Sultanate of Bijapur
Sultanate of Bijapur | |||||||||||||
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1490–1686 | |||||||||||||
Capital | Bijapur | ||||||||||||
Official languages | Persian | ||||||||||||
Common languages | |||||||||||||
Religion |
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Government | Monarchy | ||||||||||||
Sultan | |||||||||||||
• 1490–1510 | Yusuf Adil Shah (first) | ||||||||||||
• 1672–1686 | Sikandar Adil Shah (last) | ||||||||||||
Historical era | Early modern | ||||||||||||
• Established | 1490 | ||||||||||||
• Disestablished | 1686 | ||||||||||||
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Today part of | India |
The Sultanate of Bijapur[n 1] was an early modern kingdom in the western Deccan and South India, ruled by the Adil Shahi (or Adilshahi) dynasty. Bijapur had been a taraf (province) of the Bahmani Kingdom prior to its independence in 1490 and before the kingdom's political decline in the last quarter of the 15th century. It was one of the Deccan sultanates, the collective name of the kingdom's five successor states. The Sultanate of Bijapur was one of the most powerful states in Indian Subcontinent at its peak,[5] second to the Mughal Empire which conquered it in 1686 under Aurangzeb.
After emigrating to the Bahmani Sultanate, Yusuf Adil Shah rose in position and was appointed governor of the province of Bijapur. In 1490, he created a de facto independent Bijapur state which became formally independent with the Bahmani collapse in 1518.
The Bijapur Sultanate's borders changed considerably throughout its history. Its northern boundary remained relatively stable, straddling contemporary southern Maharashtra and northern Karnataka. The sultanate expanded southward, its first major conquest the Raichur Doab after defeating the Vijayanagara Empire at the Battle of Talikota in 1565. Later campaigns in the Karnatak and Carnatic extended Bijapur's borders and nominal authority as far south as Tanjore. For most of its history, Bijapur was bounded on the west by the Portuguese state of Goa, on the east by the Sultanate of Golconda, on the north by the Ahmednagar Sultanate and on the south by the Vijayanagara Empire and its succeeding Nayaka dynasties.
The sultanate clashed incessantly with its neighbours. After the allied victory against Vijayanagara at Talikota in 1565, the state expanded through its conquest of the neighbouring Bidar Sultanate in 1619. The sultanate was then relatively stable, although it was damaged by the revolt of Shivaji (who founded an independent Maratha kingdom which become the Maratha Confederacy). From the late 16th century, the greatest threat to Bijapur's security was the expansion of the Mughal Empire into the Deccan. Agreements and treaties imposed Mughal suzerainty on the Adil Shahs, by stages, until Bijapur's formal recognition of Mughal authority in 1636. The influence of their Mughal overlords and continual strife with the Marathas sapped the state of prosperity until the Mughal conquest of Bijapur in 1686.
The former Bahmani provincial capital of Bijapur remained the sultanate's capital throughout its existence. After modest earlier developments, Ibrahim Adil Shah I and Ali Adil Shah I remodelled Bijapur with a citadel, city walls, and a congregational mosque. Their successors, Ibrahim Adil Shah II, Mohammed Adil Shah and Ali Adil Shah II, added palaces, mosques, a mausoleum and other structures (considered some of the finest examples of Deccani and Indo-Islamic architecture) to the capital.
