The Delhi Sultanate and the Rise of Islamic Rule in India
Fexingo History · South Asia
The Delhi Sultanate and the Rise of Islamic Rule in India
Between the 13th and 16th centuries, a succession of Turkic and Afghan dynasties—Mamluks, Khaljis, Tughlaqs, Sayyids, and Lodis—forged the Delhi Sultanate, transforming the Indian subcontinent through Islamic rule, Persianate culture, and military conquest. Lucas and Luna guide listeners through the rise of Qutb-ud-din Aibak, the slave general who built the Qutub Minar; the brutal expansion under Alauddin Khalji, who repelled Mongol invasions and restructured the economy; the eccentric reign of Muhammad bin Tughlaq, whose disastrous experiments with token currency and capital relocation shook the sultanate; and the Timurid sack of Delhi in 1398 that left the empire fragmented. The show delves into the synthesis of Indo-Islamic architecture, the role of the ulema and Sufi saints like Nizamuddin Auliya, the revenue system of the iqta, and the contested legacy of iconoclasm and temple destruction. It also explores the sultanate’s interactions with Hindu kingdoms—the Rajput defiance at Ranthambore and Chittor, the Kakatiya tribute, and the Vijayanagara resistance—and the eventual rise of the Lodi dynasty before Babur’s cannons at Panipat ended their rule. How did a foreign military aristocracy embed itself in Indian society, and what patterns of conquest, accommodation, and cultural fusion did it set for the Mughals who followed? The Delhi Sultanate’s story is not just a prelude to empire but a crucible of medieval India’s political and religious landscape.