The Mughals originated in Central Asia. Like many Central Asian armies, the Mughal army of Babur was horse-oriented. The ranks and pay of the officers were based on the horses they retained. Babur's army was small and inherited the Timurid military traditions of Central Asia. Babur did not introduce a gunpowder warfare system, because mounted archery remained the vital part of his army. Babur's empire did not last long and the Mughal Empire collapsed with the expulsion of Humayun, and the Mughal Empire founded by Akbar in 1556 proved more stable and enduring. Although the Mughals originated as a nomadic civilization, they became more sedentary as time passed.
The massive army of Mughals were known for their highly disciplined fashion, while also maintain a characteristic of multiethnicities among its personnels. They had absorbed almost all of Northern and Central South Asia. During the height of their military domination in the India region, the adversaries of the Mughal Empire rarely confronted them in frontal battles; the Maratha confederation, Ahmadnagar Sultanates,: 38 or the Rajput kingdoms were generally powerless against the Mughals who possessed provisioned cities and camps which were defended with artilleries. They usually resorted to guerilla warfare or Fabian strategy to oppose the technologically more advanced Mughal army.: 56 By the reign of Aurangzeb, the Mughal army was mainly composed of native Indian Muslims.
If luck and fortune favor me I will very shortly expel the Mughals from Hind, for the Mughals are not superior to the Afghans in battle or single combat, but the Afghans have let the Empire of Hindo slip from their hands on account of their internal dissensions. Since I have been amongst the Mughals, and know their conduct in action, I see that they have no order or discipline and that their kings from pride of birth and station do not personally superintend the government and leave all the affair and business of the state to their nobles and ministers, in whose sayings and doings they put perfect confidence. These grandees act on corrupt motives in every case whether it be of a soldier or a cultivator, or of a rebellious zamindar.
In 1535, Humayun was made aware that the Sultan of Gujarat was planning an assault on the Mughal territories in Bayana with Portuguese aid. Humayun gathered an army and marched on Bahadur.: 107 However, instead of pressing his attack, Humayun ceased the campaign and consolidated his newly conquered territory, as Sultan Bahadur escaped and took up refuge with the Portuguese. Shortly after Humayun had marched on Gujarat, Sher Shah Suri saw an opportunity to wrest control of Agra from the Mughals.: 107 Humayun, faced with the rising threat of the Afghans in the east led by Mahmud Lodi, defeated a force of them at Dadrah in 1532, and besieged Chunar in September 1532, which was under the control of Sher Shah. The siege continued for over four months to no avail. As a result, Sher Shah offered his loyalty to the Mughals on the condition that he remained in control of Chunar, also sending one of his sons as hostage. Humayun accepted and lifted the siege in December 1532, returning to Agra due to the rising threat of Bahadur Shah, the ruler of the Gujarat Sultanate. Humayun did not wish to split up his forces under the command of a noble to continue the siege, as this would split his strength.
After Sher Shah Suri's successor Islam Shah died in 1554, Humayun gathered a vast army with the help Safavid role in Humayun's army. The vast majority of the army was of the Shi'a faith, as one Shaikh Ahmad described to Humayun, "My king, I see the whole of your army are Rafizi...Everywhere the names of your soldiers are of this kind. I find they are all Yar Ali or Kashfi Ali or Haider Ali and I have, not found a single man bearing the names of the other Companions."
In 1560, Akbar resumed military operations. A Mughal army under the command of his foster brother, Adham Khan, and a Mughal commander, Pir Muhammad Khan, began the Mughal conquest of Malwa. The Afghan ruler, Baz Bahadur, was defeated at the Battle of Sarangpur and fled to Khandesh for refuge, leaving behind his harem, treasure, and war elephants. Despite initial success, Akbar was ultimately displeased with the aftermath of the campaign; his foster brother retained all of the spoils and followed through with the Central Asian practice of slaughtering the surrendered garrison, their wives and children, and many Muslim theologians and Sayyids, who were descendants of Muhammad.
In the end of 1577, as Wazír Khán's management was not successful, the post of viceroy was conferred upon Shaháb-ud-dín Áhmed Khán, the governor of Malwa. Shaháb-ud-dín's first step was to create new military posts and strengthen the old ones.
From the year of 1578, The Mughal empire engaged in prolonged conflict against local Bengal warlord named Isa Khan, which lasted until 1597. Isa Khan was previously an ally of Mughal enemy, the Karrani dynasty, which helped Isa Khan in his expedition to Chittagong against Udai Manikya, the Maharaja of Tripura.
In 1597, on August, The Mughal engaged Isa Khan and his ally, Masum Khan Kabuli, in the final battle of their long conflict. At first Isa faced defeat with the Mughals attacking Katrabo, one of Isa's pargana (administrative unit). However, on 5 September, Durjan Singh was killed and the Mughal forces were defeated. Both the army and navy of the Mughal-Koch Bihar alliance were either routed or captured. Sometimes after the battle, Isa Khan his submission, Akbar assigned 22 parganas administrative units under his control.
In 1657, on March, the Maratha's forces under Shivaji raided the Mughal army's barracks and made away with battle-hardened Arabian horses and plenty of loot. This was responded by Aurangzeb by sending his general Nasiri Khan to let the punitive campaign, where he manage to inflict defeat to Shivaji's forces in Ahmednagar. Later, Aurangzeb and his army advanced towards Bijapur and besieged Bidar. Aurangzeb's forces used rockets and grenades while scaling the walls. Sidi Marjan was mortally wounded when a rocket struck his large gunpowder depot, and after twenty-seven days of hard fighting, Bidar was captured by the Mughals. Thus, wealthy city of Bidar has annexed by Mughal.
Until his death in 1680 Shivaji continues defying the Mughal. and succeeded by his son, Sambhaji. Then, Aurangzeb's third son Akbar left the Mughal court along with a few Muslim Mansabdar supporters and joined Muslim rebels in the Deccan. Aurangzeb in response moved his court to Aurangabad and took over command of the Deccan campaign. The rebels were defeated and Akbar fled south to seek refuge with Sambhaji, Shivaji's successor. More battles ensued, and Akbar fled to Persia and never returned.
In February 1689, Aurangzeb's forces captured and executed the successor of Shivaji, Sambhaji, then Aurangzeb drove the Maratha forces south, and further expansion into the Deccan and southern India was achieved during his reign. Then the Maratha's successor Rajaram, later Rajaram's widow Tarabai and their Maratha forces fought individual battles against the forces of the Mughal Empire. Territory changed hands repeatedly during the years (1689–1707) of interminable warfare. As there was no central authority among the Marathas, Aurangzeb was forced to contest every inch of territory, at great cost in lives and money. Even as Aurangzeb drove west, deep into Maratha territory – notably conquering Satara – the Marathas expanded eastwards into Mughal lands – Malwa and Hyderabad. The Marathas also expanded further South into Southern India defeating the independent local rulers there capturing Jinji in Tamil Nadu. In 1690, the Mughal general Zulfiqar Khan Nusrat Jung cooperating with Madurai Nayak dynasty undergoing the Siege of Jinji in conflict against Maratha, where after 8 years, they finally conquered the fort.
Aurangzeb also subsequently facing the rebellion of the Sikh in 1701. At first, the Sikh were incited by Guru Gobind Singh to form khalsa groups of militant movements which faced rejection by local hill chiefs. Then as the Sikh Khalsas fought and defeat those hill chiefs in the Battle of Anandpur (1700), they immediately appealed to Aurangzeb for assistance from Aurangzeb, which responded by sending instructions to the Mughal officials in Punjab to take action against the Sikh. Wazir Khan, the governor of Sirhind, immediately sent his forces, where they subdued the Sikh in the second battle of Anandpur in 1703-1704. Another battle were fought in Chamkaur Sahib where two more sons of Guru Gobind were slain. Then in 1706, another military operation undergoes in Khidrana or Muktsar in effort to further suppress the rebellion, which followed with Guru Gobind move to Talwandi Sabo or Dam Dama.
