The Mughal vs Ottoman vs Safavid Rivalry Explained — Fexingo History

The Mughal-Safavid War of 1649: Shah Jahan's Qandahar Obsession

6 min · 26 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The Mughal-Safavid War of 1649: Shah Jahan's Qandahar Obsession

Descripción

In 1649, the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan launched a massive but ultimately failed campaign to recapture the strategic fortress of Qandahar from the Safavid empire. This episode digs into the military logistics, the Persian commander Ali Mardan Khan's defection, the siege's brutal failures, and how Qandahar became a symbol of Mughal-Safavid rivalry in Central Asia. We also explore the war's impact on trade routes and the shifting alliances that defined the region. Perfect for listeners who want to understand the realpolitik behind the marble and poetry. #MughalEmpire #SafavidEmpire #Qandahar #ShahJahan #ShahAbbasII #AliMardanKhan #Kandahar #Siege1649 #MughalMilitary #CentralAsia #History #FexingoHistory #GunpowderEmpires #Afghanistan #MughalSafavidRivalry #HelmandRiver #BabaKiKandi #ChihilZina Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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87 episodios

episode Mughal-Ottoman Gunpowder Rivalry: Cannons That Shaped Empires artwork

Mughal-Ottoman Gunpowder Rivalry: Cannons That Shaped Empires

Lucas and Luna explore how gunpowder technology drove the rivalry between the Mughal, Ottoman, and Safavid empires. They focus on the Ottoman use of giant bronze cannons in the siege of Constantinople, the Mughal adoption of artillery under Babur at the Battle of Panipat in 1526, and the Safavid reliance on the Qizilbash cavalry. The episode contrasts the Ottoman centralized arms production with the Mughal reliance on foreign experts like the Ottoman Rumi Khan, whose cannons helped besiege Kandahar. The hosts examine how the Ottoman monopoly on advanced gunpowder technology influenced its relations with the Mughals, who sought Ottoman expertise against the Safavids. They also discuss the Safavid adaptation of cannons under Shah Abbas I, using Armenian and European advisors. The conversation touches on the diplomatic tensions over Ottoman engineers sent to India and the role of gunpowder in shaping the boundaries between the three empires. The episode concludes with a reflection on how technology transfer—or its denial—altered the course of South Asian and Middle Eastern history. #MughalEmpire #OttomanEmpire #SafavidEmpire #Gunpowder #BattleOfPanipat #RumiKhan #Kandahar #SiegeOfConstantinople #Qizilbash #ShahAbbasI #Babur #Cannons #Artillery #MilitaryHistory #GunpowderEmpires #SouthAsia #MiddleEast #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

9 de jun de 20267 min
episode The Mughal Mint Masters Who Ruled the Rupee artwork

The Mughal Mint Masters Who Ruled the Rupee

How did a handful of Mughal mint masters known as daroghas shape the economy of the subcontinent? This episode follows the journey of the rupee from Akbar's standardized silver coins to the debased currencies of Aurangzeb's later years. We trace the darogha's role in overseeing mints from Surat to Patna, the brutal efficiency of Todar Mal's revenue reforms, and the sophisticated system of credit called hundi that connected merchants across empires. Along the way, we discover how Spanish pieces of eight flooded Mughal markets, how the rupee became a global trade currency, and why Aurangzeb's attempt to fix the rupee's weight sparked a crisis. We also look at the Safavid and Ottoman mints — the abbasi and the akçe — and how each empire's monetary policy reflected its political ambitions. Featuring the darogha, the sarraf (money changer), the meticulous records of the Ain-i-Akbari, and the surprising role of cowrie shells as small change. A story of silver, sovereignty, and the unseen hands that kept the wheels of empire turning. #MughalEmpire #Rupee #MintMasters #Darogha #TodarMal #Akbar #Aurangzeb #Safavid #Ottoman #EconomicHistory #SilverTrade #Hundi #Surat #Patna #Ain-i-Akbari #CowrieShells #SouthAsia #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
episode Mughal Mint Masters and the Rupee's Journey Across Empires artwork

Mughal Mint Masters and the Rupee's Journey Across Empires

Episode 85 of our Mughal series turns to an unexpected engine of empire: money. Lucas and Luna follow the silver rupee from Akbar's standardized mints through Safavid and Ottoman trade networks, uncovering how a single coin could shape diplomacy, warfare, and everyday life. They trace the journey of silver from the mines of the New World through Spanish galleons to the Safavid caravanserais and Mughal treasuries, and examine why the Ottoman sultan tried to ban the rupee in his domains. Along the way, they meet the mint masters—the daroqhas and muhrkars—whose precise touch kept the system running, and explore the surprising role of the humble copper dam in binding together a diverse empire. This episode offers a ground-level view of Mughal economic power, revealing how coins were not just currency but declarations of sovereignty, tools of integration, and objects of fierce rivalry between three of the early modern world's greatest empires. #Mughal #Rupee #Silver #Akbar #Safavid #Ottoman #Coinage #Mint #Darogha #Muhrkar #Dam #TodarMal #Surat #Isfahan #EconomicHistory #Trade #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer9 min
episode Mughal Marble vs Safavid Tiles: Aesthetic Rivalry of Empires artwork

Mughal Marble vs Safavid Tiles: Aesthetic Rivalry of Empires

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the Mughal and Safavid empires used architecture as a form of soft power rivalry. Focusing on specific structures like the Taj Mahal's white marble inlay versus the Shah Mosque's polychrome tilework, they examine the artistic philosophies behind each. Lucas explains how Mughal architecture under Shah Jahan perfected pietra dura and jali screens, while Safavid Isfahan under Shah Abbas I emphasized massive iwans and intricate mosaic tiles. They discuss the role of craftsmen like the Iranian master 'Ali Akbar al-Isfahani', who contributed to both empires, and the exchange of materials such as lapis lazuli from Badakhshan. The conversation also touches on how the Ottoman Tulip Age paralleled these developments. No clickbait, just a thoughtful look at how three empires competed through beauty. #MughalArchitecture #SafavidArchitecture #TajMahal #ShahMosque #PietraDura #JaliScreen #ShahJahan #ShahAbbasI #Isfahan #Agra #TulipAge #OttomanArchitecture #SoftPower #ArtHistory #FexingoHistory #WorldHistory #History #MughalEmpire Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

7 de jun de 202610 min
episode Mughal vs Ottoman vs Safavid: The Architectural Rivalry of Three Empires artwork

Mughal vs Ottoman vs Safavid: The Architectural Rivalry of Three Empires

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the Mughal, Ottoman, and Safavid empires used architecture as a form of political and spiritual competition. From the Taj Mahal's marble inlay and the Süleymaniye Mosque's towering minarets to the Shah Mosque's azure tiles and the chahar bagh gardens, each dynasty crafted its own visual language of power. They discuss the role of master architects like Sinan, the influence of Persianate culture, and how structures like the Red Fort in Delhi and the Topkapi Palace in Istanbul reflected imperial ambitions. Listeners will learn about the symbolic use of tulips in Ottoman tiles, the jali screens of Mughal windows, and how the Safavids used calligraphy to assert Shi'a identity. The episode also touches on the rivalry's decline as European influence grew, leaving behind monuments that still define these regions today. #MughalArchitecture #OttomanArchitecture #SafavidArchitecture #TajMahal #SüleymaniyeMosque #ShahMosque #MimarSinan #ChaharBagh #JaliScreen #TulipAge #TopkapiPalace #RedFort #Isfahan #Istanbul #Agra #IslamicArchitecture #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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