The
sultans' failure to hold securely the Deccan and South India
resulted in the rise of competing southern dynasties: the
Muslim Bahmani Sultanate (1347-1527) and the Hindu
Vijayanagar Empire (1336-1565). Zafar Khan, a former
provincial governor under the Tughluqs, revolted against his
Turkic overlord and proclaimed himself sultan, taking the
title Ala-ud-Din Bahman Shah in 1347. The Bahmani Sultanate,
located in the northern Deccan, lasted for almost two
centuries, until it fragmented into five smaller states in
1527. The Bahmani Sultanate adopted the patterns established
by the Delhi overlords in tax collection and administration,
but its downfall was caused in large measure by the
competition and hatred between deccani (domiciled
Muslim immigrants and local converts) and paradesi
(foreigners or officials in temporary service). The Bahmani
Sultanate initiated a process of cultural synthesis visible
in Hyderabad, where cultural flowering is still expressed in
vigorous schools of deccani architecture and
painting. Founded
in 1336, the empire of Vijayanagar (named for its capital
Vijayanagar, "City of Victory," in present-day Karnataka)
expanded rapidly toward Madurai in the south and Goa in the
west and exerted intermittent control over the east coast
and the extreme southwest. Vijayanagar rulers closely
followed Chola precedents, especially in collecting
agricultural and trade revenues, in giving encouragement to
commercial guilds, and in honoring temples with lavish
endowments. Added revenue needed for waging war against the
Bahmani sultans was raised by introducing a set of taxes on
commercial enterprises, professions, and industries.
Political rivalry between the Bahmani and the Vijayanagar
rulers involved control over the Krishna-Tunghabadhra river
basin, which shifted hands depending on whose military was
superior at any given time. The Vijayanagar rulers' capacity
for gaining victory over their enemies was contingent on
ensuring a constant supply of horses--initially through Arab
traders but later through the Portuguese--and maintaining
internal roads and communication networks. Merchant guilds
enjoyed a wide sphere of operation and were able to offset
the power of landlords and Brahmans in court politics.
Commerce and shipping eventually passed largely into the
hands of foreigners, and special facilities and tax
concessions were provided for them by the ruler. Arabs and
Portuguese competed for influence and control of west coast
ports, and, in 1510, Goa passed into Portuguese
possession. The city
of Vijayanagar itself contained numerous temples with rich
ornamentation, especially the gateways, and a cluster of
shrines for the deities. Most prominent among the temples
was the one dedicated to Virupaksha, a manifestation of
Shiva, the patron-deity of the Vijayanagar rulers. Temples
continued to be the nuclei of diverse cultural and
intellectual activities, but these activities were based
more on tradition than on contemporary political realities.
(However, the first Vijayanagar ruler--Harihara I--was a
Hindu who converted to Islam and then reconverted to
Hinduism for political expediency.) The temples sponsored no
intellectual exchange with Islamic theologians because
Muslims were generally assigned to an "impure" status and
were thus excluded from entering temples. When the five
rulers of what was once the Bahmani Sultanate combined their
forces and attacked Vijayanagar in 1565, the empire crumbled
at the Battle of Talikot.
Library of Congress Country StudySouthern
Dynasties
Library of Congress Country Study
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