My cousins and I sat in a pool at 2 am when it was raining, watching the lights on the mountains in the outskirts of Islamabad twinkle through the rain. This was on, on the speakers- and there was pin drop silence. Deep in thought. We imagined our ancestors listening to this in some Mughal court, 400 years ago. That it’s reaching our ears, only just now. Reunited at last.
You could just feel the connection like almost a time travel when some Mughal Emperor sat on their throne and was listening at this kind of music while in court
?@@pedrohenriqueprata why you are criticizing him ? he was an emperor so he could be an extremist like MODI or liberalist like other people? you can not judge a Mughal emperor based on just this stuff
@@syedowaisshah9165 I'm not criticizing, my intention was to make a humorous statement. But that aside, I suspect that Aurangzeb's fundamentalist extremism may have been an attempt to give legitimacy to a power that was not really meant for him, a power he conquered with violence against his own relatives. Emperor Yongzheng of China, for similar reasons, in order to legitimize a contestable power both because of the way he achieved it and because his dynasty had a foreign origin hardly acceptable to the Chinese, became a workaholic.
Well, there are different styles and genres, some may please more than others. I climbed the channel for several hours of solo veena performance, and I admit that it seemed far less satisfying to hear than sarod music.
@@FaaduProductions well with all due respect the term Hindustan were coined by the Arabs Hindu Refers to the Mountains of Himalaya and Indus River and Istan means land hence Mughal era were the last age of it's golden civilisation.
@@danielkhalik6136 Surprising. Haha, I don't think you have heard of the Gupta empire, Asoka the great either :) I am a researcher on Mughal empire, but giving credit to only one empire is a bit injustice to what the other kings did for Hindustan then. Read more about Indus Valley, the Vedic civilisation, Gupta dynasty & Asoka the great.
This is great! I'm studying for my global modern history exam, and for each empire and region, I try to find appropriate music to have playing in the background. This truly makes me feel like I'm being lead to meet Akbar at his court in Agra
they did. there is the preconceived notion of mughals as these persians who ruled over india for 3 centuries but reading more about their times, it's very easy to notice how they took india (hindustan as they called their home) as their own. whenever i tell people shah jahan was more indian than he was persian (only a quarter persian), most are shocked. the mughal sultanate had no problem with race and cultures mingling. if anything, emperor aurangzeb banned a lot of persian activities in india because he believed they didn't align with south asian values. mughal princes were given thorough education on religions that dominated south asia, with the help of hindu tutors who translated books like vedas (which written in sanskrit) to persian and hindostani.
The king and the three first persons are wearing hats that come from Mongols and North Asia heritage , the clothes too , they kept them and mixed them woth local indian customs ,including music and that gave the Mughals and this mystic India
@@SG1377 Bhai din i ilahi koi religion nahi tha. It was just a way of life. Akbar mixed all the good points of all religions and made a sect called din i ilahi , this was done to promote religious unity throughout the empire.
Mughal Empire. In Mughal architectures these instrumental music needs tobe played to boost tourist attractions to feel the time of Mughal Empire court with music
What rubbish comments on a beautiful Misra Bhairavi rendition by Maestro Aashish Khan and his younger brother Pranesh Khan on tabla. Music has nothing to do with religion.Look at the names of the musicians,any intelligent person will understand. Sound is God.
UwU But mughal is an Indian empire, never heard of a Pakistani mughal empire😂 also modern day bloodline of the mughal throne(the bloodline of bahadur shah zafar's cousin's) is still living in delhi and not pakistan, so kindly stop claiming decent lmao
I think the music is much less "universal" than is said, and sometimes in a matter of style, it is an acquired taste. The Portuguese in the sixteenth century found Japanese music unbearable (many may still find something like the gagaku an incomprehensible cacophony), and the British East Indian officials in Canton caused indescribable perplexity in their Chinese collaborators at the times when western music was performed where they lived.
