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Khilji dynasty
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This article is about the Khilji dynasty centered in Delhi between 1290 and 1320. For the Khilji dynasty in Bengal between 1204
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"Khalji" redirects here. For the village in Iran, see Khalji, Iran.
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dynasty of Turkic origin, which ruled large parts of South Asia between 1290 and
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1320.[3][4][5] It was founded by Jalal ud din Firuz Khilji and became the second dynasty
Khilji Sultanate
to rule the Delhi Sultanate of India. The dynasty is known for their faithlessness and
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ferocity,[3]
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as well as their raids into the Hindu south and defending the Sultanate
12901320
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Contents [hide]
1 Origins
2 Economic policy and administration under Khilji dynasty
Special pages
Permanent link
Page information
5 Architecture
6 Disputed historical sources on Khilji dynasty
Wikidata item
8 See also
9 References and footnotes
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10 Further reading
11 External links
Printable version
In other projects
Origins
Khilji dynasty
Wikimedia
Commons
Languages
Capital
Delhi
Languages
Persian (official)[1]
Azrbaycanca
Religion
Sunni Islam
Sultanate
Government
Sultan
12901296
12961316
1316
13161320
Catal
etina
Deutsch
Espaol
Afghan.[15][16][17]
Franais
The three sultans of the Khalji dynasty were noted by historians for
ferocity.[11]
Ikhtiar Uddin Muhammad bin Bakhtiar Khilji was a servant of Qutb-ud-din Aibak, who
History
Established
Disestablished
1290
1320
Area
Jalal-ud-din Khilji
Italiano
background.[15]
2,700,000 km
(1,042,476 sq mi)
Today part of
India
Pakistan
Bangladesh
Afghanistan
Nederlands
the Mamluk dynasty of Delhi and served the Sultan of Delhi, Ghiyas ud din Balban.
Balban's successors were murdered over 1289-1290, and the Mamluk dynasty
succumbed to the factional conflicts within the Mamluk dynasty and the Muslim
Tajikistan[2]
Nepal
nobility. As the struggle between the factions razed, Jalal ud din Firuz Khilji led a coup
China[2]
and murdered the 17-year-old Mamluk successor Muiz ud din Qaiqabad - the last
Svenska
Trke
Jalal ud din Firuz Khilji was accepted as sultan by a faction of Muslim amirs of Turkic, Persian,
Arabic factions and Indian-Muslim aristocrats. However, Jalal-ud-din in his old age was
unpopular and not universally accepted. During his six-year reign (129096), some of Balban's
Edit links
officers revolted due to his assumption of power and the subsequent sidelining of nobility and
commanders serving the Mamluk dynasty.[18] Jalal-ud-din suppressed the revolt and executed
some commanders, then led an unsuccessful expedition against Ranthambhor and repelled a
Mongol force on the banks of the Sind River in central India with the help of his nephew Juna
Khan.[19]
Alauddin Khilji
Juna Khan, later to be known as Alauddin Khilji, was the nephew and son-in-law of Jalal-ud-din,
raided the Hindu Deccan peninsula and Deogiri - then the capital of the Hindu state of
Xueyantuo 628646
Maharashtra, looting their treasure.[18][20] He returned to Delhi in 1296, murdered his uncle and
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after he suspected them of rebellion, by first gouging out their eyes and then beheading
them.[20]
In 1308, Alauddin's lieutenant, Malik Kafur captured Warangal, overthrew the Hoysala Empire
south of the Krishna River and raided Madura in Tamil Nadu.[26] He then looted the treasury in
Bahri dynasty
capitals and from the temples of south India. Among these loots was the Warangal loot that
included one of the largest known diamond in human history, the Koh-i-noor.[25] Malik Kafur
returned to Delhi in 1311, laden with loot and war booty from Deccan peninsula which he
[show]
submitted to Aladdin Khilji. This made Malik Kafur, born in a Hindu family and who had converted to Islam before becoming Delhi
Sultanate's army commander, a favorite of Alauddin Khilji.[19]
The last Khilji sultans
Aladdin Khilji died in December 1315. Thereafter, the sultanate witnessed chaos, coup and succession of assassinations.[18] Malik
Kafur became the sultan but lacked support from Muslim amirs and was killed within a few months. Within the next three years, three
more Khilji successors violently assumed power but were in turn, all violently put to death in coups. After Malik Kafur's death, the
Muslim amirs installed Shihab-ud-din Omar - a six-year-old as Sultan, with his elder teenage brother Qutb ud din Mubarak Shah as
regent. Qutb ud din Mubarak Shah killed his younger brother and then appointed himself as the Sultan. To win over the loyalty of the
