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{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2020}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2020}}
{{Infobox royalty
{{Infobox royalty
| image       = Babur of India.jpg
| image = <!--- Do not change this lead image: it was selected by a consensus of Wikipedia editors through an [[WP:RfC]] on 7 August 2025 (RfC link: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Babur&diff=prev&oldid=1304723240 ) ---> Humayun and Babur (Late Shah Jahan Album) Babur detail.jpg
| alt         = Babur
| alt = Babur
| name         = Babur
| name = Babur <br/> ببر
| title       = [[Ghazi (warrior)|Ghazi]]<ref>{{cite book |last=Dale |first=Stephen F. |title=Babur |year=2018 |page=154}}</ref>
| title = [[Ghazi (warrior)|Ghazi]]<ref>{{cite book |last=Dale |first=Stephen F. |title=Babur |year=2018 |page=154}}</ref>
| caption     = Idealized portrait of Babur, early 17th century
| caption = Portrait of Babur in the ''[[:Commons:Category:Late Shah Jahan Album|Late Shah Jahan Album]]'', painted {{Circa|1640}}. Smithsonian Collections.<ref>{{cite web |title=Babur and Humayun with Courtiers, from the Late Shah Jahan Album |url=https://asia-archive.si.edu/object/S1986.401/ |website=Smithsonian's National Museum of Asian Art|quote=The first Mughal emperor, Babur, who reigned from 1526 to 1530, is shown seated on the right with his son and successor, Humayun.}}</ref>
| succession  = [[Emperor of Hindustan|Sultan of Hindustan]]<br />[[Mughal Emperor]] ([[Padishah]])
| succession = [[List of emperors of the Mughal Empire|Mughal Emperor]] ([[Padishah]])
| reign       = {{nowrap|21 April 1526&nbsp;– 26 December 1530}}
| reign = {{nowrap|21 April 1526&nbsp;– 26 December 1530}}
| predecessor = [[Ibrahim Khan Lodi|Ibrahim Lodi]] (as [[List of sultans of Delhi|Sultan of Delhi]])
| predecessor = {{ubl|Position established|[[Ibrahim Khan Lodi|Ibrahim Lodi]] (as [[List of sultans of Delhi|Sultan of Delhi]])}}
| successor   = [[Humayun]]
| successor = [[Humayun]]
| succession1 = [[Timurid Empire#History|Emir of Kabul]]
| succession1 = [[Timurid Empire#History|Emir of Kabul]]
| reign1       = October 1504<ref name="u914">{{cite web | last=Avali | first=Raghu | title=The Conquest of Kabul (1504) | website= Indian History for Everyone | date=2023-12-17 | url=https://www.indianhistoryforeveryone.org/blog-1-1/the-conquest-of-kabul-1504 | access-date=2024-07-12}}</ref> – 21 April 1526
| reign1 = October 1504 – 21 April 1526
| predecessor1 = Mukin Begh
| predecessor1 = Mukim Beg
| successor1   = ''Himself as the [[Mughal Emperor]]''
| successor1 = ''Himself as the [[List of emperors of the Mughal Empire|Mughal Emperor]]''
| succession2 = [[Principality of Fergana|Emir of Fergana]]
| succession2 = [[Principality of Fergana|Emir of Fergana]]
| reign2       = 10 June 1494 – February 1497
| reign2 = 10 June 1494 – February 1497
| successor2   = [[Jahangir Mirza II]]
| successor2 = [[Jahangir Mirza II]]
| predecessor2 = [[Umar Shaikh Mirza II]]
| predecessor2 = [[Umar Shaikh Mirza II]]
| succession3 = [[Timurid Empire#History|Emir of Samarkand]]
| succession3 = [[Timurid Empire#History|Emir of Samarkand]]
| reign3       = November 1496 – February 1497
| reign3 = November 1496 – February 1497
| predecessor3 = [[Sultan Baysonqor Mirza bin Mahmud Mirza|Baysonqor Mirza]]
| predecessor3 = [[Sultan Baysonqor Mirza bin Mahmud Mirza|Baysonqor Mirza]]
| successor3   = [[Sultan Ali bin Mahmud Mirza|Ali Mirza]]
| successor3 = [[Sultan Ali bin Mahmud Mirza|Ali Mirza]]
| birth_date   = {{Birth date|1483|2|14|df=y}}
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1483|2|14|df=y}}
| birth_place = [[Andijan]], [[Timurid Empire]]
| birth_place = [[Andijan]], [[Timurid Empire]]
| death_date   = {{Death date and age|df=yes|1530|12|26|1483|2|14}}
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=yes|1530|12|26|1483|2|14}}
| death_place = [[Agra]], [[Mughal Empire]]
| death_place = [[Agra]], [[Mughal Empire]]
| burial_place = [[Gardens of Babur]], [[Kabul]], Afghanistan
| burial_place = [[Gardens of Babur]], [[Kabul]], Afghanistan
| spouse       = {{Marriage|[[Maham Begum]]|1506}}
| spouse = {{Marriage|[[Maham Begum]]|1506}}
| spouse-type = Consort
| spouse-type = Consort
| spouses     = {{plainlist|
| spouses = {{plainlist|
* {{Marriage|[[Aisha Sultan Begum]]|August 1499|1503|end=divorced}}
* {{Marriage|[[Aisha Sultan Begum]]|August 1499|1503|end=divorced}}
* {{Marriage|[[Zainab Sultan Begum]]|1504|1506-07|end=died}}
* {{Marriage|[[Zainab Sultan Begum]]|1504|1506-07|end=died}}
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}}
}}
| spouses-type = Wives <br /> ''[[#Consorts|more...]]''
| spouses-type = Wives <br /> ''[[#Consorts|more...]]''
| issue       = {{plainlist|
| issue = {{plainlist|
*[[Fakhr-un-Nissa|Fakhr-un-Nissa Begum]]
*[[Fakhr-un-Nissa|Fakhr-un-Nissa Begum]]
*[[Humayun]]
*[[Humayun]]
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*[[Gulbadan Begum]]
*[[Gulbadan Begum]]
*[[Gulchehra Begum]]}}
*[[Gulchehra Begum]]}}
| issue-link   = #Issue
| issue-link = #Issue
| issue-pipe   = more...
| issue-pipe = more...
| full name   = Zahīr ud-Dīn Muhammad Bābur
| full name = Zahīr ud-Dīn Muhammad Bābur
| posthumous name = Firdaws Makani (Dwelling in Paradise)
| posthumous name = Firdaws Makani (Dwelling in Paradise)
| house       = [[Mughal dynasty|House of Babur]]
| house = [[Mughal dynasty]]
| dynasty     = [[Timurid dynasty]]
| dynasty = [[Timurid dynasty]]
| module       = {{Infobox military person | embed = yes
| module = {{Infobox military person | embed = yes
| battles =
| battles =
{{Tree list}}
{{Tree list}}
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{{Hidden end}}
{{Hidden end}}
}}
}}
| father       = [[Umar Shaikh Mirza II]]
| father = [[Umar Shaikh Mirza II]]
| mother       = [[Qutlugh Nigar Khanum]]
| mother = [[Qutlugh Nigar Khanum]]
| signature   = Detail of Babur's dynastic seal, from a Mughal land grant dating from August 1527.jpg
| signature = Detail of Babur's dynastic seal, from a Mughal land grant dating from August 1527.jpg
| signature_type = Seal
| signature_type = Seal
| religion     = [[Sunni Islam]]<ref>{{cite book |last=Christine |first=Isom-Verhaaren |title=Allies with the Infidel |year=2013 |publisher=I.B. Tauris |page=58}}</ref>
| religion = [[Sunni Islam]]<ref>{{cite book |last=Christine |first=Isom-Verhaaren |title=Allies with the Infidel |year=2013 |publisher=I.B. Tauris |page=58}}</ref>
}}
}}
'''Babur''' ({{IPA|fa|bɑː.βuɾ|lang}}; 14 February 1483{{spaced ndash}}26 December 1530; born '''Zahīr ud-Dīn Muhammad''') was the founder of the [[Mughal Empire]] in the [[Indian subcontinent]]. He was a descendant of [[Timur]] and [[Genghis Khan]] through his father and mother respectively.<ref>{{cite book |last=Baumer |first=Christoph |author-link=Christoph Baumer |title=The History of Central Asia: The Age of Islam and the Mongols |year=2018 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |page=47}}</ref><ref name="Ẓahīr-al-Dīn Moḥammad Bābor">{{iranica|babor-zahir-al-din|Ẓahīr-al-Dīn Moḥammad Bābor|quote=Bābor, Ẓahīr-al-Dīn Moḥammad son of Umar Sheikh Mirza, (6 Moḥarram 886-6 Jomādā I 937/14 February 1483&nbsp;– 26 December 1530), [[Timurid dynasty|Timurid]] prince, military genius, and literary craftsman who escaped the bloody political arena of his Central Asian birthplace to found the Mughal Empire in India. His origin, milieu, training, and education were steeped in [[Muslim]] culture and so Bābor played significant role for the fostering of this culture by his descendants, the Mughals of India, and for the expansion of Islam in the Indian subcontinent, with brilliant literary, artistic, and [[historiographical]] results.}}</ref><ref name="Robert L. Canfield 1991 p.20">{{cite book |last=Canfield |first=Robert L. |title=Turko-Persia in historical perspective |year=1991 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=20 |quote=The Mughals-Persianized Turks who invaded from Central Asia and claimed descent from both Timur and Genghis&nbsp;– strengthened the Persianate culture of Muslim India.}}</ref> He was also given the [[posthumous name]] of ''Firdaws Makani'' ('Dwelling in Paradise').<ref>{{Cite book |last=Jahangir |first=Emperor Of Hindustan |title=The Jahangirnama : memoirs of Jahangir, Emperor of India |publisher=Washington, D.C. : Freer Gallery of Art, Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; New York : Oxford University Press |year=1999 |isbn=9780195127188 |pages=6 |translator-last=Thackston |translator-first=W. M.}}</ref>
'''Babur''' ({{langx|fa|ببر|rtl=yes}}, {{IPA|fa|bɑː.βuɾ|lang}}; 14 February 1483{{spaced ndash}}26 December 1530; born '''Zahīr ud-Dīn Muhammad''') was the founder of the [[Mughal Empire]] in the [[Indian subcontinent]]. He was a descendant of [[Timur]] and [[Genghis Khan]] through his father and mother respectively.<ref>{{cite book |last=Baumer |first=Christoph |author-link=Christoph Baumer |title=The History of Central Asia: The Age of Islam and the Mongols |year=2018 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |page=47}}</ref><ref name="Ẓahīr-al-Dīn Moḥammad Bābor">{{iranica|babor-zahir-al-din|Ẓahīr-al-Dīn Moḥammad Bābor|quote=Bābor, Ẓahīr-al-Dīn Moḥammad son of Umar Sheikh Mirza, (6 Moḥarram 886-6 Jomādā I 937/14 February 1483&nbsp;– 26 December 1530), [[Timurid dynasty|Timurid]] prince, military genius, and literary craftsman who escaped the bloody political arena of his Central Asian birthplace to found the Mughal Empire in India. His origin, milieu, training, and education were steeped in [[Muslim]] culture and so Bābor played significant role for the fostering of this culture by his descendants, the Mughals of India, and for the expansion of Islam in the Indian subcontinent, with brilliant literary, artistic, and [[historiographical]] results.}}</ref><ref name="Robert L. Canfield 1991 p.20">{{cite book |last=Canfield |first=Robert L. |title=Turko-Persia in historical perspective |year=1991 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=20 |quote=The Mughals-Persianized Turks who invaded from Central Asia and claimed descent from both Timur and Genghis&nbsp;– strengthened the Persianate culture of Muslim India.}}</ref> He was also given the [[posthumous name]] of ''Firdaws Makani'' ('Dwelling in Paradise').<ref>{{Cite book |last=Jahangir |first=Emperor Of Hindustan |title=The Jahangirnama : memoirs of Jahangir, Emperor of India |publisher=Washington, D.C. : Freer Gallery of Art, Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; New York : Oxford University Press |year=1999 |isbn=9780195127188 |pages=6 |translator-last=Thackston |translator-first=W. M.}}</ref>


Born in [[Andijan]] in the [[Fergana Valley]] (now in [[Uzbekistan]]), Babur was the eldest son of [[Umar Shaikh Mirza II]] (1456–1494, [[Timurid Empire|Timurid]] governor of [[Fergana]] from 1469 to 1494) and a great-great-great-grandson of [[Timur]] (1336–1405). Babur ascended the throne of Fergana in its capital [[Akhsikath]] in 1494 at the age of twelve and faced rebellion. He conquered [[Samarkand]] two years later, only to lose Fergana soon after. In his attempt to reconquer Fergana, he lost control of Samarkand. In 1501, his attempt to recapture both the regions failed when the [[Uzbeks|Uzbek]] prince [[Muhammad Shaybani]] defeated him and founded the [[Khanate of Bukhara]].
Born in [[Andijan]] in the [[Fergana Valley]] (now in [[Uzbekistan]]), Babur was the eldest son of [[Umar Shaikh Mirza II]] (1456–1494, [[Timurid Empire|Timurid]] governor of [[Fergana]] from 1469 to 1494) and a great-great-great-grandson of [[Timur]] (1336–1405). Babur ascended the throne of Fergana in its capital [[Akhsikath]] in 1494 at the age of twelve and faced rebellion. He conquered [[Samarkand]] two years later, only to lose Fergana soon after. In his attempt to reconquer Fergana, he lost control of Samarkand. In 1501, his attempt to recapture both the regions failed when the [[Uzbeks|Uzbek]] prince [[Muhammad Shaybani]] defeated him and founded the [[Khanate of Bukhara]].


In 1504, he conquered [[Kabul]], which was under the putative rule of Abdur Razaq Mirza, the infant heir of [[Ulugh Beg II]]. Babur formed a partnership with the [[Safavid Iran|Safavid emperor]] [[Ismail I]] and reconquered parts of [[Turkestan]], including Samarkand, only to again lose it and the other newly conquered lands to the [[Shaybanids]].
In 1504, he conquered [[Kabul]], which was under the putative rule of Abd ur-Razaq Mirza, the infant heir of [[Ulugh Beg II]]. Babur formed a partnership with the [[Safavid Iran|Safavid emperor]] [[Ismail I]] and reconquered parts of [[Turkestan]], including Samarkand, only to again lose it and the other newly conquered lands to the [[Shaybanids]].


After losing Samarkand for the third time, Babur turned his attention to India and employed aid from the neighbouring Safavid and [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] empires.<ref name="Gilbert2017">{{citation|last=Gilbert|first=Marc Jason|title=South Asia in World History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1dhKDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA75|year=2017|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-066137-3|pages=75–|access-date=11 June 2021|archive-date=22 September 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230922031915/https://books.google.com/books?id=1dhKDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA75|url-status=live}} Quote: "Babur then adroitly gave the Ottomans his promise not to attack them in return for their military aid, which he received in the form of the newest of battlefield inventions, the matchlock gun and cast cannons, as well as instructors to train his men to use them."</ref> He defeated [[Ibrahim Lodi]], the [[Delhi Sultanate|Sultan of Delhi]], at the [[First Battle of Panipat]] in 1526 and founded the Mughal Empire. Before the defeat of Lodi at Delhi, the Sultanate of Delhi had been a spent force, long in a state of decline.
After losing Samarkand for the third time, Babur turned his attention to India and employed aid from the neighbouring Safavid and [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] empires.<ref name="Gilbert2017">{{citation|last=Gilbert|first=Marc Jason|title=South Asia in World History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1dhKDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA75|year=2017|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-066137-3|pages=75–|access-date=11 June 2021|archive-date=22 September 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230922031915/https://books.google.com/books?id=1dhKDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA75|url-status=live}} Quote: "Babur then adroitly gave the Ottomans his promise not to attack them in return for their military aid, which he received in the form of the newest of battlefield inventions, the matchlock gun and cast cannons, as well as instructors to train his men to use them."</ref> He defeated [[Ibrahim Lodi]], the [[Delhi Sultanate|Sultan of Delhi]], at the [[First Battle of Panipat]] in 1526 and founded the Mughal Empire. Before the defeat of Lodi at Delhi, the Sultanate of Delhi had been a spent force, long in a state of decline.


The rival adjacent [[Kingdom of Mewar]] under the rule of [[Rana Sanga]] had become one of the most powerful states in [[North India]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bhatnagar |first=V. S. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=plFuAAAAMAAJ |title=Life and Times of Sawai Jai Singh, 1688–1743 |year=1974 |publisher=Impex India |language=en |page=6 |quote=From 1326, Mewar's grand recovery commenced under Lakha, and later under Kumbha and most notably under Sanga, till it became one of the greatest powers in northern India during the first quarter of sixteenth century.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Sharma |first=G. N. |url=http://archive.org/details/in.gov.ignca.10571 |title=Mewar and the mughal emperors |date=1954 |pages=8–45 |quote=Before describing his early power, it is worthwhile to say a word or two concerning the personality and the previous history of the man (Rana Sanga) who was destined to be the acknowledged leader of Hindu India of the first half of the 16th century.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Chandra |first=Satish |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0Rm9MC4DDrcC |title=Medieval India: From Sultanat to the Mughals Part - II |date=2005 |publisher=Har-Anand Publications |isbn=978-81-241-1066-9 |pages=25–40 |language=en}}</ref> Sanga unified several [[Rajput]] clans for the first time since [[Prithviraj Chauhan]] and advanced on Babur with a grand coalition of 80,000-100,000 Rajputs, engaging Babur in the [[Battle of Khanwa]]. Babur arrived at Khanwa with 40,000-50,000 soldiers. Nonetheless, Sanga suffered a major defeat due to Babur's skillful troop positioning and use of [[gunpowder empires|gunpowder]], specifically [[matchlock]]s and small [[cannon]]s.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Dale |first1=Stephen F. |title=Babur |date=3 May 2018 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-108-47007-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tLxsDwAAQBAJ&q=babur |language=en}}</ref> The battle was one of the most decisive events in Indian history, more so than the First Battle of Panipat, as the defeat of Rana Sanga was a watershed event in the Mughal conquest of North India.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Majumdar |first1=R.C. |last2=Raychaudhuri |first2=H.C. |last3=Datta |first3=Kalikinkar |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MyIWMwEACAAJ |title=An Advanced History of India |year=1950 |edition=2nd |publisher=Macmillan & Company |page=419 |quote="The battle of khanua was one of the most decisive battles in Indian history certainly more than that of Panipat as Lodhi empire was already crumbling and Mewar had emerged as major power in northern India. Thus, Its at Khanua the fate of India was sealed for next two centuries" |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Chaurasia |first=Radheyshyam |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8XnaL7zPXPUC |title=History of Medieval India: From 1000 A.D. to 1707 A.D. |date=2002 |publisher=Atlantic Publishers & Dist |isbn=978-81-269-0123-4 |page=161 |quote="The battle of Kanwaha was more important in its result even than the first battle of panipat. While the former made Babur ruler of Delhi alone the later made him King of hindustan. As a result of his success, the Mughal empire was established firmly in India. The sovereignty of India now passed from Rajputs to Mughals" |language=en}}</ref>{{sfn|Wink|2012|p=27|ps=: "The victory of Mughals at khanua can be seen as a landmark event in Mughal conquest of North India as the battle turned out to be more historic and eventful than one fought near Panipat. It made Babur undisputed master of North India while smashing Rajput powers. After the victory at khanua, the centre of Mughal power became Agra instead of Kabul and continue to remain till downfall of the Empire after Aalamgir's death.}}
The ruler of the adjacent [[Kingdom of Mewar]], [[Rana Sanga]], advanced on Babur with a grand coalition of Rajput and Afghan warlords, engaging Babur in the [[Battle of Khanwa]]. Babur achieved a decisive victory due to his skillful troop positioning and use of [[gunpowder empires|gunpowder]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Dale |first1=Stephen F. |title=Babur |date=3 May 2018 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-108-47007-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tLxsDwAAQBAJ&q=babur |language=en}}</ref> The battle was one of the most decisive events in Indian history and was a watershed event in the Mughal conquest of North India.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Majumdar |first1=R.C. |last2=Raychaudhuri |first2=H.C. |last3=Datta |first3=Kalikinkar |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MyIWMwEACAAJ |title=An Advanced History of India |year=1950 |edition=2nd |publisher=Macmillan & Company |page=419 |quote="The battle of khanua was one of the most decisive battles in Indian history certainly more than that of Panipat as Lodhi empire was already crumbling and Mewar had emerged as major power in northern India. Thus, Its at Khanua the fate of India was sealed for next two centuries" |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Chaurasia |first=Radheyshyam |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8XnaL7zPXPUC |title=History of Medieval India: From 1000 A.D. to 1707 A.D. |date=2002 |publisher=Atlantic Publishers & Dist |isbn=978-81-269-0123-4 |page=161 |quote="The battle of Kanwaha was more important in its result even than the first battle of panipat. While the former made Babur ruler of Delhi alone the later made him King of hindustan. As a result of his success, the Mughal empire was established firmly in India. The sovereignty of India now passed from Rajputs to Mughals" |language=en}}</ref>{{sfn|Wink|2012|p=27|ps=: "The victory of Mughals at khanua can be seen as a landmark event in Mughal conquest of North India as the battle turned out to be more historic and eventful than one fought near Panipat. It made Babur undisputed master of North India while smashing Rajput powers. After the victory at khanua, the centre of Mughal power became Agra instead of Kabul and continue to remain till downfall of the Empire after Aalamgir's death.}}