Aurangzeb waged continuous war in the Deccan for more than two decades with no resolution.[page range too broad] He thus lost about a fifth of his army fighting rebellions led by the Marathas in Deccan India. He travelled a long distance to the Deccan to conquer the Marathas and eventually died of natural cause at the age of 88, while still fighting the Marathas.
Indian Historian Pradeep P. Barua also remarked that the successful takeover of Mughal rule in India by the British Raj was not stemmed from the sophisticated British empire's military organization, technology, or fighting skill. but it was rather due to the British Raj could offer political stability with their civil administrations after the decline of Mughal authority in India .: 119 Adapted to fighting pitched battles in the northern Indian plains, The Mughal as empire has their army as cavalry based society which sustain itself with huge volume of nutritious grasses supply to feed their mounts, which produced from its vast territories under their rule.
The Mughal emperors themselves maintained a small standing army, Instead the officers called mansabdars provided the bulk of the Mughal armed forces. Under Akbar, there are as many as 1,600 Mansabdars employed. While during the reign of Shah Jahan, Mansabdars were growing into 8,000 officers. Mansabdar officer worked for the government who was responsible for recruiting and maintaining his quota of horsemen, where practically most of Mughal armies were under Mansabdar officers. The rank of Mansabdars were based on the horsemen he provided, which ranged from 10(the lowest), up to 5000. A prince had the rank of 25000. Their salary pays also based on their ranks.
Furthermore, the administrative positions of the Mughal central government were mirrored at the provincial level. with Bakhshi officers charged with the management and payment of the province's military. The provincial bakhshi often simultaneously served the function of the province's waqia-navis (news writer), and reported on all provincial mansabdars, including its senior officials (such as the subahdar or diwan).The role of provincial bakhshi could face tension from the subahdar or diwan, since the bakhshi's activities kept these officials accountable to the imperial centre.
Meanwhile, personal royal army which under the direct command of the emperor were numbered around 24,000 soldiers. These emperor personal standing armies were called Ahadis, a body of cavalry trooper. Another term for the Mughal emperor personal bodyguards which associated with the Ahadis was the Walashahis(lit. belonging to the king), or imperial bodyguards, which regarded as the most trusted and faithful part of the troops, being directly in the pay of the Emperor. They also serve as cavalrymen, similar to Ahadis. They were chiefly, if not entirely, men who had been attached to the Emperor from his youth and had served him while he was only a prince and were thus marked out in a special manner as his personal attendants and household troops.
The Mughal army generally divided into four branches: the cavalry (Aswaran), the infantry (Paidgan), the artillery (Topkhana) and the navy. These were not divisions with their own commanders, instead they were branches or classes that were distributed individually amongst the Mansabdars, each of whom had some of each of these divisions. The exception to this rule was the artillery, which was a specialized corps with its own designated commander, and was not part of the mansabdari troops. The Mughals also carried on the tradition of harsh execution of mutineers by strapping them into the mouth of cannon and blowing them apart by the cannon shot. This brutal tradition was copied by the British empire military to punish their own mutineers.
The Mughal imperial camp, known as "The exalted camp" or "The victorious camp", were used for military expeditions and royal tours, also served as a mobile, "de facto" administrative capital and also imperial army headquarters, where it is manned hundreds of thousands of people and the 50,000 horses and oxen required to transport tents, baggage and equipment as its challenge. Vincent Smith further writes that the Mughal Camp was like a moving city from one place to other while Jean-Baptiste Tavernier discussing about the mode of travelling in India observed that manner of travelling in India those days is very convenient like Italy or France.
This mobile military capital were constructed by more than 2,000 personnel and labourers sent on ahead of the main imperial party. From the time of Akbar, Mughal military camps were huge in scale, accompanied by numerous personages associated with the royal court, as well as soldiers and labourers. All administration and governance was carried out within, while the Mughal Emperors spent a significant portion of their ruling period within these camps. Akbar's entourage included small camps for journeys or hunting and large camps for royal tours and military campaigns, where it could accommodate 300000 people. It is estimated the large camp were travelling in 16 km perday. however, another estimation has the camp rarely traveled more than 6 km per day and was preceded by agents, scouts and workers who prepared roads and bridges, campsites, arranged the purchase of foodstuffs and fuel and assured the cooperation of local rulers.
As army mansabdars, royal household, domestic servants and others presented a picture of a well-planned city, moving from one place to another place, traveller Niccolao Manucci who witnessed the grandeur has written that the grandeur of Mughal rulers entourage far greater than any European rulers. Abul Fazl, who writes that it would be very difficult to describe a large encampment, while he described, "Each encampment required for its carriage 100 elephants, 500 camels, 400 carts and 100 bearers. It is escorted by 500 troopers, mansabdars, Ahadis besides, there are employed a thousand Farrashes, native of Iran, Turan and Hindustan, 500 pioneers, 100 water-carriers, 50 carpenters, tent makers and torch bearers, 50 workers in leather and 150 sweepers.". While Antoni de Montserrat, who accompanied Emperor Akbar on a Kabul expedition, gives a detailed account of the magnitude of the Imperial Camp. The military marches was travelled in intervals, as the imperial army adopted the Persian traditions of gardens and large and extravagant tents. Persian texts such as Epic of Gilgamesh, the Enuma Elish, the Code of Hammurabi, Zoroastrian texts such Vendidad and Yasna, and the Book of Genesis was implied in the pavilion structure of those gardens. The pavilions like structures in different Persian type and names used in this mobile encampment, such as emarat, khaneh, qasr, moshkuy, sarai, shabistan tagh, iwan, and kakh, while on the other side, it also contain some permanent structures, and also tents with different sizes and complexities such as khaimeh, khargah, and sardagh.
The massive mobile military encampment administration of emperor Akbar, which followed by his successors, were coincided with the centralization policies which were practiced by the nomadic military style of his predecessor of Central Asian conquerors, such as the Mongols of Genghis Khan, Timur empire, and Babur With the nomadic steppe culture in mind, it is recorded this model of military administration by focusing on highly mobile imperial tourage of their soldiers and followers camps as a way to gain the prestige and loyalty. Babur himself wrote frequently about pitching his camp throughout Hindustan as he advanced. The rationale of military strategy and political necessity—surrounded by raiding nomadic empires was such of mobile technology that allowed Babur to remain elusive to his opponents. Regardless of his defeats in battle, Babur maintained control by monopolizing control of his subjects' movements, deciding which paths they would take as they maneuvered around Hindustan in their struggle for power.
Aside from such military administration semi-permanent building, the Mughal empire also erected permanent military fortresses such as Lalbagh Fort, Allahabad Fort, Red Fort, Balapur Fort, and Purana Qila. Furthermore, the Mughal empire also inherited chain of forts, or qilas, which scattered throughout the Deccan.
The theoretical potential manpower of the Mughal empire in 1647, according to Kaushik Roy from Jadavpur University, could have reached 911,400 cavalry and infantry. However, Kaushik Roy also quoted the accumulation in the imperial revenue of 12,071,876,840 dams has been calculated by Streissand who translated that the Mughal empire military could support about 342,696 cavalry and 4,039,097 infantry in total, while F. Valentijn estimated numbers higher than 4,000,000 in 1707. It further illustrated that during Shah Jahan reign, in 1647, the Mughal army composed of about 911,400 infantry and cavalry, while from 1627-58, there were 47,000 mounted musketeers, foot musketeers, gunners, and archers. Antoni de Montserrat has recorded in his work Mongolicae Legationis Commentarius that the Mughal–Afghan Wars alone, emperor Akbar could muster 50,000 cavalry, 500 war elephants and camels, along with "countless number of infantry". de Montserrat also provided information that the Mughal army under Akbar consisted of multiple ethnicities, such as Persians, Turkmen, Chagatais, Uzbeks, Pashtuns, Gujaratis, Pathans, Rajputs, and Balochis. Dirk H. A. Kolff opined this high estimate of figures were rather essentially an "inventory of military labors" available for hiring in a single operation.
