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

Aurangzeb's Deccan Wars: The Mughal Empire's Pyrrhic Victory

9 min · 16 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Aurangzeb's Deccan Wars: The Mughal Empire's Pyrrhic Victory

Descripción

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore Aurangzeb's decades-long campaign to conquer the Deccan sultanates and the Maratha kingdom. They delve into the strategic brilliance and final betrayal of the Maratha leader Shivaji, the brutal siege of Golconda, and the endless guerrilla war that bled the Mughal treasury dry. Lucas explains how Aurangzeb's religious policies and military overreach sowed the seeds of the empire's decline, focusing on the incredible story of Madanna and Akkanna, the Brahmin ministers who ran Golconda's diamond trade, and the tragic fate of the last Qutb Shahi sultan. The conversation also touches on the role of the Deccan's rugged geography, the rise of the Maratha guerrilla tactics, and the legacy of Aurangzeb's longest war. #Aurangzeb #DeccanWars #Shivaji #Golconda #MarathaEmpire #QutbShahi #MadannaAndAkkanna #MughalDecline #SiegeOfGolconda #Bijapur #Karnataka #DeccanPlateau #GuerrillaWarfare #DiamondTrade #SouthAsia #History #FexingoHistory #MughalEmpire Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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121 episodios

Portada del episodio Humayun's Exile: The King Who Lost an Empire and Came Back

Humayun's Exile: The King Who Lost an Empire and Came Back

After Babur's death in 1530, his son Humayun inherited a fragile empire—and promptly lost it. This episode traces Humayun's dramatic reversal of fortune: his defeat at the hands of Sher Shah Suri, his desperate flight across the Rajputana desert, his exile in Safavid Persia, and the unlikely alliance that let him reclaim the Mughal throne. We explore the Battle of Chausa (1539), the Battle of Kanauj (1540), Humayun's years as a wandering king, his fascinating relationship with the Safavid Shah Tahmasp, and the Persian military and cultural influences that Humayun brought back to India. Along the way, we encounter a ruler who was both a brilliant astrologer and a disastrous general, whose personal charm and intellectual curiosity ultimately rescued the Mughal dynasty from extinction. #Humayun #MughalEmpire #SherShahSuri #BattleOfChausa #BattleOfKanauj #SafavidPersia #ShahTahmasp #MughalExile #SurEmpire #MughalHistory #SouthAsia #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast #IndianHistory #MughalRestoration #PersianInfluence #AstrologerKing Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
Portada del episodio Akbar's Ibadat Khana: The Mughal Emperor's House of Worship

Akbar's Ibadat Khana: The Mughal Emperor's House of Worship

In 1575, the Mughal Emperor Akbar built a 'House of Worship' (Ibadat Khana) at his new capital Fatehpur Sikri. What began as a forum for Sunni Muslim scholars soon exploded into a free-for-all religious debate hall, where Hindus, Jains, Zoroastrians, Christians, and even atheists gathered to argue theology before the emperor. This episode follows the evolution of the Ibadat Khana from its founding to its closure, and how it led to Akbar's radical proclamation of the Din-i-Ilahi — a syncretic faith that borrowed from all traditions. We explore the key figures: the Jesuit missionaries Rodolfo Acquaviva and Francisco Henriques who debated before Akbar; the Jain monk Hiravijaya Suri who convinced the emperor to ban animal slaughter for days; and the skeptical Badauni who recorded it all with horror. Why did Akbar create this experiment in interfaith dialogue? And why did he abandon it? The answer lies in the politics of empire, the emperor's personal curiosity, and the limits of tolerance. #Akbar #IbadatKhana #FatehpurSikri #MughalEmpire #Din-i-Ilahi #InterfaithDialogue #Jesuits #Jainism #Zoroastrianism #Hinduism #Sikhism #Sulh-i-Kul #AbulFazl #Badauni #HiravijayaSuri #RodolfoAcquaviva #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer7 min
Portada del episodio Dara Shikoh: The Mughal Prince Who Chose Philosophy Over Empire