History
[edit]The founder of the dynasty, Yusuf Adil Shah, may have been a Georgian slave[6] who was purchased by Mahmud Gawan.[7] Other historians have said that he is of Persian[8] or Turkmen origin.[9][10] According to the contemporary historian Firishta, Yusuf was a son of the Ottoman Sultan Murad II; however, this is disputed by modern historians.[11][12] Another theory is that he was an Aq Qoyunlu Turkman.[13][14][12]
Founding and consolidation (1490–1580)
[edit]Yusuf impressed Bahmani Sultan Muhammad Shah III, and he was appointed governor of Bijapur.[15][11] Yusuf took advantage of Bahmani decline to establish himself as an independent sultan at Bijapur in 1490, pursuing the same goal Malik Ahmad Nizam Shah I had that year.[11][16] He proclaimed Shia Islam as the official religion of his territorial holdings in 1503,[16][17] following the lead of Shah Ismail of the Safavid dynasty.[18] Yusuf conquered and annexed the Bahmani taraf of Gulbarga the following year[19][17] and reinstated his Shia mandate shortly afterwards, a year after he revoked it under threat of invasion.[18] A Portuguese Empire colonial expedition led by Afonso de Albuquerque exerted pressure on the major Adil Shahi port of Goa, conquering it in 1510;[20] Yusuf retook the settlement two months later, but the Portuguese again conquered it in November of that year.[21]
Yusuf died in 1510, between these two clashes with the Portuguese,[21] when his son Ismail Adil Shah[c] was a boy. Ismail's regent, Kamal Khan, staged an unsuccessful coup against him; he was killed, and Ismail became the absolute ruler of Bijapur.[23] In 1514, a dispute over Gulbaraga province led the rulers of the Ahmednagar, Golconda, and Bidar Sultanates to unsuccessfully invade Ismail Adil Shah's provinces.[24] Krishnadevaraya, ruler of Vijayanagara, laid siege to the Bijapuri fort of Raichur in 1520. The siege continued for three months until the emperor's encounter with Ismail, who attempted to end it. Ismail was defeated by Krishnadevaraya in the Battle of Raichur; initially successful, with an advantage in artillery[25] (in its first major appearance in a South Asian battle),[26] Ismail was routed by the Vijayanagara forces in a surprise counter-attack which scattered much of his forces.[27] Soon after Ismail's retreat, Krishnadevaraya captured the Raichur fort.[28] In a later diplomatic conflict, Krishnadevaraya occupied Bijapur for an extended period and the sultan refused to see him.[29] Ismail invaded the territory of Amir Barid I of Bidar in 1529, besieging his capital; Aladdin Imad Shah of Berar unsuccessfully tried to mediate the conflict.[30] Amir Barid surrendered the fort of Bidar, which was looted by Ismail and his troops. Ismail recaptured Raichur and Mudgal from Vijayanagara the following year, after the death of Krishnadevaraya.[31] Amir Barid agreed with Ismail to cede him the forts of Kalyani and Qandhar in exchange for Ismail's surrender of Bidar.[32]
Ismail was succeeded in 1534 by Mallu Adil Shah, whose reign was short-lived. Installed by a prominent Bijapuri noble, Asad Khan, he is noted for incompetence; Vijayanagara invaded the sultanate and seize the Raichur Doab from the Adil Shahis. Mallu Adil Shah was soon blinded and removed from power.[33][34]
Ibrahim Adil Shah I, Ismail's son, succeeded Mallu the following year.[34] He established Sunni Islam as the state religion[33] and made anti-Westerner changes,[d] abolishing the use of Persian in some administrative tasks (although it remained the sultanate's official language)[37] and replacing many Westerners with Deccanis.[36][33] Ibrahim also invaded the Vijayanagara Empire; he pillaged a number of cities and besieged the capital, Vijayanagara, but did not seize any territory in the long term and returned home with only non-territorial rewards.[38] In another conflict with the Portuguese, Ibrahim ceded two ports in the fear that trade through Goa might be cut off from the Adil Shahis.