Religiously, Babur started his life as a staunch [[Sunni Islam|Sunni Muslim]], but he underwent significant evolution. Babur became more tolerant as he conquered new territories and grew older, allowing other religions to peacefully coexist in his empire and at his court.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Hamès |first=Constant |year=1987 |title=Babur Le Livre de Babur |url=https://www.persee.fr/doc/assr_0335-5985_1987_num_63_2_2432_t1_0222_0000_2 |journal=[[Archives de sciences sociales des religions]] |volume=63 |issue=2 |pages=222–223 |access-date=9 August 2023 |archive-date=10 August 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230810230349/https://www.persee.fr/doc/assr_0335-5985_1987_num_63_2_2432_t1_0222_0000_2 |url-status=live}}</ref> He also displayed a certain attraction to theology, poetry, geography, history, and [[biology]]—disciplines he promoted at his court—earning him a frequent association with representatives of the [[Timurid Renaissance]].<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Babur |title=Le livre de Babur: le Babur-nama de Zahiruddin Muhammad Babur |last2=Bacqué-Grammont |first2=Jean-Louis |last3=Taha Hussein-Okada |first3=Amina |date=2022 |publisher=les Belles lettres |isbn=978-2-251-45370-5 |series=Série indienne |location=Paris}}</ref> His religious and philosophical stances are characterized as [[Humanism|humanistic]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Dale |first=Stephen Frederic |year=1990 |title=Steppe Humanism: The Autobiographical Writings of Zahir al-Din Muhammad Babur, 1483–1530 |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S0020743800033171/type/journal_article |journal=International Journal of Middle East Studies |language=en |volume=22 |issue=1 |pages=37–58 |doi=10.1017/S0020743800033171 |s2cid=161867251 |issn=0020-7438 |url-access=subscription}}</ref>
Religiously, Babur started his life as a staunch [[Sunni Islam|Sunni Muslim]], but he underwent significant evolution. Babur became more tolerant as he conquered new territories and grew older, allowing other religions to peacefully coexist in his empire and at his court.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Hamès |first=Constant |year=1987 |title=Babur Le Livre de Babur |url=https://www.persee.fr/doc/assr_0335-5985_1987_num_63_2_2432_t1_0222_0000_2 |journal=[[Archives de sciences sociales des religions]] |volume=63 |issue=2 |pages=222–223 |access-date=9 August 2023 |archive-date=10 August 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230810230349/https://www.persee.fr/doc/assr_0335-5985_1987_num_63_2_2432_t1_0222_0000_2 |url-status=live}}</ref> He also displayed a certain attraction to theology, poetry, geography, history, and [[biology]]—disciplines he promoted at his court—earning him a frequent association with representatives of the [[Timurid Renaissance]].<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Babur |title=Le livre de Babur: le Babur-nama de Zahiruddin Muhammad Babur |last2=Bacqué-Grammont |first2=Jean-Louis |last3=Taha Hussein-Okada |first3=Amina |date=2022 |publisher=les Belles lettres |isbn=978-2-251-45370-5 |series=Série indienne |location=Paris}}</ref> His religious and philosophical stances are characterized as [[Humanism|humanistic]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Dale |first=Stephen Frederic |year=1990 |title=Steppe Humanism: The Autobiographical Writings of Zahir al-Din Muhammad Babur, 1483–1530 |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S0020743800033171/type/journal_article |journal=International Journal of Middle East Studies |language=en |volume=22 |issue=1 |pages=37–58 |doi=10.1017/S0020743800033171 |s2cid=161867251 |issn=0020-7438 |url-access=subscription}}</ref>


Babur married several times. Notable among his children were [[Humayun]], [[Kamran Mirza]], [[Hindal Mirza]], [[Masuma Sultan Begum (daughter of Babur)|Masuma Sultan Begum]], and the author [[Gulbadan Begum]]. Babur died in 1530 in [[Agra]] and Humayun succeeded him. Babur was first buried in Agra but, as per his wishes, his remains were moved to Kabul and reburied.<ref name="Necipoğlu" /> He ranks as a national hero in [[Uzbekistan]] and [[Kyrgyzstan]]. Many of his poems have become popular folk songs. He wrote the ''[[Baburnama]]'' in [[Chaghatai Turkic]]; it was translated into Persian during the reign (1556–1605) of his grandson, the emperor [[Akbar]].
Babur married several times. Notable among his children were [[Humayun]], [[Kamran Mirza]], [[Hindal Mirza]], [[Masuma Sultan Begum (daughter of Babur)|Masuma Sultan Begum]], and the author [[Gulbadan Begum]]. Babur died in 1530 in [[Agra]] and Humayun succeeded him. Babur was first buried in Agra but, as per his wishes, his remains were moved to Kabul and reburied.<ref name="Necipoğlu" /> He ranks as a national hero in [[Uzbekistan]] and [[Kyrgyzstan]]. Many of his poems have become popular folk songs. He wrote the ''[[Baburnama]]'' in [[Chaghatai Turkic]]; it was translated into Persian during the reign (1556–1605) of his grandson, the emperor [[Akbar]]. A devoted garden-builder, Babur is also credited with introducing the formal [[charbagh]] to the plains of northern India.


{{anchor|Etymology|Word}}
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Babur's memoirs form the main source for details of his life. They are known as the ''[[Baburnama]]'' and were written in [[Chagatai language|Chagatai]], his [[first language]],<ref name="Babur Nama">{{cite book |title=Babur Nama: Journal of Emperor Babur |year=2006 |publisher=[[Penguin Books]] India |location=Mumbai |isbn=978-0-14-400149-1 |page=xviii |last=Hiro |first=Dilip |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VW2HJL689wgC}}</ref> though, according to Dale, "his Turkic prose is highly Persianized in its sentence structure, morphology or word formation and vocabulary."<ref name="Dale2004">{{cite book |first=Stephen Frederic |last=Dale |title=The garden of the eight paradises: Bābur and the culture of Empire in Central Asia, Afghanistan and India (1483–1530) |publisher=Brill |year=2004 |pages=15, 150 |isbn=90-04-13707-6}}</ref> ''Baburnama'' was translated into Persian during the rule of Babur's grandson Akbar.<ref name="Babur Nama" />
Babur's memoirs form the main source for details of his life. They are known as the ''[[Baburnama]]'' and were written in [[Chagatai language|Chagatai]], his [[first language]],<ref name="Babur Nama">{{cite book |title=Babur Nama: Journal of Emperor Babur |year=2006 |publisher=[[Penguin Books]] India |location=Mumbai |isbn=978-0-14-400149-1 |page=xviii |last=Hiro |first=Dilip |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VW2HJL689wgC}}</ref> though, according to Dale, "his Turkic prose is highly Persianized in its sentence structure, morphology or word formation and vocabulary."<ref name="Dale2004">{{cite book |first=Stephen Frederic |last=Dale |title=The garden of the eight paradises: Bābur and the culture of Empire in Central Asia, Afghanistan and India (1483–1530) |publisher=Brill |year=2004 |pages=15, 150 |isbn=90-04-13707-6}}</ref> ''Baburnama'' was translated into Persian during the rule of Babur's grandson Akbar.<ref name="Babur Nama" />


Babur was born on 14 February 1483 in the city of [[Andijan]], [[Fergana Valley]], contemporary Uzbekistan. He was the eldest son of [[Umar Shaikh Mirza II]],<ref>{{cite web |quote=On the occasion of the birth of Babar Padishah (the son of Omar Shaikh) |url=http://depts.washington.edu/silkroad/texts/rash1.html |title=Mirza Muhammad Haidar |work=Silk Road Seattle |publisher=[[University of Washington]] |access-date=7 November 2006 |archive-date=16 April 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150416044122/http://depts.washington.edu/silkroad/texts/rash1.html |url-status=live }}</ref> ruler of the Fergana Valley, the son of [[Abu Sa'id (Timurid dynasty)|Abū Saʿīd Mirza]] (and grandson of [[Miran Shah]], who was himself son of [[Timur]]) and his wife [[Qutlugh Nigar Khanum]], daughter of [[Yunus Khan]], the ruler of [[Moghulistan]] (a descendant of [[Genghis Khan]]).<ref>{{cite book|author1=Babur|title=Babur Nama|publisher=Penguin Books|isbn=978-0-14-400149-1|page=vii|year=2006}}</ref>
Babur was born on 14 February 1483 in the city of [[Andijan]], [[Fergana Valley]], contemporary Uzbekistan. He was the eldest son of [[Umar Shaikh Mirza II]],<ref>{{cite web |quote=On the occasion of the birth of Babar Padishah (the son of Omar Shaikh) |url=http://depts.washington.edu/silkroad/texts/rash1.html |title=Mirza Muhammad Haidar |work=Silk Road Seattle |publisher=[[University of Washington]] |access-date=7 November 2006 |archive-date=16 April 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150416044122/http://depts.washington.edu/silkroad/texts/rash1.html |url-status=live }}</ref> ruler of the Fergana Valley, the son of [[Abu Sa'id (Timurid dynasty)|Abū Saʿīd Mirza]] (and grandson of [[Miran Shah]], who was himself son of [[Timur]]) and his wife [[Qutlugh Nigar Khanum]], daughter of [[Yunus Khan]], the ruler of [[Moghulistan]] and a descendant of [[Genghis Khan]].<ref>{{cite book|author1=Babur|title=Babur Nama|publisher=Penguin Books|isbn=978-0-14-400149-1|page=vii|year=2006}}</ref>


Babur hailed from the [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] [[Barlas]] tribe, which was of [[Mongol]] origin and had embraced the [[Turco-Persian tradition]]<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Babur |title=Bābur (Mughal emperor) |website=Encyclopædia Britannica |access-date=29 August 2016 |archive-date=5 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230305124145/https://www.britannica.com/biography/Babur |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Iranica" /> They had also converted to Islam centuries earlier and resided in [[Turkestan]] and [[Greater Khorasan|Khorasan]].
Babur hailed from the [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] [[Barlas]] tribe, which was of [[Mongol]] origin and had embraced the [[Turco-Persian tradition]]<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Babur |title=Bābur (Mughal emperor) |website=Encyclopædia Britannica |access-date=29 August 2016 |archive-date=5 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230305124145/https://www.britannica.com/biography/Babur |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Iranica" /> They had also converted to Islam centuries earlier and resided in [[Turkestan]] and [[Greater Khorasan|Khorasan]].
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Aside from the [[Chaghatai Turkic]], Babur was equally fluent in [[Classical Persian]], the [[lingua franca]] of the Timurid elite.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Iran/The-Timurids-and-Turkmen |title=Iran: The Timurids and Turkmen |website=Encyclopædia Britannica |access-date=29 August 2016 |archive-date=18 June 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230618001818/https://www.britannica.com/place/Iran/The-Timurids-and-Turkmen |url-status=live }}</ref>
Aside from the [[Chaghatai Turkic]], Babur was equally fluent in [[Classical Persian]], the [[lingua franca]] of the Timurid elite.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Iran/The-Timurids-and-Turkmen |title=Iran: The Timurids and Turkmen |website=Encyclopædia Britannica |access-date=29 August 2016 |archive-date=18 June 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230618001818/https://www.britannica.com/place/Iran/The-Timurids-and-Turkmen |url-status=live }}</ref>


[[File:Humayun and Babur (Late Shah Jahan Album) Babur detail.jpg|thumb|upright=0.8|Portrait of Babur in the ''[[:Commons:Category:Late Shah Jahan Album|Late Shah Jahan Album]]'', painted {{Circa|1640}}. Smithsonian Collections.<ref>{{cite web |title=Babur and Humayun with Courtiers, from the Late Shah Jahan Album |url=https://asia-archive.si.edu/object/S1986.401/ |website=Smithsonian's National Museum of Asian Art|quote=The first Mughal emperor, Babur, who reigned from 1526 to 1530, is shown seated on the right with his son and successor, Humayun.}}</ref>]]
Some of Babur's relatives, such as his uncles [[Mahmud Khan (Moghul Khan)]] and Ahmad Khan, continued to identify as Mongols, and allowed him to use their Mongol troops to help recover his fortunes in the turbulent years that followed.<ref>{{cite book |last=Dale |first=Stephen F. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xyluDwAAQBAJ&dq=dughlat+kashgar+mongol&pg=PA33 |page=35 |title=Babur:Timurid Prince and Mughal Emperor, 1483-1530 |year=2018 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=9781316996379}}</ref>
Some of Babur's relatives, such as his uncles [[Mahmud Khan (Moghul Khan)]] and Ahmad Khan, continued to identify as Mongols, and allowed him to use their Mongol troops to help recover his fortunes in the turbulent years that followed.<ref>{{cite book |last=Dale |first=Stephen F. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xyluDwAAQBAJ&dq=dughlat+kashgar+mongol&pg=PA33 |page=35 |title=Babur:Timurid Prince and Mughal Emperor, 1483-1530 |year=2018 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=9781316996379}}</ref>


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=== As Timurid ruler of Fergana ===
=== As Timurid ruler of Fergana ===
In 1494, eleven-year-old Babur became the [[Timurid Empire|Timurid]] ruler of Fergana, in present-day Uzbekistan, after his father [[Umar Shaikh Mirza II|Umar Sheikh Mirza]] died "while [[Pigeon keeping|tending pigeons]] in an ill-constructed [[dovecote]] that toppled into the [[ravine]] below the palace".<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Babur, the first Moghul emperor: Wine and tulips in Kabul |url=http://www.economist.com/node/17723207 |magazine=The Economist |date=16 December 2010 |pages=80–82 |access-date=12 June 2015 |archive-date=15 January 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170115140216/http://www.economist.com/node/17723207 |url-status=live }}</ref> During this time, two of his uncles from the neighbouring kingdoms, who were hostile to his father, and a group of nobles who wanted his younger brother Jahangir to be the ruler, threatened his succession to the throne.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=18–20}} His uncles were relentless in their attempts to dislodge him from this position as well as from many of his other territorial possessions to come.<ref>{{cite book|title=Domesticity and Power in the Early Mughal World |last=Lal |first=Ruby |isbn=0-521-85022-3 |year=2005 |page=69 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |quote=It was over these possessions, provinces controlled by uncles, or cousins of varying degrees, that Babur fought with close and distant relatives for much of his life.}}</ref> Babur was able to secure his throne mainly because of help from his maternal grandmother, [[Aisan Daulat Begum]], although there was also some luck involved.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=18–20}}
[[File:Babur meeting Sultan 'Ali Mirza near Samarqand, painted circa 1589 (Baburnama).jpg|thumb|upright|Babur as the young Emir of Fergana, joining forces with [[Sultan Ali bin Mahmud Mirza|Sultan Ali Mirza]] in 1497 near [[Samarqand]]. Painted {{Circa|1589}} (''Baburnama'').]]
In 1494, eleven-year-old Babur became the [[Timurid Empire|Timurid]] ruler of Fergana, in present-day Uzbekistan, after his father [[Umar Shaikh Mirza II|Umar Sheikh Mirza]] died "while [[Pigeon keeping|tending pigeons]] in an ill-constructed [[dovecote]] that toppled into the [[ravine]] below the palace".<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Babur, the first Moghul emperor: Wine and tulips in Kabul |url=https://www.economist.com/christmas-specials/2010/12/16/wine-and-tulips-in-kabul |magazine=The Economist |date=16 December 2010 |pages=80–82 |access-date=12 June 2015 |archive-date=15 January 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170115140216/http://www.economist.com/node/17723207 |url-status=live }}</ref> During this time, two of his uncles from the neighbouring kingdoms, who were hostile to his father, and a group of nobles who wanted his younger brother Jahangir to be the ruler, threatened his succession to the throne.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=18–20}} His uncles were relentless in their attempts to dislodge him from this position as well as from many of his other territorial possessions to come.<ref>{{cite book|title=Domesticity and Power in the Early Mughal World |last=Lal |first=Ruby |isbn=0-521-85022-3 |year=2005 |page=69 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |quote=It was over these possessions, provinces controlled by uncles, or cousins of varying degrees, that Babur fought with close and distant relatives for much of his life.}}</ref> Babur was able to secure his throne mainly because of help from his maternal grandmother, [[Aisan Daulat Begum]], although there was also some luck involved.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=18–20}}


[[File:Babur meeting Sultan 'Ali Mirza near Samarqand, painted circa 1589 (Baburnama).jpg|thumb|left|upright|Babur as the young Emir of Fergana, joining forces with [[Sultan Ali bin Mahmud Mirza|Sultan Mahmud Mirza]] in 1497 near [[Samarqand]]. Painted {{Circa|1589}} (''Baburnama'').]]
Most territories around his kingdom were ruled by his relatives, who were descendants of either Timur or Genghis Khan, and were constantly in conflict.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=18–20}} At that time, rival princes were fighting over the city of Samarkand to the west, which was ruled by his paternal cousin.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=6-7}} Babur had a great ambition to capture the city.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=6-7}}  
Most territories around his kingdom were ruled by his relatives, who were descendants of either Timur or Genghis Khan, and were constantly in conflict.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=18–20}} At that time, rival princes were fighting over the city of Samarkand to the west, which was ruled by his paternal cousin.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=6-7}} Babur had a great ambition to capture the city.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=6-7}} In 1497, he [[Siege of Samarkand (1497)|besieged Samarkand]] for seven months before eventually gaining control over it.<ref name="Afghanistan">{{cite book |last=Ewans |first=Martin |year=2002 |title=Afghanistan: A Short History of Its People and Politics |url=https://archive.org/details/afghanistan00mart |url-access=registration |publisher=HarperCollins |pages=[https://archive.org/details/afghanistan00mart/page/26 26]–27 |isbn=0-06-050508-7 |quote=Babur, while still in his teens, conceived the ambition of conquering Samarkand. In 1497, after a seven months' siege, he took the city, but his supporters gradually deserted him and Ferghana was taken from him in his absence. Within a few months he was compelled to retire from Samarkand&nbsp;... Eventually he retook Samarkand, but was again forced out, this time by an Usbek leader, Shaibani Khan&nbsp;... Babur decided in 1504 to trek over the Hindu Kush to Kabul, where the current ruler promptly retreated to Kandahar and left him in undisputed control of the city.}}</ref> He was fifteen years old and for him the campaign was a huge achievement.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=18–20}} Babur was able to hold the city despite desertions in his army, but he later fell seriously ill.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=6-7}} Meanwhile, a rebellion back home, approximately {{convert|350|km|mi}} away, amongst nobles who favoured his brother, robbed him of Fergana.<ref name="Afghanistan" /> As he was marching to recover it, he left Samarkand to [[Sultan Ali bin Mahmud Mirza|Sultan Mahmud Mirza]], leaving him with neither territory in his possession.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=18–20}} He had held Samarkand for 100 days, and he considered this defeat as his biggest loss, obsessing over it even later in his life after his conquests in India.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=18–20}}


For three years, Babur concentrated on building a strong army, recruiting widely amongst the Tajiks of [[Badakhshan]] in particular. In 1500–1501, he again laid [[Siege of Samarkand (1501)|siege to Samarkand]], and indeed he took the city briefly, but he was in turn besieged by his most formidable rival, [[Muhammad Shaybani]], [[Khan (title)|Khan]] of the Uzbeks.<ref name="Afghanistan" /><ref>{{cite web |url=http://depts.washington.edu/silkroad/texts/babur/babur1.html |quote=After being driven out of Samarkand in 1501 by the Uzbek Shaibanids&nbsp;... |title=The Memoirs of Babur |access-date=8 November 2006 |work=Silk Road Seattle |publisher=[[University of Washington]] |archive-date=21 October 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191021154433/https://depts.washington.edu/silkroad/texts/babur/babur1.html |url-status=live }}</ref> The situation became such that Babar was compelled to give his sister, Khanzada, to Shaybani in marriage as part of the peace settlement. Only after this were Babur and his troops allowed to depart the city in safety. Samarkand, his lifelong obsession, was thus lost again. He then tried to reclaim Fergana, but lost the battle there also and, escaping with a small band of followers, he wandered the mountains of central Asia and took refuge with hill tribes. By 1502, he had resigned all hopes of recovering Fergana; he was left with nothing and was forced to try his luck elsewhere.<ref name="VDM0">{{cite book|last=Mahajan|first=V.D.|title=History of medieval India|year=2007|publisher=S Chand|location=New Delhi|isbn=978-81-219-0364-6|edition=10th|pages=428–29}}</ref>{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=21–23}} He finally went to [[Tashkent]], which was ruled by his maternal uncle, but he found himself less than welcome there. Babur wrote, "During my stay in Tashkent, I endured much poverty and humiliation. No country, or hope of one!"{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=21–23}} Thus, during the ten years since becoming the ruler of Fergana, Babur suffered many short-lived victories and was without shelter and in exile, aided by friends and peasants.
[[File:Babur as Sultan of Ferghana. 1494-1504. AR Tanka (4.66 gm). Struck during his occupation of Samarkand 1497-1498 (AH 903).jpg|thumb|left|Coinage of Babur as Sultan of Ferghana, struck during his occupation of Samarkand in 1497-1498 (AH 903). It is a coin of the Timurid sultan [[Husayn Baiqara]], countermarked with the Persian legend ''adl Sultan Zahir al-Din Muhammad Bahadur'' in a leaf shaped punch.]]
In 1497, he [[Siege of Samarkand (1497)|besieged Samarkand]] for seven months before eventually gaining control over it.<ref name="Afghanistan">{{cite book |last=Ewans |first=Martin |year=2002 |title=Afghanistan: A Short History of Its People and Politics |url=https://archive.org/details/afghanistan00mart |url-access=registration |publisher=HarperCollins |pages=[https://archive.org/details/afghanistan00mart/page/26 26]–27 |isbn=0-06-050508-7 |quote=Babur, while still in his teens, conceived the ambition of conquering Samarkand. In 1497, after a seven months' siege, he took the city, but his supporters gradually deserted him and Ferghana was taken from him in his absence. Within a few months he was compelled to retire from Samarkand&nbsp;... Eventually he retook Samarkand, but was again forced out, this time by an Usbek leader, Shaibani Khan&nbsp;... Babur decided in 1504 to trek over the Hindu Kush to Kabul, where the current ruler promptly retreated to Kandahar and left him in undisputed control of the city.}}</ref> He was fifteen years old and for him the campaign was a huge achievement.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=18–20}} Babur was able to hold the city despite desertions in his army, but he later fell seriously ill.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=6-7}} Meanwhile, a rebellion back home, approximately {{convert|350|km|mi}} away, amongst nobles who favoured his brother, robbed him of Fergana.<ref name="Afghanistan" /> As he was marching to recover it, he left Samarkand to [[Sultan Ali bin Mahmud Mirza|Sultan Mahmud Mirza]], leaving him with neither territory in his possession.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=18–20}} He had held Samarkand for 100 days, and he considered this defeat as his biggest loss, obsessing over it even later in his life after his conquests in India.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=18–20}}
 
For three years, Babur concentrated on building a strong army, recruiting widely amongst the Tajiks of [[Badakhshan]] in particular. In 1500–1501, he again laid [[Siege of Samarkand (1501)|siege to Samarkand]], and indeed he took the city briefly, but he was in turn besieged by his most formidable rival, [[Muhammad Shaybani]], [[Khan (title)|Khan]] of the Uzbeks.<ref name="Afghanistan" /><ref>{{cite web |url=http://depts.washington.edu/silkroad/texts/babur/babur1.html |quote=After being driven out of Samarkand in 1501 by the Uzbek Shaibanids&nbsp;... |title=The Memoirs of Babur |access-date=8 November 2006 |work=Silk Road Seattle |publisher=[[University of Washington]] |archive-date=21 October 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191021154433/https://depts.washington.edu/silkroad/texts/babur/babur1.html |url-status=live }}</ref> The situation became such that Babur was compelled to give his sister, Khanzada, to Shaybani in marriage as part of the peace settlement. Only after this were Babur and his troops allowed to depart the city in safety. Samarkand, his lifelong obsession, was thus lost again. He then tried to reclaim Fergana, but lost the battle there also and, escaping with a small band of followers, he wandered the mountains of central Asia and took refuge with hill tribes. By 1502, he had resigned all hopes of recovering Fergana; he was left with nothing and was forced to try his luck elsewhere.<ref name="VDM0">{{cite book|last=Mahajan|first=V.D.|title=History of medieval India|year=2007|publisher=S Chand|location=New Delhi|isbn=978-81-219-0364-6|edition=10th|pages=428–29}}</ref>{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=21–23}} He finally went to [[Tashkent]], which was ruled by his maternal uncle, but he found himself less than welcome there. Babur wrote, "During my stay in Tashkent, I endured much poverty and humiliation. No country, or hope of one!"{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=21–23}} Thus, during the ten years since becoming the ruler of Fergana, Babur suffered many short-lived victories and was without shelter and in exile, aided by friends and peasants.