Why do Indian nationalist trolls always try to poison everything that is beautiful with the Asian subcontinent? This excellent music style and the bhairavi raga existed centuries before the British creation of India.
I do not know, have you heard Mongolian current ethnic music? It sounds almost indistinguishable from Chinese Han music, to my ears. The Mongol rulers of India had very little Mongol, judging by the paintings that portray them. Physically, they even resembled the northern Indians.
@Hamza ayad Yes, I know, but from what I read a lot of Indian marriages have made them physically very much like the Indians (although of course, India is also an ethnically very diverse country). I once read a description of a Western traveler who said that for the Islamic world Persia was more or less like France to the West, a parameter of civilization. Have you heard about the story of Prince Dara Shuko, son of Shah Jahan, who translated the Upanishads from Sanskrit to Persian?
@@pedrohenriqueprata, you are very right. Iran is very much the "France" of the middle east. They tend to be very pompous and are very preoccupied with fashion and their looks.
@@pedrohenriqueprata Sons of Tamerlane/Timur. They claimed Ghenghis Khan ancestry but were more Turkic. It was only on difference of what side of the river they came from. Amazing empire regardless and their blending with an ancient empire gave us this amazing music.
Until recently I thought it was a portrait of some of the great emperors of the 17th century before Aurangzeb, but researching the image I discovered that it is actually a portrait of Akbar II and his court, dating from the early 19th century. More information on Wikipedia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ghulam_Murtaza_Khan_The_Delhi_Darbar_of_Akbar_II.jpg
Sorry, this is the title with which the Japanese label King Records released the CD that contains this work. In addition, I am not going to discuss Indian history; I am Brazilian, you must be Indian, I know how these historical narratives are constructed and the unnecessary vehemence of passions that these narratives give rise to. www.amazon.com/Sarod-Mughal-Ustad-Aashish-Khan/dp/B000001LVP ua-cam.com/video/RfPL2z_DybI/v-deo.html
I'm from Brazil and to find some famous ancestor I think I'd need to do a thorough DNA analysis. I hope I have nothing to do with some "founders of the country," like Raposo Tavares, these devastating killers.
The Mughals are also the grand children of Cengiz. In fact the Mughal dynasty is half Turkic half Mongol. This is one of the reasons Pakistanis call Turks brothers. But the main reason is that we are both Muslims.
The other day I was reading something related to the topic and I came across the unknown name of Dara Shikoh, Shah Jahan's eldest son who would have been his father's successor had it not been for Aurangzeb's ambition and cruelty, which contributed greatly to tarnish the renown of the whole dynasty. Dara Shikoh was a tolerant spirit and tended to syncretism in his religious conceptions. He even declared that the Upanishads were a "Book of Occult Wisdom" that seems to be mentioned in the Quran, and translated passages from the Vedantic book to the Persian. One wonders what the future of India would have been if this prince had become ruler in place instead of his bloodthirsty, fanatical brother. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dara_Shikoh
@Ruturaj Shiralkar It is a pity that it was indispensable for such people to become rulers, such a love of power that they had no qualms about killing their own brothers, and had to continually train themselves in the art of making other people die. I understand your remarks, but let me say that the history of power strikes me as a very sad thing. This is certainly not the privilege of the Mughal Empire. I was rereading a book about the last four hundred years of China and ended up giving up on the disgust that was causing me the enormous hypocrisy that seems to characterize the rulers' realpolitik actions, cruel and bloodthirsty, and the clear principles of virtue that everyone claimed to defend. . And see how all these emperors ended their lives, in complete solitude, old, sick and full of disappointment and remorse, under a burden of heinous crimes.
