Notes for UPSC Aspirants
These notes are designed for UPSC aspirants preparing for Prelims and
Mains, covering the Medieval History syllabus (Delhi Sultanate, Mughal
Empire, Vijayanagara Empire, and Regional Kingdoms). Written in
simple language, they use bullet points, tables, and charts for clarity,
incorporating Previous Year Questions (PYQs) from 2015 to 2025 and
current affairs linkages. As of August 6, 2025, the notes align with
UPSC trends, emphasizing administration, culture, and socio-economic
aspects.
Introduction to Medieval Indian History
Overview: Medieval Indian History (1206–1857 CE) spans the
Delhi Sultanate, Mughal Empire, Vijayanagara Empire, and
Regional Kingdoms, marking the transition from decentralized to
centralized rule, Islamic influence, and cultural syncretism.
UPSC Relevance:
o Prelims: 4–6 MCQs on administration, architecture, and key
events.
o Mains: Descriptive questions on governance, cultural
contributions, and decline factors.
Sources: NCERTs (Class 7–12), Satish Chandra’s Medieval India,
Romila Thapar’s works, Byju’s, Testbook, Vajiram and Ravi,
Approach: Focus on factual recall for Prelims, analytical
depth for Mains, and current affairs linkages (e.g., heritage
conservation, religious harmony).
,1. Delhi Sultanate (1206–1526 CE)
Overview
Time Period: 1206–1526 CE.
Dynasties: Mamluk, Khalji, Tughlaq, Sayyid, Lodi.
Significance: Introduced Islamic rule, centralized administration,
and Indo-Islamic architecture in northern India.
Key Features
Establishment:
o Founded by Qutb-ud-din Aibak (1206), a slave of
Muhammad Ghori, after the Second Battle of Tarain (1192).
o Marked the beginning of Muslim rule in India.
Dynasties and Rulers:
o Mamluk (Slave) Dynasty (1206–1290):
Qutb-ud-din Aibak: First Sultan; started Qutub Minar
construction.
Iltutmish: Consolidated rule, introduced silver tanka
coins, completed Qutub Minar.
Razia Sultana: First female Muslim ruler; faced
opposition but efficient administrator.
Balban: Strengthened monarchy, introduced strict court
discipline.
o Khalji Dynasty (1290–1320):
Alauddin Khalji: Market reforms, Mongol defense,
South India conquests (e.g., Devagiri).
Malik Kafur: Led southern campaigns.
o Tughlaq Dynasty (1320–1413):
Ghiyasuddin Tughlaq: Built Tughlaqabad.
, Muhammad bin Tughlaq: Known for ambitious but
failed experiments (token currency, capital shift to
Daulatabad).
Firoz Shah Tughlaq: Welfare measures (canals,
hospitals), but orthodox policies.
o Sayyid Dynasty (1414–1451): Weak transitional rulers.
o Lodi Dynasty (1451–1526):
Sikandar Lodi: Promoted agriculture, trade.
Ibrahim Lodi: Defeated by Babur at First Battle of
Panipat (1526), ending the Sultanate.
Administration:
o Centralized monarchy with Sultan as supreme authority.
o Iqta System: Land grants to nobles for revenue collection
and military service.
o Judiciary: Based on Sharia; Qazis handled legal disputes.
o Military: Included cavalry, infantry, war elephants;
Alauddin’s reforms strengthened it.
Economy:
o Agriculture-based; land revenue (Kharaj) was the main
source.
o Alauddin’s market reforms: Fixed prices for essentials
(grains, cloth) to support the army.
o Trade with Middle East, Central Asia; Delhi as a trade hub.