Islam was
propagated by the Prophet Muhammad during the early seventh
century in the deserts of Arabia. Less than a century after
its inception, Islam's presence was felt throughout the
Middle East, North Africa, Spain, Iran, and Central Asia.
Arab military forces conquered the Indus Delta region in
Sindh in 711 and established an Indo-Muslim state there.
Sindh became an Islamic outpost where Arabs established
trade links with the Middle East and were later joined by
teachers or sufis (see Glossary), but Arab influence was
hardly felt in the rest of South Asia (see Islam, ch. 3). By
the end of the tenth century, dramatic changes took place
when the Central Asian Turkic tribes accepted both the
message and mission of Islam. These warlike people first
began to move into Afghanistan and Iran and later into India
through the northwest. Mahmud of Ghazni (971-1030), who was
also known as the "Sword of Islam," mounted seventeen
plundering expeditions between 997 and 1027 into North
India, annexing Punjab as his eastern province. The
invaders' effective use of the crossbow while at a gallop
gave them a decisive advantage over their Indian opponents,
the Rajputs. Mahmud's conquest of Punjab foretold ominous
consequences for the rest of India, but the Rajputs appear
to have been both unprepared and unwilling to change their
military tactics, which ultimately collapsed in the face of
the swift and punitive cavalry of the Afghans and Turkic
peoples. In the thirteenth
century, Shams-ud-Din Iletmish (or Iltutmish; r. 1211-36), a
former slave-warrior, established a Turkic kingdom in Delhi,
which enabled future sultans to push in every direction;
within the next 100 years, the Delhi Sultanate extended its
sway east to Bengal and south to the Deccan, while the
sultanate itself experienced repeated threats from the
northwest and internal revolts from displeased,
independent-minded nobles. The sultanate was in constant
flux as five dynasties rose and fell: Mamluk or Slave
(1206-90), Khalji (1290-1320), Tughluq (1320-1413), Sayyid
(1414-51), and Lodi (1451-1526). The Khalji Dynasty under
Ala-ud-Din (r. 1296-1315) succeeded in bringing most of
South India under its control for a time, although conquered
areas broke away quickly. Power in Delhi was often gained by
violence--nineteen of the thirty-five sultans were
assassinated--and was legitimized by reward for tribal
loyalty. Factional rivalries and court intrigues were as
numerous as they were treacherous; territories controlled by
the sultan expanded and shrank depending on his personality
and fortunes. Both the Quran
and sharia (Islamic law) provided the basis for enforcing
Islamic administration over the independent Hindu rulers,
but the sultanate made only fitful progress in the
beginning, when many campaigns were undertaken for plunder
and temporary reduction of fortresses. The effective rule of
a sultan depended largely on his ability to control the
strategic places that dominated the military highways and
trade routes, extract the annual land tax, and maintain
personal authority over military and provincial governors.
Sultan Ala-ud-Din made an attempt to reassess, systematize,
and unify land revenues and urban taxes and to institute a
highly centralized system of administration over his realm,
but his efforts were abortive. Although agriculture in North
India improved as a result of new canal construction and
irrigation methods, including what came to be known as the
Persian wheel, prolonged political instability and parasitic
methods of tax collection brutalized the peasantry. Yet
trade and a market economy, encouraged by the free-spending
habits of the aristocracy, acquired new impetus both inland
and overseas. Experts in metalwork, stonework, and textile
manufacture responded to the new patronage with
enthusiasm.
Library of Congress Country StudyThe Coming of
Islam
Library of Congress Country Study
This document is in the public domain. You may copy, download, print and distribute this work as you see fit.Every effort has been made to present this text accurately and cleanly, but no guarantees are made against errors. Neither Melissa Snell nor About.com may be held liable for any problems you experience with the text version or with any electronic form of the document.
