The Mughal Empire: How Babur Built India's Greatest Dynasty — Fexingo History

Aurangzeb's Deccan Campaign: Why the Mughal Empire Stretched Too Far

9 min · 11. juli 2026
episode Aurangzeb's Deccan Campaign: Why the Mughal Empire Stretched Too Far cover

Description

How the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb spent 25 years fighting to conquer the Deccan sultanates of Bijapur and Golconda—and bankrupted his empire in the process. This episode traces the brutal siege of Golconda in 1687, the cunning of the Maratha guerrilla leader Shivaji, the rise of the Maratha Empire, and the fiscal crisis that followed. We explore the role of the Mughal mansabdari system, the Persian-inflected culture of the Deccan courts, and the tipping point that left Delhi vulnerable to Nadir Shah's invasion. A story of ambition, war elephants, and the limits of imperial overreach. #Aurangzeb #DeccanCampaign #Bijapur #Golconda #Shivaji #MarathaEmpire #MughalEmpire #SiegeOfGolconda #MansabdariSystem #NadirShah #DeccanSultanates #QutbShahi #AdilShahi #MughalWarElephants #IndianHistory #17thCentury #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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167 episodes

episode Akbar's Navaratna: The Nine Gems Who Shaped an Empire artwork

Akbar's Navaratna: The Nine Gems Who Shaped an Empire

Step into the court of Emperor Akbar and meet the Navaratna — the Nine Gems who were more than advisors: they were poets, warriors, musicians, and financiers who shaped the Mughal Empire at its zenith. From the legendary musician Tansen to the visionary finance minister Raja Todar Mal, from the brilliant historian Abu'l-Fazl to the enigmatic Birbal, these nine figures were the brains behind Akbar's reign of sulh-i-kul — universal peace. Discover how Birbal's wit solved impossible riddles, how Tansen's ragas were said to light lamps and summon rain, and how Todar Mal's revenue reforms funded an empire. We explore the cultural and political symbiosis of a multicultural court where a Hindu Rajput general, Man Singh, led armies alongside Muslim commanders, and where a Persian poet, Faizi, translated ancient Indian texts. This episode dives into the stories, legends, and controversies surrounding these extraordinary individuals — and what their legacy meant for India's golden age. #Akbar #Navaratna #MughalEmpire #NineGems #Birbal #Tansen #RajaTodarMal #AbulFazl #Faizi #ManSingh #AbdulRahimKhanIKhana #SulhIKul #MughalCourt #IndianHistory #FatehpurSikri #SouthAsianHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday7 min
episode Akbar's Ibadat Khana: The House of Worship That Almost United Faiths artwork

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In 1575, Akbar built the Ibadat Khana at Fatehpur Sikri—a round hall where Sunni scholars, Shia theologians, Hindu pandits, Jain monks, Zoroastrian mobeds, Portuguese Jesuits, and even atheists debated theology. But the experiment backfired: instead of harmony, it exposed intolerance and led Akbar to declare his own divine faith. This episode follows the debates, the scholars who challenged Akbar's ego, and the hall itself—a physical space where empire tried to engineer enlightenment. We meet figures like Abu'l-Fazl, who recorded it all; Bada'uni, the orthodox critic who fumed in secret; and Father Rodolfo Acquaviva, the Jesuit who almost converted the emperor. The Ibadat Khana lasted only a decade, but its echoes shaped sulh-i-kul—universal peace—and haunt interfaith dialogue today. #IbadatKhana #Akbar #FatehpurSikri #Mughal #religiousdebate #sulh-i-kul #AbulFazl #Badauni #Jesuits #Jains #Zoroastrians #Hinduism #interfaith #Din-i-Ilahi #Akbarnama #FexingoHistory #History #SouthAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday10 min
episode Babur's Victory at Panipat: How 12,000 Men Toppled Delhi artwork

Babur's Victory at Panipat: How 12,000 Men Toppled Delhi

In 1526, Zahir-ud-din Muhammad Babur—a Timurid prince from the Ferghana Valley—marched into northern India with just 12,000 men and a handful of cannons. Facing him was Ibrahim Lodi, Sultan of Delhi, with an army of over 100,000 soldiers and a thousand war elephants. How did Babur, exiled from his homeland and outnumbered ten to one, manage to shatter the Lodi Sultanate and lay the foundation for the Mughal Empire? This episode unpacks the First Battle of Panipat: Babur's innovative use of the tulughma tactic, the psychological shock of gunpowder on the Indian battlefield, the betrayal within Lodi's ranks, and the brutal aftermath that sealed Delhi's fate. We also examine the technology—matchlock muskets, field artillery, and carts lashed together as mobile fortifications—that gave Babur a decisive edge. And we touch on a controversial legacy: the destruction of temples and the enslavement of prisoners, which Babur himself recorded in his memoir, the Baburnama. This is the battle that changed everything—a story of desperation, ingenuity, and the birth of an empire. #Babur #Panipat #MughalEmpire #Baburnama #IbrahimLodi #Timurid #Tulughma #Gunpowder #Matchlock #Cannon #DelhiSultanate #LodiDynasty #India #SouthAsia #16thCentury #MilitaryHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17. juli 20267 min
episode Jahangir's Chain of Justice: A Golden Bell for the People artwork

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17. juli 20269 min
episode The Lost Mughal Prince: Khusrau's Rebellion Against Jahangir artwork

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16. juli 20264 min