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 HISTORY OF INDIA. Turks and Afghans 
 CHAPTER VTHE KHALJI DYNASTY AND THE FIRST CONQUEST OF THE DECCAN         
               
         THE repugnance of the populace to Firuz was due to the belief that his
        tribe, the Khaljis, were Afghans, a people who were regarded as barbarous. They
        were, in fact, a Turkish tribe but they had long been settled in the Garmsir, or hot
        region, of Afghanistan, where they had probably acquired some Afghan manners
        and customs, and the Turkish nobles, most of whom must now have belonged to the
        second generation domiciled in India, refused to acknowledge them as Turks. It
        was owing to this hostility of the people that Firuz elected to be enthroned in
        Kaiqubad's unfinished villa at Kilokhri rather than at Delhi, and for some time
        after his elevation to the throne he dared not enter the streets of his
        capital. The more prominent citizens waited on him as a matter of course, and
        swore allegiance to him, and the people in general repaired to Kilokhri on the
        days appointed for public audiences, but they were impelled less by sentiments
        of loyalty than by curiosity to see how the barbarian would support his new
        dignity, and were compelled reluctantly to admit that he carried it well, but
        their disaffection did not at once abate, and Firuz completed the buildings and
        gardens left unfinished by Kaiqubad, named Kilokhri Shahr-i-Nau, or the New City, and
        ordered his courtiers to build themselves houses in the neighborhood of his
        palace. The order was unpopular, but there was a large class whose livelihood
        depended on the court, and villas and shops rose round the palace of Kilokhri.
         The court of Firuz differed widely from that of the Slave Kings. Balban
        had undermined, if he had not destroyed, the power of the Forty and the
        character of the Turkish nobles was changed. They were now represented largely
        by men born in the country, in many instances, probably, of Indian mothers, and
        though, as their hostility to Firuz proves, they retained their pride of race,
        they lost forever their exclusive privileges, which were invaded by Khaljis and
        by all whom it was the king's pleasure to promote. The change was inevitable.
        It would have been impossible for a small number of native courtiers to have
        maintained for ever a claim based on a remote foreign ancestry, and Firuz,
        though he did not exclude the Turks from office, completed very thoroughly the
        work which Balban had begun. The fief of Kara-Manikpur was considered an ample
        provision for Chhajju, the sole survivor of the former royal family, and Firuz
        had his own relations to consider. His eldest son, Mahmud, was entitled Khan Khanan, his second Arkali Khan,
        and his third Qadr Khan; his brother was entitled Yaghrush Khan and was appointed to the command of the army,
        and his two nephews, Ala-ud-din
        and Almas Beg, received important posts, the latter being entitled Ulugh Khan.
        Another relation, the blunt and outspoken Malik Ahmad Chap, held the
        unsuitable post of Master of the Ceremonies.
         The popular prejudice against Firuz was soon discovered to be
        groundless. Save for an occasional outburst of wrath no milder monarch ever sat
        upon the throne of Delhi. His treatment of Kaiqubad belied his boast that he
        had never shed the blood of a Muslim, but throughout his reign he displayed the
        most impolitic tenderness towards rebels and other criminals. His mildness and
        his conduct when he first ventured into Balban’s Red Palace in the city gained
        him the adherence of many of those who had opposed him as a barbarian. He
        declined to ride into the courtyard, but dismounted at the gate, and before
        entering the throne room wept bitterly in the antechamber for Balban and his
        offspring and lamented his own unworthiness of the throne and his guilt in
        aspiring to it. The few old nobles of Balban’s court and the ecclesiastics of
        the city were moved to tears and praised his sensibility, but the soldiers and
        those of his own faction murmured that such self-abasement was unkingly, and Malik Ahmad Chap openly remonstrated with
        him.