@Ruturaj Shiralkar I didn't know or remember much about the history of the Mughal Empire until recently. I had read as a teenager more detailed accounts in political history books but I remembered almost nothing. I recently bought the travel chronicles written by a well-known Brazilian poet in my country (of course this is Brazil), and several of the texts in these books deal with Cecilia's travel experiences across India, I believe around the 1950s. She repeatedly talks about the reminiscences aroused by contact with the material legacy of these rulers when they stay in places like Aurangabad, Agra or Golkonda. This has encouraged me to research more about it now that it is so easy to get a huge amount of information about anything. It was also by this means that I learned about the invasion of Nadir Shah that stole the Peacock's Throne for the Persians. As for Dara Shikoh, I learned about him in a very different reading, a very brief allusion in a book on the history of Indian philosophy, which aroused my curiosity to research something else that I do not remember much. What interested me especially about this figure was that I had interviewed in it something that I thought was an impossibility: some form of synthesis between Islam and the Indian metaphysical abstractions, which always seemed totally incompatible to me. A few years ago I read an essay by historian Fernand Braudel in which he said that the introduction of Islam in India created an insoluble historical problem because of such incompatibility, which he said would have determined a kind of cultural disease in Indian civilization. History is my favorite field of knowledge, but unfortunately I do not have a good enough memory for the amount of information and opinion that can be obtained on any given subject, and there is still the problem of considering historical hypotheses and formulations as that I mentioned above. The truth is, I could not say that I am quite sure whether Aurangzeb's reign was good or bad or what could have been India's fate if anything in the history of that country had happened differently than it did.
What is your problem ? Why do you want me to like and love this garbage ? Do you want to coerce love by force. If you are lovable people will love you. If you are charming people will love you. If you are comfortable people will love you. If you are fascinating people will love you. If you are appealing people will love you. If you are charismatic people will love you and so on. 'You' means your video. You be pleasant, elegant, sweet and delightful then everybody will love you, not only me. Sorry for showing my back. You are a great person. Personally I love you but not your video. Get paradise. Thank you.
My cousins and I sat in a pool at 2 am when it was raining, watching the lights on the mountains in the outskirts of Islamabad twinkle through the rain. This was on, on the speakers- and there was pin drop silence. Deep in thought.
We imagined our ancestors listening to this in some Mughal court, 400 years ago. That it’s reaching our ears, only just now. Reunited at last.
Wow nice, just saying that I think that mughals are a cultural symbol of both Pakistan and India!
@@JJ-ct7iy Yeah! Definitely!
islamababdi burger, new york ko aona abu banao
What if your ancestor was some random peasent in India (or pakistan)
You could just feel the connection like almost a time travel when some Mughal Emperor sat on their throne and was listening at this kind of music while in court
It couldn't be Aurangzeb, who considered music sinful entertainment - like the Taliban in Afghanistan.
?@@pedrohenriqueprata why you are criticizing him ? he was an emperor so he could be an extremist like MODI or liberalist like other people? you can not judge a Mughal emperor based on just this stuff
@@syedowaisshah9165 I'm not criticizing, my intention was to make a humorous statement. But that aside, I suspect that Aurangzeb's fundamentalist extremism may have been an attempt to give legitimacy to a power that was not really meant for him, a power he conquered with violence against his own relatives. Emperor Yongzheng of China, for similar reasons, in order to legitimize a contestable power both because of the way he achieved it and because his dynasty had a foreign origin hardly acceptable to the Chinese, became a workaholic.
@@pedrohenriqueprata lol I see what are u sayind anyway thanks for sharing this music 🎵
@@syedowaisshah9165 Calm tf down, it’s a joke
This is gorgeous. I didn't used to like Indian classical before. Guess I was deaf.
Well, there are different styles and genres, some may please more than others. I climbed the channel for several hours of solo veena performance, and I admit that it seemed far less satisfying to hear than sarod music.
😂
Hello.. Love from india
@Muxus I am Indian too.
@@pedrohenriqueprata then you are not good at Veena , watch Veena Srivani UA-cam channel you will get it.
This is the music of our ancestors who many modern Hindus are trying to alienate. This is our culture.
I'm American and fortunate to be familiar with this concern.