Other estimation came from historian Abdul-Hamid Lahori recorded the Mughal military strength in 1647 are 200,000 stipendiary cavalry, 185,000 other cavalry, and 40,000 garrisoned musketeers and gunners. Andrew de la Garza added that these great number of infantry troopers were not simply an unorganized mobs, but rather group of units which designated with different roles and equipments and according to their respective tasks, from heavy shock infantries which acted like Roman legionnaires or Swiss pikemen, to the Shamsherbaz units which served as halberdier, mace fighters, or sword gladiator.
Under the Mughals, the most important centers of production of military equipment were Delhi and Lahore. Karkhanas or workshops in Mughal empire produced various arms, ammunition, and imperial stable-harnesses for the horses in articles of iron, copper and other metals.
Regarding the tactics and equipment of the Mughal cavalry, from the time of the rise of Babur, the cavalry troopers wore heavy chain mail armour, and also acted as cavalry archers as they were armed with composite bows or steel bows. The composite bows were made of animal horn and sinews with the length around four feet. When facing difficult situation, the Muslim Mughals cavalrymen would perform a type of fighting called Utara, the martial act of dismounting from their horses and fighting on foot until they died rather than retreat. Mughal armour was not as heavy as contemporary European armour, due to the heat climate of the region, but was heavier than the south Indian outfits.
One of the most phenomenal aspect, yet somewhat unusual for its era, of Mughal military was their mastery logistical system, which according to historians such as Stephen Rosen was comparable with the ancient Rome army or modern time US Army in term of military brute force. While Historian Jeremy Black compared logistical superiority of the Mughals with the British army of Victorian era.
To maintain the constant supply of their massive cavalry forces, the empire employed logistical system to ensure the well transportation of fodder. Another key component of the Mughal logistical system was their revenue assets to finance the Overhead costs to employ the camp followers such as accountants, bankers, and merchants who accompanying the massive expedition and covering the logistical needs for months and even years. This is due to necessity of remittance from hundred of Mughal nobles to supply their needs. To facilitate such heavy logistical task of maintain the huge needs to ensure the camp sustain its inhabitants, the Mughal established an exchange bill credit institution to bridge the noble's military camps with the local Indian markets. Gommans also noted due to the nature of already wealth of Mughal empire, they did not consider it was necessary to always moving their encampment site, in comparison with the contemporary European kingdoms.
The ground army logistic department also proven pivotal in supporting the naval fleets, as the land army logistical units clearing the jungles on the coastal area, building roads and canals, allowing the navy units to advances such as during the Mughal naval operations in Assam by Mir Jumla and Chittagong by Shaishta Khan. On the other hand, the role of the riverines and waterways in India peninsula proved crucial for the empire to transport their heavy artillery weaponries.
From the time of Babur, cavalry archery has become a staple of the Mughal army. By the time of emperor Jahangir, it was recorded the Mughal empire has maintained in total of 342,696 cavalry troopers. The Mughal army performances depended heavily with their animal's performances such as war elephants, warhorses, and bulls to transport their artillery.
André Wink opined that the cavalry warfare came to replace the logistically difficult elephant warfare and chaotic mass infantry tactics. Rajputs were co-opted by converting them into cavalry despite their traditions of fighting on foot. This was similar to the Marathas' service to the Deccan Sultanates. The officer also had to maintain his quota of horses, elephants and cots for transportation, as well as foot soldiers and artillery. Soldiers were given the option to be paid either in monthly/annual payments or jagir, but many chose jagir. The emperor also allocated jagir to mansabdars for maintenance of the mansabs.
The key to Mughal power in India was its use of warhorses and also its control of the supply of superior warhorses from Central Asia. Modern middle east and Islamic culture historian Annemarie Schimmel estimated around 75 percent of Mughal army's warhorses were imported origin. This indication also supported by the Mughal victories in the Battle of Panipat, the Battle of Machhiwara, Battle of Dharmatpur, and in eyewitness accounts such as Father Monserrate, which primarily featured the use of traditional Turko-Mongol horse archer tactics rather than gunpowder. The cavalrymen of Mughal were usually hailed high-class caste and were better paid than foot soldiers and artillerymen, and had to possess at least two of their own horses and good equipment. The regular horseman was called a Sowar.
The difference between Mughal heavy cavalry charge with their counterpart in European Man-at-arms knights was the ability of the Mughal cavalryman to comfortably sat in relaxed fashion on their saddles during the top speed of their horse charge. Historian Jos Gommans recorded how the Mughals mocked the "European style" of cavalry charge. The regular cavalry troopers were directly recruited by the Mughal emperor himself, mainly from the emperor's own blood relatives and tribesmen. They had their own pay roll and pay master, and were better paid than normal horsemen sowars.
The horse cavalry and musketeers recruited by mansabdars were required to meet the standard of quality set by the emperor. The cavalry troopers in particular was riding the strong breeds of Tartary (central Asian) or Persian steeds which generally have larger body than most horses commonly found in India during that time. The quality control regarding the imperial standart used Dagh (imperial mark) which branded on the side of the horse. The cavalry troops of the Mughals also required to possess extra mounts as spare Well-bred horses were either imported from Arabia, Iran or Central Asia, or bred in Sindh, Rajasthan and parts of Punjab. Emperors at times also issued firman or imperial mandates on regular intervals addressing officials like mansabdars, kotwals, zamindars and mutasaddis for the remission of taxes for promoting the horse trade.[predatory publisher] Meanwhile, the emperor and the high-ranking commanders using Arabian horses for their high quality. The Marathan lords of Thanjavur regularly sent tributes to the empire by sending Persian and Arabian horses.
Aside from the high quality purebreed Arabian, Iraq, Khurasan, and Central Asia steeds, the Mughal also bred lower quality warhorses. The systematic classification of horse quality in Mughal empire was started in 1595, it is generally divided into several classes such as:
Tactically speaking, the Mughals characterized by their frontal-combat oriented, and shock-charge tactics of the heavy cavalry armed with swords and lances was popular in Mughal armies. The Mughal cavalry also trained in a special maneuver to attack enemy's war elephant, where they could control their horses to stand on their hind legs and jumping forward. The adversaries of the Mughals such as the Uzbek employed their own cavalry archers to counter the Mughal heavy cavalry from closing in. Meanwhile, the Mughal also possessed their own cavalry archer units which quality even more effective than a rifle armed cavalry. This particularly on their ability to shooting their arrows repeatedly on top of their horse. François Bernier observed the Mughal cavalry archer rate of fire that they can unleash 6 arrows before a riflemen could shoot twice.
In the battle against Hemu, the Mughal army led by Ali Quli Khan Shaibani with three sections of cavalry vanguard with the centre composed of 10,000 cavalry. This formation included Bairam Khan's detachment of Turks. There are unique characteristics among horse-cavalry troopers under the command of each Subahdar (Mughal provincial governor). According to the father of Shuja-ud-Daula, Safdar Jang, the governor of Awadh, had adorned his contingent of 20,000 cavalry, who were mainly native Hindustan from the Jadibal district in Kashmir, with the uniform of Persian Qizilbash in dress and taught them to speak Persian language casually. Meanwhile, The Sadaat-e-Bara tribe of Urdu-speaking people which traditionally composed the vanguard of the imperial army, held the hereditary role to serve as vanguard units of the empire in each battles.