Dara Shikoh: The Mughal Prince Who Chose Philosophy Over Empire

This episode explores the life and tragic fate of Dara Shikoh, the eldest son of Shah Jahan and heir apparent to the Mughal throne. Unlike his brother Aurangzeb, Dara was a scholar, mystic, and translator who immersed himself in Hindu and Islamic philosophy. He translated the Upanishads into Persian, wrote works like Majma-ul-Bahrain ('The Confluence of the Two Seas'), and sought to reconcile Sufi Islam with Vedantic thought. His patronage of art and learning attracted a circle of poets, yogis, and theologians. But Dara's philosophical pursuits came at a cost: he neglected military and administrative duties, alienated powerful nobles, and was outmaneuvered by Aurangzeb in the war of succession. After defeat at the Battle of Samugarh in 1658, Dara fled, was betrayed, captured, and executed for heresy in 1659. The episode examines his library, his translation of the Upanishads at the urging of Kashmiri yogis, his relationship with the Sikh Guru Hargobind, and the tragic irony that his intellectual legacy survived while his political ambitions crumbled. We also discuss how Aurangzeb used Dara's unorthodox religious views as a pretext for his execution and how Dara's works later influenced European thinkers like Voltaire and Schopenhauer. #DaraShikoh #Aurangzeb #ShahJahan #Mughal #Upanishads #MajmaulBahrain #Samugarh #Sufi #Vedanta #PersianLiterature #Sikhism #Hargobind #Schopenhauer #WarOfSuccession #Heresy #History #FexingoHistory #SouthAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

24 de jun de 20265 min
Portada del episodio Jahangir's Wine and Opium: The Addicted Emperor Who Held an Empire

Jahangir's Wine and Opium: The Addicted Emperor Who Held an Empire

Emperor Jahangir was one of the Mughal Empire's most complex rulers — a sensitive aesthete who loved painting and architecture, but also an alcoholic and opium addict who sometimes barely functioned. This episode explores Jahangir's daily consumption of up to twenty cups of strong wine and regular doses of opium, drawing on his own memoirs (the Tuzuk-i-Jahangiri) and the accounts of European visitors like Sir Thomas Roe. We trace when the addiction began, how it affected his rule, and how his wife Nur Jahan and trusted ministers managed the empire during his incapacitations. We also examine the physical and psychological toll: insomnia, tremors, paranoid outbursts, and moments of profound regret. Despite his vices, Jahangir was capable of genuine justice — his Chain of Justice allowed any subject to appeal directly to him — and intellectual curiosity. The episode raises the question of how a ruler so dependent on substances could still preside over a stable, culturally flourishing era. A nuanced portrait of an emperor who was neither a saint nor a monster, but a man caught between pleasure and duty. #Jahangir #MughalEmpire #SubstanceAbuse #TuzukIJahangiri #SirThomasRoe #NurJahan #Opium #Wine #Addiction #ChainOfJustice #MughalHistory #SouthAsia #EarlyModernHistory #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast #Emperor #Agra Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Portada del episodio The Mughal Mint: How Akbar's Silver Rupee Built an Empire

The Mughal Mint: How Akbar's Silver Rupee Built an Empire

In this episode, Lucas and Luna delve into the remarkable story of the Mughal monetary system under Akbar. They explore how the emperor's standardization of the silver rupee, based on a specific weight of 11.53 grams of nearly pure silver, created a unified currency that transformed the subcontinent's economy. The conversation covers the imperial mint network, the meticulous process of coin production, and the circulation of rupees from Agra to Kabul. They discuss the competing monies—gold mohurs for grand transactions, copper dams for everyday trade—and how Akbar's monetary reforms facilitated long-distance commerce, enabled tax collection in cash, and projected imperial authority. The episode also touches on the role of mints as symbols of sovereignty, the honesty of assayers, and how the rupee's legacy persisted into British colonial times. A fascinating look at how coins, not just conquests, built the Mughal Empire. #MughalEmpire #Akbar #Rupee #Mint #Numismatics #SilverRupee #AgraMint #KabulMint #Mohur #Dam #EconomicHistory #MughalEconomy #Currency #Coinage #History #FexingoHistory #SouthAsia #MonetarySystem Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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