
this
work, other writers combined Greek and Indian works. The history of
Indo-Islamic
medicine has not yet been carefully studied, but it is reasonably
certain
that in the books written in India during the sultanate one sees the
blending
of the three streams of Greek, Arabic, and Hindu medical knowledge. The
most famous of these works is the Tibb-i-Sikandari, written by
the
court physician Mian Bhuwa about 1512. It draws freely on the classical
Sanskrit writers, and it long remained a standard textbook for
followers
of the indigenous medical systems.
Of the purely
literary works
of the early period, very few have survived. This is especially true of
poetry, for barring the works of major poets like Amir Khusrau and
Hasan,
only those poems have been preserved which, because of their topical
nature,
were included in general histories. Examples are the poems of Sangreza
on the arrival of Iltutmish's patent of sovereignty from the Abbasid
caliphate
and his verses on the accession of Iltutmish's son or Ruhani's poem on
Iltutmish's conquest of Ranthambhor. While these poems have the usual
limitations
of occasional poetry, they indicate high poetic skill.
The early men of
letters
represented a trans-Indus tradition. Most [[116]] of them had
received
their education beyond the border, and although they had settled down
in
Islamic India, an indigenous literary tradition was slow in developing.
The two most important representatives of the early tradition were
Muhammad
Aufi and Muhammad bin Mansur Qureshi, generally known as
Fakhr-i-Mudabbir.
Aufi (c.1172–1242), a native of Bukhara who lived in Lahore and Delhi,
was the author of the earliest extant collection of biographies of
Persian
poets,
Lubabul-Albab. He also completed the voluminous
encyclopedia
of anecdotes, Jawami-al-Hikayat, which, apart from its literary
interest, is a mine of curious and interesting information relating to
this and earlier periods. The major work of Fakhr-i-Mudabbir, who lived
in Lahore at the beginning of the thirteenth century, was a study of
statecraft;
this has already been discussed in Chapter VII.
The first Persian
poet of
eminence who was born in India was Reza, or, as he was sometimes known,
Sangreza. He was Iltutmish's secretary. The most distinguished writer
of
the early sultanate, however, was Amir Khusrau (c.1253–1325). His
father,
a junior Turkish officer under Iltutmish, had married a daughter of
Rawat-i-Arz,
Balban's famous minister. Khusrau showed literary promise at an early
age,
and, after spending some time at the provincial court of Oudh, became
attached
at first to Prince Bughra Khan, the governor of Samana and later of
Bengal,
and subsequently to Prince Muhammad, the heir-designate of Balban, who
maintained a magnificent court at Multan. The prince lost his life in a
skirmish with the Mongols in 1285, and the poet went to Delhi. Balban's
successor, Kaiqubad, was Khusrau's first royal patron. In all, seven
rulers
were to be his patrons, but it is doubtful whether he was greatly
concerned
by the kaleidoscopic changes of royalty.
Apart from
lyrics, Khusrau
wrote poems relating to contemporary events. Qiran-us-Saadain,
completed
in 1289, gives an account of the historic meeting of Bughra Khan and
Kaiqubad
on the banks of the river Sarju, and contains an interesting
description
of the Delhi of those days. Miftah-ul-Futuh (1291) is a
versified
account of the exploits of Jalal-ud-din Firuz Khalji; in Ashiqa
(1315) is an account of the romance of the Gujarati princess Deval Devi
and Prince Khizr Khan, son of Ala-ud-din Khalji. The latter's conquests
are the subject [[117]] matter of Khazain-ul-Futuh
(1311),
an ornate prose work, while Nuh Sipihr, completed in 1318,
celebrates
the reign of Qutb-ud-din Mubarik Shah. In this book Amir Khusrau
challenged
the poets of Iran and sang of his native land, its hoary past, its love
of learning, its flowers, and its fair, intelligent people. Tughlaq
Nama describes the successful expedition of Ghiyas-ud-din Tughluq
against
the usurper Khusrau Khan. Khusrau was also among the earliest writers
of
Hindi poetry, and though the origins of the Hindi poems attributed to
him
are doubtful, he referred to his Hindi verses in the introduction to
one
of his Persian diwans. He also played a major role in the development
of
Indian music, as noted below.
The work of Hasan
(c.1252–1337),
a friend of Khusrau, was praised by Jami, the great Persian poet, a
rare
distinction for an Indian writer. He wrote prose as well as verse, and
his Fawaid-ul-Fuad, a record of the table-talk of his spiritual
guide, Nizam-ud-din Auliya, is a literary classic. Equally interesting,
though not so well known, was Ziya Nakhshabi (d.1350), who was a master
of simple and eloquent prose. His Tuti Nama (The Book of the
Parrot)
was based on a Sanskrit original. It has been translated into Turkish,
German, English, and many Indian languages. His other translations
include
the Kok Shastra, a Sanskrit text on erotics.