What a great relaxing ancient music 💙💖
Mashallah
Namaste
Glorious era, Golden Civilization of Magnificent Sub Continent (South Asia)
It's HINDUSTAN dumbass. None of that South Asia subcontinent bull$hit.
@@FaaduProductions well with all due respect the term Hindustan were coined by the Arabs Hindu Refers to the Mountains of Himalaya and Indus River and Istan means land hence Mughal era were the last age of it's golden civilisation.
@@hamedhamdan9906 You're right I believe. Mughal Empire was indeed a Golden period for the subcontinent.
@@danielkhalik6136 Surprising. Haha, I don't think you have heard of the Gupta empire, Asoka the great either :)
I am a researcher on Mughal empire, but giving credit to only one empire is a bit injustice to what the other kings did for Hindustan then. Read more about Indus Valley, the Vedic civilisation, Gupta dynasty & Asoka the great.
@@sanikadevdikar5987 hindu means sindhu in persian. Stan is a persian word. Even hindi is a by product of persian and sanskrit mixture
Return to mughal era 😌
This is great! I'm studying for my global modern history exam, and for each empire and region, I try to find appropriate music to have playing in the background. This truly makes me feel like I'm being lead to meet Akbar at his court in Agra
Love to our composite indian culture....❤
I listen to this while studying, it has a really nice tune, enjoying every bit of it :)
Specially while studying history...
@@nycto16 right
Highly mesmerizing , there is another extended version of this played by ustad ashish khan and is heavenly sounding. Indian classical music is divine.
Mughal music*
Perfection at its speak
Now this is what I call a bop!
This music is amazing!
So many emotions and so smooth are the shifts
Reminds me of the 5-star Taj hotels (particularly in India), their ambience. This is the kind of music they play in the background in the lobby.
Wow, the Mughals really adopted much of the culture of South Asia. Really reflects in the music.
Actually it's Indian classical rag presented in durbar
@@Arunava_Sar wahi toh keh raha hai bhai mere
@@syednazirmustafa5693 ha Bhai I just specified..
they did. there is the preconceived notion of mughals as these persians who ruled over india for 3 centuries but reading more about their times, it's very easy to notice how they took india (hindustan as they called their home) as their own. whenever i tell people shah jahan was more indian than he was persian (only a quarter persian), most are shocked. the mughal sultanate had no problem with race and cultures mingling. if anything, emperor aurangzeb banned a lot of persian activities in india because he believed they didn't align with south asian values. mughal princes were given thorough education on religions that dominated south asia, with the help of hindu tutors who translated books like vedas (which written in sanskrit) to persian and hindostani.
🤣🤣@@syednazirmustafa5693
The king and the three first persons are wearing hats that come from Mongols and North Asia heritage , the clothes too , they kept them and mixed them woth local indian customs ,including music and that gave the Mughals and this mystic India
So beautiful 🥺
This is a classic court music. Depression music.
Extremely talented
Oh amazing
Ah the real luxury ❤
best song ever
Gorgeous. 🙏🏻♥️
Wow amazing relax
A different take on Bhairavi. Nice.
you do this and you do this, I king in the castle, king in the castle
I like Mughal and Indian culture very much.
Zabrdast yar
Din-i-ilahi on point
@sando kan yeah, but akbar's religion or religious faith was din-i-ilahi and not Islam unlike any other mughal emperor
@@SG1377 Bhai din i ilahi koi religion nahi tha. It was just a way of life. Akbar mixed all the good points of all religions and made a sect called din i ilahi , this was done to promote religious unity throughout the empire.
Mughal emperors 🤞🤞 feels like Im in Mughal empire Era I wish time machine will invented in future 😭😭
We don't have their dresses, they'll think we are demons
😱
I so wish that as well! Just wanna go back in time and settle permanently
@@studentNEET319lol😂
Mughal Empire.