In 1581, Catalan Jesuit Antoni de Montserrat recorded that Akbar has brought around 500 elephants and 28 field cannons in his battle against Mirza Hakim,his brother. Montserrat also further described the supporting role of war elephant units in the formation of the Mughal army during the battle. During the rule of Aurangzeb, In 1703, the Mughal commander at Coromandel, Daud Khan Panni were recorded has spent 10,500 coins to purchase 30 to 50 war elephants from Ceylon. Akbar and Jahangir heavily used elephants in warfare, as Akbar himself maintained around 5000 to 7000 elephants in his fil-khana (elephant house), of which about 100 of the very best were reserved for his personal collection (khassa). Meanwhile, the Delhi sultans never had more than 3,000 elephants at any time, the Mughals were much more interested in maintaining war elephants than their predecessors. They fully supported changing their war tactics to also include elephants as Akbar is known as the biggest proponent of elephant warfare in the Mughal Dynasty.
Aside from its military purpose, Vikram Aggarwal recorded historical accounts and religious lore together to illustrate elephants significance to Mughal leadership's right to rule, co-opting cultural symbols and repurpose it and thus underscoring the dynamic nature of culture and power in India, As it shown how elephants played major role in the culture of South Asia, as they were seen a symbol of power and reverence since the ancient Vedic period. like the Aryans before them, the Mughals, fully adopted elephant husbandry into the Mughal dynasty. Abul Fazl, writer of emperor Akbar's biography Akbarnama, has stated that in Mughal society, the value of one good conditioned elephant as equal to 500 horses. The empire also has regular occasion supply of Sri Lankan elephants from the Marathan lords from Thanjavur.
The infantry was recruited either by Mansabdars, or by the emperor himself. The emperor's own infantry was called Ahsam. They were normally ill-paid and ill-equipped, and also lacked discipline. This group included bandukchi or gun bearers, swordsmen, as well as servants and artisans. They used a wide variety of weapons like swords, shields, lances, clubs, pistols, rifles, muskets, etc. They normally wore no armour. Unlike the Europeans who placed Wagon forts in their rear formations, the Mughals army placing their wagon in front of enemy centers with. Chains connected the wagons to each other to impeded enemy cavalry charges. This wagon forts provided cover for the slow-loading of the Indian rifles. while also protected Heavy cavalry who positioned behind the direct-fire infantry protected.
The rifle infantry units of the Mughal were generally viewed as more effective than infantry archer units. The Banduqchis were the musket infantry which formed the bulk of the Mughal infantry.
The Mughal musket infantry line was known to be able to break the enemy's elephant charge without help from cavalry units, as it was shown in the battle of Haldigathi against the Rajput kingdom of Mewar. This feat was also shown in the battle of Tukaroi against huge cavalry and elephant charge of the Afghan sultanate, although with combined arms fashion with cavalry and artillery units in Tukaroi. They are most useful in rural level operations to subdue local peasant-based insurrections against the empire.
Infantry archer in the Mughal empire was called dākhilī troops. The emperor employ them by assigning them under the command of manṣabdār officers. They usually has salary about 100-120 dāms. A captain of 10 archers was called Mīr-dah officer, they usually received higher salary between 120 and 180 dāms. During the final years of emperor Akbar's rule, the proportion of infantry archers with musketeers in Mughal army was about 3 to 1. Archer units of Mughal army mainly filled a similar role with musketeer units.
"Chelas" redirects here. For the concept of the disciple in Indian religions, see Guru–shishya tradition. For the station on the Red Line of the Lisbon Metro, see Chelas (Lisbon Metro).
Chela were slave soldiers in the Mughal army. As a counterpoise to the mercenaries in their employ, over whom they had a very loose hold, commanders were in the habit of getting together, as the kernel of their force, a body of personal dependents or slaves, who had no one to look to except their master. Such troops were known by the Hindi name of chela (a slave). They were fed, clothed, and lodged by their employer, had mostly been brought up and trained by him, and had no other home than his camp. They were recruited chiefly from children taken in war or bought from their parents during times of famine. The great majority were of Hindu origin, but they always converted to Islam after joined the Chela unit. This slave-originated units were the only troops on which a man could place entire reliance as being ready to follow his fortunes in both foul and fair weather.
Similar the Timurids and other Mongol-derived armies, and unlike other Islamic states, the Mughal empire did not use slave soldiers as their regular army. The Chela soldiers were mainly served the role as menial labor, footmen and low-level officers rather than regular units like Ghilman, Mamluks or Janissaries. However, eunuch officers were prized for their loyalty.
From the large number of women who have served as the Urdubegis under Mughal rule, we only know the name of one, that is Bibi Fatima. Her name is mentioned by Gulbadan-Begum, Humayun's half-sister, who wrote his biography the Humayun-nama. It is interesting, how in all other biographies, written by male authors, we do not find exclusive mention of an Urdubegi. In the wake of the colonial gaze interpreting history, the harem became a definite orientalist, and exotic space, from wherein the mention of the Urdubegis were removed. The harem came to largely symbolise the Mughal monarch's sexual playground, and its complexities were reduced under such a biased historical analysis.
The Indian Muslims during the rule of Mughal maintained artillery dominance in India, and even after the fall of the empire, various other non-Islamic Indian kingdoms continued to recruit Hindustani Muslims as artillery officers in their armies.
Another Mughal warships characteristics were their strength and their size, due to the shipbuilding skills of their Bengalis shipbuilder. Contrary to the naval forces in Bengal which relied mostly on riverine fitted Gharb warships,: 28 the naval forces of Janjira state which given subsidy and sponsored by Aurangzeb with the access of Surat port could construct more bigger ships like frigates and Man-of-war: 34 The Man-of-war ships of Mughals were as big as English Third-rate.: 499–500 while the frigates used prow instead of Beakhead.: 499–500 some of these ships carried thirty to forty pieces of cannons.: 499–500 This Siddi navy has armed with rare huge vessels of certain craft which weighted between 300 and 400 tonnage with heavy ordnance on row boats, where few matchlock gunner and spear men cramped. The use of hand-driven pumps to dispose excessive water from boats was already used by Indian shipmasters in the seventeenth century.: 287 However, larger imperial ships also operated by Mughal such Rahīmī, which reached 1500 tonnage. Dilip Kumar Chakrabarti also noted the existences of ships belonging to the emperor that possess 1000 tonnes in weight disposal. Another notable huge ship owned by Mughal were the Ganj-i-Sawai, which mounted 800 onboard guns at its disposal. Ganj-i-Sawai was reported as the largest ship in Surat at that time, with its 1600 tonnes in weight.
For the two decades in the end of the 16th century, during their operation in Bengal, the Mughal Empire faced difficulties when it was dealing with the rainy climate and the geography of Bengal region, which contains large portions of Ganges River delta, resulting in any attempts for military conquests turning into amphibious operations. Their opponents were the local warlords, who owned large quantities of warships. The locals were also assisted by the pirates from Portuguese Goa region, along with some Dutch ships, although some of the Portuguese instead assisted the Mughal empire.
The Mughal amphibious forces also operated in muddy terrains, such as when Ghiyas Khan led the operation against Udayaditya from the Jessore Kingdom. To further improving their operations in wet terrains, the Mughals constructed some economical river dedicated fortress which built with the abundance of muds in the region that they learned from the local Bengalese fortress construction techniques. Soon, the imperial naval strategy focusing the mobilities of the ships which tracks were defended by those river forts. Grand vizier Mir Jumla also constructing land-based defensensive installations put on those floating river forts, which constructed by lashing ships, and large rafts to enable the Mughal soldiers to fight on water. Heavy artillery pieces brought on board rafts to supplement the existing ones, while wagons lashed to decks and stacks of crates and bales of straw or cotton formed makeshift fortification.