While there were
many distinguished
names in poetry, perhaps the most important literary contribution
during
the sultanate was in the field of history. Since classical Hindu
culture
produced almost no historical literature, the Muslim works are of
special
significance for Indian historiography. Written by contemporaries who
had
taken part in the events they describe, these histories are of enormous
value for an understanding of the period. They are marred, however, by
certain defects which their very excellence tends to conceal. One is
that
many of the chronicles were written specifically for certain rulers and
nobles whom the historians glorified at the expense of rivals; another
is the tendency to picture the conquerors as actuated by unselfish and
religious motives. These peculiarities of method can generally be
discounted,
however, and the historians do not seem to have falsified historical
facts
even when they were writing panegyrics.
The number of
historical
works of the sultanate period which have [[118]] reached us is
not
large, but the works possess rich variety. The historians of the
period,
many of whom have already been mentioned, include Barani,
Fakhr-i-Mudabbir,
Hasan Nizami, Minhaj-us-Siraj, Aufi, Khusrau, Yahya, and Isami. Most of
them occupied high official positions and wrote from personal
knowledge.
Barani is the most interesting, but he is not very particular about
dates
(normally the strong point of the Muslim historians), and this detracts
from the value of his book, Tarikh-i-Firuz Shahi. But he wrote
history
as an artist, selecting and carefully arranging his material so that
his
book, instead of being a chronicle of events, emphasized the
characteristics
of various rulers and different reigns. He does not confine himself to
the kings, but gives details about the political philosophies of
different
monarchs and leading men of the times, the literary and the religious
history,
the prices in the market, and other matters of concern to the ordinary
people. Even more interesting is the gallery of portraits which he has
brought to life by a skillful analysis of personalities and by
providing
those significant small details which most Indian historians omit.
As already noted,
the rise
of regional kingdoms in the fifteenth century played an extremely
important
role in the dissemination of Islamic culture./4/
One significant feature of this disintegration of the central
authority,
with its dependence on Persian as the official language, was the rise
of
regional languages. Hindu kings had given their patronage to Sanskrit
as
the language of religion and the classics; Muslim rulers felt no such
compulsion,
and supported the common languages of the people. It was Muslim rulers,
therefore, who were responsible for many of the first translations of
the
Sanskrit classics into the provincial languages. The Muslim rulers of
Bengal
engaged scholars to translate the Ramayana and the Mahabharata into
Bengali.
Maladhar Vasu translated the Bhagavata Purana into Bengali under the
patronage
of Sultan Husain Shah (r. 1493–1518), and Chuti Khan, governor of
Chittagong,
employed Srikara Nadi to translate parts of the Asvamedha Parva of the
Mahabharata into Bengali. In Kashmir, Hindu literature and philosophy
were
studied enthusiastically at the court of Zain-ul-Abidin (1420–1470). Rajatarangini,
one of [[119]] the few histories written in Sanskrit, was
translated
into Persian, with a supplement to bring the account up to date. Other
works on music and mathematics were composed by Hindu scholars at the
Kashmir
court. In the south the Muslim rulers of Golkunda and Bijapur employed
Hindus as ministers, and maintained the state records in the Marathi
language.
Cultural histories of the various provincial governments are yet to be
written, but a similar process was at work at all places.
Among the
nonliterary arts,
music, rather than painting or sculpture, underwent important
developments
during the period of the sultanate. As already noted, Indian music had
made an impact on the Arab systems as early as the conquest of Sind,
and
the interchange between the two forms was even more fruitful when the
rich
heritage of Persia and Central Asia was added. The result was the
creation
in North India of a new type of music, quite different from traditional
Indian music which maintained its hold in South India.
Credit for this
important
work of synthesis is given to the poet Amir Khusrau, whose fame helped
to give prestige to the new music, which had as its rival in the Delhi
court the musical modes favored by the Turkish rulers. The interest of
the Chishti Sufis in "Hindustani" music and its practical cultivation
by
them further ensured its popularity. The next stage was reached during
the establishment of the independent Muslim kingdom at Jaunpur, not far
from Benares, and Kanauj, the old centers of Hindu arts. Here music
received
special attention, both at the royal court and in the Sufi monasteries.
The two most important Indian Muslim musicians of the day were Sultan
Husain
Sharqi, the last king of Jaunpur, and the contemporary saint, Pir
Bodhan
of Barnawa. The saint's dwelling became a rendezvous for musicians from
Delhi, the Deccan, and Jaunpur. The contribution of Sultan Husain to
the
development of Indian music was much more specific. He is regarded as
the
original founder of the khiyal (or romantic) school of music, which
slowly
matured and took its final shape in the days of the later Mughals,
particularly
under Muhammad Shah. Related to a Hindu devotional form that dealt with
the love of Krishna for the milkmaids, the khiyal transformed the
devotional
theme to thinly veiled invocations of human love and romance.