[38] His kingdom was invaded four times by Ahmednagar Sultanate forces, the sultanate's greatest adversary. Sultan Burhan Nizam Shah I initially allied himself with Bidar in his first invasion (which saw no territorial losses for Bijapur) but Bidar, ruled by Ali Barid Shah I, allied itself with Bijapur in the second invasion: a quadruple alliance of Ahmednagar, Jamsheed Quli Qutb Shah of Golconda, Vijayanagara, and Darya Imad Shah of Berar.[39] The war was a defeat for the Bijapuri–Bidar side, who ceded a northern district of the Bijapur Sultanate to Ahmednagar. Burhan and Ibrahim allowed Ahmednagar freedom to expand in Bidar if Bijapur had the same freedom to annex lands from Vijayanagara; Ibrahim imprisoned Ali Barid Shahi of Bidar despite their former alliance, although he was later freed by Jamsheed (who wanted a buffer state in the Deccan).[40] Burhan Nizam Shah besieged the Bijapuri city of Solapur four times,[41] but did not retain it until a third invasion which occupied territory on the southern border. Burhan advanced in a fourth invasion in 1553 with Vijayanagara almost to the Bijapuri capital, but retreated due to failing health.[42]
Ali Adil Shah I, who ascended the throne in 1558, reestablished Shia Islam as the state religion.[44] He unsuccessfully asked Hussain Nizam Shah I for the return of Solapur and Kaliyani (both seized in Ahmednagari invasions)[45] and then invaded the Nizam Shahi kingdom with assistance from Vijayanagara's de facto ruler Rama Raya and Ibrahim Qutb Shah, besieging Ahmednagar and other cities. Hussain sued for peace in 1561, submitting to Rama Raya and returning Kaliyani to Ali Adil Shah.[46][47] In 1563, Hussain attempted to regain Kaliyani and again besieged it. Ahmednagar was besieged by Ali, and Hussain was forced to abandon his siege of Kaliyani; the only beneficiary of the conflict was Vijayanagara, who gained territory from invading Golconda.[48][49] Vijayanagara negotiated additional land from Bijapur, including the cities of Yadgir and Bagalkote.[49] Wary of Vijayanagara's growing power, Ali allied his forces with the sultans of Golconda, Ahmednagar and Bidar (despite past conflicts) and defeated the Vijayanagara Empire in the 1565 Battle of Talikota. Rama Raya was beheaded after his capture by Deccani forces. Vijayanagara and nearby cities were sacked and looted (Vijayanagara for five to six months),[50][51] and historian Hermann Goetz said that this prompted the emigration of much of Vijayanagara's population to Bijapur.[52] The Raichur Doab and its surrounding area were returned to Bijapur. The Vijayanagara military was demolished, and the kingdom was a shell of its former self.[53][54] Ali I then fortified Bijapur with a wall, which facilitated the further centralization of authority. Subsequent architectural projects encouraged the growth of the city and its skilled class.[55] Another conflict between Ahmednagar and Bijapur arose in 1567; although Ali invaded Ahmednagar and his forces occupied a number of forts, the war ended in a stalemate.[56] A 1570 conflict with the Portuguese began with the hope of expelling them from India, but Ali was defeated after a number of encounters the following year.[57][58] He then annexed more land from Vijayanagara in a campaign which lasted until 1575, conquering Adoni and much of the Carnatic.[59] Ali also began a campaign to capture the Karnatak;[60] according to Richard M. Eaton, his "armies destroyed two to three hundred Hindu temples" which were replaced with Shia buildings.[61] By 1576, land gained under Ali I had doubled the sultanate's holdings.[62] He forged diplomatic relations with the Mughals, Ottomans, and Safavids during his reign, which Eaton says brought the sultanate into the dar al-islam.[63]
Peak and decline (1580–1686)