The foundation of salt water naval force of the Mughal empire were established by Akbar from the late 16th century after he conquered Bengal and Gujarat. Emperor Akbar reorganized the imperial navy from a collections of civilian vessels with more professional institutions of Naval administration which is detailed in the Ain-i-Akbari, the annals of Akbar's reign.It identifies the navy's primary objectives including the maintenance of transport and combat vessels, the retention of skilled seamen, protection of civilian commerce and the enforcement of tolls and tariffs. Akbar were recorded in A'in Mir Bahri, to be possessed 3000 armed vessels, although later decreased into 768. In early 1600, the Mughals employed Bengali local warriors as their naval force.: 165 these Nawwara is a Bengal local warlords. These locals were consisted of the twelve chiefs of Baro-Bhuyan military confederacy, where they responsible for the shipbuildings, commercial trades, slave raidings, and military protections.: 165 The Mughals assign these local warlords in naval position and also uncultivated lands for them.: 165
One of the best-documented naval campaigns of the Mughal empire were provided during the conflict against kingdom of Arakan, where in December 1665, Aurangzeb dispatched Shaista Khan, his governor of Bengal to command 288 vessels and more than 20,000 men to pacify the pirate activities within Arakan territory and to capture Chittagong, while also assisted by about 40 Portuguese vessels.: 230 Ibn Hussain, Shaista Khan's admiral, was asked to lead the navy, while the subahdar himself took up the responsibility of supplying provisions for the campaign. He also ordered Farhad Khan and Mir Murtaza to take the land route, while the overall command was given to Buzurg Ummed Khan, a son of Shaista Khan.: 230 The Mughals and the Portuguese held sway in the following naval battle. The conquered territory to the western bank of Kashyapnadi (Kaladan river) was placed under direct imperial administration. The name of Chittagong was changed to Islamabad and it became the headquarters of a Mughal faujdar.: 230 This ensuing conflict in Chittagong were documented as largest Early Modern galley battles fought which nvolved more than 500 ships. and the number of were more than 40,000 bodies. After the Mughals took Chittagong, the Portuguese moved to the Ferengi Bazaar in Dhaka. Descendants of the Portuguese still reside in these places.
It is said in the Ahkam 'Alamgiri record that the commander of British navy, Sir John Child, has concluded peace with the Mughal empire in 1689 due to his fear towards the "Mughal navy" force of Janjira which let by Siddi Yaqub. According to Grant Duff, until 1670 the imperial navy under the leadership of Khan Jahan with the Janjira mariners has clashed frequently against Maratha Navy under Shivaji, where the Janjira and Mughal naval forces always comes victorious. English letters In 1672 has recorded that Aurangzeb has sent 30 small frigates to assist the Siddis in Danda-Rajapuri. The resulting battle has caused Shivaji naval forces to be burned and lost 50 ships.: 196 Meanwhile, Khafi Khan has recorded that previously, once the fleet of Mughal during the era of Shah Jahan once inflicted heavy losses to the Maratha naval forces and causing 200 being captured while 100 casualties, an event which fuelled the rivalry of the Siddis with the Maratha in the sea.: 196
However, Syed Hassan also highlighted that Aurangzeb are not completely neglect it since he has acquired the British expertise to strengthen the fort of Janjira island, and thus establishing naval cooperation with semi independent Siddi community naval force of Janjira State which resisted the Marathas. The proficiency of the Siddi Yaqub navy are exemplified during Siege of Bombay, where Siddi Yaqub and his Mappila fleet blockaded the fortress and forced the submission of the Britain forces. In the late 1600s, Sidi Yaqut received a subsidy of 400,000 rupees from emperor Aurangzeb to manage Murud-Janjira He also owned large ships which weighed 300–400 tons. According to records, these ships were unsuitable for fighting on the open sea against European warships, but their size allowed for transporting soldiers for amphibious operations. Reports from travellers has noted that Mughal general Mir Jumla II were employing the services the sailors from British, the Dutch, and the Portuguese, along their ships. In August, 1660, he employed 6–7 British sailors of a small vessel carrying Trevisa, the English Agent, to Dhaka. He also utilised the services of both the Dutch and the British for constructing his warships as it is recorded a galiot built by the Dutch at Hooghly district and manned by 6–7 British fugitives under a captain named John Durson. Furthermore, Mir Jumla also employing a British named Thomas Pratt to construct boats and making ammunition for riverine warfare During the tenure of Mughal general Mir Jumla in Bengal, he employs Portuguese, English, and Dutch sailors to operate his 323 warships. In August, 1660, he employed 6–7 British sailors of a small vessel carrying Trevisa, the English Agent, to Dhaka. He also utilised the services of both the Dutch and the British for constructing his warships as it is recorded a galiot built by the Dutch at Hooghly district and manned by 6–7 British fugitives under a captain named John Durson. Furthermore, Mir Jumla also employing a British named Thomas Pratt to construct boats and making ammunition for riverine warfare After the death of Mir Jumla, Shaista Khan launched conquest of Chittagong in 1666, where he employing the fleet of ships belonging local warlords group in Bengal, which called Nawwara, to overcome the turbulent water water frontier of the region.
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Stephen P. Blake (2002, p. 85)... Mughal emperor contained a great many persons . The only one of its kind , this elite mahallah served as the model ... walashahis ( belonging to the king ) or mansabdaran - i khassa ( special officeholders ) , were found in the emperor's ... - Stephen P. Blake (2002). Shahjahanabad The Sovereign City in Mughal India 1639-1739 (Paperback). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-52299-1. Retrieved 4 December 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=vJ0e0kfgttUC
Stephen P. Blake (2002, p. 85)... Mughal emperor contained a great many persons . The only one of its kind , this elite mahallah served as the model ... walashahis ( belonging to the king ) or mansabdaran - i khassa ( special officeholders ) , were found in the emperor's ... - Stephen P. Blake (2002). Shahjahanabad The Sovereign City in Mughal India 1639-1739 (Paperback). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-52299-1. Retrieved 4 December 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=vJ0e0kfgttUC
Jos J. L. Gommans (2002)... walashahis, the most trusted bodyguard of the emperor and often associated with the ahadi contingent.49 Indeed, for any European observer, the precise difference between slaves and free retainers must have been rather obscure. For ... - Jos J. L. Gommans (2002). Mughal Warfare Indian Frontiers and Highroads to Empire, 1500-1700 (Paperback). Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-23989-9. Retrieved 4 December 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=vA3YVOt9QZUC
Stephen P. Blake (2002, p. 85)... Mughal emperor contained a great many persons . The only one of its kind , this elite mahallah served as the model ... walashahis ( belonging to the king ) or mansabdaran - i khassa ( special officeholders ) , were found in the emperor's ... - Stephen P. Blake (2002). Shahjahanabad The Sovereign City in Mughal India 1639-1739 (Paperback). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-52299-1. Retrieved 4 December 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=vJ0e0kfgttUC
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Anju Bala (1 June 2018). "Grandeur of the Mughal's Moving Court". Online Journal of Multidisciplinary Subjects. 12 (1). Department of History, University of Jammu: 1015–1019. ISSN 2349-266X. Retrieved 13 March 2024. http://docplayer.net/103105878-Grandeur-of-the-mughal-s-moving-court.html
