Deck 20: The Mughal Empire: Muslim Rulers and Hindu Subjects, 1400-1750

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Question
The desire for a new Mongol empire, now allied with Islam, created opportunities for military action to unite and settle the nomadic tribes of Chaghatay, leading to the rise in the fourteenth century of _________, or Tamerlane.

A) Genghis Khan
B) Bayazid
C) Temur Gurgan
D) Miran Shah
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Question
A particular problem for the long term health of Humayun's dynasty was the _________, or the creation of a regular system for previously improvised or ad hoc activities or things, of traditional nomadic succession practices among the House of Timur's rulers.

A) deinstitionalisation
B) institute
C) institutionalization
D) colonization
Question
In the wake of the collapse of the Mongol Empire, the largest in world history, the Central Asian heartland of the Turkic peoples evolved into a _________, many of whose rulers claimed descent from Genghis Khan.

A) tribe
B) city state
C) chiefdom
D) patchwork of smaller states
Question
Under Akbar's leadership, the Mughal armies were able to bring the eastern, southern and western flanks of their lands into their fold and again anchoring Islam in the former areas of its influence, the heartland of Northern India, or _________.

A) Hindustan
B) Bihar
C) Agra
D) Ajmir
Question
Because of the difficulties involved in Humayun's own succession to the throne, his death was kept a secret for several weeks, while the court worked out plans for a ___________, or the setting up of a guardian for an underage or incapacitated monarch to rule in his or her stead, for the emperor's son, fourteen-year-old Jalal ud-Din Akbar.

A) Lord Protector
B) Regency
C) Steward
D) Proxy
Question
The Mughals' primary challenge for control over Hindustan and the crucial Silk Road trade came from the _________ princes and their Persian allies.

A) Iranian
B) Uzbek
C) Afghan
D) Tajik
Question
Akbar ordered the building of the city of Fatehpur Sikri to give thanks to and honor the memory of _________, a Sufi holy man who had predicted the birth of a male son to Akbar, on the site of the holy man's camp in the village Sikri.

A) Zainuddin Shirazi
B) Zar Baksh
C) Salim Chisti
D) Bulleh Shah
Question
As was the case in China, the "inner" world of the household and the "outer" world of business, politics and warfare were clearly defined by _______.

A) age
B) gender
C) class
D) caste
Question
The Mughals' expansion into Bengal foreshadowed a clash with a very different kind of enemy, the Shan people of Southeast Asia called the _________.

A) Ahoms
B) Mong Yang
C) Hsenwi
D) Mong Kawng
Question
These discriminatory religious policies also created great distrust and many difficulties in dealing with self-governing, non-Muslim groups within the empire, most notably among the _________, who blended Hindu and Muslim traditions.

A) Ahoms
B) Sheikh
C) Hsenwi
D) Sikhs
Question
Despite these internal conflicts, Aurangzeb's military prowess helped him to secure key areas that had long eluded Mughal efforts: Bijapur, Golconda and much of the Maratha lands of the _________ region of South Central India.

A) Berar
B) Deccan
C) Orissa
D) Gondwana
Question
In the realm of the visual arts, and just like with the Safavid Persians and the Ottomans, one of the more interesting aspects of Islam as practiced by the Mughals is that, like the prohibitions regarding wine and other intoxicants, the injunctions against depicting the human form in art were often largely ignored in the _________.

A) public works
B) literature
C) museums
D) private chambers of the royal court
Question
While this new philosophy did not end Akbar's military campaigns, which he saw as ordained by God, it ultimately did lead him to conducting spirited religious debates with his subjects and formulating a new religion he called _________.

A) Islam
B) din-i ilahi
C) Ain-i-Akbari
D) Muraqaba
Question
By borrowing heavily from Sufi mysticism, Persian court protocols, Zoroastrian sun and fire veneration, and even Muslim and Christian Neo-platonic spiritualism, Akbar's divine faith sought to:

A) Increase the power of the Sunni Islamic clerics and draw followers from other religions
B) Create a new religious sect that would draw followers from other religions
C) Make him the Supreme Being of the Empire
D) Limit the power of Sunni Islamic clerics and draw followers from other religions
Question
A century before Akbar, Indian mathematicians had pushed their calculations of the value of pi to within nine decimal places, and expanded their facility with trigonometry to the point that some of the fundamental concepts of infinite series and _________ had been worked out.

A) algebra
B) geometry
C) calculus
D) scientific notation
Question
Shah Jahan did away with the _________ of former Mughal rulers and established a more legalistic and exclusively pro-Muslim environment more aligned with Sunni theology, a trend which would reach its pinnacle of power under the reign of Shah Jahan's own son, Aurangzeb.

