The Mughal vs Ottoman vs Safavid Rivalry Explained — Fexingo History

Humayun in Safavid Exile: The Emperor Who Came Back

5 min · 13 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Humayun in Safavid Exile: The Emperor Who Came Back

Descripción

In 1540, the Mughal emperor Humayun lost his kingdom to Sher Shah Suri and fled into the wilderness of Rajasthan and Sindh. This episode follows his desperate years of wandering, his refuge at the Safavid court of Shah Tahmasp I in 1544, and the extraordinary alliance that gave him 12,000 Qizilbash troops to reclaim his throne. We explore Humayun's conversion to Shi'a Islam — was it genuine or political? — his marriage to Hamida Banu Begum, and the birth of Akbar in the desert fortress of Umarkot. We also discuss the Safavid price: the strategic city of Qandahar, a point of tension for generations. Through Humayun's story, we see how one man's exile reshaped the Mughal-Safavid relationship and laid the foundations for the empire his son Akbar would build. #MughalEmpire #SafavidEmpire #Humayun #ShahTahmasp #Qizilbash #MughalHistory #SafavidHistory #IndoPersian #SherShahSuri #Qandahar #HamidaBanuBegum #Akbar #Exile #Shiism #16thCentury #History #FexingoHistory #GunpowderEmpires Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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124 episodios

episode Jahangir's Wine and the Mughal-Safavid Spice of Diplomacy artwork

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episode The Tulip Wars: How Flowers Fueled Mughal-Safavid-Ottoman Rivalry artwork

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In this episode of The Mughal vs Ottoman vs Safavid Rivalry Explained, Lucas and Luna dive into a fascinating but little-known chapter of early modern diplomacy: the letter Jahangir sent to Japan's shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu in 1613. They explore how Portuguese Jesuit intermediaries, particularly Father Sebastião Rodrigues, carried the Mughal emperor's proposal for trade and friendship across the Indian Ocean to Edo. The conversation covers the context of Iberian global networks, the ambitions of the English East India Company's William Adams (the real-life inspiration for John Blackthorne in 'Shōgun'), and why this remarkable outreach never bore fruit. Lucas explains the geopolitics of the time: the Mughal search for allies against the Portuguese and Safavids, Japan's isolationist turn, and the fragile bridges built by missionaries and merchants. Along the way, they touch on Mughal maritime interests, the port of Surat, the Red Seal Ships, and the surprising parallels between Jahangir's chain of justice and Tokugawa's legal codes. A story of what-ifs, missed connections, and the fragile threads of global history. #MughalEmpire #Jahangir #TokugawaIeyasu #MughalJapan #EdoPeriod #WilliamAdams #SebastiãoRodrigues #Jesuits #EastIndiaCompany #Surat #RedSealShips #EarlyModernDiplomacy #IndianOcean #GlobalHistory #Shōgun #Safavid #Ottoman #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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

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