The concept of modernity is often historically conflated with Westernisation, but treating Eurocentric developments as the sole baseline overlooks alternate trajectories of socio-economic and technological growth. When evaluating pre-colonial India, Muslim rulers during the Delhi Sultanate and Mughal eras ushered in early foundations of modernity—often described by historians as proto-industrialisation and early modern statecraft—by reshaping administration, global commerce, secular law, and technological capability. [1, 2]
1. Secularization of Statecraft and Civil Law
- Secular Legislation (Zawabit): Sultans like Alauddin Khilji and Muhammad bin Tughlaq enacted Zawabit—state laws independent of Islamic Sharia scriptures—to regulate markets, control military recruitment, and collect revenue. [3]
- The Imperial Policy of Sulh-i-Kul: Emperor Akbar formalised universal peace and religious neutrality. He institutionalised a multi-ethnic, multi-religious nobility, making civil and military appointments based on merit (Mansabdari system) rather than religious affiliation. [4, 5, 6, 7, 8]
- Judicial Codification: The compilation of the Fatawa-e-Alamgiri under Aurangzeb, though rooted in Islamic jurisprudence, represented a major step toward a structured, written legal code, reducing the arbitrary whim of individual judges.
2. Administrative Uniformity and Bureaucratization
- The Mansabdari System: The Mughals replaced localized, hereditary military fiefdoms with a structured, non-hereditary imperial bureaucracy. Mansabdars were assigned ranks, systematically transferred, and paid cash salaries via central treasuries to prevent the fracturing of provincial power. [4, 10, 11]
- Standardized Statistics: Abu'l-Fazl’s Ain-i-Akbari stands as a monumental early modern administrative manual. It precisely cataloged geographic, economic, yield-based, and cultural statistics across the empire, mirroring modern state demographic registers.
3. Economic Integration and Proto-Industrialization
- Uniform Currency & Weights: Rulers introduced highly stable currencies—most notably Sher Shah Suri’s silver Rupiya and copper Dam—and standardized weights and measures across thousands of miles, facilitating seamless commerce. [12]
- Monetization of the Agrarian Economy: Toddar Mal’s land revenue reforms (Zabt system) measured agricultural land and shifted tax collection from a share of grain to standardized cash payments. This forced rural peasants to enter regional and urban markets, tying local agriculture directly to global trade dynamics. [12, 14, 15]
- The Karkhana Manufacturing Network: Royal workshops (Karkhanas) centralized hundreds of specialized artisans under single roofs to manufacture textiles, weapons, and luxury goods, demonstrating early forms of factory-line division of labor.
4. Technological Influx and Mechanical Innovation
- Information & Literacy: The introduction of Chinese papermaking technology via Central Asia fundamentally altered documentation, bureaucratic record-keeping, and the preservation of knowledge in India.
- Textile Production: The introduction of the spinning wheel (Charkha) in the 14th century multiplied yarn production exponentially, directly laying the groundwork for India to become the world's preeminent textile exporter.
- Agricultural Engineering: The widespread adoption of the geared Persian wheel (Saqiya) revolutionized irrigation, making it possible to lift water from deeper wells and dramatically increasing multi-crop yields.
- Military Revolution: The introduction of gunpowder, artillery, and advanced metallurgy altered regional geopolitics, requiring centralized states capable of funding expensive standing armies. [14, 16, 17, 18, 19]
5. Urbanization and Transnational Connectivity
- Infrastructure: The reconstruction and expansion of the Grand Trunk Road (and an extensive accompanying public works network) linked Kabul directly to Bengal. It featured Sarais (inns) serving as commercial hubs and a highly efficient royal postal system (Dak Chauki). [12, 21, 22]
- Global Port Integration: The economic policies of the Mughals resembled a laissez-faire system toward foreign mercantile entities. Ports like Surat, Hugli, and Masulipatnam connected inland textile production hubs directly with the global markets of Europe, the Ottoman Empire, and Southeast Asia. [12, 23]
Limitations of this "Indigenous Modernity"
- Lack of Institutionalized Science: While technological tools were adopted, there was an absence of systemic institutional investment in theoretical sciences, physics, or mechanical printing presses.
- Absence of a Bourgeoisie: The state remained heavily reliant on agricultural revenue. Merchant wealth was highly vulnerable to arbitrary confiscation by the nobility, preventing the merchant class from evolving into a politically independent bourgeoisie capable of driving an industrial revolution. [4, 12]
Conclusion
- The economic output and data of the Bengal Subah.