A) polytheistic views
B) monotheistic views
C) dualism views
D) religious pluralism
Question
The House of Timur's new rulers, especially his son Humayun, were now faced with the problem of consolidating, organizing, and administering Babur's vast domain. Unfortunately, Humayun's interests were geared more toward _________ mysticism, poetry, astrology, and, at times, wine and opium than they were toward responsible leadership.

A) Sufi
B) Muraqaba
C) Dhikr
D) Dualistic
Question
In order to defend Hindustan, the Mughals built a series of fortresses throughout their inner domains and along the frontier. Which of the following is not the site of one such fortress?

A) Allahabad
B) Lahore
C) Red Fort in Delhi
D) Hyderabad
Question
Under Aurangzeb, there were two major trends: the start of an ongoing decades-long war with the Marathas, a federation of fiercely independent Central Indian clans; and his controversial bid for a more robust and legalistically effective _________ of Mughal India.

A) "unification"
B) "reconstruction"
C) "Islamification"
D) "transformation"
Question
During the seventeenth century, all but one of the following European nations largely supplanted Iberian influence in the region:

A) France
B) Britain
C) Italy
D) The Netherlands
Question
Akbar´s attempt to create a new divine faith was doomed to failure in part because:

A) din-i ilahi was perceived to be a religion that appealed to courtiers and nobles only
B) many followers joined the new divine faith for opportunistic rather than spiritual reasons
C) many followers embraced a less strict form of Islam instead
D) it was embraced by Sunni theologians
Question
Which of the following is not a long-term consequence of the creation of a world trading system by the European maritime powers:

A) Indian commodities were now being shipped globally
B) the Dutch and the British saw a sharp decline in their supremacy in India
C) growth of the Indian textile trade
D) growth of American silver and food and cash crop imports into India
Question
Fathullah Shirazi, a gifted Indian engineer, astronomer and philosopher:

A) came up with the concept for a multibarreled gun, similar in design to that of Leonardo da Vinci
B) invented the surgical scalpel
C) designed the world's first rocket launcher
D) is credited with designing the world's first automatic weapon
Question
Akbar's Sufi mystical training had increasingly predisposed him toward tolerance and eclecticism, which gradually developed into a personal philosophy he called _________, or "at peace with all."

A) sulh-i kull
B) Ain-i-Akbari
C) Dhikr
D) Sikhism
Question
After 1600, Akbar was faced with a domestic insurrection led by his own son Salim which nearly brought an untimely end to the latter's claims as heir apparent. In the end, however, Salim was able to prevail and ascended the throne as _________.

A) Khusrau
B) Salim
C) Aurangzeb
D) Jahangir
Question
While relations between Muslims and India's other religions were syncretic, in that they co-existed but remained largely separate, the political and social systems created by the Mughals were in many respects a successful example of the _________ of an "extraction state" and several centuries of ruling more settled areas.

A) caste system
B) synthesis
C) oligarchy
D) monarchy
Question
Aurangzeb's long rule renewed the Mughal trend of expanding into the Northeastern areas controlled by the Ahoms, whom he ultimately succeeded in converting into _________ after a military standstill.

A) Mughal chiefs
B) Mughal clients
C) Mughal representatives
D) Mughals citizens
Question
The basic administrative unit of the Mughals was the _________, a unit comprising an area usually containing a town and from a dozen to about a hundred villages.

A) league
B) meter
C) acre
D) pargana
Question
After Jahangir's death in 1627, his son Khurram inherited the throne and reigned as Shah Jahan. His rule coincided with perhaps the high point of Mughal cultural power and prestige, as reflected in its iconic monument, the _________.

A) The Tomb of Itmad-Ud-Daula
B) Salim Chisti
C) Taj Mahal
D) Bulleh Shah
Question
Under Mughal rule, an elaborate, graded system of official ranks was created in which the recipients, called _________, were awarded grants of land along with the revenues those working the land generated.

A) mansabdars
B) governors
C) viceroys
D) pashas
Question
The Persian tradition of miniature painting flourished in Mughal India, as did larger works on a variety of surfaces, while charcoal sketches and the _________ painting technique were the artistic media of choice.

A) ragmalas
B) padma
C) gouache
D) ragas
Question
Great mosque projects also represent highlights of Mughal artistic sophistication and monumental scope. Among them are the Friday Delhi Mosque in Shahjahanabad and Aurangzeb's huge _________.

