The Mughal vs Ottoman vs Safavid Rivalry Explained — Fexingo History

The Mughal Emperor Who Switched Sides Twice

7 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio The Mughal Emperor Who Switched Sides Twice

Descripción

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the extraordinary story of Rumi Khan, the Ottoman gun-founder who defected to the Safavids and then to the Mughals, reshaping siege warfare in India. They trace his journey from the Topçu corps in Istanbul to the court of Shah Tahmasp in Qazvin, and finally to Babur's army at Panipat. Lucas reveals how Rumi Khan's superior bronze cannon, the zamburak swivel guns, and his tactical expertise enabled Babur to defeat Ibrahim Lodi's superior numbers. They discuss the Rumi corps as a transnational class of military specialists, the role of the khutba in legitimizing Mughal rule, and the controversy over whether Rumi Khan was a mercenary or a true convert to the Mughal cause. The episode also touches on the later siege of Chitor under Akbar, where Rumi Khan's legacy continued through his son. This is a microhistory of technology, loyalty, and empire in the 16th century. #RumiKhan #Mughal #Ottoman #Safavid #Babur #Panipat #Topçu #Cannon #Zamburak #Chitor #ShahTahmasp #IbrahimLodi #Khutba #GunpowderEmpires #16thCentury #MilitaryHistory #SouthAsia #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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121 episodios

Portada del episodio The Mughal Emperor Who Switched Sides Twice

The Mughal Emperor Who Switched Sides Twice

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the extraordinary story of Rumi Khan, the Ottoman gun-founder who defected to the Safavids and then to the Mughals, reshaping siege warfare in India. They trace his journey from the Topçu corps in Istanbul to the court of Shah Tahmasp in Qazvin, and finally to Babur's army at Panipat. Lucas reveals how Rumi Khan's superior bronze cannon, the zamburak swivel guns, and his tactical expertise enabled Babur to defeat Ibrahim Lodi's superior numbers. They discuss the Rumi corps as a transnational class of military specialists, the role of the khutba in legitimizing Mughal rule, and the controversy over whether Rumi Khan was a mercenary or a true convert to the Mughal cause. The episode also touches on the later siege of Chitor under Akbar, where Rumi Khan's legacy continued through his son. This is a microhistory of technology, loyalty, and empire in the 16th century. #RumiKhan #Mughal #Ottoman #Safavid #Babur #Panipat #Topçu #Cannon #Zamburak #Chitor #ShahTahmasp #IbrahimLodi #Khutba #GunpowderEmpires #16thCentury #MilitaryHistory #SouthAsia #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer7 min
Portada del episodio Jahangir's Chain of Justice: A Mughal Emperor's Experiment

Jahangir's Chain of Justice: A Mughal Emperor's Experiment

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore Jahangir's famous Chain of Justice, a literal golden chain with sixty bells that hung from the Agra Fort to the Yamuna riverbank, allowing any subject to pull it and request a direct audience with the emperor. We dive into the political and philosophical motivations behind this public accountability system, examining how Jahangir's Jahangirnama describes its installation and use. We also consider its practical limitations, including how the chain quickly became entangled with court politics and the emperor's own wavering commitment. Was it sincere reform or brilliant propaganda? We look at similar traditions in Safavid Iran and Ottoman Istanbul, from Shah Abbas I's public audiences to the Topkapi Palace's Gate of Felicity, placing Jahangir's experiment in a broader context of early modern imperial spectacle and justice. The episode also touches on the chain's materiality: the gold, the bells, the artisans who crafted it, and the symbolic weight of tying justice to the emperor's own person. We close by reflecting on what this tells us about the gap between imperial ideals and everyday reality in the Mughal world. #Jahangir #ChainOfJustice #MughalJustice #AgraFort #Jahangirnama #PublicAudience #ImperialSpectacle #MughalEmpire #SafavidJustice #OttomanJustice #ShahAbbasI #Topkapi #Yamuna #EarlyModernEmpires #LegalHistory #SouthAsianHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer8 min
Portada del episodio The Mughal Emperor Who Loved Tulips: Jahangir's Floral Diplomacy