[[120]] Another
regional
kingdom where music was highly cultivated after the breakdown of the
sultanate
was Gwalior. Here the ruler, Raja Man Singh (r.1486–1516), was a Hindu,
but the chief musician at his court, Nayak Mahmud, was a Muslim. Under
his leadership a band of musicians systematized Indian music in the
light
of the changes it had undergone since the advent of the Muslims. This
resulted
in the compilation of Man Kautuhal, which contains almost all
the
airs introduced by the Muslim musicians./5/
Probably the
greatest artistic
achievement of the sultanate was neither literature nor music, but
architecture.
As with the musicians, the creativity of the Muslim architects was
nourished
by the mature styles of both the existing Islamic and Hindu traditions.
The Muslims brought to India the experience gained in the great
buildings
of Cairo, Baghdad, Cordova, and Damascus, and they were able to draw
upon
the skill of Indian stonemasons. The result was a profusion of mosques,
palaces, and tombs unmatched in any other Islamic country.
In the same year
in which
Delhi was occupied, the foundation of the mosque of Quwwat-ul-Islam was
laid by Qutb-ud-din Aibak to commemorate the capture of Delhi and, as
the
name implies, to glorify the power of Islam. Aibak however spent most
of
his brief reign at Lahore, and adornment of the new Muslim capital was
essentially the work of his successor, Iltutmish. He more than doubled
the size of the Quwwat-ul-Islam mosque, built the Qutb Minar, one of
the
world's loveliest towers, erected the buildings for Nasiriya Madrasa,
and,
to meet the needs of the growing population of Delhi for water,
excavated
the great water reservoir, the Hauz-i-Shamsi. He also changed
architectural
methods. Previously material from Hindu buildings had been used for
constructing
mosques, but in 1230, when he extended the Quwwat-ul-Islam mosque, he
used
stone especially quarried for the purpose. This gave the addition a
more
Islamic appearance.
In architecture,
as in other
spheres of culture, the Indo-Islamic society was enriched by the
dislocation
in Central Asia and Persia caused by the Mongol invasion. Not only
scholars
but artisans as well came to Delhi as refugees, and they found a ready
market for their [[121]] skills in the expanding Muslim state.
One
important result was that the indigenous Indian artistic element ceased
to be dominant in Delhi during this period. By the time of Ala-ud-din
Khalji,
Muslim traditions had become firmly established on Indian soil, with
the
result that methods of construction were revolutionized and ornament
became
an integral part of the scheme, rather than a quasi-independent
accessory,
as was the case in the earlier buildings. The Jama'at Khana mosque,
constructed
in the reign of Ala-ud-din, is the earliest surviving example in India
of a mosque built wholly in accordance with Muslim ideas.
In the provincial
capitals,
however, the influence of the refugee artisans was slight, and the
indigenous
styles remained important. In Bengal the Muslim rulers decorated their
buildings with carving which is obviously the work of Hindu craftsmen,
and in Gujarat they adapted the local style to Muslim needs to create
some
of India's most beautiful buildings. Yet even where most was owed to
native
Indian skills and tradition, the peculiar Muslim architectural
characteristics
of spaciousness and graceful forms are present. Furthermore, the
Muslims
made full use of concrete and mortar, which were known but scarcely
used
before their arrival in India. "Thanks to the strength of their binding
properties, it was possible for the Muslim rulers to span wide spaces
with
their arches, to roof immense areas with their domes, and in other ways
to achieve effects of grandeur such as the Indians had never dreamt of."/6/
The Tughluqs in
the fourteenth
century introduced a new and austere phase in architecture. Muhammad
Tughluq,
who shifted his capital from Delhi to Daulatabad, had no interest in
the
old city. The many buildings erected in Delhi during the reign of his
successor
Firuz show a severe simplicity, possibly due as much to the need for
economy
as Firuz's own strict orthodoxy. Hindu influences were reduced to the
minimum,
and Tughluq buildings are lacking in elegance and refinement. Under the
Lodis there reemerged a vigorous and catholic spirit of design, replete
with creative energy and imagination. [[122]] The explanation
is
probably that with the conversion of the Mongols to Islam and the
reduction
of chaos in Central Asia, inspiration from Persia was now available in
architecture as in literature. The Lodis were soon replaced by the
Mughals,
under whom Persian influences became even more dominant.
N O T E S
/1/ Ziya-ud-din
Barani,
Tarikh-i-Firuz
Shahi, edited by S. A. Khan (Calcutta, 1862), pp. 210. For a
general
discussion of social life, see K. M. Asraf, Life and Condition of
the
People of Hindustan (Delhi, 1959).
/2/ I. H. Qureshi, The
Administration of the Sultanate of Delhi (Karachi, 1958), p. 226.
/3/ N. N. Law, Promotion
of Learning in India during Muhammadan Rule (London, 1916), p. 181,
n. 1.
/4/ See p. 79, in *Chapter
VI*.
/5/ S. A. Halim, Journal
of the Asiatic Society of Pakistan, vol. I (1956).
/6/ Sir John
Marshall,
Cambridge
History of India (Cambridge, 1928), III, 573.