Babur
Mughal Empire

Table of Contents
Political Condition of India on the Eve of Babur’s Invasion
- The political condition of India was chaotic before Babur’s conquest.
- According to Dr. Iswari Prasad, India was a collection of states, vulnerable to an invader with strength and will.
- The disintegration of the Delhi Sultanate began during the reign of Muhammad-bin-Tughlaq.
- Ibrahim Lodi ascended the throne of Delhi in 1517, but his authority was limited to Delhi, Agra, Doab, Jaunpur, parts of Bihar, Bayana, and Chandari.
- Ibrahim Lodi believed in the Divine Right of Kings and imposed a rigid discipline at his court.
- He humiliated the Afghan nobles, forcing them to stand with arms folded during his durbar.
- Ibrahim declared that kingship knew no kinship, and his nobles were mere vassals and servants.
- When the Afghan nobles attempted to assert their hereditary privileges, Ibrahim punished them harshly.
- This led to rebellions by the top-ranking Lodi, Lohani, Farmuli, and Niyazi Afghans.
- Ibrahim had to use force to suppress the revolts, causing confusion and alarm.
- Alamkhan Lodi, an uncle of Ibrahim, claimed the throne of Delhi, supported by many discontented nobles.
- The Governor of Punjab, Daulat Khan Lodi, resisted the Sultan’s authority and acted as a de facto ruler.
- The nobles of Bihar rallied around Dariya Khan Lohani, and after his death, his son Bahar Khan (Bahadur Khan) declared independence.
- In Jaunpur, the Afghans rebelled under Nasir Khan Lohani.
- The Lodi Kingdom became severely distracted, and Ibrahim lost much of his prestige.
- Ibrahim clashed with Rana Sanga of Mewar, who defeated him.
- Ibrahim Lodi’s death in April 1526 led to a period of disturbance that weakened the Kingdom of Gujarat.
- In July 1526, Bahadur Shah, Ibrahim’s son, became king and proved to be an ambitious and successful ruler.
Mewar
- Mewar was a formidable power in India with its capital at Chittor.
- The reigning family of Mewar traced its descent back to the 6th century A.D..
- The dynasty produced several remarkable rulers, with Rana Kumbha (1433-1468) being particularly notable.
- Rana Kumbha strengthened the defences of Mewar by erecting many forts and beautifying the capital with stately buildings.
- He defeated the Sultan of Mewar and established the supremacy of Mewar in Central Hindustan.
- Babur’s contemporary on the throne of Chittor was Rana Sangram Singh (Rana Sanga), a famous and skilled warrior.
- Rana Sanga was a hero of a hundred fights, receiving eighty wounds from sword and lance.
- Unlike many other Rajput chiefs, Rana Sanga had the instincts of a politician and statesman.
- He turned the social pre-eminence of his family among Rajputs into political supremacy in Rajasthan.
- Rana Sanga was followed by two hundred vassal Rajput chiefs.
- His ambition was to establish Hindu rule over Delhi.
- Rana Sanga is said to have promised Babur that he would invade Ibrahim Lodi’s territory from the side of Agra, while Babur proceeded from the north.
- Rana Sanga was the greatest Hindu ruler in northern India.
Sindh
- The province of Sindh was a weak state in the early 16th century.
- It became independent after the end of Muhammad-bin-Tughlaq’s reign.
- The Sumra dynasty, which had ruled Sindh since the middle of the 14th century, was in decline.
- Shah Beg Arghun, the Governor of Kandhar, was under pressure from Babur and sought to conquer Sindh.
- In 1520, after being forced to abandon Kandhar to Babur, Shah Beg turned towards Sindh.
- He defeated the Sumras and occupied the province.
- Shah Beg’s son, Shah Hussain, consolidated his rule and even annexed Multan.
- By the time of Babur’s invasion, the power of the Arghuns in Sindh was at its peak.