[edit]Ali I had no son, and his nine-year-old nephew Ibrahim II was set on the throne in 1580.[65] Control of the regency was contested by Kamal Khan[66][65] and, later, by the Habshi Dilawar Khan (who reverted the state religion to Sunni Islam). Dilawar was deposed by Ibrahim II in 1590.[67] Ibrahim's rule was characterised by prosperity and patronage;[68][69] Sufism thrived, with its adherents and others flocking to Bijapur[70][71] because of his talent as a musician and poet.[72] Religious and cultural syncretism reached a zenith, and the capital was one of India's most prosperous;[73] population estimates in the latter half of Ibrahim's rule are as high as one million,[74] and accounts from a Jesuit in Ali I's rule and a Mughal diplomat in the same period of Ibrahim's rule indicate the increase of wealth of the commoners and city.[73] Ibrahim suppressed a 1594 rebellion by his brother, Ismail, who was aided by Burhan II of Ahmednagar.[75] Despite their past quarrels, the Adil Shahis formed an alliance in 1597 with Ahmednagar and Golconda to deter further Mughal advances in the Deccan. The alliance, led by a Bijapuri general, was defeated despite a three-to-one numerical advantage.[76][77] Ahmednagar fell to the Mughals in 1600,[78] but Ibrahim continued to support the eventually-successful resistance of Malik Ambar.[79] Ibrahim II founded the city of Nauraspur in 1599, three kilometers west of Bijapur,[80] as a planned center of learning and art; never fully completed[66] and was destroyed in 1624 by Malik Ambar's forces.[18] In 1618, the sultan lost the fortress of Janjira to the independent Habshi state of western India.[66] The following year, Bijapur conquered the neighbouring Bidar Sultanate,[81] although effective control over the state had been achieved as early as 1580.[82] This was preceded by an agreement between the rulers of Bijapur and the Ahmednagar Sultanate, where they divided their spheres of influence such that the latter was let to conquer the Berar Sultanate, provided the Adil Shahis could expand southwards into the territory of the decaying Vijayanagara Empire without the hindrance of the Nizam Shahis.[83][60] However, as Bidar did not fall under either of these spheres of influence, Malik Ambar, then de facto ruler of Ahmednagar, grew irate, and invaded Bijapur, reaching the capital relatively unopposed, but later withdrew.[66] The sultan, in addition to his work on Nauraspur, constructed many architectural works near Bijapur which composed the Ibrahim Rauza.[66]
Muhammad Adil Shah succeeded his father Ibrahim II in 1627. Under Muhammad's reign, the Sultanate of Bijapur reached its peak, territorially and in power and economic prosperity.[84][5] The first invasion of the Sultanate of Bijapur by the Mughal Empire took place under Muhammad's rule in 1631 by Shah Jahan, who reached and besieged Bijapur but was ultimately unsuccessful.[85] In 1636, Bijapur was forced to sign a treaty after a defeat against the Mughals requiring them to pay tribute to the Mughal emperor[86] and acknowledge Mughal authority.[87] As a reward for this gesture, the recent Mughal conquest of Ahmednagar was partitioned between the two states.[88] This treaty ushered in a period of relative peace with the Mughals, allowing for attention to be focused on continued southern conquests.[89][90] As a result, Bijapur reached its territorial peak, with its borders stretching from the Arabian Sea to the Bay of Bengal. The Sultanate of Bijapur came however into rapid decline halfway through Muhammad's reign,[91] primarily due to the strain in relations with nobles and landholders, many of whom later deserted to work for the Mughal bureaucracy,[92] and the revolt of then governor of Pune, Shivaji,[93] whose father was a Maratha commander in the service of Muhammad Adil Shah who had been employed in the Karnatak campaigns.[94][95] Muhammad Adil Shah died in 1656, though was effectively powerless in the last decade of his life from a paralyzing illness which first affected him in 1646.[96]