Anju Bala (1 June 2018). "Grandeur of the Mughal's Moving Court". Online Journal of Multidisciplinary Subjects. 12 (1). Department of History, University of Jammu: 1015–1019. ISSN 2349-266X. Retrieved 13 March 2024. http://docplayer.net/103105878-Grandeur-of-the-mughal-s-moving-court.html
Naseer Ahmad Mir (8 August 2017). "Description of Mughal Tents as a Temporary Capital" (PDF). International Journal of Scientific and Research Publications. 7 (8). Centre of Advanced Study Department of History, Aligarh Muslim University: 668–670. ISSN 2250-3153. Retrieved 13 March 2024. https://www.ijsrp.org/research-paper-0817/ijsrp-p6883.pdf
Naseer Ahmad Mir (8 August 2017). "Description of Mughal Tents as a Temporary Capital" (PDF). International Journal of Scientific and Research Publications. 7 (8). Centre of Advanced Study Department of History, Aligarh Muslim University: 668–670. ISSN 2250-3153. Retrieved 13 March 2024. https://www.ijsrp.org/research-paper-0817/ijsrp-p6883.pdf
Naseer Ahmad Mir (8 August 2017). "Description of Mughal Tents as a Temporary Capital" (PDF). International Journal of Scientific and Research Publications. 7 (8). Centre of Advanced Study Department of History, Aligarh Muslim University: 668–670. ISSN 2250-3153. Retrieved 13 March 2024. https://www.ijsrp.org/research-paper-0817/ijsrp-p6883.pdf
Jolen A Martinez (2020). Jordan, Avery (ed.). "Managing Mobility: New Materialist Approaches to Mughal Mobility in the Encampment and Constructed City". Rice Asian Studies Review. 4. Rice University Chao Center for Asian Studies: 29–34. Retrieved 13 March 2024. ...Mughal historiographical tradition has depicted the encampment as an example of its central Asian legacy.... He also created new revenue collection systems known as the khalisa... 21 Nevertheless, these centralizing policies also coincided with Akbar's .... Akbar's entourage included small camps for journeys or hunting and large camps for royal ...The emperor and his administration ruled the expanding Mughal empire from these camps. https://www.academia.edu/44568042
Jolen A Martinez (2020). Jordan, Avery (ed.). "Managing Mobility: New Materialist Approaches to Mughal Mobility in the Encampment and Constructed City". Rice Asian Studies Review. 4. Rice University Chao Center for Asian Studies: 29–34. Retrieved 13 March 2024. ...Mughal historiographical tradition has depicted the encampment as an example of its central Asian legacy.... He also created new revenue collection systems known as the khalisa... 21 Nevertheless, these centralizing policies also coincided with Akbar's .... Akbar's entourage included small camps for journeys or hunting and large camps for royal ...The emperor and his administration ruled the expanding Mughal empire from these camps. https://www.academia.edu/44568042
Jolen A Martinez (2020). Jordan, Avery (ed.). "Managing Mobility: New Materialist Approaches to Mughal Mobility in the Encampment and Constructed City". Rice Asian Studies Review. 4. Rice University Chao Center for Asian Studies: 29–34. Retrieved 13 March 2024. ...Mughal historiographical tradition has depicted the encampment as an example of its central Asian legacy.... He also created new revenue collection systems known as the khalisa... 21 Nevertheless, these centralizing policies also coincided with Akbar's .... Akbar's entourage included small camps for journeys or hunting and large camps for royal ...The emperor and his administration ruled the expanding Mughal empire from these camps. https://www.academia.edu/44568042
Jolen A Martinez (2020). Jordan, Avery (ed.). "Managing Mobility: New Materialist Approaches to Mughal Mobility in the Encampment and Constructed City". Rice Asian Studies Review. 4. Rice University Chao Center for Asian Studies: 29–34. Retrieved 13 March 2024. ...Mughal historiographical tradition has depicted the encampment as an example of its central Asian legacy.... He also created new revenue collection systems known as the khalisa... 21 Nevertheless, these centralizing policies also coincided with Akbar's .... Akbar's entourage included small camps for journeys or hunting and large camps for royal ...The emperor and his administration ruled the expanding Mughal empire from these camps. https://www.academia.edu/44568042
Jolen A Martinez (2020). Jordan, Avery (ed.). "Managing Mobility: New Materialist Approaches to Mughal Mobility in the Encampment and Constructed City". Rice Asian Studies Review. 4. Rice University Chao Center for Asian Studies: 29–34. Retrieved 13 March 2024. ...Mughal historiographical tradition has depicted the encampment as an example of its central Asian legacy.... He also created new revenue collection systems known as the khalisa... 21 Nevertheless, these centralizing policies also coincided with Akbar's .... Akbar's entourage included small camps for journeys or hunting and large camps for royal ...The emperor and his administration ruled the expanding Mughal empire from these camps. https://www.academia.edu/44568042
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Pradeep Barua (2005). Grimsley, Mark (ed.). The State at War in South Asia Studies in War, Society, and the Military. Ohio State University; University of Nebraska. p. 47. Retrieved 13 March 2024. Stephen Rosen's calculations show that even the most conservative figures for Indian soldiers per capita are at least as high as those for Europe at the end of the Thirty Years' War (1650), that is, 550,000, or 0.5 percent of a population of some 105 million (Europe west of the Urals, including Scandinavia, Britain, European Russia, Spain, and the Balkans). He also states that the actual numbers may be closer to ten times the incidence of soldiers per captain Europe during that war. Furthermore, in sharp contrast to European states, the Mughals controlled only a small proportion of the total military forces in India. The Ain-i-Akbari gives the empire's total number of soldiers in the 1590s as 4.4 million, which includes local militia, consisting mainly of foot soldiers outside of Mughal control. This represents 3 percent of an estimated population of 135 million in 1600. https://epdf.tips/the-state-at-war-in-south-asia-5ea6a52742153.html
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Timothy Clifford (1983). A Century of Collecting, 1882–1982: A Guide to the Manchester City Art Galleries. Manchester City Art Gallery. ISBN 978-0-901673-20-6. Under the Mughals, Delhi and Lahore had been the most important centres for the production of military equipment. 978-0-901673-20-6
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Andrew de la Garza (2016)german nebelwerfer...Monserrate notes the secondary role of elephants in the Mughal... 1,000 gladiators stationed in the royal palace... - Andrew de la Garza (2016). The Mughal Empire at War Babur, Akbar and the Indian Military Revolution, 1500-1605. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-24531-5. Retrieved 6 December 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=OGERDAAAQBAJ
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Vikram Aggarwal (2020). Jordan, Avery (ed.). "An Elephant is Never Forgotten, The Mughals' Use ofElephants as a Means of Legitimizing Their Right to Rule" (PDF). Rice Asian Studies Review. 4. Rice University Chao Center for Asian Studies: 1–10. Retrieved 13 March 2024. ..elephants significance to Mughal leadership's right to rule, depicting how cultural symbols are co opted and repurposed and thus underscoring the dynamic nature of culture and power....In South Asia, elephants have been a symbol of power and reverence since the ancient Vedic times, as shown in the Arthashastra and Manusmriti https://rasr.rice.edu/RASR_V4_FINAL.pdf#page=1
Vikram Aggarwal (2020). Jordan, Avery (ed.). "An Elephant is Never Forgotten, The Mughals' Use ofElephants as a Means of Legitimizing Their Right to Rule" (PDF). Rice Asian Studies Review. 4. Rice University Chao Center for Asian Studies: 1–10. Retrieved 13 March 2024. ..elephants significance to Mughal leadership's right to rule, depicting how cultural symbols are co opted and repurposed and thus underscoring the dynamic nature of culture and power....In South Asia, elephants have been a symbol of power and reverence since the ancient Vedic times, as shown in the Arthashastra and Manusmriti https://rasr.rice.edu/RASR_V4_FINAL.pdf#page=1