A) Badshahi Mosque in Lahore
B) Taj Mahal
C) Salim Chisti
D) Bulleh Shah
Question
In addition to being a monument to his beloved wife, the Taj Mahal is also an architectural allegory for:

A) The conquest of Hindustan by the Mughals in the sixteenth century.
B) Allah's judgment in paradise on the day of the resurrection.
C) The incorporation of Sikhism into Sunni Islam as the result of the Mughals.
D) The dazzling whiteness of Mumtaz Mahal's customary clothing.
Question
Like his model Genghis Khan, Timur:

A) Created an empire that long outlasted him.
B) Claimed that he was self-directed and did not rely on the power of the gods.
C) Set his ultimate sights on western Europe.
D) Proved surprisingly liberal in the treatment of at least some cities that surrendered.
Question
At the battle of Panipat in 1526, Babur's army had the advantage of:

A) The new military technologies of matchlock muskets and field cannon.
B) Vast numerical superiority.
C) 1000 war elephants that had been trained for battle conditions.
D) Afghan tribal chiefs who had a fearsome reputation for brutality.
Question
As distasteful as it was for a _________ to curry favor from the Safavid ruler Shah Tahmasp, Humayun received his support and reclaimed his throne in 1555.

A) Shia Muslim
B) Sikh
C) Hindu
D) Sunni Muslim
Question
Akbar's religious policies were viewed, by his fellow Muslims:

A) As a necessary accommodation to the large numbers of Hindus under his control.
B) As proof that he had actually become a non-believer.
C) As the result of the influence of his wife Manmati.
D) As a necessary, if harsh, reinstatement of Muslim fundamentalism in his domains.
Question
After he had launched a coup against his father, Akbar, Salim:

A) Was executed by impaling, as a warning to future rebels.
B) Was sent into exile in Persia
C) Became a Sufi priest and removed himself from the Mughal succession.
D) Suffered a revolt led by his own son Khusrau.
Question
The memory of Humayun's __________ was galling to the Mughals.

A) Defeat at the hands of the Safavids
B) Composition of a bizarre religious treatise that tried to synthesize all religions
C) Admission that he could not conquer the south of Hindustan.
D) Forced conversion to Shiism.
Question
As Mughal power was sapped by the revolts of the Marathas and others in the eighteenth century, the armed forces of the ___________ became important players in regional politics.

A) Qinglong Emperor
B) Russians
C) Ottoman Turks
D) European trading companies
Question
Akbar had a sudden intense mystical experience in 1578, gradually developing a personal philosophy he called "sulh-i kull", meaning "_________".

A) Kill them all, and let Allah sort them out.
B) Achilles sulked in his tent.
C) At peace with all.
D) All religions are equal, but some are more equal than others.
Question
By the time of Aurangzeb's death in 1707, the Marathas had set up their own administrative system with forts and taxes, and were:

A) Carrying off Shah Jahan's fabled Peacock Throne.
B) Forcibly converting Muslims to Hinduism.
C) Encouraging the Mughals to marry their daughters to Hindus.
D) Encouraging raids on Mughal caravans and pack trains.
Question
Akbar's four principal ministries included all of the following except:

A) Legal and religious affairs
B) Diplomatic relations with European trading companies
C) Army and military matters
D) The royal household
Question
The chief duties of the Mughals' zamindars were to:

A) Channel small-scale competitive energies into productive activities.
B) Purge the administrative elite of Sikhs.
C) Reform the military command structure.
D) Interpret Islamic law in accordance with Aurangzeb's directions.
Question
After the reimposition of the jizya tax on non-Muslims, Hindus who had newly converted to Islam:

A) Gave up their caste affiliation in an effort to hide their past identity.
B) Were quickly promoted into the mansabdar class.
C) Preserved their caste and clan affiliations, especially in terms of profession.
D) Were forced to demonstrate their conversion by undertaking a pilgrimage to Mecca.
Question
Women could, and often did, exercise a greater degree of power and influence among the ___________ than among most other groups in India.

A) Sikhs
B) Shiite Muslims
C) Hindus
D) Turkic peoples
Question
The astronomers of the Kerala school had calculated elliptical orbits for the visible planets a century in advance of __________.

A) Galileo Galilei
B) Johannes Kepler
C) Tycho Brahe
D) Ptolemy
Question
The skills of Hindus and Jains were increasingly sought by the Mughal court, and Akbar made a Hindu his ___________ and employed Hindu court astrologers.

A) Finance minister
B) Religious advisor
C) Protocol chief
D) Son-in-law and heir
Question
_________ writers, painters, and poets followed Humayun to India, where their talents enlivened the arts and helped develop Urdu verse forms.

A) Italian
B) Persian
C) Hindu
D) Kurdish
Question
Aided by the ease of travel within the Mongol Empire, _________ had, by the fourteenth century, become the dominant religion among the Central Asian Turkic peoples.