         In the second year of the reign Chhajju assumed the royal title at Kara
        and was joined by Hatim Khan, who held the
        neighboring fief of Oudh. The rebels advanced towards Delhi, where they were
        confident of the support of a numerous faction not yet reconciled to the rule
        of the Khalji, but Firuz marched to meet them, and his advanced guard under his
        son Arkali Khan encountered them near Budaun and
        defeated and dispersed them. Two days after the battle Chhajju was surrendered
        by a Hindu with whom he had taken refuge, and he and the other captives were
        sent, with yokes on their necks and gyves on their
        wrists, to Budaun. Firuz, seated upon a cane stool, received them in public
        audience and when he saw their bonds wept in pity. He caused them to be loosed
        and tended and entertained them at a wine party. As they hung their heads with
        shame he cheered them and foolishly praised them for their loyalty to the heir
        of their old master. The indignant courtiers, headed, as usual, by Ahmad Chap,
        protested against this encouragement of rebellion and demanded that he should
        consider what his, and their, fate would have been
        had the rebels been victorious, and the old man, who seems to have entered upon
        his dotage when he seized the throne, could find no better reply than that he
        dared not, for the sake of a transitory kingdom, imperil his soul by slaying
        fellow-Muslims.
         Arkali Khan’s
        victory was rewarded with the fief of Multan, and Chhajju was delivered into
        the custody of his conqueror, who was known to be opposed to his father’s mild
        policy. The fief of Kara was bestowed upon Ala-ud-din, who lent a willing ear to the counsels of Chhajju's principal adherents, whom he took into his
        service. Domestic griefs helped to warp his loyalty,
        for his wife, the daughter of Firuz, and her mother, who perhaps suspected the
        trend of his ambition, were shrews who not only embittered his private life,
        but constantly intrigued against him at court. Ala-ud-din’s original intention seems to have been to escape
        their malignity by leaving his uncle's dominions and establishing a
        principality in some distant part of India, but the course of events suggested
        to him a design yet more treasonable.
         
         Lenity of Firuz 
         Firuz Shah's lenity and the simplicity of his court were most
        distasteful to the Khalji officers, who were disappointed of the profit which
        they had expected from confiscations and murmured against a prince who would
        neither punish his enemies nor reward his friends. Their strictures on his
        attitude towards criminals were just, as in the case of the Thags, those miscreants whose
        religion was robbery and murder and who were the dread of wayfarers in India
        within the memory of the last generation. A few of these fanatical brigands
        were captured at Delhi and one gave information which led to the arrest of over
        a thousand. Not one was punished but the whole gang was carried in boats down
        the Jumna and Ganges and set free in Bengal. Such culpable weakness would have again
        thrown the kingdom into complete disorder had the reign of Firuz been
        prolonged.
         The discontent of the nobles found expression at their drinking parties
        when the deposition of the old king was freely discussed. Firuz, though aware
        of this treasonable talk, at first paid no heed to it, but at one drinking bout
        many nobles swore allegiance to Taj-ud-din Kuchi, a survivor of the
        Forty, and boasted of how they would slay Firuz. He sent for the drinkers and,
        after upbraiding them, threw a sword towards them and challenged any one of
        them to attack him. They stood abashed until the tension was relieved by the
        effrontery of his secretary, Nusrat Sabbah, who, though he had boasted as loudly as any, now
        told Firuz that the maunderings of drunkards were beneath his notice, that they
        were not likely to kill him, for they knew that they would never again find so
        indulgent a master, and that he was not likely to kill them, for he knew, in
        spite of their foolish talk, that he would nowhere find servants so faithful.
        Firuz called for a cup of wine and handed it to the impudent apologist, but the
        boasters were dismissed from court for a year and were warned that if they
        offended again they should be delivered to the tender mercies of Arkali Khan, who was fettered by none of his father's
        scruples.
