HISTORIANS AND HISTORIOGRAPHY DURING THE REIGN OF AKBAR

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ISBN 9789350025208
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ISBN 9789350025208

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This book, written as doctoral dissertation in the 1960s, was somewhat of a departure from the then prevalent research themes of Mughal history: its revenue system, composition of the nobility, level of peasan’ts exploitation and so forth. In examining the primary sources of Mughal history, the court chronicles, it sought to go beyong the sterile positivist true vs false dichotomy instead it sought to unearth and evaluate the unstated assumptions underlying the works of history of the period first labeled "Muslim" by James Mill in 1817-18 and later on "Medieval" in the twentieth century. In a slim though influential work, Historians of Medieval India published in 1960, Peter Hardy had postulated that history was for them a branch of Islamic theology, where historical events manifested Divine will. This book arrived at a contrary conclusion: all historians, irrespective of their grave differences, treated historical events as manifestation of human, especially the ruler’s will. In some ways we owe the notion of historical explanation in terms of personal characterstics of rulers – strong vs weak or liberal vs dogmatic – to this essential feature of our medieval sources.

Harbans Mukhia taught Medieval history for 44 years, 11 at three of Delhi University’s colleges – Kirori Mal, Rajdhani and Hindu – and 33 at JNU. Historians and Historiography During the Reign of Akbar was his first published book, Some of his other publications are: Feudalism and Non-European Societies, (co-edited with TJ Byers); French Studies in History, 2 vols. (co-edited with Maurice Aymard); The Mughals of India; Exploring India’s Medieval Centuries: Essays in History, Society, Culture and Technology.

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