A) Islam
B) Hinduism
C) Buddhism
D) Sikhism
Question
The Mughals gave India one of its most prolific eras in terms of profusion and synthesis of literary genres, with _________ remaining the chief languages of literature.

A) Hindi and Persian
B) Arabic and Persian
C) Oriya and Maithili
D) Kashmiri and Arabic
Question
For Babur and his successors, their ruling family would always be "The House of Timur," prompting historians to sometimes refer to the line as the Timurids. However, because of their claims to the legacy of Genghis Khan, they would be better known to the world as the _________.

A) Huns
B) Mughals
C) Sheikh
D) Mangral
Question
Inconsolable after the loss of his wife Mumtaz Mahal, Shah Jahan built a magnificent tomb complex in her honor near _________.

A) Kerala
B) Calicut
C) Lahore
D) Agra
Question
The end of the fourteenth century marked the stunning rise of Temur Gurgan, who was widely known from the Persian rendering of his name as Timur the _____.

A) Lame
B) Bloody
C) Son of Genghis
D) Rising Sun
Question
Zahir ud-Din Muhammad was better known by his nickname, Babur, which means "leopard" or "tiger" in __________.

A) Turkish
B) Mongol
C) Persian
D) Urdu
Question
In the 1550s, Mughal forces secured the eastern, southern, and western flanks of their lands, anchoring Islam with the territory they called "__________".

A) Outer Mughalia
B) Hindustan
C) India
D) Punjab
Question
The Mughals built fortresses at strategic points throughout their inner domains as well as along the frontier, and the largest was the Red Fort in _______.

A) Allahabad
B) Kandahar
C) Dacca
D) Delhi
Question
Akbar married the Rajput princess Manmati, despite her adherence to:

A) Hinduism
B) Shiite Islam
C) Sikhism
D) Christianity
Question
Jahangir's son Khusrau was forced to watch as his comrades were put to death by ____________.

A) Drawing and quartering
B) Hanging
C) Impalement
D) Crucifixion
Question
A four-way struggle broke out among the sons of Shah Jahan upon his death in ________.

A) 1627
B) 1605
C) 1707
D) 1657
Question
Akbar wore his hair long under his turban like the __________.

A) Confucians
B) Catholics
C) Sikhs
D) Sufis
Question
__________ reimposed the hated jizya tax on non-Muslims, which had been abolished by Akbar.

A) Khurram
B) Aurangzeb
C) Muhammad Dara Shikuh
D) Gobind Singh
Question
Aurangzeb spent much of the last two decades of his life campaigning against the _________.

A) Safavid Persians
B) British in Bengal
C) Hindu Marathas
D) Remaining members of his family
Question
For the English, the acquisition of Bombay (Mumbai) from the _________ in the 1660s gave the British East India Company a superb harbor.

A) Mughals
B) Portuguese
C) French
D) Chinese
Question
The Mughals appointed members of the new _________ elite to positions in the provincial governments and state ministries.

A) Zamindar
B) Pargana
C) Timurid
D) Mansabdar
Question
Indian _________ calicoes (named for the Indian port of Calicut) proved immensely popular in Europe for underwear and summer clothing.

A) Cotton
B) Wool
C) Silk
D) Linen
Question
The familiar term "pajamas" comes from the __________ word pajama, the lightweight summer garments worn in India and popularized as sleepwear in Europe.

A) Persian
B) Turkish
C) Hindi
D) Arabic
Question
________ turned the running of his empire over to his wife, the striking Persian princess Nur Jahan, on several occasions, and she mediated the succession wars after his death.

A) Shah Jahan
B) Jahangir
C) Babur
D) Akbar
Question
The Gunpowder empires, named for their reliance on cannons and small arms in their military campaigns, included all of the following except:

A) The Safavids
B) The Mughals
C) The Ottomans
D) The Habsburgs
Question
Mughal relations with Safavid Persia, where _________ was the official state religion, meant a certain influence on the Mughal court was unavoidable.

A) Sufism
B) Sikhism
C) Shia Islam
D) Sunni Islam
Question
Muhammad Ghauth Gwaliori's ___________ tapped sources from Hindu and Muslim astrology, Jewish Kabbala traditions, and Sufi mysticism.

A) The Five Jewels
B) The Baburnama
C) The Hamzanama
D) The Fatehpur Sikri
Question
The Golden Temple in the city of ________ became the religious center of the Sikhs, and they defended their faith against the repressive policies of Aurangzeb.