         Firuz Shah’s solitary departure from his policy of leniency was
        unfortunate. A religious leader named Sidi Maula, originally a disciple of Shaikh Farid-ud-din Ganj-i-Shakar of Pak Pattan or Ajudhan had, in 1291,
        been established for some time at Delhi, where his mode of life attracted
        general attention. He accepted neither an allowance from the state nor
        offerings from disciples or admirers, but all might enjoy at the hospice which
        he had built for himself the most lavish hospitality. His wealth was attributed
        by the vulgar to his discovery of the philosopher's stone, but it has been
        suggested that he was a patron and a pensioner of the Thags. The most frequent guests
        at his private table were the Khan Khanan and some of
        the old nobles of Balban’s court, who had enrolled themselves as his disciples,
        and their meetings naturally attracted suspicion. It was discovered, one
        historian says, by Firuz himself, who attended a meeting in disguise, that
        there was a plot to raise Sidi Maula to the throne as Caliph, and he and his principal disciples were arrested.
        Scruples, suggested by the theologians, regarding the legality of the ordeal by
        fire, disappointed the populace of a spectacle, and Sidi Maula was brought before Firuz, who condescended to
        bandy words with him and, losing his temper in the controversy, turned, in the
        spirit of Henry II of England, to some fanatics of another sect and exclaimed,
        “Will none of you do justice for me on this saint?” One of the wretches sprang
        upon Sidi Maula, slashed
        him several times with a razor, and stabbed him with a packing-needle. Arkali Khan finished the business by bringing up an
        elephant, which trampled the victim to death. One of those dust-storms which,
        in northern India, darken the noonday sun immediately arose and was attributed
        by the superstitious to the divine wrath, as was also a more serious calamity,
        the failure of the seasonal rains, which caused a famine so acute that bands of
        hungry and desperate wretches are said to have drowned themselves in the Jumna.
        Shortly after the execution of Sidi Maula the suspiciously opportune death of the Khan Khanan, his principal disciple, was announced, and Arkali Khan became heir-apparent and remained at Delhi as
        regent while his father led an expedition against Ranthambhor. On his way he
        captured the fortress and laid waste the district of Jhain,
        but a reconnaissance of Ranthambhor convinced him that the place could not be
        taken without losses which he was not prepared to risk, and he returned to Delhi
        to endure another lecture from his outspoken cousin, Ahmad Chap, to whose just
        strictures he could oppose no better argument than that he valued each hair of
        a true believer's head more than a hundred such fortresses as Ranthambhor.
         
         Designs of Alauddin. Invasion of the Deccan 
         In 1292 a horde of Moguls between 100,000 and 150,000 strong, under the
        command of a grandson of Hulagu, invaded India and penetrated as far as Sunam, where it was met by Firuz. The advanced guard of the
        invaders suffered a severe defeat and they readily agreed to the king’s terms.
        Their army was to be permitted to leave India unmolested, but Ulghu, a
        descendant of Chingiz, and other officers, with their contingents, accepted
        Islam and entered the service of Firuz, who gave to Ulghu a daughter in
        marriage. The converts settled in the suburbs of Delhi and though many, after a
        few years’ experience of the Indian climate, returned to their homes, a large
        number remained and become known, like their predecessors, as the New Muslims. The
        recapture of Mandawar from the Hindus and a raid into the Jhain district completed the tale of Firuz Shah’s activities in 1292, but in the same
        year his nephew Ala-ud-din,
        having received permission to invade Wawa, captured the town of Bhilsa, whence he brought much plunder to Delhi, and
        received as a reward the great fief of Oudh, in addition to that of Kara. Nor
        was this all that he gained by his enterprise, for he had heard at Bhilsa of the wealth of the great southern kingdom of
        Deogir, which extended over the western Deccan, and his imagination had been
        fired by dreams of southern conquest. Without mentioning these designs to his
        uncle he took advantage of his indulgent mood to obtain from him permission to
        raise additional troops for the purpose of annexing Chanderi and other fertile districts of Malwa.
         At this period two Hindu kingdoms existed in the Deccan, as distinct
        from the Peninsula; Deogir in the west and Warangal or Telingana in the east. The former was ruled by Ramachandra, the seventh of the northern
        Yadava dynasty, and the latter by Rudramma Devi,
        widow of Ganpati, fifth raja of the Kakatiya dynasty.