- The precise operational mechanics of the Mansabdari and land revenue systems.
- A direct comparison of Mughal technology versus European technology in the 17th century. [1, 4]
1. The Foreign Paradigm: The Perso-Islamic Model
- The Circle of Justice (Adayal): This core Persian political philosophy argued that a king cannot rule without an army, an army cannot exist without land revenues, revenues cannot be collected without prosperous peasants, and peasants cannot prosper without justice. Thus, economic stability and state survival depended on keeping non-Muslim subjects content and economically productive. [7, 8, 9]
- The Concept of Zillullah (Shadow of God): Rulers like Balban and later Akbar adopted the Persian ideal of the king as the supreme, semi-divine authority on Earth. This allowed them to place the Emperor's political decrees (Zawabit) above the religious rulings of the local orthodox clergy (Ulema). [10, 11]
- The Bureaucracy of Samarkand and Persia: The administrative, courtly etiquette (Adab), and accounting systems used by the Delhi Sultanate and Mughals were directly imported from the Persianate world, prioritizing central authority and systemic taxation over religious expansion. [12]
2. Primary Motivations: Wealth, Legacy, and Centralization
- Resource Extraction & Wealth: India was the economic engine of the medieval world. The primary motivation was to establish a stable, centralized revenue system (Zabt) to extract agricultural surplus and control international trade routes. [15, 16, 17, 18]
- Dynastic Continuity and Security: Confronted by the constant threat of brutal Mongol invasions during the Sultanate era and internal rebellions during the Mughal era, rulers were motivated to build meritocratic, multi-ethnic militaries (including Rajput and local Muslim elites) to secure their borders and throne. [19, 20, 21, 22]
- Monumental Legacy: Culturally, they were driven by a desire to establish India as the premier center of the Persianate cultural world, funding grand architecture, literature, and technology to legitimize their status globally.
3. How Far Religion Was a Factor or Contributor?
A. Religion as an Instrument of Legitimacy (The Rhetoric)
- Political Branding: Early Sultans sought investiture (Mansur) from the distant Abbasid Caliph in Baghdad. This was not because the Caliph had actual power, but because a religious stamp of approval gave the Sultans legitimacy in the eyes of their Central Asian military commanders and rivals. [26, 27]
- Wartime Mobilization: Rulers frequently used religious rhetoric, such as declaring a Jihad (holy war) or adopting titles like Ghazi (religious warrior) before major battles (e.g., Babur before the Battle of Khanwa against Rana Sanga). This was highly effective for unifying disparate mercenary tribes under a single banner. [28, 29, 30, 31]
B. The Reality of Pragmatism (The Policy)
- Subjugation of the Clergy: Whenever the Ulema (orthodox religious scholars) demanded that rulers strictly enforce Sharia law or aggressively convert the Hindu majority, the rulers flatly refused. Monarchs like Alauddin Khilji famously stated that he did what was best for the state, not what was prescribed by religious law.
- The Zimmi Status and Taxation: Realizing that converting the vast population was logistically impossible and economically disastrous, rulers legally classified Hindus as Zimmis (protected subjects). While taxes like the Jizya (poll tax) were occasionally levied for economic or political leverage, they were frequently suspended (notably by Akbar and his successors) to maintain social harmony and secure the loyalty of powerful Hindu Rajput allies.
- The Calculus of Power: Wars were fought for territory, not theology. Muslim rulers routinely allied with Hindu kingdoms to defeat rival Muslim rulers. For example, Babur fought the Muslim Ibrahim Lodi; Akbar fought the Muslim rulers of Gujarat and Bengal; and Aurangzeb’s top military general, who led the campaigns against Shivaji, was a Hindu Rajput king, Jai Singh I. [32, 33, 34, 35, 36]
Summary: Rhetoric vs. Reality
| Factor [37, 38, 39, 40, 41] | Religious Rhetoric | Imperial Reality |
|---|---|---|
| State Law | Supposedly governed by Sharia. | Governed by Zawabit (secular state laws based on local conditions). |
| Alliances | Framed as Believers vs. Infidels. | Pragmatic pacts (Muslims and Hindus routinely allied against shared rivals). |
| Clergy Power | Ulema held high symbolic status. | Ulema were systematically sidelined whenever they interfered in state finances or security. |
- The specific debates between the orthodox Ulema and Emperors like Akbar or Jahangir.
