NCERT Book Class 12 History Kings and Chronicles The Mughal Courts

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Theme II Chapter 9 Kings and Chronicles The Mughal Courts NCERT Book Class Class 12 PDF (2025-26)

The rulers of the Mughal Empire saw themselves as appointed by Divine Will to rule over a large and heterogeneous populace. Although this grand vision was often circumscribed by actual political circumstances, it remained important. One way of transmitting this vision was through the writing of dynastic histories. The Mughal kings commissioned court historians to write accounts. These accounts recorded the events of the
emperor’s time. In addition, their writers collected vast amounts of information from the regions of the subcontinent to help the rulers govern their domain. Modern historians writing in English have termed this genre
of texts chronicles, as they present a continuous chronological record of events. Chronicles are an indispensable source for any scholar wishing to write a history of the Mughals. At one level they were a repository of factual information about the institutions of the Mughal state, painstakingly collected and classified by individuals closely connected with the court. At the same time these texts were intended as conveyors of  meanings that the Mughal rulers sought to impose on their domain. They therefore give us a glimpse into how imperial ideologies were created and disseminated. This chapter will look at the workings of this rich and fascinating dimension of the Mughal Empire.

1. The Mughals and Their Empire
The name Mughal derives from Mongol. Though today the term evokes the grandeur of an empire, it was not the name the rulers of the dynasty chose for themselves. They referred to themselves as Timurids, as descendants of the Turkish ruler Timur on the paternal side. Babur, the first Mughal ruler, was related to Ghenghiz Khan from his mother’s side. He spoke Turkish and referred derisively to the Mongols as barbaric hordes. During the sixteenth century, Europeans used the erm Mughal to describe the Indian rulers of this  branch of the family. Over the past centuries the word has been frequently used – even the name Mowgli, the young hero of Rudyard Kipling’s Jungle Book, is derived from it.

The empire was carved out of a number of regional states of India through conquests and political alliances between the Mughals and local chieftains. The founder of the empire, Zahiruddin Babur, was driven from his Central Asian homeland, Farghana, by the warring Uzbeks. He first established himself at Kabul and then in 1526 pushed further into the Indian subcontinent in search of territories and resources to satisfy the needs of the members of  his clan.

His successor, Nasiruddin Humayun (1530-40, 1555-56) expanded the frontiers of the empire, but lost it to the Afghan leader Sher Shah Sur, who drove him into exile. Humayun took refuge in the court of the Safavid ruler of Iran. In 1555 Humayun defeated the Surs, but died a year later. Many consider Jalaluddin Akbar (1556-1605) the greatest of all the Mughal emperors, for he not only expanded but also consolidated his empire,  making it the largest, strongest and richest kingdom of his time. Akbar succeeded in extending the frontiers of the empire to the Hindukush mountains, and checked the expansionist designs of the Uzbeks of Turan (Central Asia) and the Safavids of Iran.
Akbar had three fairly able successors in Jahangir (1605-27), Shah Jahan (1628-58) and Aurangzeb (1658-1707), much as their characters varied. Under them the territorial expansion continued, though at a much   educed pace. The three rulers maintained and consolidated the various instruments of governance. During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the institutions of an imperial structure were created. These included effective methods of administration and taxation. The visible centre of Mughal power was the court. Here political alliances and relationships were forged, status and hierarchies defined. The political system devised by the Mughals was based  on a combination of military power and conscious policy to accommodate the different traditions they encountered in the subcontinent. After 1707, following the death of Aurangzeb, the power of the dynasty diminished. In place of the vast  apparatus of empire controlled from Delhi, Agra or Lahore – the different capital cities – regional powers acquired greater autonomy. Yet symbolically the prestige of the Mughal ruler did not lose its aura. In  1857 the last scion of this dynasty, Bahadur Shah Zafar II, was overthrown by the British.


Please refer to attached file for NCERT Class 12 History Kings And Chronicles(The Mughal Courts)

Theme I Chapter 01 Bricks, Beads and Bones The Harappan Civilisation
NCERT Book Class 12 History Bricks Beads and Bones The Harappan Civilisation
Theme I Chapter 02 Kings, Farmers and Towns Early States and Economies
NCERT Book Class 12 History Kings Farmers and Towns Early States and Economies
Theme I Chapter 03 Kinship, Caste and Class Early Societies
NCERT Book Class 12 History Kinship Caste and Class Early Societies
Theme I Chapter 04 Thinkers, Beliefs and Buildings Cultural Developments
NCERT Book Class 12 History Thinkers Beliefs and Buildings Cultural Developments
Theme II Chapter 05 Through the Eyes of Travellers Perceptions of Society
NCERT Book Class 12 History Through The Eyes Of Travellers Perceptions of Society
Theme II Chapter 06 Bhakti-Sufi Traditions Changes in Religious Beliefs and Devotional Texts
NCERT Book Class 12 History Bhakti Sufi Traditions Changes in Religious Beliefs and Devotional Texts
Theme II Chapter 07 An Imperial Capital: Vijayanagara
NCERT Book Class 12 History An Imperial Capital Vijayanagara
Theme II Chapter 08 Peasants, Zamindars and the State Agrarian Society and the Mughal Empire
NCERT Book Class 12 History Peasants Zamindars And the State Agarian Society And the Mugal Empire
Theme III Chapter 09 Colonialism and the Countryside: Exploring Official Archives
NCERT Book Class 12 History Colonialism and The Countryside
Theme III Chapter 10 Rebels and the Raj The Revolt of 1857 and its Representations
NCERT Book Class 12 History Rebels And the Raj The Revolt of 1857 And Its Representations
Theme III Chapter 11 Mahatma Gandhi and the Nationalist Movement Civil Disobedience and Beyond
NCERT Book Class 12 History Mahatma Gandhi and The Nationalist Movement Civil Disobedience and Beyond
Theme III Chapter 12 Framing the Constitution The Beginning of a New Era
NCERT Book Class 12 History Framing The Constitution The Beginning Of a New Era

NCERT Book Class 12 History Theme II Chapter 9 Kings and Chronicles The Mughal Courts

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