History, asked by priyankasrk1994, 6 months ago

Review Exercise
I. Fill in the blanks.
1. Akbar's regent Bairam Khan was bestowed the title of Khan + Khana
2. In the Second Battle of Panipat,
was defeated by the Mughal army.
3. Queen
of Gondwana fought Akbar's army with courage.
4.
was defeated by the Mughal forces at the Battle of Haldighati.
5.
were provinces in the Akbar's territories.
6. Under Akbar' reign there were
number of provinces.
7. Akbar continued the system of
and
in military
organisation
8. The Mughal forces were led by
in the Battle of Haldighati.
9. Land was measured with bamboo sticks joined with iron rings called
10. At Fatehpur Sikri
was built for religious discussions.
11.
was the new religion promulgated by Akbar.
12. The Buland Darwaza was built to commemorate Akbar's victory over​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
3

Answer:

don't post that much of question together it's so

Answered by SakshamKumarthegreat
4

Answer:

  1. He was also the guardian, chief mentor, adviser, teacher and the most trusted ally of Akbar. Humayun honored him as Khan-i-Khanan, which means "King of Kings".
  2. The Second Battle of Panipat took place on 5th November, 1556, between the Mughal Forces of Akbar and the army of Hemu. It was a decisive victory for Akbar's generals Khan Zaman I and Bairam Khan.
  3. Rani Durgavati took control over the Gondwana Kingdom after the death of King Dalpat Shah. As a queen, she fought 51 gallant wars against many invaders including Mughals. Rani Durgavati showed enormous courage, self-belief, and heroism in her battles and treated her people fairly.
  4. Akbar deputed Raja Man Singh against Maharana Pratap, who had set up the capital at Kumbhalgarh from Gogunda. However, the forces of Rana Mewar were outnumbered against the imperial mughal forces and the Mughal forces defeated Rana Pratap in the battle of Haldighati
  5. Initially, after the administrative reforms of Akbar, the Mughal empire was divided into 12 subahs : Kabul, Lahore, Multan, Delhi, Agra, Avadh, Illahabad, Bihar, Bangalah, Malwa, Ajmer and Gujarat.
  6. The number of provinces rose to 15 during Akbar's reign, 17 during Jahangir's time and 22 under Shah jahan. The provinces were divided into sarkars, parganas and villages.
  7. Akbar organized his army as well as the nobility by means of a system called the mansabdari. Under this system, each officer in the army was assigned a rank (a mansabdar), and assigned a number of cavalry that he had to supply to the imperial army.
  8. The Battle of Haldighati was a battle fought on 18 June 1576 between cavalry and archers supporting the Rana of Mewar, Maharana Pratap, and the Mughal emperor Akbar's forces, led by Man Singh I of Amber. ... When the Rana refused to personally submit to Akbar, war became inevitable
  9. The land was measured in 'bighas'. The Dahsala system changed the land measurement method from using a rope to land measuring system by bamboo pieces connected by iron rings to make the measurement method more accurate. This measurement method was called the Bamboo Jarid system
  10. The Ibadat Khana or House of Worship was a prayer or a meeting room built by Akbar at his palace in Fatehpur Sikri. It was built to gather spiritual leaders of different religious grounds so as to conduct a discussion on the teachings of the respective religious leaders.
  11. Religion of God"), known during its time as Tawḥīd-i-Ilāhī ("Divine Monotheism", lit: "Oneness of God") or Divine Faith was a syncretic religion propounded by the Mughal emperor Akbar in 1582, intending to merge some of the elements of the religions of his empire, and thereby reconcile the differences that divided his ....
  12. Buland Darwaza, or the "Door of victory", was built in 1602 A.D. by Mughal emperor Akbar to commemorate his victory over Gujarat. It is the main entrance to the Jama Masjid at Fatehpur Sikri, which is 43 km from Agra, India.
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