- How the Circle of Justice philosophy was explicitly taught in Mughal administrative manuals.
- A breakdown of inter-religious military alliances during the 16th and 17th centuries. [45, 46]
1. Monetised Taxation Provided Immediate Funding
- The Diwani Rights (1765): Following the Battle of Buxar, the EIC acquired the Diwani (the right to collect land revenue) for Bengal, Bihar, and Odisha directly from Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II. [10, 11]
- The "Investment" Loop: Instead of bringing silver from Britain to buy Indian goods, the British used the existing Mughal tax machinery to extract cash from Indian peasants. They then used that exact cash to buy Indian textiles and spices, which they sold globally for a 100% profit—effectively conquering and buying India using its own pre-existing economic machinery. [10, 12, 13]
2. High-Capacity Shipping Technology Was Appropriated
- Design Duplication: Indian ships, particularly Bengal cargo and rice ships, utilized an innovative flushed-deck design. This made them structurally stronger, safer, and far less prone to leaks than traditional European stepped-deck vessels. [14]
- Maritime Hegemony: The British East India Company systematically copied these flushed-deck and hull designs in the 1760s. This reverse-engineering drastically improved the seaworthiness and navigation of British vessels, giving them the exact maritime edge needed to dominate global trade routes during the Industrial Revolution. [14]
3. A Turnkey Textile Grid Fed Global Markets
- Ready-Made Supply Chains: When the British arrived, they found a fully operational, highly skilled, and deeply organized network of weavers, artisans, and merchant middlemen. [13, 16, 17]
- Capitalist Jumpstart: The EIC plugged directly into this pre-existing supply chain. By monopolizing and later coercing this artisan network, the British accumulated the immense capital reserves required to finance their early domestic industrialization back home. [2, 16, 18, 19, 20]
4. Standardised Currency and Infrastructure Eased the Conquest
- The Stable Silver Rupiya: The standardized, highly pure currency system established by Sher Shah Suri and the Mughals allowed European merchants to trade seamlessly across vast distances without dealing with hyper-fragmented local barter or volatile exchange rates. [15]
- The Grand Trunk Road Network: The sprawling logistics network of highways and Sarais (inns) built for Mughal administrative uniformity became the exact physical conduits the British military used to rapidly march armies, transport raw materials, and establish administrative control over the interior subcontinent. [15, 23]
Summary of the Economic Hijacking
| Mughal/Sultanate Foundation [2, 10, 13, 14, 15, 16, 23] | How the European Colonisers Benefitted |
|---|---|
| Monetised Zabt Tax System | Provided the raw cash used to purchase goods, ending Britain's need to export silver. |
| Flushed-Deck Bengal Shipbuilding | Copied by the British to improve the seaworthiness of their own global merchant fleets. |
| Artisan Karkhana & Weaver Networks | Monopolized by the EIC to capture global textile markets and generate immense capital. |
| Unified Currency (Rupiya) & Roads | Allowed rapid British military movement and seamless commercial exploitation of the interior. |
- How the British deliberately de-industrialized the Indian textile sector in the 19th century to protect mills in Manchester.
- The specific financial mechanics of the Drain of Wealth theory formulated by Dadabhai Naoroji. [13, 18, 27, 28]
Why This Pivot Occurs: Presentism vs. History
- Weaponizing the Past: Complex historical processes (like the pragmatic alliances between Mughal emperors and Rajput kings) are often ignored because they do not fit modern, neat narratives of absolute communal division.
- Sensationalism Over Substance: Media ecosystems and political rhetoric naturally gravitate toward highly emotional, socially polarizing buzzwords rather than dense debates about 17th-century land revenue (Zabt) or ship designs. [1]
- Erasure of Shared Heritage: Reducing a multi-century era to a single social controversy erases the deep, intertwined syncretic culture (Ganga-Jamuni Tehzeeb) that developed in art, music, language (like Urdu), and architecture.
The Value of Holding the Larger Picture
- The British "Divide and Rule" historiography (like James Mill's division of Indian history into Hindu, Muslim, and British periods), which laid the groundwork for modern communal politics.
- The evolution of syncretic identities during this period, such as the emergence of the Bhakti and Sufi movements that defied rigid religious boundaries.