English, asked by bhargavigarg9205, 16 hours ago

why do you think Prithviraj says, "We are not so weak as to be afraid of a mere plunderer!

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Answered by XeroxKing
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Why did the plunderers of India like Mohammad Ghazni not stay in India?

Why did the plunderers of India like Mohammad Ghazni not stay in India?They would have hated it. To stress something that is (perhaps understandably) missed by historians native to the subcontinent, for people descending to India from the cool, semi-arid, thinly populated mountain plateaus around it it is a hot, wet, and overcrowded place. Foreigners in the 16th century, including Babur, the conqueror of Hindustan, would note:

Why did the plunderers of India like Mohammad Ghazni not stay in India?They would have hated it. To stress something that is (perhaps understandably) missed by historians native to the subcontinent, for people descending to India from the cool, semi-arid, thinly populated mountain plateaus around it it is a hot, wet, and overcrowded place. Foreigners in the 16th century, including Babur, the conqueror of Hindustan, would note:‘Three things oppressed us in Hindustan’, writes Babur, ‘its heat, its violent winds, its dust.’ Sometimes, says Badauni, it got ‘so extremely hot… that the very brain boiled in the cranium.’ (…) Moans Bernier: ‘I have been reduced by the intenseness of the heat to the last extremity… my parched and withered body has become a mere sieve, the quart of water which I swallow at a draught, passing at the same moment through every one of my pores.’

Why did the plunderers of India like Mohammad Ghazni not stay in India?They would have hated it. To stress something that is (perhaps understandably) missed by historians native to the subcontinent, for people descending to India from the cool, semi-arid, thinly populated mountain plateaus around it it is a hot, wet, and overcrowded place. Foreigners in the 16th century, including Babur, the conqueror of Hindustan, would note:‘Three things oppressed us in Hindustan’, writes Babur, ‘its heat, its violent winds, its dust.’ Sometimes, says Badauni, it got ‘so extremely hot… that the very brain boiled in the cranium.’ (…) Moans Bernier: ‘I have been reduced by the intenseness of the heat to the last extremity… my parched and withered body has become a mere sieve, the quart of water which I swallow at a draught, passing at the same moment through every one of my pores.’The summer heat was made worse by dust storms. ‘It gets up in great strength every year in the heats… ’, writes Babur, ’so strong and carrying so much dust and earth that you cannot see one another. People call this wind andhi, the darkener of the sky.’ (…) ‘During the rainy season (the climate is very pleasant), but you cannot shoot, even with the bow of our country… the coats of mail, books, clothes, and furniture all feel the bad effects of moisture.’

Why did the plunderers of India like Mohammad Ghazni not stay in India?They would have hated it. To stress something that is (perhaps understandably) missed by historians native to the subcontinent, for people descending to India from the cool, semi-arid, thinly populated mountain plateaus around it it is a hot, wet, and overcrowded place. Foreigners in the 16th century, including Babur, the conqueror of Hindustan, would note:‘Three things oppressed us in Hindustan’, writes Babur, ‘its heat, its violent winds, its dust.’ Sometimes, says Badauni, it got ‘so extremely hot… that the very brain boiled in the cranium.’ (…) Moans Bernier: ‘I have been reduced by the intenseness of the heat to the last extremity… my parched and withered body has become a mere sieve, the quart of water which I swallow at a draught, passing at the same moment through every one of my pores.’The summer heat was made worse by dust storms. ‘It gets up in great strength every year in the heats… ’, writes Babur, ’so strong and carrying so much dust and earth that you cannot see one another. People call this wind andhi, the darkener of the sky.’ (…) ‘During the rainy season (the climate is very pleasant), but you cannot shoot, even with the bow of our country… the coats of mail, books, clothes, and furniture all feel the bad effects of moisture.’Heat apart, the most remarkable fact about India for the Mughals was the sheer crush of people. The vast concourses of people he saw in India astounded Babur. ‘As far as Bengal, as far indeed as the shore of the great ocean, the peoples are without break… the population of Hindustan is unlimited,’ he writes.

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