Vikram Aggarwal (2020). Jordan, Avery (ed.). "An Elephant is Never Forgotten, The Mughals' Use ofElephants as a Means of Legitimizing Their Right to Rule" (PDF). Rice Asian Studies Review. 4. Rice University Chao Center for Asian Studies: 1–10. Retrieved 13 March 2024. ..elephants significance to Mughal leadership's right to rule, depicting how cultural symbols are co opted and repurposed and thus underscoring the dynamic nature of culture and power....In South Asia, elephants have been a symbol of power and reverence since the ancient Vedic times, as shown in the Arthashastra and Manusmriti https://rasr.rice.edu/RASR_V4_FINAL.pdf#page=1
Vikram Aggarwal (2020). Jordan, Avery (ed.). "An Elephant is Never Forgotten, The Mughals' Use ofElephants as a Means of Legitimizing Their Right to Rule" (PDF). Rice Asian Studies Review. 4. Rice University Chao Center for Asian Studies: 1–10. Retrieved 13 March 2024. ..elephants significance to Mughal leadership's right to rule, depicting how cultural symbols are co opted and repurposed and thus underscoring the dynamic nature of culture and power....In South Asia, elephants have been a symbol of power and reverence since the ancient Vedic times, as shown in the Arthashastra and Manusmriti https://rasr.rice.edu/RASR_V4_FINAL.pdf#page=1
Vikram Aggarwal (2020). Jordan, Avery (ed.). "An Elephant is Never Forgotten, The Mughals' Use ofElephants as a Means of Legitimizing Their Right to Rule" (PDF). Rice Asian Studies Review. 4. Rice University Chao Center for Asian Studies: 1–10. Retrieved 13 March 2024. ..elephants significance to Mughal leadership's right to rule, depicting how cultural symbols are co opted and repurposed and thus underscoring the dynamic nature of culture and power....In South Asia, elephants have been a symbol of power and reverence since the ancient Vedic times, as shown in the Arthashastra and Manusmriti https://rasr.rice.edu/RASR_V4_FINAL.pdf#page=1
Vikram Aggarwal (2020). Jordan, Avery (ed.). "An Elephant is Never Forgotten, The Mughals' Use ofElephants as a Means of Legitimizing Their Right to Rule" (PDF). Rice Asian Studies Review. 4. Rice University Chao Center for Asian Studies: 1–10. Retrieved 13 March 2024. ..elephants significance to Mughal leadership's right to rule, depicting how cultural symbols are co opted and repurposed and thus underscoring the dynamic nature of culture and power....In South Asia, elephants have been a symbol of power and reverence since the ancient Vedic times, as shown in the Arthashastra and Manusmriti https://rasr.rice.edu/RASR_V4_FINAL.pdf#page=1
Muzaffar Alam; Sanjay Subrahmanyam (2012). Writing the Mughal World: Studies on Culture and Politics (illustrated ed.). Columbia University Press. p. 360. ISBN 978-0231158114. Retrieved 12 July 2024. 978-0231158114
Jos J. L. Gommans (2002, pp. 125, 128)(zamburak, shutarnal, shahin) that was attached to the saddle of the dromedary. These zamburaks were first mentioned by Bernier, who reports that Aurangzeb took two to three hundred camel- guns with him on his expedition to Kashmir - Jos J. L. Gommans (2002). Mughal Warfare Indian Frontiers and Highroads to Empire, 1500-1700 (Paperback). Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-23989-9. Retrieved 4 December 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=vA3YVOt9QZUC
Jos J. L. Gommans (2002, pp. 125, 128)(zamburak, shutarnal, shahin) that was attached to the saddle of the dromedary. These zamburaks were first mentioned by Bernier, who reports that Aurangzeb took two to three hundred camel- guns with him on his expedition to Kashmir - Jos J. L. Gommans (2002). Mughal Warfare Indian Frontiers and Highroads to Empire, 1500-1700 (Paperback). Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-23989-9. Retrieved 4 December 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=vA3YVOt9QZUC
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Spessert, Robert D. (2019). "Review: Climate of Conquest War, Environment, and Empire in Mughal North India – Pratyay Nath, Oxford University Press, Oxford, United Kingdom, 2019, 368 pages". Military Review. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 4 June 2023. https://www.armyupress.army.mil/Journals/Military-Review/English-Edition-Archives/January-February-2021/Spessert-Book-Review-Essay/
Spessert, Robert D. (2019). "Review: Climate of Conquest War, Environment, and Empire in Mughal North India – Pratyay Nath, Oxford University Press, Oxford, United Kingdom, 2019, 368 pages". Military Review. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 4 June 2023. https://www.armyupress.army.mil/Journals/Military-Review/English-Edition-Archives/January-February-2021/Spessert-Book-Review-Essay/
Spessert, Robert D. (2019). "Review: Climate of Conquest War, Environment, and Empire in Mughal North India – Pratyay Nath, Oxford University Press, Oxford, United Kingdom, 2019, 368 pages". Military Review. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 4 June 2023. https://www.armyupress.army.mil/Journals/Military-Review/English-Edition-Archives/January-February-2021/Spessert-Book-Review-Essay/
Spessert, Robert D. (2019). "Review: Climate of Conquest War, Environment, and Empire in Mughal North India – Pratyay Nath, Oxford University Press, Oxford, United Kingdom, 2019, 368 pages". Military Review. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 4 June 2023. https://www.armyupress.army.mil/Journals/Military-Review/English-Edition-Archives/January-February-2021/Spessert-Book-Review-Essay/
Spessert, Robert D. (2019). "Review: Climate of Conquest War, Environment, and Empire in Mughal North India – Pratyay Nath, Oxford University Press, Oxford, United Kingdom, 2019, 368 pages". Military Review. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 4 June 2023. https://www.armyupress.army.mil/Journals/Military-Review/English-Edition-Archives/January-February-2021/Spessert-Book-Review-Essay/
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Andrew de la Garza (2016, pp. 89–90) - Andrew de la Garza (2016). The Mughal Empire at War Babur, Akbar and the Indian Military Revolution, 1500-1605. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-24531-5. Retrieved 6 December 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=OGERDAAAQBAJ
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Andrew de la Garza (2016)german nebelwerfer...Monserrate notes the secondary role of elephants in the Mughal... 1,000 gladiators stationed in the royal palace... - Andrew de la Garza (2016). The Mughal Empire at War Babur, Akbar and the Indian Military Revolution, 1500-1605. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-24531-5. Retrieved 6 December 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=OGERDAAAQBAJ
Pratyay Nath (2022, p. 157) - Pratyay Nath (2022). "War and the Non-Elite: Towards a People's History of the Mughal Empire". The Medieval History Journal. 25 (1): 127–158. doi:10.1177/0971945820961695. ISSN 0973-0753. Retrieved 17 July 2024. Nath, Climate of Conquest: 30–36 https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0971945820961695
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Irfan Habib; K. N. Panikkar; T. J. Byres; Utsa Patnaik (2002). The Making of History: Essays Presented to Irfan Habib. Anthem Press. p. 82. ISBN 1843310384. Retrieved 19 July 2024. 1843310384
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Chatterjee, Partha (2002). A Princely Impostor?: The Strange and Universal History of the Kumar of Bhawal. Princeton University Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-691-09031-3. Most of the larger zamindari establishments consisted of a considerable number—sometimes half or more of all estate employees—of armed men, called jamadar, mridha, peyada, paik, and so on, who were used against recalcitrant tenants. 978-0-691-09031-3