The Mughal Emperor Who Loved Tulips: Jahangir's Floral Diplomacy

Emperor Jahangir's obsession with tulips wasn't just aesthetic — it was a subtle tool of diplomacy and rivalry with the Safavids and Ottomans. This episode traces how the Mughal court's passion for tulip cultivation, documented in the Jahangirnama, paralleled the Ottoman 'Tulip Age' and the Safavid love of gardens. We explore the exchange of bulbs between empires, the symbolic meaning of tulips in Persianate culture, and how Jahangir's gardeners in Kashmir and Agra competed with Isfahan and Istanbul. Featuring the travels of the Mughal ambassador to Iran, the tulip motifs in Mughal architecture, and the little-known story of how Jahangir sent tulip bulbs to the Ottoman sultan as a gesture of prestige. A fresh angle on the rivalry through flowers, gardens, and the politics of beauty. #MughalEmpire #Jahangir #Tulips #Safavid #Ottoman #KashmirGardens #Jahangirnama #FloralDiplomacy #PersianateCulture #Isfahan #Istanbul #Agra #ChaharBagh #TulipAge #Botany #MughalGardens #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

24 de jun de 20265 min
Portada del episodio How Mughal Artists Transformed Safavid Persian Painting

How Mughal Artists Transformed Safavid Persian Painting

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the artistic rivalry between the Mughal and Safavid empires through the lens of painting. They discuss how Persian artists from Safavid courts, such as Mir Sayyid Ali and Abd al-Samad, were invited to the Mughal atelier and how their styles merged with Indian traditions to create a distinctive Mughal miniature painting. The conversation covers the role of royal patronage under Humayun and Akbar, the development of portraiture and naturalism, the influence of European art via Jesuit missions, and the contrast with the more stylized Safavid approach. Specific works like the Hamzanama and the Akbarnama are examined. The episode also touches on the later decline of Mughal patronage under Aurangzeb and the survival of these artistic traditions in Rajasthan and the Deccan. A brief donation segment supports the ad-free mission of the show. #MughalPainting #SafavidArt #PersianMiniature #Hamzanama #Akbarnama #MirSayyidAli #AbdAlSamad #Humayun #Akbar #Aurangzeb #JesuitMission #EuropeanInfluence #MughalAtelier #IndianArtHistory #CulturalExchange #HistoryOfPainting #ArtRivalry #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

24 de jun de 20269 min
Portada del episodio The Safavid Siege of Hormuz and the Anglo-Persian Alliance

The Safavid Siege of Hormuz and the Anglo-Persian Alliance

In 1622, a joint force of Safavid soldiers and English East India Company warships captured the Portuguese fortress of Hormuz, breaking a century of Portuguese dominance in the Persian Gulf. Lucas and Luna unpack the unlikely alliance between Shah Abbas I and the English, the role of the Company's galleons, the aftermath that saw Bandar Abbas rise as a trade hub, and how this reshaped Mughal-Ottoman-Safavid competition. They also touch on the broader implications for the spice trade, the decline of the Portuguese Estado da Índia, and the parallels with the Anglo-Mughal conflicts brewing in Surat. Along the way, they discuss the siege's key figures—Imam Quli Khan, Robert Sherley, and Sir Thomas Roe—and the strategic use of the Gulf's pearl banks and coral reefs. #Hormuz #AngloPersianAlliance #ShahAbbasI #EastIndiaCompany #PortugueseEmpire #BandarAbbas #ImamQuliKhan #RobertSherley #SirThomasRoe #PersianGulf #Safavid #Mughal #Ottoman #SpiceTrade #NavalHistory #EstadoDaIndia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

23 de jun de 20267 min