=== At Kabul ===
=== At Kabul ===
[[File:Babur in 1507, standing in armour.jpg|thumb|upright=0.8|Babur in armour, April–May 1507 in Kabul. ''Baburnama'' (1589).<ref>{{cite book |last1=Babur |first1=Emperor of Hindustan |last2=Beveridge |first2=Annette Susannah |title=The Babur-nama in English (Memoirs of Babur) |date=1922 |publisher=London, Luzac |page=319 |url=https://archive.org/details/baburnamainengli01babuuoft/page/318/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22Muhammad+Husain+Mirza%22}}</ref>]]
[[File:Babur in 1507, standing in armour.jpg|thumb|upright=0.8|Babur in armour, April–May 1507 in Kabul. ''Baburnama'' (1589).<ref>{{Harvard citation no brackets|Beveridge|2018|p=[https://archive.org/details/baburnamainengli01babuuoft/page/318/mode/1up 319]}}</ref>]]
Kabul was ruled by Babur's paternal uncle [[Ulugh Beg II]], who died leaving only an infant as heir.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=21–23}} The city was then claimed by Mukin Begh, who was considered to be a usurper and was opposed by the local populace. In 1504, Babur was able to cross the snowy [[Hindu Kush]] mountains and [[Siege of Kabul (1504)|capture Kabul]] from the remaining Arghunids, who were forced to retreat to [[Kandahar]].<ref name="Afghanistan" /> With this move, he gained a new kingdom, re-established his fortunes and would remain its ruler until 1526.<ref name="VDM0" /> In 1505, because of the low revenue generated by his new mountain kingdom, Babur began his first expedition to India; in his memoirs, he wrote, "My desire for Hindustan had been constant. It was in the month of Shaban, the Sun being in Aquarius, that we rode out of Kabul for Hindustan". It was a brief raid across the [[Khyber Pass]].{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=21–23}}
Kabul was ruled by Babur's paternal uncle [[Ulugh Beg II]], who died leaving only an infant as heir.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=21–23}} The city was then claimed by Mukim Beg, who was considered to be a usurper and was opposed by the local populace. In October 1504, Babur was able to cross the snowy [[Hindu Kush]] mountains and [[Siege of Kabul (1504)|capture Kabul]] from the remaining Arghun chieftains, who were forced to retreat to [[Kandahar]].<ref name="Afghanistan" /><ref name="u641">{{cite web | title=The First Afghan Empire In India (1451-1526 A.D.) | url=https://ia801509.us.archive.org/15/items/in.ernet.dli.2015.99712/2015.99712.The-First-Afghan-Empire-In-India-1451-1526-Ad_text.pdf | access-date=7 August 2025 | page=214}}</ref> With this move, he gained a new kingdom, re-established his fortunes and would remain its ruler until 1526.<ref name="VDM0" /> In 1505, because of the low revenue generated by his new mountain kingdom, Babur began his first expedition to India; in his memoirs, he wrote, "My desire for Hindustan had been constant. It was in the month of Shaban, the Sun being in Aquarius, that we rode out of Kabul for Hindustan". It was a brief raid across the [[Khyber Pass]].{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=21–23}}


In the same year, Babur united with [[Sultan Husayn Mirza Bayqarah]] of [[Herat]], a fellow Timurid and distant relative, against their common enemy, the Uzbek Shaybani.<ref name="perspect">{{cite book |title=Perspectives on Persian Painting: Illustrations to Amir Khusrau's Khamsah |last=Brend |first=Barbara |year=2002 |isbn=0-7007-1467-7 |publisher=Routledge (UK) |page=188 }}</ref> However, this venture did not take place because Husayn Mirza died in 1506 and his two sons were reluctant to go to war.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=21–23}} Babur instead stayed at Herat after being invited by the two Mirza brothers. It was then the cultural capital of the eastern Muslim world. Though he was disgusted by the vices and luxuries of the city,{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=24–26}} he marvelled at the intellectual abundance there, which he stated was "filled with learned and matched men".<ref>{{cite book |title=The Sewing Circles of Herat: A Personal Voyage Through Afghanistan |last=Lamb |first=Christina |page=[https://archive.org/details/sewingcirclesofh00chri/page/153 153] |isbn=0-06-050527-3 |publisher=HarperCollins |year= 2004 |url=https://archive.org/details/sewingcirclesofh00chri/page/153 }}</ref> He became acquainted with the work of the Chagatai poet [[Mir Ali Shir Nava'i]], who encouraged the use of [[Chagatai language|Chagatai]] as a [[literary language]]. Nava'i's proficiency with the language, which he is credited with founding,<ref>{{cite book |title=Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time |last=Hickmann |first=William C. |year= 1992 |isbn=0-691-01078-1 |page=473 |publisher=Princeton University Press |quote=Eastern Turk Mir Ali Shir Neva'i (1441–1501), founder of the Chagatai literary language}}</ref> may have influenced Babur in his decision to use it for his memoirs. He spent two months there before being forced to leave because of diminishing resources;<ref name="perspect" /> it later was overrun by Shaybani and the Mirzas fled.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=24–26}}
In the same year, Babur united with [[Sultan Husayn Mirza Bayqarah]] of [[Herat]], a fellow Timurid and distant relative, against their common enemy, the Uzbek Shaybani.<ref name="perspect">{{cite book |title=Perspectives on Persian Painting: Illustrations to Amir Khusrau's Khamsah |last=Brend |first=Barbara |year=2002 |isbn=0-7007-1467-7 |publisher=Routledge (UK) |page=188 }}</ref> However, this venture did not take place because Husayn Mirza died in 1506 and his two sons were reluctant to go to war.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=21–23}} Babur instead stayed at Herat after being invited by the two Mirza brothers. It was then the cultural capital of the eastern Muslim world. Though he was disgusted by the vices and luxuries of the city,{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=24–26}} he marvelled at the intellectual abundance there, which he stated was "filled with learned and matched men".<ref>{{cite book |title=The Sewing Circles of Herat: A Personal Voyage Through Afghanistan |last=Lamb |first=Christina |page=[https://archive.org/details/sewingcirclesofh00chri/page/153 153] |isbn=0-06-050527-3 |publisher=HarperCollins |year= 2004 |url=https://archive.org/details/sewingcirclesofh00chri/page/153 }}</ref> He became acquainted with the work of the Chagatai poet [[Mir Ali Shir Nava'i]], who encouraged the use of [[Chagatai language|Chagatai]] as a [[literary language]]. Nava'i's proficiency with the language, which he is credited with founding,<ref>{{cite book |title=Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time |last=Hickmann |first=William C. |year= 1992 |isbn=0-691-01078-1 |page=473 |publisher=Princeton University Press |quote=Eastern Turk Mir Ali Shir Neva'i (1441–1501), founder of the Chagatai literary language}}</ref> may have influenced Babur in his decision to use it for his memoirs. He spent two months there before being forced to leave because of diminishing resources;<ref name="perspect" /> it later was overrun by Shaybani and the Mirzas fled.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=24–26}}
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He thus assumed the title of ''[[Padshah]]'' (emperor) among the Timurids—though this title was insignificant since most of his ancestral lands were taken, Kabul itself was in danger and Shaybani continued to be a threat.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=24–26}} Babur prevailed during a potential rebellion in Kabul, but two years later a revolt among some of his leading generals drove him out of Kabul. Escaping with very few companions, Babur soon returned to the city, capturing Kabul again and regaining the allegiance of the rebels. Meanwhile, Shaybani was defeated and killed by [[Ismail I]], Shah of [[Shia]] Safavid Persia, in 1510.<ref>{{cite book |title=Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of World Religions |last=Doniger |first=Wendy |isbn=0-87779-044-2 |date= 1999 |page=[https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780877790440/page/539 539] |publisher=Merriam-Webster |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780877790440/page/539 }}</ref>
He thus assumed the title of ''[[Padshah]]'' (emperor) among the Timurids—though this title was insignificant since most of his ancestral lands were taken, Kabul itself was in danger and Shaybani continued to be a threat.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=24–26}} Babur prevailed during a potential rebellion in Kabul, but two years later a revolt among some of his leading generals drove him out of Kabul. Escaping with very few companions, Babur soon returned to the city, capturing Kabul again and regaining the allegiance of the rebels. Meanwhile, Shaybani was defeated and killed by [[Ismail I]], Shah of [[Shia]] Safavid Persia, in 1510.<ref>{{cite book |title=Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of World Religions |last=Doniger |first=Wendy |isbn=0-87779-044-2 |date= 1999 |page=[https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780877790440/page/539 539] |publisher=Merriam-Webster |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780877790440/page/539 }}</ref>


Babur and the remaining Timurids used this opportunity to reconquer their ancestral territories. Over the following few years, Babur and Shah Ismail formed a partnership in an attempt to take over parts of Central Asia. In return for Ismail's assistance, Babur permitted the Safavids to act as a suzerain over him and his followers.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Islamic World in Ascendancy: From the Arab Conquests to the Siege in Vienna |last=Sicker |first=Martin |isbn=0-275-96892-8 |year= 2000 |page=189 |publisher=Bloomsbury Academic |quote=Ismail was quite prepared to lend his support to the displaced Timurid prince, Zahir ad-Din Babur, who offered to accept Safavid suzerainty in return for help in regaining control of Transoxiana.}}</ref> Thus, in 1513, after leaving his brother Nasir Mirza to rule Kabul, he managed to take Samarkand for the third time; he also took Bokhara but lost both again to the Uzbeks.<ref name="VDM0" />{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=24–26}} Shah Ismail reunited Babur with his sister [[Khanzada Begum|Khānzāda]], who had been imprisoned by and forced to marry the recently deceased Shaybani.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Erdogan |first=Eralp |date=July 2014 |title=Babür İmparatorluğu'nun Kuruluş Safhasında Şah İsmail ile Babür İttifakı |url=http://www.historystudies.net/dergi/tar20151234f99.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/http://www.historystudies.net/dergi/tar20151234f99.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live |journal= History Studies: International Journal of History|volume=6 |issue=4 |pages=31–39 |doi=10.9737/historyS1150 |doi-broken-date=11 July 2025 |language=tr}}</ref> Babur returned to Kabul after three years in 1514. The following 11 years of his rule mainly involved dealing with relatively insignificant rebellions from Afghan tribes, his nobles and relatives, in addition to conducting raids across the eastern mountains.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=24–26}} Babur began to modernise and train his army despite it being, for him, relatively peaceful times.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=27–29}}
Babur and the remaining Timurids used this opportunity to reconquer their ancestral territories. Over the following few years, Babur and Shah Ismail formed a partnership in an attempt to take over parts of Central Asia. In return for Ismail's assistance, Babur permitted the Safavids to act as a suzerain over him and his followers.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Islamic World in Ascendancy: From the Arab Conquests to the Siege in Vienna |last=Sicker |first=Martin |isbn=0-275-96892-8 |year= 2000 |page=189 |publisher=Bloomsbury Academic |quote=Ismail was quite prepared to lend his support to the displaced Timurid prince, Zahir ad-Din Babur, who offered to accept Safavid suzerainty in return for help in regaining control of Transoxiana.}}</ref> Thus, in 1513, after leaving his brother Nasir Mirza to rule Kabul, he managed to take Samarkand for the third time; he also took [[Bukhara]] but lost both again to the Uzbeks.<ref name="VDM0" />{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=24–26}} Shah Ismail reunited Babur with his sister [[Khanzada Begum|Khānzāda]], who had been imprisoned by and forced to marry the recently deceased Shaybani.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Erdogan |first=Eralp |date=July 2014 |title=Babür İmparatorluğu'nun Kuruluş Safhasında Şah İsmail ile Babür İttifakı |url=http://www.historystudies.net/dergi/tar20151234f99.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/http://www.historystudies.net/dergi/tar20151234f99.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live |journal= History Studies: International Journal of History|volume=6 |issue=4 |pages=31–39 |doi=10.9737/historyS1150 |doi-broken-date=11 July 2025 |language=tr}}</ref> Babur returned to Kabul after three years in 1514. The following 11 years of his rule mainly involved dealing with relatively insignificant rebellions from Afghan tribes, his nobles and relatives, in addition to conducting raids across the eastern mountains.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=24–26}} Babur began to modernise and train his army despite it being, for him, relatively peaceful times.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=27–29}}


== Foreign relations ==
== Foreign relations ==
Determined to conquer the Uzbeks and recapture his ancestral homeland, Babur was wary of their allies the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottomans]], and made no attempt to establish formal diplomatic relations with them. He did, however, employ the [[matchlock]] commander [[Mustafa Rumi]] and several other Ottomans.<ref name=Farooqi2008>{{cite book |last=Farooqi |first=Naimur Rahman |year=2008 |title=Mughal-Ottoman relations: a study of political & diplomatic relations between Mughal India and the Ottoman Empire, 1556–1748 |pages=13–14 |oclc=20894584}}</ref> From them, he adopted the tactic of using matchlocks and cannons in the field (rather than only in [[siege]]s), which gave him an important advantage in India.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=27–29}}
Babur made no attempt to establish formal diplomatic relations with the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottomans]] while trying to defeat the Uzbeks and recapture his ancestral homeland. He did, however, employ the [[matchlock]] commander [[Mustafa Rumi]] and several other Ottomans.<ref name=Farooqi2008>{{cite book |last=Farooqi |first=Naimur Rahman |year=2008 |title=Mughal-Ottoman relations: a study of political & diplomatic relations between Mughal India and the Ottoman Empire, 1556–1748 |pages=13–14 |oclc=20894584}}</ref> From them, he adopted the tactic of using matchlocks and cannons in the field (rather than only in [[siege]]s), which gave him an important advantage in India.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=27–29}}


== Formation of the Mughal Empire ==
== Formation of the Mughal Empire ==
{{Main|Lodi dynasty|Delhi Sultanate|Siege of Kabul (1504)}}
{{Main|Lodi dynasty|Delhi Sultanate|Siege of Kabul (1504)}}
[[File:Babar 936.jpg|thumb|Babur's coin, based on [[Bahlol Lodhi]]'s standard, [[Agra Fort|Qila Agra]], [[anno Hegirae|AH]] 936|170x170px]]
[[File:Babar 936.jpg|thumb|Babur's coin, based on [[Bahlol Lodhi]]'s standard, [[Agra Fort|Qila Agra]], [[anno Hegirae|AH]] 936|170x170px]]


Babur still wanted to escape from the Uzbeks, and he chose India as a refuge instead of [[Badakhshan]], which was to the north of Kabul. He wrote, "In the presence of such power and potency, we had to think of some place for ourselves and, at this crisis and in the crack of time there was, put a wider space between us and the strong foeman."{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=27–29}} After his third loss of Samarkand, Babur gave full attention to the conquest of North India, launching a campaign; he reached the [[Chenab River]], now in [[Pakistan]], in 1519.<ref name="VDM0" /> Until 1524, his aim was to only expand his rule to [[Punjab region|Punjab]], mainly to fulfill the legacy of his ancestor Timur, since it used to be part of his empire.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=27–29}} At the time parts of North India were part of the Delhi Sultanate, ruled by Ibrahim Lodi of the Lodi dynasty, but the sultanate was crumbling and there were many defectors. Babur received invitations from Daulat Khan Lodi, Governor of Punjab and Ala-ud-Din, uncle of Ibrahim.<ref name="RSCHMI">{{cite book |last=Chaurasia |first=Radhey Shyam |title=History of medieval India : from 1000 A.D. to 1707 A.D. |year=2002 |publisher=Atlantic Publ. |location=New Delhi |isbn=81-269-0123-3 |pages=89–90 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8XnaL7zPXPUC&q=babur%20receiving%20invitations%20from%20Daulat%20Khan%20Lodi&pg=PA89}}</ref> He sent an ambassador to Ibrahim, claiming himself the rightful heir to the throne, but the ambassador was detained at [[Lahore]], Punjab, and released months later.<ref name="VDM0" />
Babur writes in his memoir:
 
{{Blockquote|From the time of the revered Prophet down till now three men from that side have conquered and ruled Hindūstān. [[Mahmud of Ghazni|Maḥmūd Ghāzī]] was the first, who and whose descendants sat long on the seat of government in Hindūstān. [[Muhammad of Ghor|Shihābu’d-dīn of Ghūr]] was the second, whose slaves and dependants royally shepherded this realm for many years. I am the third.<ref>{{Harvard citation no brackets|Beveridge|2018|p=[https://archive.org/details/baburnamainengli02babuuoft/page/479/mode/1up 479]}}</ref>}}
 
Babur still wanted to escape from the Uzbeks, and he chose India as a refuge instead of [[Badakhshan]], which was to the north of Kabul. He wrote, "In the presence of such power and potency, we had to think of some place for ourselves and, at this crisis and in the crack of time there was, put a wider space between us and the strong foeman."{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=27–29}} After his third loss of Samarkand, Babur gave full attention to the conquest of North India, launching a campaign; he reached the [[Chenab River]], now in [[Pakistan]], in 1519.<ref name="VDM0" /> Until 1524, his aim was to only expand his rule to [[Punjab region|Punjab]], mainly to fulfill the legacy of his ancestor Timur, since it used to be part of his empire.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=27–29}} At the time parts of North India were part of the Delhi Sultanate, ruled by Ibrahim Lodi of the Lodi dynasty, but the sultanate was crumbling and there were many defectors. Babur received invitations from [[Daulat Khan Lodi]], Governor of Punjab and Ala-ud-Din, uncle of Ibrahim.<ref name="RSCHMI">{{cite book |last=Chaurasia |first=Radhey Shyam |title=History of medieval India : from 1000 A.D. to 1707 A.D. |year=2002 |publisher=Atlantic Publ. |location=New Delhi |isbn=81-269-0123-3 |pages=89–90 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8XnaL7zPXPUC&q=babur%20receiving%20invitations%20from%20Daulat%20Khan%20Lodi&pg=PA89}}</ref> He sent an ambassador to Ibrahim, claiming himself the rightful heir to the throne, but the ambassador was detained at [[Lahore]], Punjab, and released months later.<ref name="VDM0" />


Babur started for Lahore in 1524 but found that Daulat Khan Lodi had been driven out by forces sent by Ibrahim Lodi.<ref>{{cite book |last=Chandra |first=Satish |year=2009 |title=Medieval India:From Sultanat to the Mughals |volume=2 |location=New Delhi |publisher=Har-Anand |page=27 |isbn=978-81-241-1268-7}}</ref> When Babur arrived at Lahore, the Lodi army marched out and his army was routed. In response, Babur burned Lahore for two days, then marched to Dibalpur, placing Alam Khan, another rebel uncle of Lodi, as governor.<ref>{{harvtxt|Chandra|2009|pp=27–28}}</ref> Alam Khan was quickly overthrown and fled to Kabul. In response, Babur supplied Alam Khan with troops who later joined up with Daulat Khan Lodi, and together with about 30,000 troops, they besieged Ibrahim Lodi at Delhi.<ref name="autogenerated1">{{harvtxt|Chandra|2009|p=28}}</ref> The sultan easily defeated and drove off Alam's army, and Babur realised that he would not allow him to occupy the Punjab.<ref name="autogenerated1" />
Babur started for Lahore in 1524 but found that Daulat Khan Lodi had been driven out by forces sent by Ibrahim Lodi.<ref>{{cite book |last=Chandra |first=Satish |year=2009 |title=Medieval India:From Sultanat to the Mughals |volume=2 |location=New Delhi |publisher=Har-Anand |page=27 |isbn=978-81-241-1268-7}}</ref> When Babur arrived at Lahore, the Lodi army marched out and his army was routed. In response, Babur burned Lahore for two days, then marched to Dibalpur, placing Alam Khan, another rebel uncle of Lodi, as governor.<ref>{{harvtxt|Chandra|2009|pp=27–28}}</ref> Alam Khan was quickly overthrown and fled to Kabul. In response, Babur supplied Alam Khan with troops who later joined up with Daulat Khan Lodi, and together with about 30,000 troops, they besieged Ibrahim Lodi at Delhi.<ref name="autogenerated1">{{harvtxt|Chandra|2009|p=28}}</ref> The sultan easily defeated and drove off Alam's army, and Babur realised that he would not allow him to occupy the Punjab.<ref name="autogenerated1" />
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=== First Battle of Panipat ===
=== First Battle of Panipat ===
{{Main|First Battle of Panipat}}
{{Main|First Battle of Panipat}}
[[File:1526-First Battle of Panipat-Ibrahim Lodhi and Babur.jpg|thumb|upright|Mughal artillery and troops in action during the [[Battle of Panipat (1526)]]]]
[[File:1526-First Battle of Panipat-Ibrahim Lodhi and Babur.jpg|thumb|upright|Mughal artillery and troops in action during the [[Battle of Panipat (1526)]]]]


In November 1525, Babur got news at [[Peshawar]] that Daulat Khan Lodi had switched sides, and Babur drove out Ala-ud-Din. Babur then marched onto Lahore to confront Daulat Khan Lodi, only to see Daulat's army melt away at their approach.<ref name="VDM0" /> Daulat surrendered and was pardoned. Thus within three weeks of crossing the [[Indus River]] Babur had become the master of Punjab.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Babur | title=Bābur, Mughal emperor |access-date=2023-11-19 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230220132730/https://www.britannica.com/biography/Babur | archive-date=2023-02-20 | url-status=live}}</ref>
In November 1525, Babur got news at [[Peshawar]] that Daulat Khan Lodi had switched sides, and Babur drove out Ala-ud-Din. Babur then marched onto Lahore to confront Daulat Khan Lodi, only to see Daulat's army melt away at their approach.<ref name="VDM0" /> Daulat surrendered and was pardoned. Thus within three weeks of crossing the [[Indus River]] Babur had become the master of Punjab.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Babur | title=Bābur, Mughal emperor |access-date=2023-11-19 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230220132730/https://www.britannica.com/biography/Babur | archive-date=2023-02-20 | url-status=live}}</ref>