A) Srinagar
B) Calcutta
C) Gwalior
D) Amritsar
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Deck 20: The Mughal Empire: Muslim Rulers and Hindu Subjects, 1400-1750
1
The desire for a new Mongol empire, now allied with Islam, created opportunities for military action to unite and settle the nomadic tribes of Chaghatay, leading to the rise in the fourteenth century of _________, or Tamerlane.

A) Genghis Khan
B) Bayazid
C) Temur Gurgan
D) Miran Shah
C
2
A particular problem for the long term health of Humayun's dynasty was the _________, or the creation of a regular system for previously improvised or ad hoc activities or things, of traditional nomadic succession practices among the House of Timur's rulers.

A) deinstitionalisation
B) institute
C) institutionalization
D) colonization
C
3
In the wake of the collapse of the Mongol Empire, the largest in world history, the Central Asian heartland of the Turkic peoples evolved into a _________, many of whose rulers claimed descent from Genghis Khan.

A) tribe
B) city state
C) chiefdom
D) patchwork of smaller states
D
4
Under Akbar's leadership, the Mughal armies were able to bring the eastern, southern and western flanks of their lands into their fold and again anchoring Islam in the former areas of its influence, the heartland of Northern India, or _________.

A) Hindustan
B) Bihar
C) Agra
D) Ajmir
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5
Because of the difficulties involved in Humayun's own succession to the throne, his death was kept a secret for several weeks, while the court worked out plans for a ___________, or the setting up of a guardian for an underage or incapacitated monarch to rule in his or her stead, for the emperor's son, fourteen-year-old Jalal ud-Din Akbar.

A) Lord Protector
B) Regency
C) Steward
D) Proxy
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6
The Mughals' primary challenge for control over Hindustan and the crucial Silk Road trade came from the _________ princes and their Persian allies.

A) Iranian
B) Uzbek
C) Afghan
D) Tajik
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7
Akbar ordered the building of the city of Fatehpur Sikri to give thanks to and honor the memory of _________, a Sufi holy man who had predicted the birth of a male son to Akbar, on the site of the holy man's camp in the village Sikri.

A) Zainuddin Shirazi
B) Zar Baksh
C) Salim Chisti
D) Bulleh Shah
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8
As was the case in China, the "inner" world of the household and the "outer" world of business, politics and warfare were clearly defined by _______.

A) age
B) gender
C) class
D) caste
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
The Mughals' expansion into Bengal foreshadowed a clash with a very different kind of enemy, the Shan people of Southeast Asia called the _________.

A) Ahoms
B) Mong Yang
C) Hsenwi
D) Mong Kawng
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
These discriminatory religious policies also created great distrust and many difficulties in dealing with self-governing, non-Muslim groups within the empire, most notably among the _________, who blended Hindu and Muslim traditions.

A) Ahoms
B) Sheikh
C) Hsenwi
D) Sikhs
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Despite these internal conflicts, Aurangzeb's military prowess helped him to secure key areas that had long eluded Mughal efforts: Bijapur, Golconda and much of the Maratha lands of the _________ region of South Central India.

A) Berar
B) Deccan
C) Orissa
D) Gondwana
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k this deck
12
In the realm of the visual arts, and just like with the Safavid Persians and the Ottomans, one of the more interesting aspects of Islam as practiced by the Mughals is that, like the prohibitions regarding wine and other intoxicants, the injunctions against depicting the human form in art were often largely ignored in the _________.

A) public works
B) literature
C) museums
D) private chambers of the royal court
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
While this new philosophy did not end Akbar's military campaigns, which he saw as ordained by God, it ultimately did lead him to conducting spirited religious debates with his subjects and formulating a new religion he called _________.

A) Islam
B) din-i ilahi
C) Ain-i-Akbari
D) Muraqaba
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
By borrowing heavily from Sufi mysticism, Persian court protocols, Zoroastrian sun and fire veneration, and even Muslim and Christian Neo-platonic spiritualism, Akbar's divine faith sought to:

A) Increase the power of the Sunni Islamic clerics and draw followers from other religions
B) Create a new religious sect that would draw followers from other religions
C) Make him the Supreme Being of the Empire
D) Limit the power of Sunni Islamic clerics and draw followers from other religions
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
A century before Akbar, Indian mathematicians had pushed their calculations of the value of pi to within nine decimal places, and expanded their facility with trigonometry to the point that some of the fundamental concepts of infinite series and _________ had been worked out.

A) algebra
B) geometry
C) calculus
D) scientific notation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 72 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Shah Jahan did away with the _________ of former Mughal rulers and established a more legalistic and exclusively pro-Muslim environment more aligned with Sunni theology, a trend which would reach its pinnacle of power under the reign of Shah Jahan's own son, Aurangzeb.