Ali Adil Shah II inherited a troubled kingdom. His state was invaded by Mughal forces in 1657, under then viceroy Aurangzeb, who captured Bidar, multiple other forts, and reached Bijapur, though were forced to retreat before they could lay siege to the city; Aurangzeb was nevertheless able to annex much of the occupied territory, including Bidar.[97][93] The stability of the Bijapur Sultanate was again affected by further troubles with the Marathas, who persisted with raids and rebellions.[93] Afzal Khan, a Bijapuri general, was sent to subdue Shivaji in 1659, but his expedition ended a disaster, as he was murdered and his home fort of Pratapgarh was captured in a confrontation with Shivaji.[98] Despite further Maratha advances in the north, Ali continued his southern campaigns in the Karnatak and Carnatic, in which he captured Thanjavur and other cities from the Nayakas from 1659–63.[99]
Sikandar Adil Shah, the last Adil Shahi sultan, ruled next for fourteen troublesome years. His reign saw multiple civil wars and much internal strife and unrest, particularly over who should be his regent, as he was only four at the time of his accession.[100] Khawas Khan, Sikandar's initial regent and leader of the Deccani faction,[101] took control of the state, though was removed from power in place of his enemy.[93] Shivaji formally founded an independent Maratha Kingdom, which went on to become the Maratha Confederacy, in 1674, and by then had de facto control over much of the Adil Shahis' original territory in the Deccan. He in the following years undid almost all of the southern Bijapuri conquests, annexing this territory into his own state, while also attempting to capture Bijapur itself.[93] Throughout this period the Mughals had been continuously encroaching upon the Adil Shahis' territory,[102] and with Shivaji's death in 1680, a more concerted effort to conquer the remaining Muslim Deccan states was launched.[93] In April 1685, Mughal forces, led by Aurangzeb, began their siege of Bijapur,[102] and with its conclusion on 12 September 1686,[103] the Sultanate of Bijapur came to an end.[104] The capital and its surrounding territory were annexed into an eponymous subah,[93] while Sikandar was sent into Mughal captivity.[105]
Culture
[edit]Architecture
[edit]The architecture of the Sultanate of Bijapur, as a subset of Deccani architecture, was a variant of Indo-Islamic architecture, influenced by that of the Middle East.[106] Adil Shahi architecture was of high sculptural quality, attained through its localized and unique nature. Characteristic of Adil Shahi architecture was large domes and dargahs, complex turrets,[107] geometric and Arabic or Persian calligraphic designs,[106][108] and decorated friezes of tholobates.[109]
Yusuf Adil Shah, the first sultan, began his work by expanding on two dargahs at Gulbarga commemorating Sufis, and added minarets to them.[110] The first building to fully employ the characteristics of Adil Shahi architecture was a Jama Masjid built during the reign of Ibrahim Adil Shah I.[109] The primary Jami Masjid of Bijapur, however, was built under the rule of Ali I, and was commissioned in 1576.[111] The largest of any structure of its type in the Deccan at its inception,[112] Eaton calls it "one of the most imposing and magnificent" in the region.[55] Under Ibrahim II, the sultanate's most prolific patron,[113] the aspects of Adil Shahi architecture evolved to focus on intricate carvings and detail[114] and adopted a style of Hindu–Muslim syncretism;[115] this change is seen in the Malika Jahan Begum mosque built by the sultan in 1586. His most notable commissioned work though was the eponymous Ibrahim Rauza, completed in 1626, comprising a mosque built in honour of his wife and a mausoleum for his dynasty.[114] Mohammed Adil Shah facilitated the creation of the Gol Gumbaz, his own mausoleum and one of the greatest monuments in Bijapur. It is supported by large arched recesses and a massive dome,[116] the largest in the Islamic world[117] upon its near-completion at Muhammad's death in 1656.[116] The last main Adil Shahi architectural project was the unfinished mausoleum of Ali Adil Shah II, the Bara Kaman, which stopped construction with his death in 1672.[118]