Babur marched on to Delhi via [[Sirhind-Fategarh|Sirhind]]. He reached [[Panipat]] on 20 April 1526 and there met Ibrahim Lodi's numerically superior army of about 100,000 soldiers and 100 elephants.<ref name="VDM0" /><ref name="RSCHMI" /> In the battle that began on the following day, Babur used the tactic of ''Tulugma'', encircling Ibrahim Lodi's army and forcing it to face artillery fire directly, as well as frightening its war elephants.<ref name="RSCHMI" /> Ibrahim Lodi died during the battle, thus ending the Lodi dynasty.<ref name="VDM0" />
Babur marched on to Delhi via [[Sirhind-Fategarh|Sirhind]]. He reached [[Panipat]] on 20 April 1526 and there met Ibrahim Lodi's numerically superior army of about 100,000 soldiers and 1000 elephants.<ref name="VDM0" /><ref name="RSCHMI" /><ref name=":0" /> In the battle that began on the following day, Babur used the tactic of ''Tulugma'', encircling Ibrahim Lodi's army and forcing it to face artillery fire directly, as well as frightening its war elephants.<ref name="RSCHMI" /> Across the front of his position Babur lashed together some 700 baggage carts with rawhide ropes in what he called the "Ottoman" (''Rūmī'') fashion, leaving gaps through which his cavalry could charge, and stationed his matchlock-men and field guns behind this barricade; the artillery was directed by two Ottoman master-gunners, Ustad Ali Quli and [[Mustafa Rumi]].<ref name="Dale-Panipat">{{cite book |last=Dale |first=Stephen F. |title=The Garden of the Eight Paradises: Bābur and the Culture of Empire in Central Asia, Afghanistan and India (1483–1530) |publisher=Brill |year=2004 |page=316}}</ref><ref name="Chandra1978">{{cite book |last=Chandra |first=Satish |author-link=Satish Chandra (historian) |title=Medieval India |publisher=National Council of Educational Research and Training |year=1978 |page=13}}</ref><ref name="Anooshahr-guns">{{cite book |last=Anooshahr |first=Ali |title=The Ghazi Sultans and the Frontiers of Islam: A Comparative Study of the Late Medieval and Early Modern Periods |publisher=Routledge |year=2009 |page=24}}</ref> Ibrahim Lodi died during the battle, thus ending the Lodi dynasty.<ref name="VDM0" />


Babur wrote in his memoirs about his victory:
Babur wrote in his memoirs about his victory:
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After the battle, Babur occupied Delhi, Gwalior and Agra, took the throne of Lodi, and laid the foundation for the eventual rise of Mughal rule in India. However, before he became North India's ruler, he had to fend off challengers, such as Rana Sanga.<ref name="VDM1">{{harvtxt|Mahajan|2007|p=438}}</ref>
After the battle, Babur occupied Delhi, Gwalior and Agra, took the throne of Lodi, and laid the foundation for the eventual rise of Mughal rule in India. However, before he became North India's ruler, he had to fend off challengers, such as Rana Sanga.<ref name="VDM1">{{harvtxt|Mahajan|2007|p=438}}</ref>


Many of Babur's men allegedly wanted to leave India due to its warm climate, but Babur motivated them to stay and expand his empire.{{Citation needed|date=May 2024}}
Many of Babur's men allegedly wanted to leave India due to its harsh climate, but Babur motivated them to stay and expand his empire. Many of his retainers returned to Kabul including his close friend Khwaja Kalan.<ref name=":0" />


=== Battle of Khanwa ===
=== Battle of Khanwa ===
{{Main|Battle of Khanwa}}
{{Main|Battle of Khanwa}}
[[File:Babur visiting the Urvah valley in Gwalior 1.jpg|thumb|upright|Babur encounters the Jain Colossal at the [[Siddhachal Caves|Urvahi valley]] in [[Gwalior]] in 1527. He ordered them to be destroyed<ref>"Gwalior Fort: Rock Sculptures", A Cunningham, ''Archaeological Survey of India'', pp. 364–70</ref>]]
[[File:Babur visiting the Urvah valley in Gwalior 1.jpg|thumb|upright|Babur encounters the Jain Colossal at the [[Siddhachal Caves|Urvahi valley]] in [[Gwalior]] in 1527. He ordered them to be destroyed<ref>"Gwalior Fort: Rock Sculptures", A Cunningham, ''Archaeological Survey of India'', pp. 364–70</ref>]]


The Battle of Khanwa was fought between Babur and the [[Rajput]] ruler of [[Mewar]], [[Rana Sanga]] on 16 March 1527. Rana Sanga wanted to overthrow Babur, whom he considered to be a foreigner ruling in India, and also to extend the Rajput territories by annexing Delhi and [[Agra]]. He was supported by Afghan chiefs who felt Babur had been deceptive by refusing to fulfil promises made to them. Upon receiving news of Rana Sangha's advance towards Agra, Babur after annexing Gwalior and Bayana took a defensive position at [[Khanwa]] (currently in the Indian state of [[Rajasthan]]), from where he hoped to launch a counterattack later. According to K.V. Krishna Rao, Babur won the battle because of his "superior generalship" and modern tactics; the battle was one of the first in India that featured cannons and muskets. Rao also notes that Rana Sanga faced "treachery" when the Hindu chief [[Silhadi]] joined Babur's army with a garrison of 6,000 soldiers.<ref name="Rao">{{cite book |first=K. V. Krishna |last=Rao |title=Prepare Or Perish: A Study of National Security |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=G7xPaJomYsEC&pg=PA453 |isbn=978-81-7212-001-6 |publisher=Lancer Publishers |page=453 |year=1991 |access-date=7 October 2020 |archive-date=5 February 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240205161458/https://books.google.com/books?id=G7xPaJomYsEC&pg=PA453#v=onepage&q&f=false |url-status=live}}</ref>
The Battle of Khanwa was fought between Babur and the [[Rajput]] ruler of [[Mewar]], [[Rana Sanga]] on 16 March 1527. Rana Sanga wanted to overthrow Babur, whom he considered to be a foreigner ruling in India, and also to extend the Rajput territories by annexing Delhi and [[Agra]]. He was supported by a mixed group of Afghan chiefs composed of former Lodi loyalists and local warlords. Upon receiving news of Rana Sangha's advance towards Agra, Babur after annexing Gwalior and Bayana took a defensive position at [[Khanwa]] (currently in the Indian state of [[Rajasthan]]), from where he hoped to launch a counterattack later. According to [[K. V. Krishna Rao]], Babur won the battle because of his "superior generalship" and modern tactics; the battle was one of the first in India that featured cannons and muskets. Rao also notes that Rana Sanga faced "treachery" when the Hindu chief [[Silhadi]] joined Babur's army with a garrison of 6,000 soldiers.<ref name="Rao">{{cite book |first=K. V. Krishna |last=Rao |title=Prepare Or Perish: A Study of National Security |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=G7xPaJomYsEC&pg=PA453 |isbn=978-81-7212-001-6 |publisher=Lancer Publishers |page=453 |year=1991 |access-date=7 October 2020 |archive-date=5 February 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240205161458/https://books.google.com/books?id=G7xPaJomYsEC&pg=PA453#v=onepage&q&f=false |url-status=live}}</ref>
 
On the eve of the battle, with his troops unsettled by an astrologer's prophecy of defeat, Babur recast the campaign in religious terms. He denounced Rana Sanga as a ''kafir'' (infidel), proclaimed the coming fight a ''jihad'', and in a public ceremony renounced wine for good, ordering his gold and silver drinking vessels broken up and the fragments distributed to the poor.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=27–29}}<ref name="Anooshahr20">{{cite book |last=Anooshahr |first=Ali |title=The Ghazi Sultans and the Frontiers of Islam: A Comparative Study of the Late Medieval and Early Modern Periods |publisher=Routledge |year=2009 |page=20}}</ref> The decree issued for the occasion, drafted by his secretary Shaikh Zain, likened the smashing of the wine vessels to the breaking of idols, and after the victory Babur assumed the title of ''[[Ghazi (warrior)|ghazi]]'' and composed a verse celebrating his triumph over the unbelievers.<ref name="Anooshahr20" /><ref name="Asher60">{{cite book |last=Asher |first=Catherine B. |author-link=Catherine Asher |title=Architecture of Mughal India |series=The New Cambridge History of India |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1992 |page=60}}</ref> As at Panipat, his field guns were arranged behind a screen of linked carts; the Ottoman gunner Mustafa Rumi commanded the culverins whose fire helped break the Rajput cavalry charges.<ref name="Roy77">{{cite book |last=Roy |first=Kaushik |title=Military Manpower, Armies and Warfare in South Asia |publisher=Routledge |year=2015 |page=77}}</ref>


=== Battle of Chanderi ===
=== Battle of Chanderi ===
{{Main|Battle of Chanderi}}
The [[Battle of Chanderi]] took place the year after the Battle of Khanwa. On receiving news that Rana Sanga had made preparations to renew the conflict with him, Babur decided to isolate the Rana by defeating one of his staunchest allies, [[Medini Rai]], who was the ruler of Malwa.<ref name="Lane-Poole">{{cite book |last=Lane-Poole |first=Stanley |author-link=Stanley Lane-Poole |year=1899 |title=Babar |url=https://archive.org/details/babar035008mbp |pages=182–83 |publisher=The Clarendon Press}}</ref><ref name="Chandra">{{cite book |last=Chandra |first=Satish |author-link=Satish Chandra (historian) |year=1999 |title=Medieval India: From Sultanat to the Mughals |volume=2 |edition=1st |location=New Delhi |publisher=Har-Anand Publications |page=36 |oclc=36806798}}</ref>
The [[Battle of Chanderi]] took place the year after the Battle of Khanwa. On receiving news that Rana Sanga had made preparations to renew the conflict with him, Babur decided to isolate the Rana by defeating one of his staunchest allies, [[Medini Rai]], who was the ruler of Malwa.<ref name="Lane-Poole">{{cite book |last=Lane-Poole |first=Stanley |author-link=Stanley Lane-Poole |year=1899 |title=Babar |url=https://archive.org/details/babar035008mbp |pages=182–83 |publisher=The Clarendon Press}}</ref><ref name="Chandra">{{cite book |last=Chandra |first=Satish |author-link=Satish Chandra (historian) |year=1999 |title=Medieval India: From Sultanat to the Mughals |volume=2 |edition=1st |location=New Delhi |publisher=Har-Anand Publications |page=36 |oclc=36806798}}</ref>


Upon reaching Chanderi, on 20 January 1528,<ref name="Lane-Poole" /> Babur offered Shamsabad to Medini Rao in exchange for Chanderi as a peace overture, but the offer was rejected.<ref name="Chandra" /> The outer fortress of Chanderi was taken by Babur's army at night, and the next morning the upper fort was captured. Babur himself expressed surprise that the upper fort had fallen within an hour of the final assault.<ref name = "Lane-Poole" /> Seeing no hope of victory, Medini Rai organized a ''[[jauhar]]'', during which women and children within the fortress [[Self-immolation|immolated themselves]].<ref name="Lane-Poole"/><ref name="Chandra" /> A small number of soldiers also collected in Medini Rao's house and killed each other in collective suicide. This sacrifice does not seem to have impressed Babur, who did not express a word of admiration for the enemy in his autobiography.<ref name="Lane-Poole" />
Upon reaching Chanderi, on 20 January 1528,<ref name="Lane-Poole" /> Babur offered Shamsabad to Medini Rai in exchange for Chanderi as a peace overture, but the offer was rejected.<ref name="Chandra" /> The outer fortress of Chanderi was taken by Babur's army at night, and the next morning the upper fort was captured. Babur himself expressed surprise that the upper fort had fallen within an hour of the final assault.<ref name = "Lane-Poole" /> Seeing no hope of victory, Medini Rai organized a ''[[jauhar]]'', during which women and children within the fortress [[Self-immolation|immolated themselves]].<ref name="Lane-Poole"/><ref name="Chandra" /> A small number of soldiers also collected in Medini Rai's house and killed each other in collective suicide. This sacrifice does not seem to have impressed Babur, who did not express a word of admiration for the enemy in his autobiography.<ref name="Lane-Poole" />
 
=== Battle of Ghaghra ===
{{Main|Battle of Ghaghra}}
 
By 1529, most of the major oppositions in Hindustan had either been defeated or forced into submission. Babur turned his attention to consolidating control over the eastern Gangetic plain by eliminating the remaining Afghan Lodi loyalists and pursuing the traitors Biban and Bayezid. In the spring of 1529, Babur marched down the Ganges to engage the eastern Afghan Confederacy under Sultan [[Lodi dynasty#Mahmud Lodi|Mahmud Lodi]] and the [[Sultanate of Bengal]] under [[Sultan]] [[Nusrat Shah]].<ref>{{Cite book|title=Bābur-nāma a memoir|url=|publisher=|date=2017|isbn=978-81-291-4175-0|language=en|first=Annette S.|last=Beveridge|pages=423}}</ref>
 
The [[Battle of Ghaghra]] (May 1529) was the final major conflict fought by Babur, as part of his struggle to consolidate power over Hindustan. The Mughal forces, employing field artillery and coordinated cavalry manoeuvres, defeated the Afghan–Bengal coalition.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=Bābur-nāma a memoir|url=|publisher=|date=2017|isbn=978-81-291-4175-0|language=en|first=Annette S.|last=Beveridge|pages=303}}</ref> Following the battle, Nusrat Shah sued for peace and Mahmud Lodi’s influence collapsed, effectively ending organized Afghan resistance to Babur.
 
== Administration and the Indian empire ==
Babur's principal difficulty after Panipat was not winning territory but holding it. Many of his Central Asian followers regarded Hindustan as a hot and alien land fit only for plunder and pressed to return to the cool of Kabul, and the hot-weather mortality, together with his failure to distribute the spoils quickly enough, briefly sapped their morale.<ref name="Anooshahr32">{{cite book |last=Anooshahr |first=Ali |title=The Ghazi Sultans and the Frontiers of Islam: A Comparative Study of the Late Medieval and Early Modern Periods |publisher=Routledge |year=2009 |page=32}}</ref> Babur answered with conspicuous generosity. His daughter [[Gulbadan Begum]] recalled that "the treasures of five kings fell into his hands" and that "he gave everything away": nobles, soldiers, traders and scribes received bounties, gifts were sent to relatives and holy men in Samarkand and [[Khorasan|Khurasan]], and every person in the country of Kabul was given a silver coin. This open-handedness, in keeping with his cultivated image as a ''qalandar'' (a wandering, open-handed dervish), helped bind his following to him.<ref name="Eraly43">{{cite book |last=Eraly |first=Abraham |author-link=Abraham Eraly |title=The Mughal Throne: The Saga of India's Great Emperors |publisher=Phoenix |year=2004 |page=43}}</ref><ref name="Mukhia115">{{cite book |last=Mukhia |first=Harbans |title=The Mughals of India |publisher=Blackwell |year=2004 |page=115}}</ref>
 
Babur made few structural changes to the government he had inherited. He kept [[Agra]] as his capital, distributed the conquered districts as revenue assignments to his commanders and to the Afghan chiefs who submitted, and left local [[zamindar]]s and much of the [[Lodi dynasty|Lodi]] fiscal machinery in place.<ref name="Asher51">{{cite book |last=Asher |first=Catherine B. |author-link=Catherine Asher |title=Architecture of Mughal India |series=The New Cambridge History of India |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1992 |pages=51–54}}</ref> His lasting contribution was military rather than institutional: he brought field artillery and the mobile, gunpowder-equipped tactics he had absorbed from the Ottomans and from Central Asian warfare into northern India, and gave the cavalry arm a prominence that the elephant-based armies of his Indian opponents lacked.<ref name="Srivastava569">{{cite book |last=Srivastava |first=A. L. |title=The Mughal Empire, 1526–1803 |publisher=Shiva Lal Agarwala |year=1952 |page=569}}</ref><ref name="Dale-Panipat" /> At his death the realm reached from the [[Amu Darya|Oxus]] and Kabul across the Punjab and the Gangetic plain to the frontiers of [[Bengal Sultanate|Bengal]] and Bihar, but it remained a loose military conquest rather than a settled state; Babur, as Asher writes, bequeathed to Humayun "a shaky and as yet unconsolidated empire".<ref name="Asher51" /><ref name="Chandra-ghaghra">{{cite book |last=Chandra |first=Satish |author-link=Satish Chandra (historian) |title=Medieval India |publisher=National Council of Educational Research and Training |year=1978 |page=16}}</ref>


==Religious policy==
==Religious policy==
Babur defeated and killed [[Ibrahim Lodi]], the last Sultan of the [[Lodi dynasty]], in 1526. Babur ruled for 4 years and was succeeded by his son [[Humayun]] whose reign was temporarily usurped by the [[Suri dynasty]]. During their 30-year rule, religious violence continued in India. Records of the violence and trauma, from Sikh-Muslim perspective, include those recorded in [[Sikhism|Sikh]] literature of the 16th century.<ref name=johnhinnells>{{cite book |last1=Hinnells |first1=John |last2=King |first2=Richard |title=Religion and Violence in South Asia: Theory and Practice |year=2006 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-415-37291-6 |pages=101–114}}</ref> The violence of Babur in the 1520s was witnessed by [[Guru Nanak]], who commented upon it in four hymns.{{citation needed|date=March 2021}} Historians suggest the early Mughal period of religious violence contributed to introspection and then the transformation in Sikhism from pacifism to militancy for self-defense.<ref name=johnhinnells/> According to Babur's autobiography, ''[[Baburnama]]'', his campaign in northwest India targeted Hindus and Sikhs as well as apostates (non-Sunni sects of Islam), and an immense number were killed, with Muslim camps building "towers of skulls of the infidels" on hillocks.<ref>{{cite book |editor-last1=Elliot |editor-first1=H. M. |editor-link1=Henry Miers Elliot |editor-last2=Dowson |editor-first2=John |editor-link2=John Dowson |translator-last1=Leyden |translator-first1=John |translator-link1=John Leyden |translator-last2=Erskine |translator-first2=William |translator-link2=William Erskine (historian) |year=1872 |chapter=Tuzak-i Babari |trans-chapter=The Autobiography of Babur |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/cu31924073036745/page/n285/mode/1up |title=The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians |title-link=The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians |volume=IV |location=London |publisher=Trübner and Co. |pages=272, 275}}</ref>  In Babur's secret will, in the year 935AH, 1529 AD, to Humayun, Babur advises Humayun to administer justice according to the ways of every religion, avoid sacrifice of the cow, not to ruin the temples and shrines of any law obeying community, overlook the dissensions of the [[Shia Islam|Shias]] and the [[Sunni Islam|Sunnis]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Prasad |first=Rajendra |title=India Divided |publisher=[[Hind Kitabs Ltd.]] |edition=3rd |pages=38–39}}</ref>
Babur defeated and killed [[Ibrahim Lodi]], the last Sultan of the [[Lodi dynasty]], in 1526. Babur ruled for 4 years and was succeeded by his son [[Humayun]] whose reign was temporarily usurped by the [[Suri dynasty]]. During their 30-year rule, religious violence continued in India. Records of the violence and trauma, from Sikh-Muslim perspective, include those recorded in [[Sikhism|Sikh]] literature of the 16th century.<ref name=johnhinnells>{{cite book |last1=Hinnells |first1=John |last2=King |first2=Richard |title=Religion and Violence in South Asia: Theory and Practice |year=2006 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-415-37291-6 |pages=101–114}}</ref> The violence of Babur in the 1520s was witnessed by [[Guru Nanak]], who commented upon it in four hymns.{{citation needed|date=March 2021}} Historians suggest the early Mughal period of religious violence contributed to introspection and then the transformation in Sikhism from pacifism to militancy for self-defense.<ref name=johnhinnells/> According to Babur's autobiography, ''[[Baburnama]]'', his campaign in northwest India targeted Hindus and Sikhs as well as apostates (non-Sunni sects of Islam), and an immense number were killed, with Muslim camps building "towers of skulls of the infidels" on hillocks.<ref>{{cite book |editor-last1=Elliot |editor-first1=H. M. |editor-link1=Henry Miers Elliot |editor-last2=Dowson |editor-first2=John |editor-link2=John Dowson |translator-last1=Leyden |translator-first1=John |translator-link1=John Leyden |translator-last2=Erskine |translator-first2=William |translator-link2=William Erskine (historian) |year=1872 |chapter=Tuzak-i Babari |trans-chapter=The Autobiography of Babur |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/cu31924073036745/page/n285/mode/1up |title=The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians |title-link=The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians |volume=IV |location=London |publisher=Trübner and Co. |pages=272, 275}}</ref>  In Babur's secret will, in the year 935AH, 1529 AD, to Humayun, Babur advises Humayun to administer justice according to the ways of every religion, avoid sacrifice of the cow, not to ruin the temples and shrines of any law obeying community, overlook the dissensions of the [[Shia Islam|Shias]] and the [[Sunni Islam|Sunnis]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Prasad |first=Rajendra |title=India Divided |publisher=Hind Kitabs Ltd. |edition=3rd |pages=38–39}}</ref>


== Personal life and relationships ==
== Personal life and relationships ==
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Babur did not initially know [[Old Hindi]]; however, his Turkic poetry indicates that he picked up some of its vocabulary later in life.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rahman |first=Tariq |title=From Hindi to Urdu : a social and political history |year=2011 |location=Karachi |publisher=Oxford University Press |pages=73–74 |isbn=978-0-19-906313-0|oclc=731974235 }}</ref>
Babur did not initially know [[Old Hindi]]; however, his Turkic poetry indicates that he picked up some of its vocabulary later in life.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rahman |first=Tariq |title=From Hindi to Urdu : a social and political history |year=2011 |location=Karachi |publisher=Oxford University Press |pages=73–74 |isbn=978-0-19-906313-0|oclc=731974235 }}</ref>


Unlike his father, he had [[:wikt:ascetic|ascetic]] tendencies and did not have any great interest in women. In his first marriage, he was "bashful" towards [[Aisha Sultan Begum]], later losing his affection for her.<ref>{{cite book |url=http://persian.packhum.org/persian/main?url=pf%3Ffile%3D03501050%26ct%3D0 |title=Memoirs of Zehīr-ed-Dīn Muhammed Bābur Emperor of Hindustan, Written by himself, in the Chaghatāi Tūrki |others=Translated by John Leyden and William Erskine, Annotated and Revised by Lucas King |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1921 |chapter=The Memoirs of Babur, Volume 1, chpt. 71 |chapter-url=http://persian.packhum.org/persian/main?url=pf%3Ffile%3D03501051%26ct%3D70%26rqs%3D187%26rqs%3D196 |quote=Āisha Sultan Begum, the daughter of Sultan Ahmed Mirza, to whom I had been betrothed in the lifetime of my father and uncle, having arrived in [[Khujand]], I now married her, in the month of Shābān. In the first period of my being a married man, though I had no small affection for her, yet, from modesty and bashfulness, I went to her only once in ten, fifteen, or twenty days. My affection afterwards declined, and my shyness increased; in so much, that my mother the Khanum, used to fall upon me and scold me with great fury, sending me off like a criminal to visit her once in a month or forty days. |access-date=2 April 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081205161213/http://persian.packhum.org/persian/main?url=pf%3Ffile%3D03501050%26ct%3D0 |archive-date=5 December 2008 |url-status=dead}}</ref> Babur showed similar shyness in his interactions with [[Baburi Andijani|Baburi]], a boy in his camp with whom he had an infatuation around this time, recounting that: {{Blockquote|"Occasionally Baburi came to me, but I was so bashful that I could not look him in the face, much less converse freely with him. In my excitement and agitation I could not thank him for coming, much less complain of his leaving. Who could bear to demand the ceremonies of fealty?"<ref>{{cite book |last1=Babur |first1=Emperor of Hindustan |last2=Beveridge |first2=Annette Susannah |title=The Babur-nama in English (Memoirs of Babur) |date=1922 |publisher=London, Luzac |page=120 |url=https://archive.org/details/baburnamainengli01babuuoft/page/120/mode/2up}}</ref><ref>{{harvtxt|Babur, Emperor of Hindustan|2002|p=89}}</ref>}}
Unlike his father, he had [[:wikt:ascetic|ascetic]] tendencies and did not have any great interest in women. In his first marriage, he was "bashful" towards [[Aisha Sultan Begum]], later losing his affection for her.<ref>{{cite book |url=http://persian.packhum.org/persian/main?url=pf%3Ffile%3D03501050%26ct%3D0 |title=Memoirs of Zehīr-ed-Dīn Muhammed Bābur Emperor of Hindustan, Written by himself, in the Chaghatāi Tūrki |others=Translated by John Leyden and William Erskine, Annotated and Revised by Lucas King |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1921 |chapter=The Memoirs of Babur, Volume 1, chpt. 71 |chapter-url=http://persian.packhum.org/persian/main?url=pf%3Ffile%3D03501051%26ct%3D70%26rqs%3D187%26rqs%3D196 |quote=Āisha Sultan Begum, the daughter of Sultan Ahmed Mirza, to whom I had been betrothed in the lifetime of my father and uncle, having arrived in [[Khujand]], I now married her, in the month of Shābān. In the first period of my being a married man, though I had no small affection for her, yet, from modesty and bashfulness, I went to her only once in ten, fifteen, or twenty days. My affection afterwards declined, and my shyness increased; in so much, that my mother the Khanum, used to fall upon me and scold me with great fury, sending me off like a criminal to visit her once in a month or forty days. |access-date=2 April 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081205161213/http://persian.packhum.org/persian/main?url=pf%3Ffile%3D03501050%26ct%3D0 |archive-date=5 December 2008 |url-status=dead}}</ref> Babur showed similar shyness in his interactions with [[Baburi Andijani|Baburi]], a boy 3 years younger than himself in his camp with whom he had an infatuation around this time, recounting that:  
 
{{Blockquote|"Occasionally Baburi came to me, but I was so bashful that I could not look him in the face, much less converse freely with him. In my excitement and agitation I could not thank him for coming, much less complain of his leaving. Who could bear to demand the ceremonies of fealty?"<ref>{{Harvard citation no brackets|Beveridge|2018|p=[https://archive.org/details/baburnamainengli01babuuoft/page/120/mode/2up 120]}}</ref><ref>{{harvtxt|Babur, Emperor of Hindustan|2002|p=89}}</ref>}}
 
However, Babur acquired several more wives and concubines over the years, and as required for a prince, he was able to ensure the continuity of his line.
However, Babur acquired several more wives and concubines over the years, and as required for a prince, he was able to ensure the continuity of his line.