A) polytheistic views
B) monotheistic views
C) dualism views
D) religious pluralism
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Unlock Deck
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17
The House of Timur's new rulers, especially his son Humayun, were now faced with the problem of consolidating, organizing, and administering Babur's vast domain. Unfortunately, Humayun's interests were geared more toward _________ mysticism, poetry, astrology, and, at times, wine and opium than they were toward responsible leadership.

A) Sufi
B) Muraqaba
C) Dhikr
D) Dualistic
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k this deck
18
In order to defend Hindustan, the Mughals built a series of fortresses throughout their inner domains and along the frontier. Which of the following is not the site of one such fortress?

A) Allahabad
B) Lahore
C) Red Fort in Delhi
D) Hyderabad
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19
Under Aurangzeb, there were two major trends: the start of an ongoing decades-long war with the Marathas, a federation of fiercely independent Central Indian clans; and his controversial bid for a more robust and legalistically effective _________ of Mughal India.

A) "unification"
B) "reconstruction"
C) "Islamification"
D) "transformation"
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
During the seventeenth century, all but one of the following European nations largely supplanted Iberian influence in the region:

A) France
B) Britain
C) Italy
D) The Netherlands
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Unlock Deck
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21
Akbar´s attempt to create a new divine faith was doomed to failure in part because:

A) din-i ilahi was perceived to be a religion that appealed to courtiers and nobles only
B) many followers joined the new divine faith for opportunistic rather than spiritual reasons
C) many followers embraced a less strict form of Islam instead
D) it was embraced by Sunni theologians
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 72 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Which of the following is not a long-term consequence of the creation of a world trading system by the European maritime powers:

A) Indian commodities were now being shipped globally
B) the Dutch and the British saw a sharp decline in their supremacy in India
C) growth of the Indian textile trade
D) growth of American silver and food and cash crop imports into India
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 72 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Fathullah Shirazi, a gifted Indian engineer, astronomer and philosopher:

A) came up with the concept for a multibarreled gun, similar in design to that of Leonardo da Vinci
B) invented the surgical scalpel
C) designed the world's first rocket launcher
D) is credited with designing the world's first automatic weapon
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Akbar's Sufi mystical training had increasingly predisposed him toward tolerance and eclecticism, which gradually developed into a personal philosophy he called _________, or "at peace with all."

A) sulh-i kull
B) Ain-i-Akbari
C) Dhikr
D) Sikhism
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
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25
After 1600, Akbar was faced with a domestic insurrection led by his own son Salim which nearly brought an untimely end to the latter's claims as heir apparent. In the end, however, Salim was able to prevail and ascended the throne as _________.

A) Khusrau
B) Salim
C) Aurangzeb
D) Jahangir
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26
While relations between Muslims and India's other religions were syncretic, in that they co-existed but remained largely separate, the political and social systems created by the Mughals were in many respects a successful example of the _________ of an "extraction state" and several centuries of ruling more settled areas.

A) caste system
B) synthesis
C) oligarchy
D) monarchy
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27
Aurangzeb's long rule renewed the Mughal trend of expanding into the Northeastern areas controlled by the Ahoms, whom he ultimately succeeded in converting into _________ after a military standstill.

A) Mughal chiefs
B) Mughal clients
C) Mughal representatives
D) Mughals citizens
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28
The basic administrative unit of the Mughals was the _________, a unit comprising an area usually containing a town and from a dozen to about a hundred villages.

A) league
B) meter
C) acre
D) pargana
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29
After Jahangir's death in 1627, his son Khurram inherited the throne and reigned as Shah Jahan. His rule coincided with perhaps the high point of Mughal cultural power and prestige, as reflected in its iconic monument, the _________.

A) The Tomb of Itmad-Ud-Daula
B) Salim Chisti
C) Taj Mahal
D) Bulleh Shah
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30
Under Mughal rule, an elaborate, graded system of official ranks was created in which the recipients, called _________, were awarded grants of land along with the revenues those working the land generated.

A) mansabdars
B) governors
C) viceroys
D) pashas
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31
The Persian tradition of miniature painting flourished in Mughal India, as did larger works on a variety of surfaces, while charcoal sketches and the _________ painting technique were the artistic media of choice.

A) ragmalas
B) padma
C) gouache
D) ragas
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32
Great mosque projects also represent highlights of Mughal artistic sophistication and monumental scope. Among them are the Friday Delhi Mosque in Shahjahanabad and Aurangzeb's huge _________.

