Babar

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Babur

Zahir-ud-Din Babur whose name means - The Manifester of the Religion (of Islam), better known by his nick name - Babur (Lion, in Turkic) was a great military strategist who was also a gifted poet and a lover of nature who constructed gardens wherever he went. The founder of the Mughal Empire he was a descendant of the Mongol, Turkic, Persian, and Afghan invaders of Southwest Asia who invaded India in the early 16th century.

Babur was the great-grandson of Timur Lenk (Timur the Lame, from which the Western name Tamerlane is derived), who had invaded India and plundered Delhi in 1398 and then ruled over a short-lived empire based in Fergana or Samarkand (in modern-day Uzbekistan) that united Persian-based Mongols (Babur's maternal ancestors) and other West Asian peoples. His paternal ancestor was Genghis Khan.

Babur was driven from Samarkand and initially established his rule in Kabul in 1504. Having grow up with stories of the easy riches to be gained in India he made several raids into the Punjab and India. Now with a firm base close to the passes into India he became determined to expand his kingdom eastward into the Punjab. But as fate would have it before he invaded, an invitation from an opportunistic Afghan chief in Punjab, who wished his help in overthrowing Ibrahim Lodi, the ruler of the Delhi Sultinate (1517-26), brought him to the very heart of Delhi fullfilling his desire to build a mighty kingdom.

A Seasoned Military Commander


Babur, a seasoned military commander, entered India in 1526 with his well-trained veteran army of 12,000 to meet the sultan's huge but unwieldy and disunited force of more than 100,000 men. Babur defeated the Lodi sultan decisively at Panipat (in modern-day Haryana, about ninety kilometers north of Delhi where several decisive battles have been won and lost.

Employing something never seen before in India——gun carts, moveable artillery, and superior cavalry tactics, Babur achieved a resounding victory. A year later, he decisively defeated a Rajput confederacy led by Rana Sangha.

Bagh-e-Babur, Only one of the Splendid gardens built by Babur

In 1529 Babur routed the joint forces of Afghans and the sultan of Bengal but died in 1530 before he could consolidate his military gains. He left behind as legacies his memoirs (Babur Namah), several beautiful gardens in Kabul, Lahore, and Agra, and destroyed many more Hindu Mandirs from the mountains of Jammu and Kashmir to the East across India. The 'Babri Masjid incident' is still unsoved.

His son Humayun, the first to gain from a Rajput Raja the famed diamond—later to be called the Koh-i-noor, would soon be forced to leave India only to return to build an even greater kingdom. His son Akbar and his descendants would fulfill Babur's dream of establishing a Mughal empire in Hindustan.

Leaving behind, in the end, as had their ancestor, a spledid history of beautiful arts and Architecture along with an equally brutal history of destruction and death.

Among those who were held captive in Babur's campaigns was Guru Nanak whom the Emperor released.

These articles deal with Mughal Empire

Babur (1526-30) -|- Humayun (1530-56) -|- Akbar (1556-1605) -|- Jahangir (1605-27) -|- Shah Jahan (1627-58) -|- Aurangzeb (1658-1707)