Babur's first wife, Aisha Sultan Begum, was his paternal cousin, the daughter of Sultan Ahmad Mirza, his father's brother. She was an infant when betrothed to Babur, who was himself five years old. They married eleven years later, {{circa|1498–99}}. The couple had one daughter, [[Fakhr-un-Nissa]], who died within a year in 1500. Three years later, after Babur's first defeat at Fergana, Aisha left him and returned to her father's household.<ref name="Babur's wives and children">{{cite book |title=Babur Nama:Journal of Emperor Babur |publisher=Penguin |page=362 |isbn=978-0-14-400149-1 |author=Babur |edition=2006 |editor-last=Hiro |editor-first=Dilip |chapter=Babur's wives and children |year=2006}}</ref>{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=27–29}} In 1504, Babur married Zaynab Sultan Begum, who died childless within two years. In the period 1506–08, Babur married four women, [[Maham Begum]] (in 1506), [[Masuma Sultan Begum]], Gulrukh Begum and Dildar Begum.<ref name="Babur's wives and children" /> Babur had four children by Maham Begum, of whom only one survived infancy. This was his eldest son and heir, [[Humayun]]. Masuma Sultan Begum died during childbirth; the year of her death is disputed (either 1508 or 1519). Gulrukh bore Babur two sons, [[Kamran Mirza|Kamran]] and [[Askari Mirza|Askari]], and Dildar Begum was the mother of Babur's youngest son, [[Hindal Mirza|Hindal]].<ref name="Babur's wives and children" /> Babur later married [[Mubaraka Yusufzai]], a [[Pashtuns|Pashtun]] woman of the [[Yusufzai]] tribe. Gulnar Aghacha and Nargul Aghacha were two [[Circassian beauties|Circassian slaves]] given to Babur as gifts by Tahmasp Shah Safavi, the Shah of Persia. They became "recognized ladies of the royal household."<ref name="Babur's wives and children" />
[[File:Likely portraits of Gulbadan and Gulchihra, daughters of Babur, in 1546, Kabul.jpg|thumb|left|Likely contemporary portraits of [[Gulbadan Begum|Gulbadan]] and [[Gulchehra Begum]], daughters of Babur, in 1546, Kabul. [[Dust Muhammad]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Parodi |first1=Laura E. |last2=Wannell |first2=Bruce |title=The Earliest Datable Mughal Painting |journal=www.asianart.com |date=2011 |url=https://www.asianart.com/articles/parodi/index.html}}</ref>]]
Babur's first wife, Aisha Sultan Begum, was his paternal cousin, the daughter of Sultan Ahmad Mirza, his father's brother. She was an infant when betrothed to Babur, who was himself five years old. They married eleven years later, {{circa|1498–99}}. The couple had one daughter, [[Fakhr-un-Nissa]], who died within a year in 1500. Three years later, after Babur's first defeat at Fergana, Aisha left him and returned to her father's household.<ref name="Babur's wives and children">{{cite book |title=Babur Nama:Journal of Emperor Babur |publisher=Penguin |page=362 |isbn=978-0-14-400149-1 |author=Babur |edition=2006 |editor-last=Hiro |editor-first=Dilip |chapter=Babur's wives and children |year=2006}}</ref>{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=27–29}} In 1504, Babur married Zaynab Sultan Begum, who died childless within two years. In the period 1506–08, Babur married four women, [[Maham Begum]] (in 1506), [[Masuma Sultan Begum]], Gulrukh Begum and Dildar Begum.<ref name="Babur's wives and children" /> Babur had four children by Maham Begum, of whom only one survived infancy. This was his eldest son and heir, [[Humayun]]. Masuma Sultan Begum died during childbirth; the year of her death is disputed (either 1508 or 1519). Gulrukh bore Babur two sons, [[Kamran Mirza|Kamran]] and [[Askari Mirza|Askari]], and Dildar Begum was the mother of Babur's youngest son, [[Hindal Mirza|Hindal]].<ref name="Babur's wives and children" /> Babur later married [[Mubaraka Yusufzai]], a [[Pashtuns|Pashtun]] woman of the [[Yusufzai]] tribe. Gulnar Aghacha and Nargul Aghacha were two [[Circassian beauties|Circassian slaves]] given to Babur as gifts by [[Tahmasp I|Tahmasp Shah Safavi]], the Shah of Persia. They became "recognized ladies of the royal household."<ref name="Babur's wives and children" />


During his rule in Kabul, when there was a time of relative peace, Babur pursued his interests in literature, art, music and gardening.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=27–29}} Previously, he never drank alcohol and avoided it when he was in Herat. In Kabul, he first tasted it at the age of thirty. He then began to drink regularly, host wine parties and consume preparations made from [[opium]].{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=24–26}} Though religion had a central place in his life, Babur also approvingly quoted a line of poetry by one of his contemporaries: "I am drunk, officer. Punish me when I am sober". He quit drinking for health reasons before the Battle of Khanwa, just two years before his death, and demanded that his court do the same. But he did not stop chewing narcotic preparations, and did not lose his sense of irony. He wrote, "Everyone regrets drinking and swears an oath (of [[abstinence]]); I swore the oath and regret that."<ref>Pope, Hugh (2005). ''Sons of the Conquerors'', Overlook Duckworth, pp. 234–35.</ref>
During his rule in Kabul, when there was a time of relative peace, Babur pursued his interests in literature, art, music and gardening.{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=27–29}} Previously, he never drank alcohol and avoided it when he was in Herat. In Kabul, he first tasted it at the age of thirty. He then began to drink regularly, host wine parties and consume preparations made from [[opium]].{{sfn|Eraly|2007|pp=24–26}} Though religion had a central place in his life, Babur also approvingly quoted a line of poetry by one of his contemporaries: "I am drunk, officer. Punish me when I am sober". He quit drinking for health reasons before the Battle of Khanwa, just two years before his death, and demanded that his court do the same. But he did not stop chewing narcotic preparations, and did not lose his sense of irony. He wrote, "Everyone regrets drinking and swears an oath (of [[abstinence]]); I swore the oath and regret that."<ref>Pope, Hugh (2005). ''Sons of the Conquerors'', Overlook Duckworth, pp. 234–35.</ref>


Babur was opposed to the blind obedience towards the [[Yassa|Chinggisid laws]] and customs that were influential in Turco-Mongol society:<blockquote>"Previously our ancestors had shown unusual respect for the Chingizid code ({{lang|mn-Latn|törah}}). They did not violate this code sitting and rising at councils and court, at feasts and dinners. [However] Chingez Khan's code is not a ''nass qati'' (categorical text) that a person must follow. Whenever one leaves a good custom, it should be followed. If ancestors leave a bad custom, however it is necessary to substitute a good one."</blockquote>Making clear that to him, the categorical text (i.e. the [[Quran]]) had displaced Genghis Khan's ''[[Yassa]]'' in moral and legal matters.<ref>{{Cite book |last=F. Dale |first=Stephen |title=THE GARDEN OF THE EIGHT PARADISES: Babur and the Culture of Empire in Central Asia, Afghanistan and India (1483-1530) |publisher=Brill |year=2004 |pages=171}}</ref>
Babur acknowledged [[Yassa|Chinggisid laws]] and customs that were influential in Turco-Mongol society but downplayed its importance compared to Divine laws:<ref>{{Cite journal|title=The Second Formation of Islamic Law: The Post-Mongol Context of the Ottoman Adoption of a School of Law|url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/comparative-studies-in-society-and-history/article/second-formation-of-islamic-law-the-postmongol-context-of-the-ottoman-adoption-of-a-school-of-law/0EF5DA8A84DB77EBE18684EADDE9E4FE|journal=Comparative Studies in Society and History|date=2013|issn=0010-4175|pages=579–602|volume=55|issue=3|doi=|language=en|first=Guy|last=Burak}}</ref><blockquote>"Previously our ancestors had shown unusual respect for the Chingizid code ({{lang|mn-Latn|törah}}). They did not violate this code sitting and rising at councils and court, at feasts and dinners. [However] Chingez Khan's code is not a ''nass qati'' (categorical text) that a person must follow. Whenever one leaves a good custom, it should be followed. If ancestors leave a bad custom, however it is necessary to substitute a good one."</blockquote>


== Poetry ==
== Literary works ==
[[File:Illustrations from Babur-namah 1.jpg|thumb|Illustrations in the ''Baburnama'' regarding the fauna of India.]]
[[File:Illustrations from Babur-namah 1.jpg|thumb|Illustrations in the ''Baburnama'' regarding the fauna of India.]]
Babur was an acclaimed writer, who had a profound love for literature. His library was one of his most beloved possessions that he always carried around with him, and books were one of the treasures he searched for in new conquered lands. In his memoirs, when he listed sovereigns and nobles of a conquered land, he also mentioned poets, musicians and other educated people.<ref name="Eraly">{{cite book |first=Abraham |last=Eraly |title=Emperors of the Peacock Throne: The Saga of the Great Moghuls |year=1997 |page=29 |publisher=Penguin Books Limited}}</ref>
Babur was an acclaimed writer, who had a profound love for literature. His library was one of his most beloved possessions that he always carried around with him, and books were one of the treasures he searched for in new conquered lands. In his memoirs, when he listed sovereigns and nobles of a conquered land, he also mentioned poets, musicians and other educated people.<ref name="Eraly">{{cite book |first=Abraham |last=Eraly |title=Emperors of the Peacock Throne: The Saga of the Great Moghuls |year=1997 |page=29 |publisher=Penguin Books Limited}}</ref>
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Even though he died aged 47, Babur left a rich literary and scientific heritage. He authored his famous memoir the [[Baburnama|Bāburnāma]], as well as beautiful lyrical works or [[Ghazal|''ghazals'']], treatises on Muslim jurisprudence (Mubayyin), poetics (Aruz risolasi), music, and a special [[calligraphy]], known as ''khatt-i Baburi''.<ref>{{cite book |first=Abraham |last=Eraly |title=Emperors of the Peacock Throne: The Saga of the Great Moghuls |year=1997 |page=30 |publisher=Penguin Books Limited}}</ref><ref>Hasanov,&nbsp;S.&nbsp;(1981).&nbsp;Bobirning "Aruz risolasi" asari (in Uzbek). pp. 1-4.&nbsp;Uzbekistan:&nbsp;Fan.</ref><ref>Schimmel,&nbsp;A.&nbsp;(2004).&nbsp;The Empire of the Great Mughals: History, Art and Culture.&nbsp;p. 26. India:&nbsp;Reaktion Books.</ref><ref>Eraly,&nbsp;A.&nbsp;(2000).&nbsp;Last Spring: The Lives and Times of Great Mughals.&nbsp;pp. 30-41. India:&nbsp;Penguin Books Limited.</ref>
Even though he died aged 47, Babur left a rich literary and scientific heritage. He authored his famous memoir the [[Baburnama|Bāburnāma]], as well as beautiful lyrical works or [[Ghazal|''ghazals'']], treatises on Muslim jurisprudence (Mubayyin), poetics (Aruz risolasi), music, and a special [[calligraphy]], known as ''khatt-i Baburi''.<ref>{{cite book |first=Abraham |last=Eraly |title=Emperors of the Peacock Throne: The Saga of the Great Moghuls |year=1997 |page=30 |publisher=Penguin Books Limited}}</ref><ref>Hasanov,&nbsp;S.&nbsp;(1981).&nbsp;Bobirning "Aruz risolasi" asari (in Uzbek). pp. 1-4.&nbsp;Uzbekistan:&nbsp;Fan.</ref><ref>Schimmel,&nbsp;A.&nbsp;(2004).&nbsp;The Empire of the Great Mughals: History, Art and Culture.&nbsp;p. 26. India:&nbsp;Reaktion Books.</ref><ref>Eraly,&nbsp;A.&nbsp;(2000).&nbsp;Last Spring: The Lives and Times of Great Mughals.&nbsp;pp. 30-41. India:&nbsp;Penguin Books Limited.</ref>


Babur's Bāburnāma is a collection of memoirs, written in the [[Chagatai language]] and later translated into [[Persian language|Persian]], the usual literary language of the Mughal court, during the rule of emperor [[Akbar]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.poemhunter.com/abdur-rahim-khankhana/biography/poet-33381/|title=Biography of Abdur Rahim Khankhana|access-date= 2006-10-28|url-status=dead|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20060117163845/http://www.poemhunter.com/abdur-rahim-khankhana/biography/poet-33381/  |archive-date = 2006-01-17}}</ref> However, Babur's Turkic prose in Bāburnāma is already highly [[Persian language|Persianized]] in its sentence structure, vocabulary, and morphology,<ref>{{cite book |first=Stephen Frederic |last=Dale |title=The garden of the eight paradises: Bābur and the culture of Empire in Central Asia, Afghanistan and India (1483–1530) |publisher=Brill |year=2004 |pages=15,150 |isbn=90-04-13707-6 }}</ref> and also consists of several phrases and minor poems in Persian.
Babur's Bāburnāma is a collection of memoirs, written in the [[Chagatai language]] and later translated into [[Persian language|Persian]], the usual literary language of the Mughal court, during the rule of emperor [[Akbar]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.poemhunter.com/abdur-rahim-khankhana/biography/poet-33381/|title=Biography of Abdur Rahim Khankhana|access-date= 2006-10-28|url-status=dead|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20060117163845/http://www.poemhunter.com/abdur-rahim-khankhana/biography/poet-33381/  |archive-date = 2006-01-17}}</ref> However, Babur's Turkic prose in Bāburnāma is already highly Persianized in its sentence structure, vocabulary, and morphology,<ref>{{cite book |first=Stephen Frederic |last=Dale |title=The garden of the eight paradises: Bābur and the culture of Empire in Central Asia, Afghanistan and India (1483–1530) |publisher=Brill |year=2004 |pages=15,150 |isbn=90-04-13707-6 }}</ref> and also consists of several phrases and minor poems in Persian.
 
Babur wrote most of his poems in Chagatai Turkic, known to him as ''Türki'', but he also composed in Persian. However, he was mostly praised for his literary works written in Turkic, which drew comparison with the poetry of [[Ali-Shir Nava'i]].<ref name="Eraly"/> The contemporary historian [[Mirza Muhammad Haidar Dughlat|Mirza Haidar]] ranked him a Turki poet "second only to Mir Ali Shir", and Babur took his prosody seriously enough to write an essay on Turkic metre, the ''Aruz risalasi'', which he judged superior to Nava'i's own treatment of the subject.<ref name="Eraly51">{{cite book |last=Eraly |first=Abraham |author-link=Abraham Eraly |title=The Mughal Throne: The Saga of India's Great Emperors |publisher=Phoenix |year=2004 |page=51}}</ref><ref name="Dale242">{{cite book |last=Dale |first=Stephen F. |title=The Garden of the Eight Paradises: Bābur and the Culture of Empire in Central Asia, Afghanistan and India (1483–1530) |publisher=Brill |year=2004 |page=242}}</ref> He also devised a personal calligraphic hand, the ''khatt-i Baburi'', in which he had a copy of the [[Quran|Qur'an]] made and copies of his ''Walidiyya'' translation and his Hindustan poems circulated.<ref name="BNscript">{{cite book |author=Babur |translator-last=Beveridge |translator-first=Annette Susannah |title=The Bābur-nāma in English |publisher=Luzac |year=1922 |page=756}}</ref>


Babur wrote most of his poems in Chagatai Turkic, known to him as ''Türki'', but he also composed in Persian. However, he was mostly praised for his literary works written in Turkic, which drew comparison with the poetry of [[Ali-Shir Nava'i]].<ref name="Eraly"/>
The ''Baburnama'' itself is regarded as one of the earliest true autobiographies in Islamic literature. Frank to the point of self-incrimination, it sets down Babur's faults and failures alongside his triumphs and offers detailed descriptions of the peoples, customs, animals, plants and landscapes he encountered; Stephen Dale characterises its author as "a relentlessly ambitious, humorous, casually violent, articulate, heavy drinking, personally engaging, highly cultured Muslim".<ref name="Majumdar21">{{cite book |last=Majumdar |first=R. C. |author-link=R. C. Majumdar |title=The Mughul Empire |publisher=Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan |year=1974 |page=21}}</ref><ref name="Dale6">{{cite book |last=Dale |first=Stephen F. |title=The Garden of the Eight Paradises: Bābur and the Culture of Empire in Central Asia, Afghanistan and India (1483–1530) |publisher=Brill |year=2004 |page=6}}</ref> Written in Chaghatai Turkic, it was rendered into Persian for the imperial library by [[Abdul Rahim Khan-i-Khanan]] in November 1589, during the reign of Babur's grandson [[Akbar]], and was repeatedly illustrated by Mughal painters thereafter.<ref name="Stronge86">{{cite book |last=Stronge |first=Susan |title=Painting for the Mughal Emperor: The Art of the Book 1560–1660 |publisher=V&A Publications |year=2002 |page=86}}</ref><ref name="Dale50">{{cite book |last=Dale |first=Stephen F. |title=The Garden of the Eight Paradises: Bābur and the Culture of Empire in Central Asia, Afghanistan and India (1483–1530) |publisher=Brill |year=2004 |page=50}}</ref>


The following [[Rubaʿi|ruba'i]] is an example of Babur's poetry written in Turkic, composed in the aftermath of his famous victory in North India to celebrate his [[Ghazi (warrior)|ghazi]] status.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Balabanlilar |first1=Lisa |title=Imperial Identity in the Mughal Empire. Memory and Dynastic Politics in Early Modern South and Central Asia |date=2015 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |isbn=978-0-857-72081-8 |pages=42–43}}</ref>
The following [[Rubaʿi|ruba'i]] is an example of Babur's poetry written in Turkic, composed in the aftermath of his famous victory in North India to celebrate his [[Ghazi (warrior)|ghazi]] status.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Balabanlilar |first1=Lisa |title=Imperial Identity in the Mughal Empire. Memory and Dynastic Politics in Early Modern South and Central Asia |date=2015 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |isbn=978-0-857-72081-8 |pages=42–43}}</ref>
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For Islam's sake I wandered barren wastes; Against unbelievers and the land of Hind I mustered force. Having vowed to make myself a martyr, By God's leave I took up the sword as a ghazi.</poem>
For Islam's sake I wandered barren wastes; Against unbelievers and the land of Hind I mustered force. Having vowed to make myself a martyr, By God's leave I took up the sword as a ghazi.</poem>
{{col-end}}
{{col-end}}
== Gardens, art and architecture ==
Babur was a passionate maker of gardens, and the ''Baburnama'' dwells on the planning and planting of gardens far more than on any building project; it has been noted that, although an observant Muslim, Babur never mentions building or even praying in a mosque, while he describes his gardens at length and gives them evocative names.<ref name="Dale7">{{cite book |last=Dale |first=Stephen F. |title=The Garden of the Eight Paradises: Bābur and the Culture of Empire in Central Asia, Afghanistan and India (1483–1530) |publisher=Brill |year=2004 |page=7}}</ref> Regarding the Punjab as his by Timurid right, he laid out his earliest Indian gardens on the banks of the [[Yamuna|river Yamuna]] at Agra, introducing to the plains of northern India the symmetrical, four-part [[charbagh]] (paradise garden) watered from the river. This rationally ordered garden, which Babur treated as concrete evidence of his Timurid heritage, became one of the enduring trademarks of Mughal architecture.<ref name="Koch210">{{cite book |last=Koch |first=Ebba |title=Mughal Art and Imperial Ideology: Collected Essays |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2001 |page=210}}</ref><ref name="Asher60" /> A garden he designed himself near the Ghaggar river was completed in 1528–29, and the quarter of Agra developed by his nobles was nicknamed "Kabul" by local people, while the site of his Panipat garden is still called Kabuli Bagh.<ref name="Asher51" /> The Agra garden long known as the Ram Bagh (or Aram Bagh) was by tradition associated with Babur, but it has been re-identified as the [[Nur Jahan|Bagh-i Nur Afshan]] of Nur Jahan, completed in 1621.<ref name="Koch85">{{cite book |last=Koch |first=Ebba |title=Mughal Architecture: An Outline of Its History and Development, 1526–1858 |publisher=Prestel |year=1991 |page=85}}</ref>
[[File:Kabuli Bagh Mosque.JPG|thumb|upright=1.0|alt=Domed stone mosque at Panipat viewed against the sky.|The Kabuli Bagh Mosque at [[Panipat]], built by Babur to commemorate his victory at the [[First Battle of Panipat]] (1526), one of three congregational mosques surviving from his reign.]] Few of Babur's buildings survive, and his chief architectural monuments are three congregational mosques erected during his brief reign: one at [[Sambhal]] (1526) and two dated 1528–29, the [[Kabuli Bagh Mosque]] at [[Panipat]] and a mosque at [[Ayodhya]].<ref name="Koch31">{{cite book |last=Koch |first=Ebba |title=Mughal Architecture: An Outline of Its History and Development, 1526–1858 |publisher=Prestel |year=1991 |page=31}}</ref><ref name="Asher51" /> The Ayodhya mosque, built by Babur's officer [[Mir Baqi]], incorporated carved black-stone columns from an earlier temple and stood on a mound later venerated by many Hindus as the birthplace of the deity [[Rama]].<ref name="Asher59">{{cite book |last=Asher |first=Catherine B. |author-link=Catherine Asher |title=Architecture of Mughal India |series=The New Cambridge History of India |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1992 |page=59}}</ref>
This mosque, the [[Babri Masjid]], became the focus of the [[Ayodhya dispute|Ram Janmabhoomi–Babri Masjid dispute]]. In December 1992 it was demolished by activists of the [[Vishva Hindu Parishad]] and the [[Bharatiya Janata Party]], an event that set off communal rioting in which more than a thousand people were killed and that has remained a charged issue in Indian politics ever since. As its reputed builder, Babur is consequently reviled by many Hindu nationalists in modern India, even as he is honoured as a national hero in Uzbekistan.<ref name="Dale448">{{cite book |last=Dale |first=Stephen F. |title=The Garden of the Eight Paradises: Bābur and the Culture of Empire in Central Asia, Afghanistan and India (1483–1530) |publisher=Brill |year=2004 |page=448}}</ref><ref name="Dale7" />