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Abu 'l-Fazl Allami (1977). Phillot, Lieut. Colonel D.C. (ed.). The Ain-i Akbari. Trans. H. Blochman. Delhi: Munishram Manoharlal. pp. 45–47. ISBN 978-81-86142-24-0. 978-81-86142-24-0
Hambly, Gavin (1998). "Armed Women Retainers in the Zenanas of Indo-Muslim Rulers: The case of Bibi Fatima". Women in the medieval Islamic world : Power, patronage, and piety. New York: St. Martin's Press. pp. 431–433. ISBN 0-312-21057-4. 0-312-21057-4
Misra, Rekha (1967). Women in Mughal India (1526–1748). Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal. pp. 79–80. OCLC 568760006. /wiki/OCLC_(identifier)
Findly, Ellison B. (1988). "The Capture of Maryam-uz-Zamānī's Ship: Mughal Women and European Traders". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 108 (2): 227–238. doi:10.2307/603650. ISSN 0003-0279. JSTOR 603650. https://www.jstor.org/stable/603650
Tauseef, Khadija (20 June 2022). "Urdubegis: The Forgotten Female Fighters of the Mughal Empire". Ancient Origins Reconstructing the story of humanity's past. Retrieved 1 June 2023. https://www.mpositive.in/category/royal-familiespreindependence-descendants/
enrouteI (22 October 2022). "The Urdubegis — Female Guards of the Zenana and the Mughal Emperor". Enroute Indian History. Retrieved 1 June 2023. https://enrouteindianhistory.com/the-urdubegis-female-guards-of-the-zenana-and-the-mughal-emperor/
Romesh C. Butalia (1998). The Evolution of the Artillery in India. Allied Publishers Limited. p. 300. ISBN 978-81-7023-872-0. 978-81-7023-872-0
Andrew de la Garza (2016, p. 48) - Andrew de la Garza (2016). The Mughal Empire at War Babur, Akbar and the Indian Military Revolution, 1500-1605. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-24531-5. Retrieved 6 December 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=OGERDAAAQBAJ
Alfred W. Crosby (8 April 2002). Throwing Fire Projectile Technology Through History (Hardcover). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-79158-8. Retrieved 6 December 2023. 978-0-521-79158-8
Will Slatyer (20 February 2015). The Life/Death Rhythms of Capitalist Regimes - Debt Before Dishonour Timetable of World Dominance 1400-2100. Partridge Publishing Singapore. ISBN 978-1-4828-2961-7. Retrieved 6 December 2023. rockets were upgraded versions of Mughal rockets utilised during the Siege of Jinji by the progeny of the Nawab of Arcot 978-1-4828-2961-7
Abraham Elahy (2007). The Mughal World:Life in India's Last Golden Age. Penguin Books India. p. 291. ISBN 978-0-14-310262-5. 978-0-14-310262-5
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Andrew de la Garza (2016, p. 47)"...One gargantuan mortar used....payload of over 3,000 pounds" - Andrew de la Garza (2016). The Mughal Empire at War Babur, Akbar and the Indian Military Revolution, 1500-1605. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-24531-5. Retrieved 6 December 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=OGERDAAAQBAJ
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William Irvine (2007). Sarkar, Jadunath (ed.). Later Mughals. Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. Kolkata, India: Asiatic Society, Asiatic Society of Bengal. p. 199. ISBN 978-9693519242. Retrieved 13 July 2024. 978-9693519242
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Alfred W. Crosby (8 April 2002). Throwing Fire Projectile Technology Through History (Hardcover). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-79158-8. Retrieved 6 December 2023. 978-0-521-79158-8
Will Slatyer (20 February 2015). The Life/Death Rhythms of Capitalist Regimes - Debt Before Dishonour Timetable of World Dominance 1400-2100. Partridge Publishing Singapore. ISBN 978-1-4828-2961-7. Retrieved 6 December 2023. rockets were upgraded versions of Mughal rockets utilised during the Siege of Jinji by the progeny of the Nawab of Arcot 978-1-4828-2961-7
Swati Shiwal; Dolamani Sahu (2022). "POLITICAL HISTORY OF THE MUGHALS: INFLUENCE ON SOUTH ASIA". IJRTS Journal of Research. 23 (23): 113. ISSN 2347-6117. Retrieved 16 July 2024. https://ijrtspublications.org/fileserve.php?FID=235
MughalistanSipahi (19 June 2010). "Islamic Mughal Empire: War Elephants Part 3". Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 28 November 2012 – via YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lbzr26t8H2U
Ghulam Yazdani (1995). Bidar: Its History and Monuments (1 ed.). Motilal Banarsidass. p. 15. ISBN 8120810716. 8120810716
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Andrew de la Garza (2016)german nebelwerfer...Monserrate notes the secondary role of elephants in the Mughal... 1,000 gladiators stationed in the royal palace... - Andrew de la Garza (2016). The Mughal Empire at War Babur, Akbar and the Indian Military Revolution, 1500-1605. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-24531-5. Retrieved 6 December 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=OGERDAAAQBAJ
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Andrew de la Garza (2016, p. 48) - Andrew de la Garza (2016). The Mughal Empire at War Babur, Akbar and the Indian Military Revolution, 1500-1605. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-24531-5. Retrieved 6 December 2023. https://books.google.com/books?id=OGERDAAAQBAJ
Alfred W. Crosby (8 April 2002). Throwing Fire Projectile Technology Through History (Hardcover). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-79158-8. Retrieved 6 December 2023. 978-0-521-79158-8
Will Slatyer (20 February 2015). The Life/Death Rhythms of Capitalist Regimes - Debt Before Dishonour Timetable of World Dominance 1400-2100. Partridge Publishing Singapore. ISBN 978-1-4828-2961-7. Retrieved 6 December 2023. rockets were upgraded versions of Mughal rockets utilised during the Siege of Jinji by the progeny of the Nawab of Arcot 978-1-4828-2961-7
Pradeep Barua (2005, p. 318) - Pradeep Barua (2005). Grimsley, Mark (ed.). The State at War in South Asia Studies in War, Society, and the Military. Ohio State University; University of Nebraska. p. 47. Retrieved 13 March 2024. Stephen Rosen's calculations show that even the most conservative figures for Indian soldiers per capita are at least as high as those for Europe at the end of the Thirty Years' War (1650), that is, 550,000, or 0.5 percent of a population of some 105 million (Europe west of the Urals, including Scandinavia, Britain, European Russia, Spain, and the Balkans). He also states that the actual numbers may be closer to ten times the incidence of soldiers per captain Europe during that war. Furthermore, in sharp contrast to European states, the Mughals controlled only a small proportion of the total military forces in India. The Ain-i-Akbari gives the empire's total number of soldiers in the 1590s as 4.4 million, which includes local militia, consisting mainly of foot soldiers outside of Mughal control. This represents 3 percent of an estimated population of 135 million in 1600. https://epdf.tips/the-state-at-war-in-south-asia-5ea6a52742153.html
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Francisco Bethencourt & Cátia A.P. Antunes 2022, p. 116. - Francisco Bethencourt; Cátia A.P. Antunes (2022). Merchant Cultures A Global Approach to Spaces, Representations and Worlds of Trade, 1500–1800. Brill. ISBN 9789004506572. Retrieved 21 March 2024. https://books.google.com/books?id=mplcEAAAQBAJ
Permanent Delegation of Bangladesh to UNESCO (2023). "Mughal Forts on Fluvial Terrains in Dhaka". Dhaka, District- Dhaka, Narayanganj, Munshiganj: UNESCO. Retrieved 19 April 2024. https://whc.unesco.org/en/tentativelists/6675/
Atul Chandra Roy (1972) - Atul Chandra Roy (1972). A history of Mughal navy and naval warfares. World Press. pp. XII. Retrieved 6 April 2024. https://www.amazon.com/history-Mughal-navy-naval-warfares/dp/B0006C8KUY
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MacDougall, Phillip (2014). Naval Resistance to Britain's Growing Power in India, 1660-1800 The Saffron Banner and the Tiger of Mysore (Hardcover). Boydell Press. pp. 28–34. ISBN 978-1-84383-948-4. Retrieved 20 June 2023. 978-1-84383-948-4
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