In Mughal architectures these instrumental music needs tobe played to boost tourist attractions to feel the time of Mughal Empire court with music
TRUE BRO 🥺🥺
Perfection
OMG this is tooooooo LiT💥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
I added this on my presentations
What rubbish comments on a beautiful Misra Bhairavi rendition by Maestro Aashish Khan and his younger brother Pranesh Khan on tabla.
Music has nothing to do with religion.Look at the names of the musicians,any intelligent person will understand.
Sound is God.
Aeros shared this with me.
This is the beauty of Mughals nd Subcontinent.❤
chal chutiye
@@registryd3069 Get out uh My sun, Mughals kii Shahi haram kii production aaj Mughal pr bhoonk rahi h
tu naali ka production hai mughal saale waise hi china ki naaliyon se nikal ke aaye the,bc sirf biryani badhiya banate ho,baaki pure jhaatu
ADDRESS BATA APNA
@@registryd3069 Sale mughal khoon hu kar hum muglo pr bhoonkta h
I love my heritage, love from Pakistan, the descendants of the mughals ❤🇵🇰
hi zindabad from chinese taiwan
F**k off ,with love from Hindustan, descendents of Maharana Pratap, Ashoka and CHHATRAPATI SHIVAJI MAHARAJ 🚩🇮🇳🐅
@@mint8648 ❤❤
@@ManojKumar-ov6vq dude, I never even mentioned india and you're after me? Smh 😑
UwU
But mughal is an Indian empire, never heard of a Pakistani mughal empire😂 also modern day bloodline of the mughal throne(the bloodline of bahadur shah zafar's cousin's) is still living in delhi and not pakistan, so kindly stop claiming decent lmao
North Indian music had full patronage of Mughal emperors and their governors heading mughal provinces
The music actually flourished during this time
Wha🔥🔥🔥
Woww
🌹🌹
How can i add this music on background of my histrory presentation that is about mughal emperors
Is it free to use in UA-cam video?
mesmerizing! Mughal era is our pride.
for you but a shame and curse for the world
Here after Pakistani drama Badshah Begum based on Mughal Empire...
Is it copyright free?
Actually it's Indian classical rag presented in durbar
good
Oooh Waah Mughal Music😘😘😘
@@registryd3069 Fuck off IT Cell gandu.
It really is gorgeous music.
@@registryd3069 Bro do you really have to make everything political?
@@registryd3069 Sanghi spotted
Minding language..talk the great..Actually it's Indian classical rag presented in durbar
👌👌👌👌👌
Antiqueness is uniqueness...
From where I can download this audio
Sir no copyright music ...plz tell me ...ma ny apny youtube channel video par lagana ha
I understood nothing.
@@pedrohenriqueprata I can put this music on my channel youtube
@@azadfoods He can. I have no rights to this material.
@@pedrohenriqueprata ok sir
Mughals ❤️
Which indian song it resembles?? Anyone ???
😌
Is this music royalty free? Please revert
This is absolute genius. Not sure if it just my Pakistani origins... or do people from other cultures get this too?
I think the music is much less "universal" than is said, and sometimes in a matter of style, it is an acquired taste. The Portuguese in the sixteenth century found Japanese music unbearable (many may still find something like the gagaku an incomprehensible cacophony), and the British East Indian officials in Canton caused indescribable perplexity in their Chinese collaborators at the times when western music was performed where they lived.
It is derived from the bhairavi raga. A music of the Indian subcontinent.
Why do Indian nationalist trolls always try to poison everything that is beautiful with the Asian subcontinent? This excellent music style and the bhairavi raga existed centuries before the British creation of India.
Im an Afghan Hun 🇦🇫 and I get this too
@@mediummark2258 that is awesome. Out of interest, what is "Afghan Hun"?
Can i use this sound track in my other channel video please if you give me permission so
You can.
@@pedrohenriqueprata thanks sir ji i will add this video link in my video description.. Its monetize? Any problem i face sir in future
@@robertsaxenasinger9328 This stuff is not mine. I just joined an audio file to an image and uploaded it to the channel.
