A People’s History of the Mughal Empire

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  • Опубліковано 16 жов 2024
  • The 6th Prof. Satish Chandra Memorial Lecture
    bangaloreinter...
    Professor Satish Chandra was one of the first historians to shift our attention from the emperors of the Mughal Empire to its people.
    Drawing upon his works, this lecture highlights the contribution of common people in the formation of the empire. It does this by focusing on two groups that played important roles in the domain of warfare. Firstly, it investigates the vast numbers of mercenaries and armed peasants who served as foot-soldiers in the armies. They served as guards, swordsmen, gunners, and archers. Secondly, it studies the pioneers, carpenters, stone-cutters, boatmen, and other workers who toiled in the domain of military logistics. They built roads, constructed bridges, dug tunnels, and looked after the war-animals in the course of campaigns. It argues that the participation of vast numbers of common people in these two capacities was key to the functioning of the empire. This implies that the empire was not an elite project created only by emperors, noblemen, and courtiers. Rather, it was a broad-based political entity that rested on the work and involvement of vast sections of the South Asian population.
    About Prof. Satish Chandra
    Prof. Satish Chandra (1922 - 2017) was a leading authority on Medieval Indian History.
    In a career spanning nearly 40 years, Prof. Chandra taught history at Allahabad University, Aligarh Muslim University, Delhi University, Rajasthan University, and finally the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), where along with S. Gopal, Bipin Chandra and Romila Thapar he co-founded the Centre for Historical Studies.
    In between, from 1972 to 1980 he was first Vice Chairman and then the Chairman of the University Grants Commission.
    In 1985, along with intellectuals like Prof. Nurul Hasan and marine biologist Dr. Zahoor Qasim, he founded the Society for Indian Ocean Studies which, among other activities, brings out the quarterly Journal for Indian Ocean Studies.
    Son of Sir Sita Ram, India’s first High Commissioner to Pakistan (1947-48), Prof. Chandra has, along with some other JNU historians, been said to have been a ‘left leaning historian’ who espoused the Marxist approach to history, and one whose early experiences helped bridge the intellectual gap in interpreting medieval Indian history and modern times.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 4

  • @PrasannaVighne
    @PrasannaVighne День тому +10

    The description or title needs to include something about the actual speaker, Prof. Pratyay Nath!

  • @sunilbanerjee
    @sunilbanerjee 16 годин тому

    Insightful,enormously educative talk from a humble scholar who urges us all to strive for the right answers despite barriers.Never to feel fulfilled and immodestly believe to have found "the truth."Clear about his own position and its limitations,the answers to very substantial questions that came thick and fast were equally Swift and satisfying.All in all a worthy celebration of the memory of a pioneering historian.Thank you for the presentation.

  • @bhanumathisharma
    @bhanumathisharma День тому

    Yes
    It does