1. How did Humayun’s love for learning impact his empire?
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Answers
Explanation:
In the spring of 1553, somewhere in the region of Rothas, now in present day Punjab, Pakistan, an emperor had started long and hard into the distance contemplating the fate of a royal prince who had been his prisoner for a while. The treacherous prince had turned against him when he had been down and out on his luck, plotted to have him arrested and assassinated, and repeatedly tested and punished him for the promise he made to his father come what may he would not shed the blood of his own kin.
But instead of the smoldering fury of vengeance that his Mongol ancestors had been notorious for and bestowed with the supreme power to order his death with a wave of the hand, the emperor had wondered if he had the power to pardon the prince one last time against the advice of his ministers – and even if it had not been the first time the prince had so grievously wronged him and he had forgiven the prince.
What had stopped the emperor in his tracks from spontaneously pardoning the prince this time round had been the murderous rage he had seen in the eyes of his loyal commanders. To teach a lesson to the soldiers who had sided with the emperor, the prince had committed numerous atrocities against their families when they had not been in a position to defend them, and they in turn had been furious with him.
Listening to their heated words for what had seemed like an eternity, and realizing how precariously close he was to having his own men desert him, the emperor had weighed his options carefully and after a while, swallowing the lump that swelled in his throat pronounced with a heavy heart: Let my brother’s life be spared but blind him and send him to Mecca so he may not trouble us anymore.