Painting and literature
[edit]The Adil Shahis partook in miniature painting through the Bijapur school of Deccani painting. Miniature painting was virtually nonexistent in the Bijapur Sultanate prior to the reign of Ali I, but became widespread under his rule and flourished under the rule of Ibrahim II and his successors.[43][119] The Bijapur school of painting was rooted in Persian miniature painting and culture and was usually baroque in style.[120] In contrast to North Indian contemporary painting, it seldom depicted events and scenes of war, and rather focused on atmospheres and picturesque fantasies and dreams, straying away from logic in general.[106]
The Adil Shahi sultans promoted the development of writing in the Deccani language, and Bijapur was one of the centers for its early literary evolution.[121] Ibrahim II was a skillful writer of Deccani Urdu literature,[122] and one of its earliest proponents. Ibrahim himself wrote the Kitab-i Nauras, a Deccani musical poetry work,[123] and patronized many poets and their works of art. His poet laureate, Persian Muhammad Zuhuri,[124][72] wrote the Saqinama, a collection of lyric poetry.[72] Another employed by the sultan was Firishta, who after entering Ibrahim's service in 1604 and gaining his trust, on the sultan's suggestion wrote his history of the medieval Deccan, the Tarikh-i Firishta, which serves as the basis for much of the modern historiography on the region and period.[125][126] The later Nusrati, one of the foremost Deccani poets, wrote the romance work Gulshan-i 'Ishq under the patronage of Ali Adil Shah II, and a narrative of the sultan's conquests.[127]
Rulers
[edit]Nine sultans ruled the Sultanate of Bijapur from 1490 to 1686, with the title of Sultan of Bijapur.[128]
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Titular Name | Personal Name | Reign | |
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Independence from the Bahmani Sultanate (1490) | |||
Amir أمیر |
Yusuf Adil Shah یوسف عادل شاہ |
1490–1510 | |
Adil Khani عادل خانی |
Ismail Adil Shah اسماعیل عادل شاہ |
1510–1534 | |
Adil Khani عادل خانی |
Mallu Adil Shah ملو عادل شاہ |
1534–1535 | |
Adil Khani عادل خانی |
Ibrahim Adil Shah I ابراہیم عادل شاہ اول |
1535–1558 | |
Adil Khani عادل خانی |
Ali Adil Shah I علی عادل شاہ اول |
1558–1580 | |
Adil Khani عادل خانی |
Ibrahim Adil Shah II ابراہیم عادل شاہ دوئم |
1580–1627 | |
Adil Khani عادل خانی |
Mohammed Adil Shah محمد عادل شاہ |
1627–1656 | |
Adil Khani عادل خانی |
Ali Adil Shah II علی عادل شاہ دوئم |
1656–1672 | |
Adil Khani عادل خانی |
Sikandar Adil Shah سکندر عادل شاہ |
1672–1686 | |
Conquered by Aurangzeb of the Mughal Empire in 1686. |
See also
[edit]Part of a series on the |
History of Karnataka |
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Notes
[edit]- ^ a b After 1535[2][3]
- ^ Written only, for local government[4]
- ^ Yusuf and his son, Ismail, generally used the title Adil Khan. "Khan" ("chief" in a number of Central Asian cultures and adopted in Persia) conferred lower status than "Shah", which indicated royal rank. With the rule of Yusuf's grandson, Ibrahim Adil Shah I (r. 1534–1558), the title "Adil Shah" became common, but Bijapur rulers recognized Safavid Persian suzerainty over their realm.[22]
- ^ The "Westerners", also known as the gharibs or afaqis, were a faction in the Deccani and Bahmani courts of anyone not native to the subcontinent ("west" of it) and were typically Persian-speaking and Shia Muslim.[35][36]
References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ Schwartzberg, Joseph E. (1978). A Historical atlas of South Asia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 147, map XIV.4 (k). ISBN 0226742210.
- ^ Satish Chandra, Medieval India: From Sultanat to the Mughals, Part II, (Har-Anand, 2009), 210.
- ^ Alam, Muzaffar (1998). "The pursuit of Persian: Language in Mughal Politics". Modern Asian Studies. 32 (2). Cambridge University Press: 317–349. doi:10.1017/s0026749x98002947. S2CID 146630389.
