Babur hunting rhinoceros in Peshawar
Habib was followed soon by other historians such as Iqtidar Alam Khan and M Athar Ali, both from Aligarh Muslim University. Their main propositions can be seen in the relevant volumes of the Cambridge Economic History of India. They tend to focus disproportionately on the period between the start of Akbar’s reign and the end of Aurangzeb’s rule – from 1556 to 1707 – arguing that the main institutions that sustained throughout this period were laid down under Akbar. They focus on the increasing centralisation of the state apparatus, particularly the revenue system, in this time period.
They also describe the state as becoming increasingly extractive, putting pressure on the peasantry, but using the surplus only unproductively, mainly on elite consumption and imports. The implication here being that the Mughals lacked scientific curiosity or the desire to invest and, therefore, did not use their surplus to produce a more dynamic economy, which is probably the same thing that historians like Sarkar were saying though in a different context and in a different way.
More recent works have challenged much of this historiography, including its problematic assumption about the Mughal religious beliefs and attitudes. The book by Alam and Subrahmanyam mentioned earlier offers an important critique in this regard. Truschke’s work provides another corrective for assumptions about Aurangzeb’s rigid behaviour and Islamic motivations.
Perhaps the most interesting aspect of the recent work is its attempt to expand the traditional foci of history of Mughal India. Aligarh-based historian Shireen Moosvi – whose writing is very much in the tradition of Irfan Habib – has, for example, written on the various forms of labour under the Mughals. The mainstay of her piece, The World of Labour in Mughal India (c. 1500–1750), published in 2011 in a journal, International Review of Social History, is that wages in money were being given for most types of work during Akbar’s rule. She, thus, expands class categories in the Mughal agrarian system that, according to her, did not merely employ indentured labour paid in kind. If that was the case, an entire story of labour and circulation of money in the Mughal period remains untold.
Other recent work pushes readers to look beyond kings and rulers and focus on social classes below aristocracy. Rajeev Kinra’s 2015 book, Writing Self, Writing Empire, focuses on Chandar Bhan Brahman, the Mughal state secretary (or munshi) who lived through the reigns of Akbar, Jahangir, Shah Jahan and Aurangzeb. Stephen P Blake’s 2013 book, Time in Early Modern Islam: Calendar, Ceremony, and Chronology in the Safavid, Mughal, and Ottoman Empires, goes in an entirely unexplored direction and compares how differently Safavids in Iran, Mughals in India and Ottomans in Turkey measured time and its social implications.
The focus on gender roles under Mughal rule is not something new but previous writings on the Mughal court and the harem focused on seclusion and exploitation of women. This trend has changed over time with the harem coming to represent a space where traditionally masculine matters of politics and public policy were also negotiated and decided. New works offer insights into how women of the harem were very much a part of public life. An example of this is Domesticity and Power in the Early Mughal World, a 2005 book by Ruby Lal — a professor of South Asian Studies at Emory University, Atlanta. In a somewhat similar vein, The Princes of the Mughal empire, 1504–1719, a 2015 book by Munis D Faruqui of Cambridge University, focuses on how political intrigues and alliances among the Mughal princes actually deepened the reach of the empire as opposed to the idea that such tactics undermined Mughal power.
These writings on subjects ‘below’ the level of rulers themselves are also being accompanied by a push to produce histories concerned with Mughal India’s links with regions outside the Subcontinent. In recent years, greater stress has been laid on the Central Asian origin of the Mughals in an attempt to understand them without geographically limiting them within India. This, of course, is an important attempt given that the concept of nation state at the time of the Mughals had no real meaning. Seeing them as a singularly-Indian phenomenon is, therefore, problematic. An example of this is American historian Lisa Balabanlilar’s 2012 book Imperial Identity in the Mughal Empire: Memory and Dynastic Politics in Early Modern South and Central Asia.
In the final analysis, the story of Mughal India’s historiography, and particularly the role of colonisation in this story, should not be forgotten if we are to ever soften the rigid contours of the myth of Aurangzeb and Babur. New writings, particularly the recent work done by Truschke, are an important step in this direction.
This was originally published in the Herald's September 2017 issue under the title "History revisited". To read more subscribe to the Herald in print.
The writer has a PhD in history from the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, and is currently an assistant professor at the Lahore University of Management Sciences.