@@pedrohenriqueprata did you get any copyright claim sir
@@robertsaxenasinger9328 No.
You could really hear the mongolian influence
I do not know, have you heard Mongolian current ethnic music? It sounds almost indistinguishable from Chinese Han music, to my ears. The Mongol rulers of India had very little Mongol, judging by the paintings that portray them. Physically, they even resembled the northern Indians.
@Hamza ayad Yes, I know, but from what I read a lot of Indian marriages have made them physically very much like the Indians (although of course, India is also an ethnically very diverse country). I once read a description of a Western traveler who said that for the Islamic world Persia was more or less like France to the West, a parameter of civilization. Have you heard about the story of Prince Dara Shuko, son of Shah Jahan, who translated the Upanishads from Sanskrit to Persian?
@@pedrohenriqueprata, you are very right. Iran is very much the "France" of the middle east. They tend to be very pompous and are very preoccupied with fashion and their looks.
lol like what
@@pedrohenriqueprata Sons of Tamerlane/Timur. They claimed Ghenghis Khan ancestry but were more Turkic. It was only on difference of what side of the river they came from. Amazing empire regardless and their blending with an ancient empire gave us this amazing music.
I love listening 😍👌👍 ❤️ Mughal raag thx for this video 🌉
Actually it's Indian classical rag presented in durbar
No it's mugal raag u fool
@@arabiantime it's a hindustani raag played in the Mughal darbar, not that complicated
@@jassimarsingh6505 hindu kafur hindus lac ability to prodices such song
Do you have the name of this image? Thanks!
Until recently I thought it was a portrait of some of the great emperors of the 17th century before Aurangzeb, but researching the image I discovered that it is actually a portrait of Akbar II and his court, dating from the early 19th century. More information on Wikipedia.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ghulam_Murtaza_Khan_The_Delhi_Darbar_of_Akbar_II.jpg
@@pedrohenriqueprata thanks for the information!
How did you name it mughal court???
Islamophobic
@Ganda Bacha wrong
@Ganda Bacha well hindustani classical Music didn't originate in mughal court, but it was played in mughal court by likes of tansen, baiju bawra, etc.
Can i use this music in my video
He can.
Can I use this in my vlog?
Pode.
So much central Asian influence In this it makes sense because they are the grandchildren of Amir Timur (Timur the Lame)
who’s in the painting?
Me :)
Shah Jahan
Compare this to a contemporary sea shanty.
Can I use this music for my video ?
I will use max 25 to 30 sec music, for food video
No material available on my channel is my property, so anyone can use it as they please.
@@pedrohenriqueprata so I can use, thanks
This is all Hindusthani classical music even before mughal came to loot India...😎
Sorry, this is the title with which the Japanese label King Records released the CD that contains this work. In addition, I am not going to discuss Indian history; I am Brazilian, you must be Indian, I know how these historical narratives are constructed and the unnecessary vehemence of passions that these narratives give rise to.
www.amazon.com/Sarod-Mughal-Ustad-Aashish-Khan/dp/B000001LVP
ua-cam.com/video/RfPL2z_DybI/v-deo.html
@@pedrohenriqueprata 👍👍👍👍
@@pedrohenriqueprata 👍👍 great music video...🔥🔥🔥😀😀😀
@@TheCANexus how they plot I do not know India is richest country till 1750 ,it's Brits who looted.
@@TheCANexus Mughals were not looters they were great rulers....you are completely brainwashed by BJP and RSs
i am from Turkey We are the grandchildren of Cengiz
I'm from Brazil and to find some famous ancestor I think I'd need to do a thorough DNA analysis. I hope I have nothing to do with some "founders of the country," like Raposo Tavares, these devastating killers.
The Mughals are also the grand children of Cengiz. In fact the Mughal dynasty is half Turkic half Mongol. This is one of the reasons Pakistanis call Turks brothers. But the main reason is that we are both Muslims.