== Family ==
== Family ==
{{unreferenced section|date=February 2020}}


=== Consorts ===
=== Consorts ===
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*[[Masuma Sultan Begum]] ({{Abbr|m.|marriage}} 1507; {{Abbr|d.|death}} 1508), daughter of [[Sultan Ahmed Mirza]] and half-sister of [[Aisha Sultan Begum]];
*[[Masuma Sultan Begum]] ({{Abbr|m.|marriage}} 1507; {{Abbr|d.|death}} 1508), daughter of [[Sultan Ahmed Mirza]] and half-sister of [[Aisha Sultan Begum]];
*[[Bibi Mubarika]] ({{Abbr|m.|marriage}} 1519), [[Pashtuns|Pashtun]] of the [[Yusufzai]] tribe;
*[[Bibi Mubarika]] ({{Abbr|m.|marriage}} 1519), [[Pashtuns|Pashtun]] of the [[Yusufzai]] tribe;
*Gulrukh Begum;
*Gulrukh Begum. Sister of Amir Sultan Ali Mirza Begchik. They married no later than 1512 and she died before 1545.
*Dildar Begum, a woman of great learning, poetic talent, charm and grace; She was the ''nadima-i majlis'' (boon companion) of [[Malwa Sultanate|Malwa sultan]] Nasir-ud Din Shah (r. 1500 – 1510) and after that of [[Delhi Sultanate|Sultan of Delhi]] [[Sikandar Lodhi]] (r. 1489 – 1517);<ref>{{cite book | title=Indo-iranica - Volume 36 | publisher=Iran Society. | date=1983 | page=144}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | last=Mushtaqi | first=Shaikh Rizqullah | title=Waqiyat-e-Mushtaqi | publisher=Rampur Raza Library, Rampur|year=2002|pages=225, 227|isbn= 81-87113-48-0}}</ref>
*Dildar Begum, a woman of great learning, poetic talent, charm and grace; She was the ''nadima-i majlis'' (boon companion) of [[Malwa Sultanate|Malwa sultan]] Nasir-ud Din Shah (r. 1500 – 1510) and after that of [[Delhi Sultanate|Sultan of Delhi]] [[Sikandar Lodhi]] (r. 1489 – 1517);<ref>{{cite book | title=Indo-iranica - Volume 36 | publisher=Iran Society. | date=1983 | page=144}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | last=Mushtaqi | first=Shaikh Rizqullah | title=Waqiyat-e-Mushtaqi | publisher=Rampur Raza Library, Rampur|year=2002|pages=225, 227|isbn= 81-87113-48-0}}</ref>
*Gulnar Aghacha, a [[Circassians|Circassian]] concubine;<ref name="a482">{{cite book | last=Mukherjee | first=Soma | title=Royal Mughal Ladies and Their Contributions | publisher=Gyan Books | date=2001 | isbn=978-81-212-0760-7 | page=24}}</ref><ref name="m843">{{cite book | last=Gordon | first=Matthew | last2=Hain | first2=Kathryn A. | title=Concubines and Courtesans: Women and Slavery in Islamic History | publisher=Oxford University Press | date=2017 | isbn=978-0-19-062218-3 | page=201}}</ref>
*Gulnar Aghacha, a [[Circassians|Circassian]] concubine;<ref name="a482">{{cite book | last=Mukherjee | first=Soma | title=Royal Mughal Ladies and Their Contributions | publisher=Gyan Books | date=2001 | isbn=978-81-212-0760-7 | page=24}}</ref><ref name="m843">{{cite book | last=Gordon | first=Matthew | last2=Hain | first2=Kathryn A. | title=Concubines and Courtesans: Women and Slavery in Islamic History | publisher=Oxford University Press | date=2017 | isbn=978-0-19-062218-3 | page=201}}</ref>
*Nazgul Aghacha, another [[Circassians|Circassian]] concubine;<ref name="a482"/><ref name="m843"/>
*Nargul or Nazgul Aghacha, another [[Circassians|Circassian]] concubine;<ref name="a482"/><ref name="m843"/>


The identity of the mother of one of Babur's daughters, [[Gulrukh Begum]] is disputed. Gulrukh's mother may have been the daughter of [[Sultan Mahmud Mirza]] by his wife Pasha Begum who is referred to as Saliha Sultan Begum in certain secondary sources, however this name is not mentioned in the [[Baburnama]] or the works of [[Gulbadan Begum]], which casts doubt on her existence. This woman may never have existed at all or she may even be the same woman as Dildar Begum.
The identity of the mother of one of Babur's daughters, [[Gulrukh Begum]] is disputed. Gulrukh's mother may have been the daughter of [[Sultan Mahmud Mirza]] by his wife Pasha Begum who is referred to as Saliha Sultan Begum in certain secondary sources, however this name is not mentioned in the [[Baburnama]] or the works of [[Gulbadan Begum]], which casts doubt on her existence. This woman may never have existed at all or she may even be the same woman as Dildar Begum.


=== Issue ===
=== Issue ===
The sons of Babur were:
*[[Humayun]] ({{Abbr|b.|birth}} 1508; {{Abbr|d.|death}} 1556) — with [[Maham Begum]], succeeded Babur as the second [[Mughal Emperor]];
*[[Kamran Mirza]] ({{Abbr|b.|birth}} 1509; {{Abbr|d.|death}}  1557) — with Gulrukh Begum;{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=90}}
*[[Askari Mirza]] ({{Abbr|b.|birth}} 1516; {{Abbr|d.|death}} 1558) — with Gulrukh Begum;{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=90}}
*[[Hindal Mirza]] ({{Abbr|b.|birth}} 1519; {{Abbr|d.|death}} 1551) — with Dildar Begum;{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=90}}
*Sultan Ahmad Mirza ({{Abbr|d.|death}} young) — with Gulrukh Begum;{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=90}}
*Shahrukh Mirza ({{Abbr|d.|death}} young) — with Gulrukh Begum;{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=90}}
*Barbul Mirza ({{Abbr|d.|death}} infancy) — with [[Maham Begum]];{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=90}}
*Alwar Mirza ({{Abbr|d.|death}} 1529, Agra) — with Dildar Begum;{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|pp=3, 90}}
*Faruq Mirza (2 August 1526, Kabul – 1527) — with [[Maham Begum]];{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|pp=10, 90}}


The daughters of Babur were:
[[File:Contemporary portrait of Humayun seated (made in Kabul in 1550-1555).jpg|thumb|upright|Contemporary portrait of [[Humayun]] from life (painted in Kabul, {{circa|1550–55}}), wearing the ''[[Tāj-i 'Izzat]]'']]
*[[Fakhr-un-Nissa]] Begum (1501 1501) — with [[Aisha Sultan Begum]];{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=89}}
 
*[[Masuma Sultan Begum (daughter of Babur)|Masuma Sultan Begum]] ({{Abbr|b.|birth}} 1508 — {{floruit}} 1534) — with [[Masuma Sultan Begum]]; Married to [[Muhammad Zaman Mirza]];{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|pp=130, 262}}
{| class="wikitable"
*Mihr Jahan Begum ({{Abbr|b.|born}} Khost {{Abbr|d.|death}} infancy) — with [[Maham Begum]];{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=90}}
 
*Aisan Daulat Begum ({{Abbr|d.|death}} infancy) — with [[Maham Begum]];{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=90}}
! Name
*Gulizar Begum ({{Abbr|d.|death}} young) — with Gulrukh Begum;{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=90}}
! Birth
*Gulrang Begum ({{Abbr|b.|birth}} 1514, Khost — {{floruit}} 1534) — with Dildar Begum; Married in 1530 to Isan Timur Sultan, ninth son of [[Ahmad Alaq]] of [[Moghulistan]], the maternal uncle of Emperor Babur.<ref name="s400">{{cite book | last=Hindustan) | first=Babur (Emperor of | title=Babur Nama: Journal of Emperor Babur | publisher=Penguin Books India | date=2006 | isbn=978-0-14-400149-1 | page=202}}</ref>{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|pp=232–233}}
! Death
*[[Gulchehra Begum]] ({{Abbr|b.|birth}} {{circa|1516}} {{floruit}} 1557) — with Dildar Begum; Married firstly in 1530 to Sultan Tukhta Bugha Khan (died 1533), son of [[Ahmad Alaq]] of [[Moghulistan]], the maternal uncle of Emperor Babur, married secondly in 1549 to Abbas Sultan Uzbeg;{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=231}}
! Notes
*[[Gulbadan Begum]] ({{Abbr|b.|birth}} 1522 – {{Abbr|d.|death}} 1603) — with Dildar Begum; Married to Khizr Khwaja Khan, son of her father's cousin [[Aiman Khwajah Sultan]] of [[Moghulistan]], son of [[Ahmad Alaq]] of [[Moghulistan]], the maternal uncle of Emperor Babur;
 
*[[Gulrukh Begum]] (Gulbarg Begum) —  Identity of mother is disputed, may have been Dildar Begum or Saliha Sultan Begum Married to Nuruddin Muhammad Mirza, son of Khwaja Hasan Naqshbandi, with whom she had [[Salima Sultan Begum]], wife of [[Bairam Khan]] and later the Mughal Emperor [[Akbar]].
|-
! colspan=4 | ''By [[Aisha Sultan Begum]]''
 
|-
| [[Fakhr-un-Nissa]] Begum  
|1501
|1501
|{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=89}}
 
 
|-
! colspan=4 | ''By [[Maham Begum]]''
 
|-
|[[Humayun]]
| 6 March 1508
| 27 January 1556
| succeeded as the second [[Mughal Emperor]]
 
|-
|Barbul Mirza
|unknown
|{{Abbr|d.|death}} infancy
| rowspan="3" |{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=90}}
 
|-
| Mehr Jahan Begum
|{{Abbr|b.|born}} unknown at Khost
|{{Abbr|d.|death}} infancy
 
|-
|Aisan Daulat Begum  
|unknown
|{{Abbr|d.|death}} infancy
 
|-
|Faruq Mirza
|2 August 1526
|1527
|{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|pp=10, 90}}  
 
|-
! colspan=4 | ''By [[Masuma Sultan Begum]]''
 
|-
| [[Masuma Sultan Begum (daughter of Babur)|Masuma Sultan Begum]]
|1508
| unknown
| Married to [[Muhammad Zaman Mirza]];{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|pp=130, 262}}
 
|-
! colspan=4 | ''By Gulrukh Begum''
|-
|[[Kamran Mirza]]  
|{{Circa}} 1509
|16 October 1557
| rowspan="5" | {{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=90}}
 
|-
|[[Askari Mirza]]
|5 February 1516
| 1558
 
|-
|Sultan Ahmad Mirza
|unknown
| {{Abbr|d.|death}} young
 
|-
|Shahrukh Mirza
|Unknown
| {{Abbr|d.|death}} young
 
|-
|Gulizar Begum  
|unknown
|{{Abbr|d.|death}} young
 
|-
! colspan=4 | ''By Dildar Begum''
 
|-
| [[Hindal Mirza]]
| 4 March 1519
| 20 November 1551
|{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=90}}
 
|-
|Alwar Mirza
|unknown
| 1529, Agra
|{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|pp=3, 90}}
 
|-
| Gulrang Begum
| 1514, Khost  
| Unknown
| Married her first-cousin once removed, Isan Timur Sultan, ninth son of [[Ahmad Alaq]] of [[Moghulistan]]; <ref name="s400">{{cite book | last=Hindustan) | first=Babur (Emperor of | title=Babur Nama: Journal of Emperor Babur | publisher=Penguin Books India | date=2006 | isbn=978-0-14-400149-1 | page=202}}</ref>{{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|pp=232–233}}
 
|-
| [[Gulchehra Begum]]  
|{{circa|1516}}
| {{circa|1557}}
| Married twice. Firstly, to her first-cousin once-removed, Sultan Tukhta Bugha Khan (died 1533), son of [[Ahmad Alaq]] of [[Moghulistan]] in 1530;  secondly to Abbas Sultan Uzbeg in 1549. {{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|p=231}}
 
|-
| [[Gulbadan Begum]]  
| 20 November 1522
| 7 February 1603
| Author of the ''Humayun-nama''. Married her second cousin, Khizr Khwaja Khan, son of her father's cousin [[Aiman Khwajah Sultan]] of [[Moghulistan]], son of [[Ahmad Alaq]] of [[Moghulistan]]. {{sfn|Gulbadan Begum|1902|pp=231–232}}<ref name="Balabanlilar70">{{cite book |last=Balabanlilar |first=Lisa |title=Imperial Identity in the Mughal Empire: Memory and Dynastic Politics in Early Modern South and Central Asia |publisher=I.B. Tauris |year=2012 |page=70}}</ref>
 
|-
! colspan=4 | ''By Dildar Begum or Saliha Sultan Begum (disputed) ''
 
|-
| Gulrukh Begum
| unknown
| unknown
| Married Nuruddin Muhammad Mirza, son of Khwaja Hasan Naqshbandi, with whom she had [[Salima Sultan Begum]]. {{Citation needed|date=October 2025}}
 
 
 
|}


== Death and legacy ==
== Death and legacy ==
[[File:Humayun and Babur (Late Shah Jahan Album).jpg|upright=1.5|Babur and his son [[Humayun]]. Painted {{Circa|1640}} (''[[:Commons:Category:Late Shah Jahan Album|Late Shah Jahan Album]]'')|thumb]]
In the last months of his life Babur was preoccupied with the succession. His eldest son and intended heir, [[Humayun]], fell dangerously ill at [[Sambhal]] in 1530, and by a celebrated account preserved by his daughter Gulbadan Begum, the emperor, advised to give away his most precious possession to obtain his son's recovery, offered instead his own life: he walked three times round the sick-bed and prayed that the illness be transferred to him. Humayun recovered, and Babur's own health declined soon afterwards.<ref name="EdwardesGarrett12">{{cite book |last1=Edwardes |first1=S. M. |last2=Garrett |first2=H. L. O. |title=Mughal Rule in India |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1930 |page=12}}</ref><ref name="Mukhia161">{{cite book |last=Mukhia |first=Harbans |title=The Mughals of India |publisher=Blackwell |year=2004 |page=161}}</ref> A letter of advice he had earlier sent Humayun urged him to deal gently with his brothers, and Babur divided his dominions among his sons in roughly a six-to-five ratio between Humayun and [[Kamran Mirza|Kamran]]; the injunction to forbearance would shape, and trouble, Humayun's later dealings with Kamran.<ref name="Eraly65">{{cite book |last=Eraly |first=Abraham |author-link=Abraham Eraly |title=The Mughal Throne: The Saga of India's Great Emperors |publisher=Phoenix |year=2004 |page=65}}</ref>
Babur died in Agra on {{OldStyleDate|5 January|1531|26 December 1530}} and was succeeded by his eldest son, Humayun. He was first buried in Chauburji, [[Agra]].<ref name="Rangan">{{cite news |last1=Datta |first1=Rangan |title=Agra beyond the Taj: Exploring tombs and gardens on the left bank of Yamuna |url=https://www.telegraphindia.com/my-kolkata/places/agra-beyond-the-taj-exploring-tombs-and-gardens-on-the-left-bank-of-yamuna/cid/2031729 |access-date=18 July 2024 |work=The Telegraph |date=5 July 2024}}</ref><ref name="Jagaran">{{cite news |last1=Goel |first1=Shrishti |title=Did you know Mughal emperor Babur's body was kept at this place for 6 months before being buried in Kabul? |url=https://english.jagran.com/india/did-you-know-mughal-emperor-baburs-body-was-kept-at-this-place-for-6-months-before-being-buried-in-kabul-10020153 |access-date=18 July 2024 |work=Dainik Jagaran |date=20 November 2020}}</ref> Later, as per his wishes, his mortal remains were moved to Kabul and reburied in [[Bagh-e Babur]] in Kabul sometime between 1539 and 1544.<ref name="Necipoğlu">{{citation |last=Necipoğlu |first=Gülru |title=Muqarnas: An Annual on the Visual Culture of the Islamic World |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=s6MN2T9cXNEC&pg=PA135 |year=1997 |publisher=Brill |isbn=90-04-10872-6 |page=135 |access-date=8 February 2019 |archive-date=5 February 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240205161343/https://books.google.com/books?id=s6MN2T9cXNEC&pg=PA135#v=onepage&q&f=false |url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="VDM1"/>
 
Babur died in Agra on {{OldStyleDate|5 January|1531|26 December 1530}} and was succeeded by Humayun. He was first buried in Chauburji, [[Agra]].<ref name="Rangan">{{cite news |last1=Datta |first1=Rangan |title=Agra beyond the Taj: Exploring tombs and gardens on the left bank of Yamuna |url=https://www.telegraphindia.com/my-kolkata/places/agra-beyond-the-taj-exploring-tombs-and-gardens-on-the-left-bank-of-yamuna/cid/2031729 |access-date=18 July 2024 |work=The Telegraph |date=5 July 2024}}</ref><ref name="Jagaran">{{cite news |last1=Goel |first1=Shrishti |title=Did you know Mughal emperor Babur's body was kept at this place for 6 months before being buried in Kabul? |url=https://www.thedailyjagran.com/india/did-you-know-mughal-emperor-baburs-body-was-kept-at-this-place-for-6-months-before-being-buried-in-kabul-10020153 |access-date=18 July 2024 |work=Dainik Jagaran |date=20 November 2020}}</ref> Later, as per his wishes, his mortal remains were moved to Kabul and reburied in [[Bagh-e Babur]] in Kabul sometime between 1539 and 1544.<ref name="Necipoğlu">{{citation |last=Necipoğlu |first=Gülru |title=Muqarnas: An Annual on the Visual Culture of the Islamic World |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=s6MN2T9cXNEC&pg=PA135 |year=1997 |publisher=Brill |isbn=90-04-10872-6 |page=135 |access-date=8 February 2019 |archive-date=5 February 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240205161343/https://books.google.com/books?id=s6MN2T9cXNEC&pg=PA135#v=onepage&q&f=false |url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="VDM1"/>


[[File:TOMB OF BABUR IN KABUL.jpg|thumb|upright|Babur's tomb, located in the [[Gardens of Babur]], Kabul]]
[[File:TOMB OF BABUR IN KABUL.jpg|thumb|upright|Babur's tomb, located in the [[Gardens of Babur]], Kabul]]
Line 275: Line 425:
Although all applications of modern Central Asian ethnicities to people of Babur's time are anachronistic, Soviet and Uzbek sources regard Babur as an ethnic Uzbek.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |editor-first=A. M. |editor-last=Prokhorov |encyclopedia=Great Soviet Encyclopedia |title=Babur |url=http://bse-soviet-encyclopedia.info/%D0%91%D0%BE%D0%BB%D1%8C%D1%88%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D0%A1%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%B5%D1%82%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D1%8D%D0%BD%D1%86%D0%B8%D0%BA%D0%BB%D0%BE%D0%BF%D0%B5%D0%B4%D0%B8%D1%8F/54583/%D0%91%D0%B0%D0%B1%D1%83%D1%80 |access-date=16 September 2013 |language=ru |year=1969–1978 |publisher=Soviet Encyclopedia |location=Moscow |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130916175254/http://bse-soviet-encyclopedia.info/%D0%91%D0%BE%D0%BB%D1%8C%D1%88%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D0%A1%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%B5%D1%82%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D1%8D%D0%BD%D1%86%D0%B8%D0%BA%D0%BB%D0%BE%D0%BF%D0%B5%D0%B4%D0%B8%D1%8F/54583/%D0%91%D0%B0%D0%B1%D1%83%D1%80 |archive-date=16 September 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite encyclopedia |editor-first=Ibrohim |editor-last=Muminov |encyclopedia=Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia |title=Bobur |language=uz |year=1972 |volume=2 |location=Tashkent |pages=287–95}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Bobur |first=Zahiriddin Muhammad |title=Boburnoma |year=1989 |publisher=Yulduzcha |location=Tashkent |page=3 |editor=A'zam Oʻktam |language=uz |chapter=About This Edition}}</ref> At the same time, during the Soviet Union Uzbek scholars were censored for idealising and praising Babur and other historical figures such as [[Ali-Shir Nava'i]].<ref>{{cite book |editor-last=Fierman |editor-first=William |title=Soviet Central Asia |year=1991 |publisher=Westview Press |location=Boulder, Colorado |isbn=978-0-8133-7907-4 |page=[https://archive.org/details/sovietcentralasi00fier/page/147 147] |url=https://archive.org/details/sovietcentralasi00fier/page/147}}</ref>
Although all applications of modern Central Asian ethnicities to people of Babur's time are anachronistic, Soviet and Uzbek sources regard Babur as an ethnic Uzbek.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |editor-first=A. M. |editor-last=Prokhorov |encyclopedia=Great Soviet Encyclopedia |title=Babur |url=http://bse-soviet-encyclopedia.info/%D0%91%D0%BE%D0%BB%D1%8C%D1%88%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D0%A1%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%B5%D1%82%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D1%8D%D0%BD%D1%86%D0%B8%D0%BA%D0%BB%D0%BE%D0%BF%D0%B5%D0%B4%D0%B8%D1%8F/54583/%D0%91%D0%B0%D0%B1%D1%83%D1%80 |access-date=16 September 2013 |language=ru |year=1969–1978 |publisher=Soviet Encyclopedia |location=Moscow |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130916175254/http://bse-soviet-encyclopedia.info/%D0%91%D0%BE%D0%BB%D1%8C%D1%88%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D0%A1%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%B5%D1%82%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D1%8D%D0%BD%D1%86%D0%B8%D0%BA%D0%BB%D0%BE%D0%BF%D0%B5%D0%B4%D0%B8%D1%8F/54583/%D0%91%D0%B0%D0%B1%D1%83%D1%80 |archive-date=16 September 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite encyclopedia |editor-first=Ibrohim |editor-last=Muminov |encyclopedia=Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia |title=Bobur |language=uz |year=1972 |volume=2 |location=Tashkent |pages=287–95}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Bobur |first=Zahiriddin Muhammad |title=Boburnoma |year=1989 |publisher=Yulduzcha |location=Tashkent |page=3 |editor=A'zam Oʻktam |language=uz |chapter=About This Edition}}</ref> At the same time, during the Soviet Union Uzbek scholars were censored for idealising and praising Babur and other historical figures such as [[Ali-Shir Nava'i]].<ref>{{cite book |editor-last=Fierman |editor-first=William |title=Soviet Central Asia |year=1991 |publisher=Westview Press |location=Boulder, Colorado |isbn=978-0-8133-7907-4 |page=[https://archive.org/details/sovietcentralasi00fier/page/147 147] |url=https://archive.org/details/sovietcentralasi00fier/page/147}}</ref>


