which century marked the end of the medieval period in india
Answers
Answer:
19th century
Explanation:
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Answer:
==>8th century" denotes the "beginning" of the "medieval period" in India. Medieval period or the middle age began from 5th century and ended in 15th century in the west and for India it was from 8th to 18th
Explanation:
==>Medieval India refers to a long period of the history of the Indian subcontinent between the "ancient period" and "modern period". It is usually regarded as running between the breakup of the Gupta Empire in the 6th century AD and the start of the Mughal Empire in 1526, although some historians regard it as both starting and finishing later than these points.
The Mehrangarh Fort was built in medieval India during the reign of Jodha of Mandore.
Definitions Edit
Medieval India during the Harsha Empire of the 7th century A.D.
One definition includes the period from the 6th century,[1] the "first half of the 7th century",[2] or the 8th century[3] up to the 16th century, essentially coinciding with the Middle Ages of Europe. It may be divided into two periods: The 'early medieval period' which lasted from the 6th to the 13th century and the 'late medieval period' which lasted from the 13th to the 16th century, ending with the start of the Mughal Empire in 1526. The Mughal era, from the 16th century to the 18th century, is often referred to as the early modern period,[1] but is sometimes also included in the 'late medieval' period.[4]
An alternative definition, often seen in those more recent authors who still use the term at all, brings the start of the medieval times forward, either to about 1000 CE, or to the 12th century.[5] The end may be pushed back to the 18th century, Hence, this period can be effectively considered as the beginning of Muslim domination (North India) to British India.[6] Or the "early medieval" period as beginning in the 8th century, and ending with the 11th century.[7]
The use of "medieval" at all as a term for periods in Indian history has often been objected to, and is probably becoming more rare (there is a similar discussion in terms of the history of China).[8] It is argued that neither the start nor the end of the period really mark fundamental changes in Indian history, comparable to the European equivalents.[9] Burton Stein still used the concept in his A History of India (1998, referring to the period from the Guptas to the Mughals), but most recent authors using it are Indian. Understandably, they often specify the period they cover within their titles.[10].