- ^ Sheikh, Samira (2021). "Persian in the Villages, or, the Language of Jamiat Rai's Account Books". Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient. 64 (5–6): 704. doi:10.1163/15685209-12341551.
The Adil Shahi rulers of Bijapur used written Marathi for local government, including revenue collection and judicial matters, as did the Nizam Shahis.
- ^ a b Eaton 1978, p. xxiii.
- ^ Subrahmanyam, Sanjay (2012). Courtly Encounters: Translating Courtliness and Violence in Early Modern Eurasia. Harvard University Press. p. 101. ISBN 978-0-674-06736-3.
- ^ Majumdar 1974, p. 445.
- ^ Meri, Josef W. (2006). Medieval Islamic Civilization, Volume 1 An Encyclopedia. Routledge. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-415-96691-7.
In 1481, Yusuf 'Adil Khan, a Persian slave who claimed to descend from the Ottoman sultan Murad III, became the governor of Bijapur.
- ^ Vernon O. Egger (2016). A History of the Muslim World since 1260: The Making of a Global Community. Routledge. ISBN 9781315511078.
- ^ Clifford Edmund Bosworth (2007). Historic Cities of the Islamic World. Brill. p. 55. ISBN 978-9004153882.
- ^ a b c Sherwani 1973, p. 291.
- ^ a b Nikki R. Keddie,Rudi Matthee (2011). Iran and the Surrounding World: Interactions in Culture and Cultural Politics. University of Washington Press. p. 25. ISBN 9780295800240.
- ^ Bolar, Varija R (2012). "Turks in Karnataka" (PDF). International Journal of Social Studies 4 (1): 423.
- ^ Farooqui, Salma Ahmed (2011). A Comprehensive History of Medieval India: From Twelfth to the Mid-Eighteenth Century. Pearson Education India. p. 174. ISBN 978-81-317-3202-1.
- ^ Sherwani 1946, p. 342.
- ^ a b Eaton 2019, p. 151.
- ^ a b Majumdar 1974, p. 446.
- ^ a b c Hutton, Deborah S. (2010). "ʿĀdil Shāhīs". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Rowson, Everett (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam (3rd ed.). Brill Online. ISSN 1873-9830.
- ^ Haig 1925, p. 429.
- ^ Chandra 2014, pp. 156–157.
- ^ a b Sherwani 1973, p. 303.
- ^ Anwar, M. Siraj (1991). "The Safavids and Mughal Relations with the Deccan States". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 52: 255–262. ISSN 2249-1937. JSTOR 44142611.
- ^ Majumdar 1974, p. 447.
- ^ Haig 1925, p. 430.
- ^ Eaton 2009, p. 299.
- ^ Eaton 2009, p. 289.
- ^ Eaton 2009, pp. 302–303.
- ^ Eaton 2009, pp. 304–305.
- ^ Eaton 2009, pp. 306–307.
- ^ Yazdani 1947, p. 12.
- ^ Majumdar 1974, pp. 448–449.
- ^ Yazdani 1947, p. 13.
- ^ a b c Majumdar 1974, p. 449.
- ^ a b Flatt 2019, p. 140.
- ^ Eaton 2008, p. 61.
- ^ a b Eaton 2008, p. 91.
- ^ Baqir, Muhammad. "BĪJĀPŪR". iranicaonline.org. Encyclopædia Iranica. Retrieved 8 February 2017.
The official language of the court at Bījāpūr during the ʿĀdelšāhī period and until the end of Mughal rule in 1274/1858 was Persian. Indeed, Yūsof ʿĀdelšāh (895–916/1489–1510) and his son Esmāʿīl themselves wrote poetry in Persian, Esmāʿīl under the pen name Wafāʾī. The ʿĀdelšāhīs established Shiʿism in Bījāpūr and actively encouraged the immigration of Persian writers and religious figures.
- ^ a b Majumdar 1974, p. 450.
