Abul Fazal Monarchy
Abul Fazal Monarchy
Abul Fazal Monarchy
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Dr Swasti Rao, Associate Fellow, Europe and Eurasia Center, Manohar Parrikar
Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses
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11.11 Abul Fazal’s Views on Administration and popular well being: Reforms Abul Fazal:
Monarchical
11.11.1Departure from Delhi Sultanate Authority and
Popular Well
11.11.2Importance to Talent
Being
11.11.3Changes in Tax system
11.12 Criticism
11.13 Let us sum up
11.14 References
11.15 Answers to check your progress Exercises
11.0 OBJECTIVES
The aim of this unit is to familiarise you with the political and administrative
ideas of Abul Fazal ,a medieval Indian historian and philosopher who served at
the Court of Akabr. After studying this unit, you should be able to understand:
Context of Abul Fazal’s life and times
Early influences on his philosophical thought
Important characterics of his political thought
His methodology
His ideas of peace, Secularism, Sovereignty, division of society, divine
origin of king, rationality
Administrative and political reforms in the times of Akbar
Analyze some of his limitations and criticisms
11.1 INTRODUCTION
Sheikh Abu’L-FaŻl (1551-1602) was a historian, officer, chief secretary, and
confidant of the Mughal emperor Akbar. He was born on 14 January 1551 and
was the second son of Shaikh Mobārak, a teacher and scholar who had migrated
to Agra in 1543 from Nagaur, Rajastan. Fazal was an eminent historian of
Medieval India along with Barani.
Fazal occupies a place of distinction. This is mainly because of the predominance
of intellectual elements in his writings, his unfailing appeal to reason against
religious and cultural traditions, broader view of history and a new methodology
which he sought to apply to his task. His interpretation of history was integrally
linked to the political, social, economic and religious realities of that period and
strove to address the plurality and diversity of Indian society at large that Akbar
wished to rule in the best possible manner.
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Political Concerns Check Your Progress Exercise 2
and Key Ideas
Note: i) Use the space given below for your answer.
ii) Check your progress with the model answer given at the end of
the unit.
1. Elaborate the methodology of Abul Fazal.
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2. Elaborate the notion of Sovereignty and Social Contract in Abul Fazal’s
thought.
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3. Why is Din e Ilahi a secular Philosophy?
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11.12 CRITICISM
Abul Fazal is usually criticized for the following:
Criticized for not being a true Muslim and for being a kafir. Fazl did not think
that Islam was superior to all religions while Barani and other thinkers regarded it
as supreme. This was the reason that many people called Abul Fazl a rebel, a
Kafir, Hindu or Agnipujak etc. He was too skeptical of tradition and those hostile
to him record that he had brusquely brushed aside Ghazali's criticisms of the
scientists with the short remark that Ghazali "had spoken nonsense.
His cosmopolitan philosophy and Din e ilahi could only be partially successful in
India. Policies like Sulh-kul and Din-i-Ilahi gave strength to his governance and
administration, but these new experiments were not as successful as Akbar
hoped.
Inconsistency in the theory of social contract and in his theory of divine origin of
sovereignty since the two theories are not logically compatible with each other.
Indeed, he may be said to have tried to combine the two, but certain logical
inconsistencies remained.
11.14 REFERENCES
Fatāwā-ye ǰahāndārī, tr. M. Habib and A. Afzal-al-din, The Political
Theory of the Delhi Sultanate, Aligarh, 1960.)
199
Political Concerns M. Habib and K. A. Nizami, eds., A Comprehensive History of India V:
and Key Ideas
The Delhi Sultanate, Delhi, 1970,
Singh, M.P “Indian Political Thought” 2011 Dorling Kindersley (India)
Pvt. Ltd.
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