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Enjoying the privilege of a
being a capital of diverse dynasties, Delhi, has evolved as a museum
showcasing the royalty of the ruling elite's and their monumental
heritage.
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India -
Delhi - Bahadur Shah
Bahadur Shah
¤ Bahadur Shah Reign lasted For A Very Small Tenure
Aurangzebs son Bahadur Shah, who is commonly neglected because
his reign lasted just five years, completes the gallery of the great
Mughals. He was an old man of 63 when he came to power but his
achievements in those five years would have done credit to most men in
their prime. He made settlements with the implacable Marathas,
tranquilized the Rajputs, decisively defeated the Sikhs in the Punjab,
and took their last Guru into his service. He was travelling
throughout his reign and only came to rest in Lahore in the last few
months of his life.

¤ The Decline of Mughal Dynasty
From there on, the Mughal dynasty began to crumble at an amazing
speed. Many historians blame Aurangzeb and his destructive policies
for eroding the common mans faith in the dynasty. However this
is by far an overstatement. Whatever the policies of Aurangzeb, he was
very much the emperor till his dying day in 1707. Though his policies
did lead to resentment; the blame for the decline of the Mughals must
definitely be shared.
If one agrees with the theory that after every golden period a
decline must inevitably follow, then the disintegration of the Mughal
Empire becomes easy to explain. The golden period of the Mughals is
said to be the reign of Shah Jahan. By the end of his reign, the signs
of rot setting in were clear for all to see. Aurangzeb is best
remembered as a zealot who broke temples, but a closer look reveals
that he was no different from his father, Shah Jahan, a bigot who
followed an active anti-Hindu policy. However we look at the Taj Mahal
and forgive Shah Jahan everything. Shah Jahan, who had the most
peaceful reign of all, bought trouble for himself by needlessly
starting an expensive Balkh campaign to win back Samarkand. and if he
had been firmer with Dara Shikoh, the much-hyped battle of succession
would have ended right there. But Dara was his weakness and Shah Jahan
let him rule the roost leading to disastrous consequences. So the
first part of the blame falls squarely in Shah Jahans shoulders.
The golden rays which seemed to be fading at the end of Shah Jahans
rule were brightened to a large extent by Aurangzeb in his initial
years. But the Deccan wringed Aurangzeb the man, the king, the father
and the believer of all softer emotions and decorum. He simply lost
his sense of balance. He alienated a sizeable portion of his subjects,
allies and employees and made unnecessary enemies which cost his
successors dearly. During his lifetime, he tried to put down
rebellions all over his empire (the Marathas, the Sikhs, the Satnamis
and the Rajputs) with one hand while trying to take Deccan by the
other. However it was like trying to put out wild fire. Ultimately it
was these alternative power blocks that sped up the fall of the
Mughals. Not to mention the foreign powers who were already among
those present: the British stretching their legs in Calcutta, the
Portuguese in Goa and the French testing waters in the South.
of course it did not help matters that the successors of the great
Mughals were weak and unworthy of their forefathers. But that was
bound to happen some or the other time wasnt it? So, from the
late-18th century the field was wide open for any new power that
wanted to try to set up shop in India.
¤ British Take Over The Mughal Reign
A confused state of affairs reigned supreme till the British finally
took control. It is hardly surprising that the more insular Brits
thought it was the White Mans burden to set the house in order
for the natives who seemed to be their own worst enemies. Clearly it
was the twilight zone, when dynasties just linger on for want of
something or someone better. But there was yet time, and many
invasions, before the British emerged as a power to reckon with in
Delhi.
The first of these was led by the famous Persian king Nadir Shah in
1739. At this time the court in Delhi
was busy fighting the Marathas and one of their best generals,
Nizam-ul-Mulk, was in war against them. Nizam met Nadir when the
latter arrived near Delhi and succeeded in changing his mind about
sacking Delhi by offering him a booty of 50,00,000 rupees. However
here again court politics had the upper hand - one of Nizams
rival generals convinced Nadir he was settling for too little and that
the fabulous riches of Delhi were to be seen to be believed. Naturally
Nadir marched over to Delhi in time to have a khutba read in his name.