Babur is considered a national hero in Uzbekistan.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.uzbekistan.or.kr/bbs/board.php?bo_table=news&wr_id=878 |title=Grandeur and Eternity: Zahiriddin Muhammad Bobur in Minds of People Forever |work=Embassy of Uzbekistan in Korea. |date=22 February 2011 |access-date=14 February 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130522171617/http://www.uzbekistan.or.kr/bbs/board.php?bo_table=news&wr_id=878 |archive-date=22 May 2013 |url-status=dead}}</ref> On 14 February 2008, stamps in his name were issued in the country to commemorate his 525th birth anniversary.<ref>{{cite web |title=The country's history on postage miniatures |url=http://old.ut.uz/eng/kaleidoscope/the_countrys_history_on_postage_miniatures.mgr |publisher=Uzbekistan Today |access-date=12 June 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150614180708/https://old.ut.uz/eng/kaleidoscope/the_countrys_history_on_postage_miniatures.mgr |archive-date=14 June 2015}}</ref> Many of Babur's poems have become popular Uzbek folk songs, especially by [[Sherali Joʻrayev]].<ref>{{cite news |title=Sherali Joʻrayev: We Haven't Stopped. We Still Exist |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/uzbek/news/story/2007/04/070412_sherali_juraev_60.shtml |date=13 April 2007 |work=[[BBC]]'s Uzbek Service |language=uz |access-date=8 October 2013 |archive-date=5 February 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240205161345/https://www.bbc.com/uzbek/news/story/2007/04/070412_sherali_juraev_60 |url-status=live}}</ref> Some sources claim that Babur is a national hero in [[Kyrgyzstan]] too.<ref>{{cite book |last=Wang |first=Zhihong |title=Dust in the Wind: Retracing Dharma Master Xuanzang's Western Pilgrimage |publisher= |page=121}}</ref> In October 2005, Pakistan developed the [[Babur (cruise missile)|Babur Cruise Missile]], named in his honour.
Babur is considered a national hero in Uzbekistan.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.uzbekistan.or.kr/bbs/board.php?bo_table=news&wr_id=878 |title=Grandeur and Eternity: Zahiriddin Muhammad Bobur in Minds of People Forever |work=Embassy of Uzbekistan in Korea. |date=22 February 2011 |access-date=14 February 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130522171617/http://www.uzbekistan.or.kr/bbs/board.php?bo_table=news&wr_id=878 |archive-date=22 May 2013 |url-status=dead}}</ref> On 14 February 2008, stamps in his name were issued in the country to commemorate his 525th birth anniversary.<ref>{{cite web |title=The country's history on postage miniatures |url=http://old.ut.uz/eng/kaleidoscope/the_countrys_history_on_postage_miniatures.mgr |publisher=Uzbekistan Today |access-date=12 June 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150614180708/https://old.ut.uz/eng/kaleidoscope/the_countrys_history_on_postage_miniatures.mgr |archive-date=14 June 2015}}</ref> Many of Babur's poems have become popular Uzbek folk songs, especially by [[Sherali Joʻrayev]].<ref>{{cite news |title=Sherali Joʻrayev: We Haven't Stopped. We Still Exist |url=https://www.bbc.com/uzbek/news/story/2007/04/070412_sherali_juraev_60 |date=13 April 2007 |work=[[BBC]]'s Uzbek Service |language=uz |access-date=8 October 2013 |archive-date=5 February 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240205161345/https://www.bbc.com/uzbek/news/story/2007/04/070412_sherali_juraev_60 |url-status=live}}</ref> Some sources claim that Babur is a national hero in [[Kyrgyzstan]] too.<ref>{{cite book |last=Wang |first=Zhihong |title=Dust in the Wind: Retracing Dharma Master Xuanzang's Western Pilgrimage |publisher= |page=121}}</ref> In October 2005, Pakistan developed the [[Babur (cruise missile)|Babur Cruise Missile]], named in his honour.


''[[Shahenshah Babar]]'', an Indian film about the emperor directed by [[Wajahat Mirza]] was released in 1944. The 1960 Indian biographical film ''Babar'' by [[Hemen Gupta]] covered the emperor's life with [[Gajanan Jagirdar]] in the lead role.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Rangoonwalla |first1=Firoze |last2=Das |first2=Vishwanath |title=Indian Filmography: Silent & Hindi Films, 1897–1969 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=26dZAAAAMAAJ |year=1970 |publisher=J. Udeshi |page=370 |access-date=8 February 2021 |archive-date=5 February 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240205161451/https://books.google.com/books?id=26dZAAAAMAAJ |url-status=live}}</ref>
''[[Shahenshah Babar]]'', an Indian film about the emperor directed by [[Wajahat Mirza]] was released in 1944. The 1960 Indian biographical film ''Babar'' by [[Hemen Gupta]] covered the emperor's life with [[Gajanan Jagirdar]] in the lead role.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Rangoonwalla |first1=Firoze |last2=Das |first2=Vishwanath |title=Indian Filmography: Silent & Hindi Films, 1897–1969 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=26dZAAAAMAAJ |year=1970 |publisher=J. Udeshi |page=370 |access-date=8 February 2021 |archive-date=5 February 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240205161451/https://books.google.com/books?id=26dZAAAAMAAJ |url-status=live}}</ref>
Line 286: Line 436:


==References==
==References==
=== Secondary sources ===
{{refbegin}}
{{refbegin}}
* {{cite EB9 |mode=cs2 |wstitle=Baber |volume=3 |ref={{harvid|''EB''|1878}} |page=179}}
* {{cite EB9 |mode=cs2 |wstitle=Baber |volume=3 |ref={{harvid|''EB''|1878}} |page=179}}
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* {{cite book|author=Gulbadan Begum |translator=Annette S. Beveridge | title=Humayun-nama :The history of Humayun |url=https://archive.org/details/historyofhumayun00gulbrich |year=1902 |publisher=[[Royal Asiatic Society]]}}
* {{cite book|author=Gulbadan Begum |translator=Annette S. Beveridge | title=Humayun-nama :The history of Humayun |url=https://archive.org/details/historyofhumayun00gulbrich |year=1902 |publisher=[[Royal Asiatic Society]]}}
* {{cite news |last=Srivastava |first=Sushil |title=The ASI Report – a review |newspaper=Frontline |date=25 October 2003 |url=http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/the-asi-report-a-review/article797088.ece |access-date=2014-12-27 |archive-date=20 December 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131220182615/http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/the-asi-report-a-review/article797088.ece |url-status=live }}
* {{cite news |last=Srivastava |first=Sushil |title=The ASI Report – a review |newspaper=Frontline |date=25 October 2003 |url=http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/the-asi-report-a-review/article797088.ece |access-date=2014-12-27 |archive-date=20 December 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131220182615/http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/the-asi-report-a-review/article797088.ece |url-status=live }}
=== Primary sources ===
* {{Cite book |last=Beveridge |first=Annette Susannah |url=https://books.google.com/books/about/The_Babur_Nama_Memoirs_of_Babur.html?id=5w1TswEACAAJ |title=The Babur-Nama Memoirs of Babur |date=2018 |publisher=Atlantic Publishers & Distributors Pvt Limited |isbn=978-81-269-2519-3 |volume=I |language=en |orig-year=1922 }} [https://archive.org/details/baburnamainengli01babuuoft Alt URL]
{{refend}}
{{refend}}



Latest revision as of 14:13, 29 May 2026

Template:Use Indian English Template:Infobox royalty Babur (Script error: The function "langx" does not exist., fa; 14 February 1483 – 26 December 1530; born Zahīr ud-Dīn Muhammad) was the founder of the Mughal Empire in the Indian subcontinent. He was a descendant of Timur and Genghis Khan through his father and mother respectively.[1][2][3] He was also given the posthumous name of Firdaws Makani ('Dwelling in Paradise').[4]

Born in Andijan in the Fergana Valley (now in Uzbekistan), Babur was the eldest son of Umar Shaikh Mirza II (1456–1494, Timurid governor of Fergana from 1469 to 1494) and a great-great-great-grandson of Timur (1336–1405). Babur ascended the throne of Fergana in its capital Akhsikath in 1494 at the age of twelve and faced rebellion. He conquered Samarkand two years later, only to lose Fergana soon after. In his attempt to reconquer Fergana, he lost control of Samarkand. In 1501, his attempt to recapture both the regions failed when the Uzbek prince Muhammad Shaybani defeated him and founded the Khanate of Bukhara.

In 1504, he conquered Kabul, which was under the putative rule of Abd ur-Razaq Mirza, the infant heir of Ulugh Beg II. Babur formed a partnership with the Safavid emperor Ismail I and reconquered parts of Turkestan, including Samarkand, only to again lose it and the other newly conquered lands to the Shaybanids.

After losing Samarkand for the third time, Babur turned his attention to India and employed aid from the neighbouring Safavid and Ottoman empires.[5] He defeated Ibrahim Lodi, the Sultan of Delhi, at the First Battle of Panipat in 1526 and founded the Mughal Empire. Before the defeat of Lodi at Delhi, the Sultanate of Delhi had been a spent force, long in a state of decline.

The ruler of the adjacent Kingdom of Mewar, Rana Sanga, advanced on Babur with a grand coalition of Rajput and Afghan warlords, engaging Babur in the Battle of Khanwa. Babur achieved a decisive victory due to his skillful troop positioning and use of gunpowder.[6] The battle was one of the most decisive events in Indian history and was a watershed event in the Mughal conquest of North India.[7][8][9]

Religiously, Babur started his life as a staunch Sunni Muslim, but he underwent significant evolution. Babur became more tolerant as he conquered new territories and grew older, allowing other religions to peacefully coexist in his empire and at his court.[10] He also displayed a certain attraction to theology, poetry, geography, history, and biology—disciplines he promoted at his court—earning him a frequent association with representatives of the Timurid Renaissance.[11] His religious and philosophical stances are characterized as humanistic.[12]

Babur married several times. Notable among his children were Humayun, Kamran Mirza, Hindal Mirza, Masuma Sultan Begum, and the author Gulbadan Begum. Babur died in 1530 in Agra and Humayun succeeded him. Babur was first buried in Agra but, as per his wishes, his remains were moved to Kabul and reburied.[13] He ranks as a national hero in Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. Many of his poems have become popular folk songs. He wrote the Baburnama in Chaghatai Turkic; it was translated into Persian during the reign (1556–1605) of his grandson, the emperor Akbar. A devoted garden-builder, Babur is also credited with introducing the formal charbagh to the plains of northern India.

Name

Ẓahīr-ud-Dīn is Arabic for "Defender of the Faith" (of Islam), and Muhammad honours the Islamic prophet. The name was chosen for Babur by the Sufi saint Khwaja Ahrar, who was the spiritual master of his father.[14] The difficulty of pronouncing the name for his Central Asian Turco-Mongol army may have been responsible for the greater popularity of his nickname Babur,[15] also variously spelled Baber,[16] Babar,[17] and Bābor.[2] The name is generally taken in reference to the Persian word babur (Template:Wikt-lang), meaning "tiger" or "panther".[18][16][19] The word repeatedly appears in Ferdowsi's Shahnameh and was borrowed into the Turkic languages of Central Asia.[17][20]

Background

File:Babur's Genealogical Order.jpg
Babur Family Tree

Template:Campaignbox Babur Babur's memoirs form the main source for details of his life. They are known as the Baburnama and were written in Chagatai, his first language,[21] though, according to Dale, "his Turkic prose is highly Persianized in its sentence structure, morphology or word formation and vocabulary."[18] Baburnama was translated into Persian during the rule of Babur's grandson Akbar.[21]

Babur was born on 14 February 1483 in the city of Andijan, Fergana Valley, contemporary Uzbekistan. He was the eldest son of Umar Shaikh Mirza II,[22] ruler of the Fergana Valley, the son of Abū Saʿīd Mirza (and grandson of Miran Shah, who was himself son of Timur) and his wife Qutlugh Nigar Khanum, daughter of Yunus Khan, the ruler of Moghulistan and a descendant of Genghis Khan.[23]

Babur hailed from the Turkic Barlas tribe, which was of Mongol origin and had embraced the Turco-Persian tradition[24][25] They had also converted to Islam centuries earlier and resided in Turkestan and Khorasan.

Aside from the Chaghatai Turkic, Babur was equally fluent in Classical Persian, the lingua franca of the Timurid elite.[26]

Some of Babur's relatives, such as his uncles Mahmud Khan (Moghul Khan) and Ahmad Khan, continued to identify as Mongols, and allowed him to use their Mongol troops to help recover his fortunes in the turbulent years that followed.[27]

Hence, Babur, though nominally a Mongol (or Moghul in Persian language), drew much of his support from the local Turkic and Iranian people of Central Asia, and his army was diverse in its ethnic makeup. It included Sarts, Tajiks, ethnic Afghans, Arabs, as well as Barlas and Chaghatayid Turko-Mongols from Central Asia.[28]

Ruler of Central Asia

As Timurid ruler of Fergana

File:Babur meeting Sultan 'Ali Mirza near Samarqand, painted circa 1589 (Baburnama).jpg
Babur as the young Emir of Fergana, joining forces with Sultan Ali Mirza in 1497 near Samarqand. Painted c. 1589 (Baburnama).

In 1494, eleven-year-old Babur became the Timurid ruler of Fergana, in present-day Uzbekistan, after his father Umar Sheikh Mirza died "while tending pigeons in an ill-constructed dovecote that toppled into the ravine below the palace".[29] During this time, two of his uncles from the neighbouring kingdoms, who were hostile to his father, and a group of nobles who wanted his younger brother Jahangir to be the ruler, threatened his succession to the throne.[15] His uncles were relentless in their attempts to dislodge him from this position as well as from many of his other territorial possessions to come.[30] Babur was able to secure his throne mainly because of help from his maternal grandmother, Aisan Daulat Begum, although there was also some luck involved.[15]

Most territories around his kingdom were ruled by his relatives, who were descendants of either Timur or Genghis Khan, and were constantly in conflict.[15] At that time, rival princes were fighting over the city of Samarkand to the west, which was ruled by his paternal cousin.[31] Babur had a great ambition to capture the city.[31]

File:Babur as Sultan of Ferghana. 1494-1504. AR Tanka (4.66 gm). Struck during his occupation of Samarkand 1497-1498 (AH 903).jpg
Coinage of Babur as Sultan of Ferghana, struck during his occupation of Samarkand in 1497-1498 (AH 903). It is a coin of the Timurid sultan Husayn Baiqara, countermarked with the Persian legend adl Sultan Zahir al-Din Muhammad Bahadur in a leaf shaped punch.

In 1497, he besieged Samarkand for seven months before eventually gaining control over it.[32] He was fifteen years old and for him the campaign was a huge achievement.[15] Babur was able to hold the city despite desertions in his army, but he later fell seriously ill.[31] Meanwhile, a rebellion back home, approximately 350 kilometres (220 mi) away, amongst nobles who favoured his brother, robbed him of Fergana.[32] As he was marching to recover it, he left Samarkand to Sultan Mahmud Mirza, leaving him with neither territory in his possession.[15] He had held Samarkand for 100 days, and he considered this defeat as his biggest loss, obsessing over it even later in his life after his conquests in India.[15]

For three years, Babur concentrated on building a strong army, recruiting widely amongst the Tajiks of Badakhshan in particular. In 1500–1501, he again laid siege to Samarkand, and indeed he took the city briefly, but he was in turn besieged by his most formidable rival, Muhammad Shaybani, Khan of the Uzbeks.[32][33] The situation became such that Babur was compelled to give his sister, Khanzada, to Shaybani in marriage as part of the peace settlement. Only after this were Babur and his troops allowed to depart the city in safety. Samarkand, his lifelong obsession, was thus lost again. He then tried to reclaim Fergana, but lost the battle there also and, escaping with a small band of followers, he wandered the mountains of central Asia and took refuge with hill tribes. By 1502, he had resigned all hopes of recovering Fergana; he was left with nothing and was forced to try his luck elsewhere.[34][35] He finally went to Tashkent, which was ruled by his maternal uncle, but he found himself less than welcome there. Babur wrote, "During my stay in Tashkent, I endured much poverty and humiliation. No country, or hope of one!"[35] Thus, during the ten years since becoming the ruler of Fergana, Babur suffered many short-lived victories and was without shelter and in exile, aided by friends and peasants.

At Kabul

File:Babur in 1507, standing in armour.jpg
Babur in armour, April–May 1507 in Kabul. Baburnama (1589).[36]

Kabul was ruled by Babur's paternal uncle Ulugh Beg II, who died leaving only an infant as heir.[35] The city was then claimed by Mukim Beg, who was considered to be a usurper and was opposed by the local populace. In October 1504, Babur was able to cross the snowy Hindu Kush mountains and capture Kabul from the remaining Arghun chieftains, who were forced to retreat to Kandahar.[32][37] With this move, he gained a new kingdom, re-established his fortunes and would remain its ruler until 1526.[34] In 1505, because of the low revenue generated by his new mountain kingdom, Babur began his first expedition to India; in his memoirs, he wrote, "My desire for Hindustan had been constant. It was in the month of Shaban, the Sun being in Aquarius, that we rode out of Kabul for Hindustan". It was a brief raid across the Khyber Pass.[35]

In the same year, Babur united with Sultan Husayn Mirza Bayqarah of Herat, a fellow Timurid and distant relative, against their common enemy, the Uzbek Shaybani.[38] However, this venture did not take place because Husayn Mirza died in 1506 and his two sons were reluctant to go to war.[35] Babur instead stayed at Herat after being invited by the two Mirza brothers. It was then the cultural capital of the eastern Muslim world. Though he was disgusted by the vices and luxuries of the city,[39] he marvelled at the intellectual abundance there, which he stated was "filled with learned and matched men".[40] He became acquainted with the work of the Chagatai poet Mir Ali Shir Nava'i, who encouraged the use of Chagatai as a literary language. Nava'i's proficiency with the language, which he is credited with founding,[41] may have influenced Babur in his decision to use it for his memoirs. He spent two months there before being forced to leave because of diminishing resources;[38] it later was overrun by Shaybani and the Mirzas fled.[39] Babur became the only reigning ruler of the Timurid dynasty after the loss of Herat, and many princes sought refuge with him at Kabul because of Shaybani's invasion in the west.[39]

File:Barbur leading an assault against the Hazaras in 1507. Baburnama of 1589-90.jpg
Barbur leading an assault against the Hazaras in 1507. Baburnama (1589)
File:Coin of Babur, as ruler of Kabul.jpg
Coin minted by Babur during his time as ruler of Kabul. Dated 1507/8

He thus assumed the title of Padshah (emperor) among the Timurids—though this title was insignificant since most of his ancestral lands were taken, Kabul itself was in danger and Shaybani continued to be a threat.[39] Babur prevailed during a potential rebellion in Kabul, but two years later a revolt among some of his leading generals drove him out of Kabul. Escaping with very few companions, Babur soon returned to the city, capturing Kabul again and regaining the allegiance of the rebels. Meanwhile, Shaybani was defeated and killed by Ismail I, Shah of Shia Safavid Persia, in 1510.[42]

Babur and the remaining Timurids used this opportunity to reconquer their ancestral territories. Over the following few years, Babur and Shah Ismail formed a partnership in an attempt to take over parts of Central Asia. In return for Ismail's assistance, Babur permitted the Safavids to act as a suzerain over him and his followers.[43] Thus, in 1513, after leaving his brother Nasir Mirza to rule Kabul, he managed to take Samarkand for the third time; he also took Bukhara but lost both again to the Uzbeks.[34][39] Shah Ismail reunited Babur with his sister Khānzāda, who had been imprisoned by and forced to marry the recently deceased Shaybani.[44] Babur returned to Kabul after three years in 1514. The following 11 years of his rule mainly involved dealing with relatively insignificant rebellions from Afghan tribes, his nobles and relatives, in addition to conducting raids across the eastern mountains.[39] Babur began to modernise and train his army despite it being, for him, relatively peaceful times.[45]

Foreign relations

Babur made no attempt to establish formal diplomatic relations with the Ottomans while trying to defeat the Uzbeks and recapture his ancestral homeland. He did, however, employ the matchlock commander Mustafa Rumi and several other Ottomans.[46] From them, he adopted the tactic of using matchlocks and cannons in the field (rather than only in sieges), which gave him an important advantage in India.[45]

Formation of the Mughal Empire

File:Babar 936.jpg
Babur's coin, based on Bahlol Lodhi's standard, Qila Agra, AH 936

Babur writes in his memoir:

From the time of the revered Prophet down till now three men from that side have conquered and ruled Hindūstān. Maḥmūd Ghāzī was the first, who and whose descendants sat long on the seat of government in Hindūstān. Shihābu’d-dīn of Ghūr was the second, whose slaves and dependants royally shepherded this realm for many years. I am the third.[47]

Babur still wanted to escape from the Uzbeks, and he chose India as a refuge instead of Badakhshan, which was to the north of Kabul. He wrote, "In the presence of such power and potency, we had to think of some place for ourselves and, at this crisis and in the crack of time there was, put a wider space between us and the strong foeman."[45] After his third loss of Samarkand, Babur gave full attention to the conquest of North India, launching a campaign; he reached the Chenab River, now in Pakistan, in 1519.[34] Until 1524, his aim was to only expand his rule to Punjab, mainly to fulfill the legacy of his ancestor Timur, since it used to be part of his empire.[45] At the time parts of North India were part of the Delhi Sultanate, ruled by Ibrahim Lodi of the Lodi dynasty, but the sultanate was crumbling and there were many defectors. Babur received invitations from Daulat Khan Lodi, Governor of Punjab and Ala-ud-Din, uncle of Ibrahim.[48] He sent an ambassador to Ibrahim, claiming himself the rightful heir to the throne, but the ambassador was detained at Lahore, Punjab, and released months later.[34]