amirs and the Malik clan in the Sultanate, Mubarak Shah offered Ghazi Malik the command of Punjab and others various offices or
death. The amirs chose the office. Mubarak Shah ruled for less than 4 years, then was murdered in 1320 by his army general
Khusraw Khan. The Muslim amirs in Delhi reached out and invited Ghazi Malik, then Muslim army commander in Punjab to lead a coup
against Khusraw Khan. Ghazi Malik attacked Khusraw Khan in Delhi, beheaded him, and rechristened himself as Sultan Ghiyath alDin Tughluq, the first ruler of the Tughluq dynasty.[20]
worsened in north India, shortages increased and Delhi Sultanate witnessed increasingly worse and extended periods of
famines.[19][41] The Sultan banned private storage of food by anyone.[29] Rationing system was introduced by Alauddin as shortages
multiplied however, the nobility and his army were exempt from the per family quota-based food rationing system.[41] The shortages,
price controls and rationing system caused starvation deaths of numerous rural people, mostly Hindus. However, during these
famines, Khilji's sultanate granaries and wholesale mandi system with price controls ensured sufficient food for his army, court officials
and the urban population in Delhi.[30][42] Price controls instituted by Khilji reduced prices, but also lowered wages to a point where
ordinary people did not benefit from the low prices.[43] The price control system collapsed shortly after the death of Alauddin Khalji,
with prices of various agriculture products and wages doubling to quadrupling within a few years.[43]
Historical impact
The tax system introduced during the Khalji dynasty had a long term influence on Indian taxation system and state administration,
Alauddin Khalji's taxation system was probably the one institution from his reign that lasted the longest, surviving indeed
into the nineteenth or even the twentieth century. From now on, the land tax (kharaj or mal) became the principal form in
which the peasant's surplus was expropriated by the ruling class.
The Cambridge Economic History of India: c.1200-c.1750, [44]
Architecture
Ala-ud-din Khilji is credited with the early Indo-Mohammedan architecture, a style and construction campaign that flourished during
Tughlaq dynasty. Among works completed during Khilji dynasty, are Alai Darwaza - the southern gateway of Qutb complex enclosure,
the Idgah at Rapri, and the Jamat Khana (Khizri) Mosque in Delhi.[49] The Alai Darwaza, completed in 1311, was included as part of
Qutb Minar and its Monuments UNESCO World Heritage site in 1993.[50]
Perso-Arabic inscriptions on monuments have been traced to the Khilji dynasty era.[1]
Personal Name
Reign
Shyista Khn
(Jalal-ud-din)
Malik Froz
Ala-ud-din[11]
Shihab-ud-din
Qutb-ud-din
12901296[4]
12961316[4]
1316[4]
13161320[4]
See also
Khalaj people
Hepthalites
Persianate society
Ikhtiyar Uddin Muhammad Bin Bakhtiyar Khalji
List of Sunni Muslim dynasties
Survey of India"
2. ^ a
"Khalji Dynasty"
Distributors
3. ^ a
25. ^ a
of Turkish origin, though the Khalj tribe had long been settled in
26. ^ a
bc de
Dynastic Chart
p. 368.
Primus Books. pp. 8089. ISBN 978-9-38060-734-4.
Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia: A Historical
30. ^ a
Retrieved 2013-06-13.
bc
28. ^ a
29. ^ a
Asia. p. 364.
2014-11-13.
bc d
bc
"Khalji Dynasty"
978-0-521-54329-3
34. ^ Elliot and Dowson (1871), The History of India as told by its
of Turkic origin, though the Khilj tribe had long been settled in
what is now Afghanistan..."
90697-0
36. ^ a
38. ^ a
978-0-521-54329-3
"The Khiljis were a Central Asian Turkic dynasty but having been
Delhi Court."
41. ^ a
. Marshall
Retrieved 2012-11-19.
bc d
and Military History, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9780521543293 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag name
bc d
Press
^a b c
18. ^ a
Analysis
Development Analysis
20.
51. ^ a
0521543293, pp 49-52
bc d
52. ^ Elliot and Dawson (1871), The History of India as told by its
own Historians, Vol. 3, pp 94-98
53. ^ Irfan Habib (1981), "Barani's theory of the history of the Delhi
Sultanate", Indian Historical Review, Vol. 7, No. 1, pp 99-115
Further reading
Vincent A Smith, The Oxford History of India: From the Earliest Times to the End of 1911 , p. 230, at Google Books, Oxford
University Press
Peter Jackson (2003), The Delhi Sultanate: A Political and Military History, Cambridge University Press
External links
Encyclopdia Britannica - Khalji Dynasty
Khilji - A Short History of Muslim Rule in India
The Role of Ulema in Indo-Muslim History , Aziz Ahmad, Studia Islamica, No. 31 (1970),
pp. 113
Authority control
WorldCat Identities
VIAF: 57416848
GND: 119071878
Khilji dynasty
Delhi Sultanate
Dynasties of Pakistan
Medieval Afghanistan
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