Unfortunately, around this time a rumour began doing the rounds that
Nadir was dead, which was not only celebrated by the inhabitants of
Delhi, but also made them bold enough to actually attack a few Persian
soldiers. The result? On March 11, 1739, on an order from Nadir Shah
his soldiers plundered Delhi and massacred its citizens. The areas of
Chandni Chowk, the fruit market, the Dariba bazaar and the buildings
around Jama Masjid were burnt to cinders. Each and every inhabitant of
the area was killed to make an example. The people of Delhi will still
point at the Khooni Darwaza (Bloody Gate) in the old city and tell you
about the massacre that took place as if it were just yesterday. The
royal treasury was sacked and its contents seized. When Nadir Shah
left Delhi after 57 days, he also took along the fabulous Peacock
Throne of the Mughals and the Koh-i-noor with him. Along with them
went the last vestiges of Mughal pride and splendour.
Moved to much sorrow and tears, Mir Taqi Mir, a famous contemporary
Urdu poet wrote about what was left of Delhi:
Once through this ruined city did I pass
I espied a lonely bird on a bough and asked
What knowest thou of this wilderness?
It replied: I can sum it up in two words:
Alas, Alas!
¤ Delhi Rocked by the Afghans
The next invasion that rocked Delhi was led by the Afghans, with
Ahmad Shah Abdali, an ex-general of Nadir Shah, as their commander.
Abdali led as many as seven invasions into India between 1748-1767.
After the drubbing that Delhi got by Nadir Shah the Mughals seemed to
have just given up. Abdali was all over the place ransacking Lahore,
Punjab and so on, but it seemed like the Delhi court couldnt
care less. It was left to the Marathas to face the Abdali challenge
but they lost. In January 1757, Abdali captured Delhi. After pillaging
Delhi the Afghans marched on to overrun most of Northern India. It is
said that following the ransacking of the cities of Mathura, Brindaban
and Gokul, for seven days the waters of the Jamuna flowed of a
blood-red colour.
An
outbreak of Cholera in the army forced Adbali to withdraw; but not
before he had made the Delhi court cough up around 1,20,000,000 rupees
(that the Delhi court could still raise such a phenomenal amount
post-Nadir Shah speaks for the unbelievable riches that the Mughals
had accumulated). Apart from the money, Abdali also demanded and got
Kashmir, Lahore, Sirhind and Multan. It was only on his sixth invasion
of India that the Sikhs challenged him in 1764. Later in 1767, they
even managed to inflict defeat on him and took Lahore and Central
Punjab. However the areas from Peshawar up remained with Abdali. The
Urdu poet Mir taqi Mir was witness to the unfortunate and barbaric
invasions of Abdali too. He laments:
There once was fair city,
Among cities of the world the first in fame;
It hath been ruined and laid desolate,
To that city I belong, Delhi is its name.
¤ British Got Exhausted India
The India that the British took over was an India exhausted with war
and battle; an India badly in need of, and indeed glad of, someone who
could take charge. She had gone a round circle in the cycle of
history. It was great leap too from the cultured, sophisticated
and erudite civilization under the Mughals to the power hungry and
superstitious dark ages of the late 18th and 19th
century. The status of women in society fell like never before: Sati,
huge weddings which were a drain on the brides family,
oppression in the form of a rigid caste system (even with the Muslims)
and so on which were never a part of Indian culture became
so now.
No, we were not putting on out best faces for the firangis
(colloquial; foreigners).
Most of the action of the British rise to power in India happened
offstage, as it were, as far as Delhi was concerned.
Delhi comes into the
picture as late as in 1911 when the famed Delhi Durbar was held and
the shift of the capital to Delhi was announced. This was when Sir
Edward Lutyens and Sir Herbert Baker were roped in as architects of
the famed New Delhi, also called Lutyens Delhi, the ninth city
of Delhi.
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