A) Badshahi Mosque in Lahore
B) Taj Mahal
C) Salim Chisti
D) Bulleh Shah
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33
In addition to being a monument to his beloved wife, the Taj Mahal is also an architectural allegory for:

A) The conquest of Hindustan by the Mughals in the sixteenth century.
B) Allah's judgment in paradise on the day of the resurrection.
C) The incorporation of Sikhism into Sunni Islam as the result of the Mughals.
D) The dazzling whiteness of Mumtaz Mahal's customary clothing.
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34
Like his model Genghis Khan, Timur:

A) Created an empire that long outlasted him.
B) Claimed that he was self-directed and did not rely on the power of the gods.
C) Set his ultimate sights on western Europe.
D) Proved surprisingly liberal in the treatment of at least some cities that surrendered.
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35
At the battle of Panipat in 1526, Babur's army had the advantage of:

A) The new military technologies of matchlock muskets and field cannon.
B) Vast numerical superiority.
C) 1000 war elephants that had been trained for battle conditions.
D) Afghan tribal chiefs who had a fearsome reputation for brutality.
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36
As distasteful as it was for a _________ to curry favor from the Safavid ruler Shah Tahmasp, Humayun received his support and reclaimed his throne in 1555.

A) Shia Muslim
B) Sikh
C) Hindu
D) Sunni Muslim
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37
Akbar's religious policies were viewed, by his fellow Muslims:

A) As a necessary accommodation to the large numbers of Hindus under his control.
B) As proof that he had actually become a non-believer.
C) As the result of the influence of his wife Manmati.
D) As a necessary, if harsh, reinstatement of Muslim fundamentalism in his domains.
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38
After he had launched a coup against his father, Akbar, Salim:

A) Was executed by impaling, as a warning to future rebels.
B) Was sent into exile in Persia
C) Became a Sufi priest and removed himself from the Mughal succession.
D) Suffered a revolt led by his own son Khusrau.
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39
The memory of Humayun's __________ was galling to the Mughals.

A) Defeat at the hands of the Safavids
B) Composition of a bizarre religious treatise that tried to synthesize all religions
C) Admission that he could not conquer the south of Hindustan.
D) Forced conversion to Shiism.
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40
As Mughal power was sapped by the revolts of the Marathas and others in the eighteenth century, the armed forces of the ___________ became important players in regional politics.

A) Qinglong Emperor
B) Russians
C) Ottoman Turks
D) European trading companies
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41
Akbar had a sudden intense mystical experience in 1578, gradually developing a personal philosophy he called "sulh-i kull", meaning "_________".

A) Kill them all, and let Allah sort them out.
B) Achilles sulked in his tent.
C) At peace with all.
D) All religions are equal, but some are more equal than others.
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42
By the time of Aurangzeb's death in 1707, the Marathas had set up their own administrative system with forts and taxes, and were:

A) Carrying off Shah Jahan's fabled Peacock Throne.
B) Forcibly converting Muslims to Hinduism.
C) Encouraging the Mughals to marry their daughters to Hindus.
D) Encouraging raids on Mughal caravans and pack trains.
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43
Akbar's four principal ministries included all of the following except:

A) Legal and religious affairs
B) Diplomatic relations with European trading companies
C) Army and military matters
D) The royal household
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44
The chief duties of the Mughals' zamindars were to:

A) Channel small-scale competitive energies into productive activities.
B) Purge the administrative elite of Sikhs.
C) Reform the military command structure.
D) Interpret Islamic law in accordance with Aurangzeb's directions.
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45
After the reimposition of the jizya tax on non-Muslims, Hindus who had newly converted to Islam:

A) Gave up their caste affiliation in an effort to hide their past identity.
B) Were quickly promoted into the mansabdar class.
C) Preserved their caste and clan affiliations, especially in terms of profession.
D) Were forced to demonstrate their conversion by undertaking a pilgrimage to Mecca.
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46
Women could, and often did, exercise a greater degree of power and influence among the ___________ than among most other groups in India.

A) Sikhs
B) Shiite Muslims
C) Hindus
D) Turkic peoples
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47
The astronomers of the Kerala school had calculated elliptical orbits for the visible planets a century in advance of __________.

A) Galileo Galilei
B) Johannes Kepler
C) Tycho Brahe
D) Ptolemy
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48
The skills of Hindus and Jains were increasingly sought by the Mughal court, and Akbar made a Hindu his ___________ and employed Hindu court astrologers.

A) Finance minister
B) Religious advisor
C) Protocol chief
D) Son-in-law and heir
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49
_________ writers, painters, and poets followed Humayun to India, where their talents enlivened the arts and helped develop Urdu verse forms.

A) Italian
B) Persian
C) Hindu
D) Kurdish
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50
Aided by the ease of travel within the Mongol Empire, _________ had, by the fourteenth century, become the dominant religion among the Central Asian Turkic peoples.