Nd I am descend of Shahjahan.❤
So what happens if you are the grand children of the murderer?
@@sadenb Who,s murderer, Rana Sanga, partap ya Shiva chupp k larny wala
There was no Indian in the Mughal court sorry.
Good music from worst rulers ever
The other day I was reading something related to the topic and I came across the unknown name of Dara Shikoh, Shah Jahan's eldest son who would have been his father's successor had it not been for Aurangzeb's ambition and cruelty, which contributed greatly to tarnish the renown of the whole dynasty. Dara Shikoh was a tolerant spirit and tended to syncretism in his religious conceptions. He even declared that the Upanishads were a "Book of Occult Wisdom" that seems to be mentioned in the Quran, and translated passages from the Vedantic book to the Persian. One wonders what the future of India would have been if this prince had become ruler in place instead of his bloodthirsty, fanatical brother.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dara_Shikoh
@Ruturaj Shiralkar It is a pity that it was indispensable for such people to become rulers, such a love of power that they had no qualms about killing their own brothers, and had to continually train themselves in the art of making other people die. I understand your remarks, but let me say that the history of power strikes me as a very sad thing. This is certainly not the privilege of the Mughal Empire. I was rereading a book about the last four hundred years of China and ended up giving up on the disgust that was causing me the enormous hypocrisy that seems to characterize the rulers' realpolitik actions, cruel and bloodthirsty, and the clear principles of virtue that everyone claimed to defend. . And see how all these emperors ended their lives, in complete solitude, old, sick and full of disappointment and remorse, under a burden of heinous crimes.
@Ruturaj Shiralkar I didn't know or remember much about the history of the Mughal Empire until recently. I had read as a teenager more detailed accounts in political history books but I remembered almost nothing. I recently bought the travel chronicles written by a well-known Brazilian poet in my country (of course this is Brazil), and several of the texts in these books deal with Cecilia's travel experiences across India, I believe around the 1950s. She repeatedly talks about the reminiscences aroused by contact with the material legacy of these rulers when they stay in places like Aurangabad, Agra or Golkonda. This has encouraged me to research more about it now that it is so easy to get a huge amount of information about anything. It was also by this means that I learned about the invasion of Nadir Shah that stole the Peacock's Throne for the Persians. As for Dara Shikoh, I learned about him in a very different reading, a very brief allusion in a book on the history of Indian philosophy, which aroused my curiosity to research something else that I do not remember much. What interested me especially about this figure was that I had interviewed in it something that I thought was an impossibility: some form of synthesis between Islam and the Indian metaphysical abstractions, which always seemed totally incompatible to me. A few years ago I read an essay by historian Fernand Braudel in which he said that the introduction of Islam in India created an insoluble historical problem because of such incompatibility, which he said would have determined a kind of cultural disease in Indian civilization. History is my favorite field of knowledge, but unfortunately I do not have a good enough memory for the amount of information and opinion that can be obtained on any given subject, and there is still the problem of considering historical hypotheses and formulations as that I mentioned above. The truth is, I could not say that I am quite sure whether Aurangzeb's reign was good or bad or what could have been India's fate if anything in the history of that country had happened differently than it did.
What do you mean worst rulers? When mughal ruled the empire was second most richest region on earth.
Rique Borges a Mughal India that would be the most richest and powerful nation ever and that would be a very peaceful nation
Worst video.
What is your problem ? Why do you want me to like and love this garbage ? Do you want to coerce love by force. If you are lovable people will love you. If you are charming people will love you. If you are comfortable people will love you. If you are fascinating people will love you. If you are appealing people will love you. If you are charismatic people will love you and so on. 'You' means your video.
You be pleasant, elegant, sweet and delightful then everybody will love you, not only me. Sorry for showing my back. You are a great person. Personally I love you but not your video. Get paradise. Thank you.
খ্যাপাচোদা মানুষ