Babur started for Lahore in 1524 but found that Daulat Khan Lodi had been driven out by forces sent by Ibrahim Lodi.[49] When Babur arrived at Lahore, the Lodi army marched out and his army was routed. In response, Babur burned Lahore for two days, then marched to Dibalpur, placing Alam Khan, another rebel uncle of Lodi, as governor.[50] Alam Khan was quickly overthrown and fled to Kabul. In response, Babur supplied Alam Khan with troops who later joined up with Daulat Khan Lodi, and together with about 30,000 troops, they besieged Ibrahim Lodi at Delhi.[51] The sultan easily defeated and drove off Alam's army, and Babur realised that he would not allow him to occupy the Punjab.[51]

First Battle of Panipat

File:1526-First Battle of Panipat-Ibrahim Lodhi and Babur.jpg
Mughal artillery and troops in action during the Battle of Panipat (1526)

In November 1525, Babur got news at Peshawar that Daulat Khan Lodi had switched sides, and Babur drove out Ala-ud-Din. Babur then marched onto Lahore to confront Daulat Khan Lodi, only to see Daulat's army melt away at their approach.[34] Daulat surrendered and was pardoned. Thus within three weeks of crossing the Indus River Babur had become the master of Punjab.[52]

Babur marched on to Delhi via Sirhind. He reached Panipat on 20 April 1526 and there met Ibrahim Lodi's numerically superior army of about 100,000 soldiers and 1000 elephants.[34][48][53] In the battle that began on the following day, Babur used the tactic of Tulugma, encircling Ibrahim Lodi's army and forcing it to face artillery fire directly, as well as frightening its war elephants.[48] Across the front of his position Babur lashed together some 700 baggage carts with rawhide ropes in what he called the "Ottoman" (Rūmī) fashion, leaving gaps through which his cavalry could charge, and stationed his matchlock-men and field guns behind this barricade; the artillery was directed by two Ottoman master-gunners, Ustad Ali Quli and Mustafa Rumi.[54][55][56] Ibrahim Lodi died during the battle, thus ending the Lodi dynasty.[34]

Babur wrote in his memoirs about his victory:

By the grace of the Almighty God, this difficult task was made easy to me and that mighty army, in the space of a half a day was laid in dust.[34]

After the battle, Babur occupied Delhi, Gwalior and Agra, took the throne of Lodi, and laid the foundation for the eventual rise of Mughal rule in India. However, before he became North India's ruler, he had to fend off challengers, such as Rana Sanga.[57]

Many of Babur's men allegedly wanted to leave India due to its harsh climate, but Babur motivated them to stay and expand his empire. Many of his retainers returned to Kabul including his close friend Khwaja Kalan.[53]

Battle of Khanwa

File:Babur visiting the Urvah valley in Gwalior 1.jpg
Babur encounters the Jain Colossal at the Urvahi valley in Gwalior in 1527. He ordered them to be destroyed[58]

The Battle of Khanwa was fought between Babur and the Rajput ruler of Mewar, Rana Sanga on 16 March 1527. Rana Sanga wanted to overthrow Babur, whom he considered to be a foreigner ruling in India, and also to extend the Rajput territories by annexing Delhi and Agra. He was supported by a mixed group of Afghan chiefs composed of former Lodi loyalists and local warlords. Upon receiving news of Rana Sangha's advance towards Agra, Babur after annexing Gwalior and Bayana took a defensive position at Khanwa (currently in the Indian state of Rajasthan), from where he hoped to launch a counterattack later. According to K. V. Krishna Rao, Babur won the battle because of his "superior generalship" and modern tactics; the battle was one of the first in India that featured cannons and muskets. Rao also notes that Rana Sanga faced "treachery" when the Hindu chief Silhadi joined Babur's army with a garrison of 6,000 soldiers.[59]

On the eve of the battle, with his troops unsettled by an astrologer's prophecy of defeat, Babur recast the campaign in religious terms. He denounced Rana Sanga as a kafir (infidel), proclaimed the coming fight a jihad, and in a public ceremony renounced wine for good, ordering his gold and silver drinking vessels broken up and the fragments distributed to the poor.[45][60] The decree issued for the occasion, drafted by his secretary Shaikh Zain, likened the smashing of the wine vessels to the breaking of idols, and after the victory Babur assumed the title of ghazi and composed a verse celebrating his triumph over the unbelievers.[60][61] As at Panipat, his field guns were arranged behind a screen of linked carts; the Ottoman gunner Mustafa Rumi commanded the culverins whose fire helped break the Rajput cavalry charges.[62]

Battle of Chanderi

The Battle of Chanderi took place the year after the Battle of Khanwa. On receiving news that Rana Sanga had made preparations to renew the conflict with him, Babur decided to isolate the Rana by defeating one of his staunchest allies, Medini Rai, who was the ruler of Malwa.[63][64]

Upon reaching Chanderi, on 20 January 1528,[63] Babur offered Shamsabad to Medini Rai in exchange for Chanderi as a peace overture, but the offer was rejected.[64] The outer fortress of Chanderi was taken by Babur's army at night, and the next morning the upper fort was captured. Babur himself expressed surprise that the upper fort had fallen within an hour of the final assault.[63] Seeing no hope of victory, Medini Rai organized a jauhar, during which women and children within the fortress immolated themselves.[63][64] A small number of soldiers also collected in Medini Rai's house and killed each other in collective suicide. This sacrifice does not seem to have impressed Babur, who did not express a word of admiration for the enemy in his autobiography.[63]

Battle of Ghaghra

By 1529, most of the major oppositions in Hindustan had either been defeated or forced into submission. Babur turned his attention to consolidating control over the eastern Gangetic plain by eliminating the remaining Afghan Lodi loyalists and pursuing the traitors Biban and Bayezid. In the spring of 1529, Babur marched down the Ganges to engage the eastern Afghan Confederacy under Sultan Mahmud Lodi and the Sultanate of Bengal under Sultan Nusrat Shah.[65]

The Battle of Ghaghra (May 1529) was the final major conflict fought by Babur, as part of his struggle to consolidate power over Hindustan. The Mughal forces, employing field artillery and coordinated cavalry manoeuvres, defeated the Afghan–Bengal coalition.[53] Following the battle, Nusrat Shah sued for peace and Mahmud Lodi’s influence collapsed, effectively ending organized Afghan resistance to Babur.

Administration and the Indian empire

Babur's principal difficulty after Panipat was not winning territory but holding it. Many of his Central Asian followers regarded Hindustan as a hot and alien land fit only for plunder and pressed to return to the cool of Kabul, and the hot-weather mortality, together with his failure to distribute the spoils quickly enough, briefly sapped their morale.[66] Babur answered with conspicuous generosity. His daughter Gulbadan Begum recalled that "the treasures of five kings fell into his hands" and that "he gave everything away": nobles, soldiers, traders and scribes received bounties, gifts were sent to relatives and holy men in Samarkand and Khurasan, and every person in the country of Kabul was given a silver coin. This open-handedness, in keeping with his cultivated image as a qalandar (a wandering, open-handed dervish), helped bind his following to him.[67][68]

Babur made few structural changes to the government he had inherited. He kept Agra as his capital, distributed the conquered districts as revenue assignments to his commanders and to the Afghan chiefs who submitted, and left local zamindars and much of the Lodi fiscal machinery in place.[69] His lasting contribution was military rather than institutional: he brought field artillery and the mobile, gunpowder-equipped tactics he had absorbed from the Ottomans and from Central Asian warfare into northern India, and gave the cavalry arm a prominence that the elephant-based armies of his Indian opponents lacked.[70][54] At his death the realm reached from the Oxus and Kabul across the Punjab and the Gangetic plain to the frontiers of Bengal and Bihar, but it remained a loose military conquest rather than a settled state; Babur, as Asher writes, bequeathed to Humayun "a shaky and as yet unconsolidated empire".[69][71]

Religious policy

Babur defeated and killed Ibrahim Lodi, the last Sultan of the Lodi dynasty, in 1526. Babur ruled for 4 years and was succeeded by his son Humayun whose reign was temporarily usurped by the Suri dynasty. During their 30-year rule, religious violence continued in India. Records of the violence and trauma, from Sikh-Muslim perspective, include those recorded in Sikh literature of the 16th century.[72] The violence of Babur in the 1520s was witnessed by Guru Nanak, who commented upon it in four hymns.[citation needed] Historians suggest the early Mughal period of religious violence contributed to introspection and then the transformation in Sikhism from pacifism to militancy for self-defense.[72] According to Babur's autobiography, Baburnama, his campaign in northwest India targeted Hindus and Sikhs as well as apostates (non-Sunni sects of Islam), and an immense number were killed, with Muslim camps building "towers of skulls of the infidels" on hillocks.[73] In Babur's secret will, in the year 935AH, 1529 AD, to Humayun, Babur advises Humayun to administer justice according to the ways of every religion, avoid sacrifice of the cow, not to ruin the temples and shrines of any law obeying community, overlook the dissensions of the Shias and the Sunnis.[74]

Personal life and relationships

File:Babur supervising the laying out of the Garden of Fidelity in Kabul (facing double page).jpg
Babur supervising the laying out of the Garden of Fidelity in Kabul. Baburnama, 1590

There are no descriptions about Babur's physical appearance, except from the paintings in the translation of the Baburnama prepared during the reign of Akbar.[35] In his autobiography, Babur claimed to be strong and physically fit, and that he had swum across every major river he encountered, including twice across the Ganges River in North India.[75]

Babur did not initially know Old Hindi; however, his Turkic poetry indicates that he picked up some of its vocabulary later in life.[76]

Unlike his father, he had ascetic tendencies and did not have any great interest in women. In his first marriage, he was "bashful" towards Aisha Sultan Begum, later losing his affection for her.[77] Babur showed similar shyness in his interactions with Baburi, a boy 3 years younger than himself in his camp with whom he had an infatuation around this time, recounting that:

"Occasionally Baburi came to me, but I was so bashful that I could not look him in the face, much less converse freely with him. In my excitement and agitation I could not thank him for coming, much less complain of his leaving. Who could bear to demand the ceremonies of fealty?"[78][79]

However, Babur acquired several more wives and concubines over the years, and as required for a prince, he was able to ensure the continuity of his line.

File:Likely portraits of Gulbadan and Gulchihra, daughters of Babur, in 1546, Kabul.jpg
Likely contemporary portraits of Gulbadan and Gulchehra Begum, daughters of Babur, in 1546, Kabul. Dust Muhammad.[80]

Babur's first wife, Aisha Sultan Begum, was his paternal cousin, the daughter of Sultan Ahmad Mirza, his father's brother. She was an infant when betrothed to Babur, who was himself five years old. They married eleven years later, c. 1498–99. The couple had one daughter, Fakhr-un-Nissa, who died within a year in 1500. Three years later, after Babur's first defeat at Fergana, Aisha left him and returned to her father's household.[81][45] In 1504, Babur married Zaynab Sultan Begum, who died childless within two years. In the period 1506–08, Babur married four women, Maham Begum (in 1506), Masuma Sultan Begum, Gulrukh Begum and Dildar Begum.[81] Babur had four children by Maham Begum, of whom only one survived infancy. This was his eldest son and heir, Humayun. Masuma Sultan Begum died during childbirth; the year of her death is disputed (either 1508 or 1519). Gulrukh bore Babur two sons, Kamran and Askari, and Dildar Begum was the mother of Babur's youngest son, Hindal.[81] Babur later married Mubaraka Yusufzai, a Pashtun woman of the Yusufzai tribe. Gulnar Aghacha and Nargul Aghacha were two Circassian slaves given to Babur as gifts by Tahmasp Shah Safavi, the Shah of Persia. They became "recognized ladies of the royal household."[81]

During his rule in Kabul, when there was a time of relative peace, Babur pursued his interests in literature, art, music and gardening.[45] Previously, he never drank alcohol and avoided it when he was in Herat. In Kabul, he first tasted it at the age of thirty. He then began to drink regularly, host wine parties and consume preparations made from opium.[39] Though religion had a central place in his life, Babur also approvingly quoted a line of poetry by one of his contemporaries: "I am drunk, officer. Punish me when I am sober". He quit drinking for health reasons before the Battle of Khanwa, just two years before his death, and demanded that his court do the same. But he did not stop chewing narcotic preparations, and did not lose his sense of irony. He wrote, "Everyone regrets drinking and swears an oath (of abstinence); I swore the oath and regret that."[82]

Babur acknowledged Chinggisid laws and customs that were influential in Turco-Mongol society but downplayed its importance compared to Divine laws:[83]

"Previously our ancestors had shown unusual respect for the Chingizid code (törah). They did not violate this code sitting and rising at councils and court, at feasts and dinners. [However] Chingez Khan's code is not a nass qati (categorical text) that a person must follow. Whenever one leaves a good custom, it should be followed. If ancestors leave a bad custom, however it is necessary to substitute a good one."

Literary works

File:Illustrations from Babur-namah 1.jpg
Illustrations in the Baburnama regarding the fauna of India.

Babur was an acclaimed writer, who had a profound love for literature. His library was one of his most beloved possessions that he always carried around with him, and books were one of the treasures he searched for in new conquered lands. In his memoirs, when he listed sovereigns and nobles of a conquered land, he also mentioned poets, musicians and other educated people.[84]

Even though he died aged 47, Babur left a rich literary and scientific heritage. He authored his famous memoir the Bāburnāma, as well as beautiful lyrical works or ghazals, treatises on Muslim jurisprudence (Mubayyin), poetics (Aruz risolasi), music, and a special calligraphy, known as khatt-i Baburi.[85][86][87][88]

Babur's Bāburnāma is a collection of memoirs, written in the Chagatai language and later translated into Persian, the usual literary language of the Mughal court, during the rule of emperor Akbar.[89] However, Babur's Turkic prose in Bāburnāma is already highly Persianized in its sentence structure, vocabulary, and morphology,[90] and also consists of several phrases and minor poems in Persian.

Babur wrote most of his poems in Chagatai Turkic, known to him as Türki, but he also composed in Persian. However, he was mostly praised for his literary works written in Turkic, which drew comparison with the poetry of Ali-Shir Nava'i.[84] The contemporary historian Mirza Haidar ranked him a Turki poet "second only to Mir Ali Shir", and Babur took his prosody seriously enough to write an essay on Turkic metre, the Aruz risalasi, which he judged superior to Nava'i's own treatment of the subject.[91][92] He also devised a personal calligraphic hand, the khatt-i Baburi, in which he had a copy of the Qur'an made and copies of his Walidiyya translation and his Hindustan poems circulated.[93]

The Baburnama itself is regarded as one of the earliest true autobiographies in Islamic literature. Frank to the point of self-incrimination, it sets down Babur's faults and failures alongside his triumphs and offers detailed descriptions of the peoples, customs, animals, plants and landscapes he encountered; Stephen Dale characterises its author as "a relentlessly ambitious, humorous, casually violent, articulate, heavy drinking, personally engaging, highly cultured Muslim".[94][95] Written in Chaghatai Turkic, it was rendered into Persian for the imperial library by Abdul Rahim Khan-i-Khanan in November 1589, during the reign of Babur's grandson Akbar, and was repeatedly illustrated by Mughal painters thereafter.[96][97]

The following ruba'i is an example of Babur's poetry written in Turkic, composed in the aftermath of his famous victory in North India to celebrate his ghazi status.[98]

Gardens, art and architecture

Babur was a passionate maker of gardens, and the Baburnama dwells on the planning and planting of gardens far more than on any building project; it has been noted that, although an observant Muslim, Babur never mentions building or even praying in a mosque, while he describes his gardens at length and gives them evocative names.[99] Regarding the Punjab as his by Timurid right, he laid out his earliest Indian gardens on the banks of the river Yamuna at Agra, introducing to the plains of northern India the symmetrical, four-part charbagh (paradise garden) watered from the river. This rationally ordered garden, which Babur treated as concrete evidence of his Timurid heritage, became one of the enduring trademarks of Mughal architecture.[100][61] A garden he designed himself near the Ghaggar river was completed in 1528–29, and the quarter of Agra developed by his nobles was nicknamed "Kabul" by local people, while the site of his Panipat garden is still called Kabuli Bagh.[69] The Agra garden long known as the Ram Bagh (or Aram Bagh) was by tradition associated with Babur, but it has been re-identified as the Bagh-i Nur Afshan of Nur Jahan, completed in 1621.[101]

Domed stone mosque at Panipat viewed against the sky.
The Kabuli Bagh Mosque at Panipat, built by Babur to commemorate his victory at the First Battle of Panipat (1526), one of three congregational mosques surviving from his reign.

Few of Babur's buildings survive, and his chief architectural monuments are three congregational mosques erected during his brief reign: one at Sambhal (1526) and two dated 1528–29, the Kabuli Bagh Mosque at Panipat and a mosque at Ayodhya.[102][69] The Ayodhya mosque, built by Babur's officer Mir Baqi, incorporated carved black-stone columns from an earlier temple and stood on a mound later venerated by many Hindus as the birthplace of the deity Rama.[103]

This mosque, the Babri Masjid, became the focus of the Ram Janmabhoomi–Babri Masjid dispute. In December 1992 it was demolished by activists of the Vishva Hindu Parishad and the Bharatiya Janata Party, an event that set off communal rioting in which more than a thousand people were killed and that has remained a charged issue in Indian politics ever since. As its reputed builder, Babur is consequently reviled by many Hindu nationalists in modern India, even as he is honoured as a national hero in Uzbekistan.[104][99]

Family

Consorts

The identity of the mother of one of Babur's daughters, Gulrukh Begum is disputed. Gulrukh's mother may have been the daughter of Sultan Mahmud Mirza by his wife Pasha Begum who is referred to as Saliha Sultan Begum in certain secondary sources, however this name is not mentioned in the Baburnama or the works of Gulbadan Begum, which casts doubt on her existence. This woman may never have existed at all or she may even be the same woman as Dildar Begum.

Issue

File:Contemporary portrait of Humayun seated (made in Kabul in 1550-1555).jpg
Contemporary portrait of Humayun from life (painted in Kabul, c. 1550–55), wearing the Tāj-i 'Izzat
Name Birth Death Notes
By Aisha Sultan Begum
Fakhr-un-Nissa Begum 1501 1501 [109]


By Maham Begum
Humayun 6 March 1508 27 January 1556 succeeded as the second Mughal Emperor
Barbul Mirza unknown d. infancy [110]
Mehr Jahan Begum b. unknown at Khost d. infancy
Aisan Daulat Begum unknown d. infancy
Faruq Mirza 2 August 1526 1527 [111]
By Masuma Sultan Begum
Masuma Sultan Begum 1508 unknown Married to Muhammad Zaman Mirza;[112]
By Gulrukh Begum
Kamran Mirza c. 1509 16 October 1557 [110]
Askari Mirza 5 February 1516 1558
Sultan Ahmad Mirza unknown d. young
Shahrukh Mirza Unknown d. young
Gulizar Begum unknown d. young
By Dildar Begum
Hindal Mirza 4 March 1519 20 November 1551 [110]
Alwar Mirza unknown 1529, Agra [113]
Gulrang Begum 1514, Khost Unknown Married her first-cousin once removed, Isan Timur Sultan, ninth son of Ahmad Alaq of Moghulistan; [114][115]
Gulchehra Begum c. 1516 c. 1557 Married twice. Firstly, to her first-cousin once-removed, Sultan Tukhta Bugha Khan (died 1533), son of Ahmad Alaq of Moghulistan in 1530;  secondly to Abbas Sultan Uzbeg in 1549. [116]
Gulbadan Begum 20 November 1522 7 February 1603 Author of the Humayun-nama. Married her second cousin, Khizr Khwaja Khan, son of her father's cousin Aiman Khwajah Sultan of Moghulistan, son of Ahmad Alaq of Moghulistan. [117][118]
By Dildar Begum or Saliha Sultan Begum (disputed)
Gulrukh Begum unknown unknown Married Nuruddin Muhammad Mirza, son of Khwaja Hasan Naqshbandi, with whom she had Salima Sultan Begum. [citation needed]


Death and legacy

In the last months of his life Babur was preoccupied with the succession. His eldest son and intended heir, Humayun, fell dangerously ill at Sambhal in 1530, and by a celebrated account preserved by his daughter Gulbadan Begum, the emperor, advised to give away his most precious possession to obtain his son's recovery, offered instead his own life: he walked three times round the sick-bed and prayed that the illness be transferred to him. Humayun recovered, and Babur's own health declined soon afterwards.[119][120] A letter of advice he had earlier sent Humayun urged him to deal gently with his brothers, and Babur divided his dominions among his sons in roughly a six-to-five ratio between Humayun and Kamran; the injunction to forbearance would shape, and trouble, Humayun's later dealings with Kamran.[121]

Babur died in Agra on Template:OldStyleDate and was succeeded by Humayun. He was first buried in Chauburji, Agra.[122][123] Later, as per his wishes, his mortal remains were moved to Kabul and reburied in Bagh-e Babur in Kabul sometime between 1539 and 1544.[13][57]

File:TOMB OF BABUR IN KABUL.jpg
Babur's tomb, located in the Gardens of Babur, Kabul

It is generally agreed that, as a Timurid, Babur was not only significantly influenced by the Persian culture, but also that his empire gave rise to the expansion of the Persianate ethos in the Indian subcontinent.[2][3] He emerged in his own telling as a Timurid Renaissance inheritor, leaving signs of Islamic, artistic literary, and social aspects in India.[124][125]

F. Lehmann states in the Encyclopædia Iranica:

His origin, milieu, training, and culture were steeped in Persian culture and so Babur was largely responsible for the fostering of this culture by his descendants, the Mughals of India, and for the expansion of Persian cultural influence in the Indian subcontinent, with brilliant literary, artistic, and historiographical results.[25]

Although all applications of modern Central Asian ethnicities to people of Babur's time are anachronistic, Soviet and Uzbek sources regard Babur as an ethnic Uzbek.[126][127][128] At the same time, during the Soviet Union Uzbek scholars were censored for idealising and praising Babur and other historical figures such as Ali-Shir Nava'i.[129]

Babur is considered a national hero in Uzbekistan.[130] On 14 February 2008, stamps in his name were issued in the country to commemorate his 525th birth anniversary.[131] Many of Babur's poems have become popular Uzbek folk songs, especially by Sherali Joʻrayev.[132] Some sources claim that Babur is a national hero in Kyrgyzstan too.[133] In October 2005, Pakistan developed the Babur Cruise Missile, named in his honour.

Shahenshah Babar, an Indian film about the emperor directed by Wajahat Mirza was released in 1944. The 1960 Indian biographical film Babar by Hemen Gupta covered the emperor's life with Gajanan Jagirdar in the lead role.[134]

One of the enduring features of Babur's life was that he left behind the lively and well-written autobiography known as Baburnama.[135] Quoting Henry Beveridge, Stanley Lane-Poole writes:[136]

His autobiography is one of those priceless records which are for all time, and is fit to rank with the confessions of St. Augustine and Rousseau, and the memoirs of Gibbon and Newton. In Asia it stands almost alone.

In his own words, "The cream of my testimony is this, do nothing against your brothers even though they may deserve it." Also, "The new year, the spring, the wine and the beloved are joyful. Babur make merry, for the world will not be there for you a second time."[137]

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References

Secondary sources

Primary sources

Further reading

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New title
Mughal Emperor
20 April 1526 – 26 December 1530
Succeeded by

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