A) Islam
B) Hinduism
C) Buddhism
D) Sikhism
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51
The Mughals gave India one of its most prolific eras in terms of profusion and synthesis of literary genres, with _________ remaining the chief languages of literature.

A) Hindi and Persian
B) Arabic and Persian
C) Oriya and Maithili
D) Kashmiri and Arabic
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52
For Babur and his successors, their ruling family would always be "The House of Timur," prompting historians to sometimes refer to the line as the Timurids. However, because of their claims to the legacy of Genghis Khan, they would be better known to the world as the _________.

A) Huns
B) Mughals
C) Sheikh
D) Mangral
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53
Inconsolable after the loss of his wife Mumtaz Mahal, Shah Jahan built a magnificent tomb complex in her honor near _________.

A) Kerala
B) Calicut
C) Lahore
D) Agra
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54
The end of the fourteenth century marked the stunning rise of Temur Gurgan, who was widely known from the Persian rendering of his name as Timur the _____.

A) Lame
B) Bloody
C) Son of Genghis
D) Rising Sun
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55
Zahir ud-Din Muhammad was better known by his nickname, Babur, which means "leopard" or "tiger" in __________.

A) Turkish
B) Mongol
C) Persian
D) Urdu
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56
In the 1550s, Mughal forces secured the eastern, southern, and western flanks of their lands, anchoring Islam with the territory they called "__________".

A) Outer Mughalia
B) Hindustan
C) India
D) Punjab
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57
The Mughals built fortresses at strategic points throughout their inner domains as well as along the frontier, and the largest was the Red Fort in _______.

A) Allahabad
B) Kandahar
C) Dacca
D) Delhi
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58
Akbar married the Rajput princess Manmati, despite her adherence to:

A) Hinduism
B) Shiite Islam
C) Sikhism
D) Christianity
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59
Jahangir's son Khusrau was forced to watch as his comrades were put to death by ____________.

A) Drawing and quartering
B) Hanging
C) Impalement
D) Crucifixion
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60
A four-way struggle broke out among the sons of Shah Jahan upon his death in ________.

A) 1627
B) 1605
C) 1707
D) 1657
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61
Akbar wore his hair long under his turban like the __________.

A) Confucians
B) Catholics
C) Sikhs
D) Sufis
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62
__________ reimposed the hated jizya tax on non-Muslims, which had been abolished by Akbar.

A) Khurram
B) Aurangzeb
C) Muhammad Dara Shikuh
D) Gobind Singh
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63
Aurangzeb spent much of the last two decades of his life campaigning against the _________.

A) Safavid Persians
B) British in Bengal
C) Hindu Marathas
D) Remaining members of his family
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64
For the English, the acquisition of Bombay (Mumbai) from the _________ in the 1660s gave the British East India Company a superb harbor.

A) Mughals
B) Portuguese
C) French
D) Chinese
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65
The Mughals appointed members of the new _________ elite to positions in the provincial governments and state ministries.

A) Zamindar
B) Pargana
C) Timurid
D) Mansabdar
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66
Indian _________ calicoes (named for the Indian port of Calicut) proved immensely popular in Europe for underwear and summer clothing.

A) Cotton
B) Wool
C) Silk
D) Linen
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67
The familiar term "pajamas" comes from the __________ word pajama, the lightweight summer garments worn in India and popularized as sleepwear in Europe.

A) Persian
B) Turkish
C) Hindi
D) Arabic
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68
________ turned the running of his empire over to his wife, the striking Persian princess Nur Jahan, on several occasions, and she mediated the succession wars after his death.

A) Shah Jahan
B) Jahangir
C) Babur
D) Akbar
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69
The Gunpowder empires, named for their reliance on cannons and small arms in their military campaigns, included all of the following except:

A) The Safavids
B) The Mughals
C) The Ottomans
D) The Habsburgs
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70
Mughal relations with Safavid Persia, where _________ was the official state religion, meant a certain influence on the Mughal court was unavoidable.

A) Sufism
B) Sikhism
C) Shia Islam
D) Sunni Islam
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71
Muhammad Ghauth Gwaliori's ___________ tapped sources from Hindu and Muslim astrology, Jewish Kabbala traditions, and Sufi mysticism.

A) The Five Jewels
B) The Baburnama
C) The Hamzanama
D) The Fatehpur Sikri
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72
The Golden Temple in the city of ________ became the religious center of the Sikhs, and they defended their faith against the repressive policies of Aurangzeb.

A) Srinagar
B) Calcutta
C) Gwalior
D) Amritsar
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