- ^ Majumdar 1974, pp. 417–418.
- ^ Majumdar 1974, p. 419.
- ^ Majumdar 1974, pp. 418–420.
- ^ Majumdar 1974, p. 420.
- ^ a b Michell & Zebrowski 1999, p. 161.
- ^ Eaton 2019, p. 152.
- ^ Haig 1925, p. 444.
- ^ Eaton 2008, pp. 96–97.
- ^ Haig 1925, p. 445.
- ^ Eaton 2008, pp. 97–98.
- ^ a b Majumdar 1974, pp. 423–424.
- ^ Majumdar 1974, pp. 424–426.
- ^ Haig 1925, p. 449.
- ^ Eaton 1978, p. 97.
- ^ Eaton 2008, pp. 98–99.
- ^ Majumdar 1974, p. 426.
- ^ a b Eaton 1978, p. 86.
- ^ Haig 1925, pp. 451–452.
- ^ Haig 1925, pp. 452–453.
- ^ Sherwani 1973, pp. 333–334.
- ^ Haig 1925, pp. 453–454.
- ^ a b Fischel 2020, p. 69.
- ^ Eaton 1978, p. 68.
- ^ Eaton 1978, p. 84.
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Sources
[edit]- Asher, Catherine B.; Talbot, Cynthia (2006). India Before Europe. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780511808586.
- Chandra, Satish (2014). History of Medieval India 800–1700 A.D. Orient BlackSwan. ISBN 9788125032267.
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- Eaton, Richard M. (2008). "Rama Raya (1484–1565)". A Social History of the Deccan, 1300–1761 : Eight Indian Lives. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-71627-7. OCLC 226973152.
- Eaton, Richard M. (2009). "'Kiss My Foot,' Said the King: Firearms, Diplomacy and the Battle for Raichur, 1520". Modern Asian Studies. 43 (1). Cambridge University Press: 289–313. doi:10.1017/S0026749X07003289. JSTOR 20488080.
- Eaton, Richard M. (2019). India in the Persianate Age, 1000–1765. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520325128.
- Fischel, Roy S. (2020). Local States in an Imperial World : Identity, Society and Politics in the Early Modern Deccan. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 9781474436090.
- Flatt, Emma J. (2019). The Courts of the Deccan Sultanates: Living Well in the Persian Cosmopolis. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781108481939.
- Haig, Wolseley (1925). Cambridge History of India Vol. 2. Cambridge University Press.
- Harle, James C. (1994). The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent. Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300062175.
- Overton, Keelan (2016). "Book Culture, Royal Libraries, and Persianate Painting in Bijapur, circa 1580‒1630". Muqarnas. 33: 91–154. doi:10.1163/22118993_03301P006. JSTOR 26551683.
- Majumdar, R.C., ed. (1974). "The Five Sultanates of the Deccan". The Mughul Empire. Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan.
- Matthews, David J. (1993). "Eighty Years of Dakani Scholarship". The Annual of Urdu Studies. 9.
- Michell, George; Zebrowski, Mark (1999). Architecture and Art of the Deccan Sultanates (The New Cambridge History of India Vol. I:7). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521563215.
- Shaheen, Shagufta; Shahid, Sajjad (2018). "The Unique Literary Traditions of Dakhnī". In Azam, Kousar J. (ed.). Languages and Literary Cultures in Hyderabad. Routledge. ISBN 9781351393997.
- Sherwani, Haroon Khan (1946). The Bahmanis of the Deccan – An Objective Study. Krishnavas International Printers, Hyderabad Deccan.
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Further reading
[edit]- Chapter on "Persian Literature in Bijapur Sultanate" in The Rise, Growth And Decline of Indo-Persian Literature by R.M. Chopra, Iran Culture House, New Delhi, 2012.
External links
[edit]- The Adil Shahi Kingdom (1510 CE to 1686 CE) by Dr. (Mrs) Jyotsna Kamat