What was the northern western border of the mughal empire during the region of akbar?
Answers
Answer:
Explanation:
Whenever the rulers of India could strengthen their defence in the northwestern directions, they all remained protected from foreign invaders. To prevent the invaders from reaching the fertile valleys of Punjab and Sind, it was important to provide a strong defence in the northwest, and to control the area extending from Kabul, via Ghazni to Kandhar.
Babur and the North-West:
Before invading India, Babur had already captured strategic points of the Hindukush range. He, therefore, did not face any serious problem from the North-West Frontier.
Humayun:
Humayun was able to capture Kandhar with the assistance of Shah of Persia. He did not encounter any tribal uprising from this direction.
Akbar:
Akbar followed a systematic frontier policy. He suppressed the wild tribes by sending strong forces which had to face serious challenge from the Afghan tribes, especially the Yusufzais. The tribal uprising convinced Akbar to bring the frontier provinces under his strict control. He conquered and annexed Sind, Baluchistan, Kashmir and Kandhar. He secured the empire and brought territorial gains to the Mughal empire in this direction.
Jahangir:
Although the Shah of Persia professed friendship with Jahangir, he captured Kandhar.
Shah Jahan:
In spite of best efforts, Shah Jahan failed to get foothold.
Aurangzeb:
Aurangzeb followed a ‘forward’ policy on the Northwest Frontier. The unruly Afghan tribes of the region created lot of trouble for the Mughals.
There were three important revolts of the Yusufzais (1667), of the Afridis (1672) and the Kataks (1674).
The Mughal Empire or Mogul Empire, was an early-modern empire in South Asia.For some two centuries, the empire stretched from the outer fringes of the Indus basin in the west, northern Afghanistan in the northwest, and Kashmir in the north, to the highlands of present-day Assam and Bangladesh in the east, and the uplands of the Deccan plateau in South India.