         On his return from Delhi Ala-ud-din made preparations for his great enterprise, and,
        having appointed Malik Alaul-Mulk his deputy in Kara,
        with instructions to supply the king with such periodical bulletins of news as
        would allay any anxiety or suspicion, set out in 1294 at the head of seven or
        eight thousand horse. After marching for two months by devious and unfrequented
        tracks he arrived at Ellichpur in Berar, where he
        explained his presence and secured himself from molestation by letting it be
        understood that he was a discontented noble of Delhi on his way to seek service
        at Rajamahendri (Rajahmundry) in southern Telingana. After a halt of two days he continued his march
        towards Deogir, where fortune favored him. Ramachandra was taken by surprise
        and the greater part of his army was absent with his wife and his eldest son,
        Shankar, who were performing a pilgrimage, but he collected two or three
        thousand troops and met the invader at Lasura, twelve
        miles from the city. He was defeated and compelled to seek the protection of
        his citadel, which he hastily provisioned with sacks taken from a large caravan
        passing through the city, only to discover, when it was too late, that the
        sacks contained salt instead of grain. Meanwhile Ala-ud-din, who now gave out that his troops were but the
        advanced guard of an army of 20,000 horse, which was following him closely,
        plundered the city and the royal stables, from which he obtained thirty or
        forty elephants and some thousands of horse, and Ramachandra sued for peace. Ala-ud-din agreed to desist from
        hostilities on condition of retaining what plunder he had and of extorting what
        more he could from the citizens. He collected over 1400 pounds of gold and a
        great quantity of pearls and rich stuffs, and prepared to depart on the
        fifteenth day after his arrival, but Shankar, who had heard of the attack on
        Deogir, had hastened back, and arrived within six miles of the city as Ala-ud-din was starting on his
        homeward march. His father in vain implored him not to break faith with the
        invaders and he marched to attack them. Ala-ud-din detached Malik Nusrat,
        with a thousand horse, to watch the city and himself turned to meet Shankar. He
        was on the point of being overwhelmed by the superior numbers of the Hindus
        when Malik Nusrat came to his relief. His force was
        taken for the army of which Ala-ud-din
        had boasted and the Hindus broke and fled in confusion. Ala-ud-din now again invested the citadel and treated his
        captives and the citizens with great severity, and the garrison, on discovering
        that the place had been provisioned with salt instead of grain, was obliged to
        sue humbly for peace. Ala-ud-din’s
        terms were now naturally harder than at first, and he demanded the cession of
        the province of Ellichpur, which was to be
        administered at his convenience and for his benefit either by Ramachandra’s
        officers or his own, and the payment of an extravagant indemnity, amounting to
        17,250 pounds of gold, 200 pounds of pearls, 58 pounds of other gems, 28,250
        pounds of silver, and 1000 pieces of silk.
         The booty was enormous, but it was the reward of an exploit as daring
        and impudent as any recorded in history. Ala-ud-din’s objective, the capital of a powerful kingdom, was
        separated from his base by a march of two months through unknown regions
        inhabited by peoples little likely to be otherwise than hostile. He knew not
        what forces might oppose his advance, and he was unable to secure his retreat,
        which, by reason of the wealth which he carried with him, was more perilous
        than his advance, but fortune befriended him and his own resourcefulness and
        high courage sustained him, and he reached Kara safely with all his treasure.
         His lieutenant at Kara had succeeded, by means of false and temporizing
        messages, in explaining to the satisfaction of the doting Firuz the absence of
        reports from his nephew. The king’s advisers were less credulous, but were
        unable to shake his confidence in Alauddin, whom he
        loved, he said, as a son.
         Late in the year 1295 Firuz went on a hunting tour to Gwalior and there
        learned that his nephew was returning from the south to Kara, laden with such
        spoils as had never been seen at Delhi. The news delighted him, and he debated
        whether he should return to Delhi to await Ala-ud-din’s arrival, remain at Gwalior to receive him, or
        advance to meet him. Ahmad Chap, without pretending to conceal his suspicions,
        advocated the last course, which would take the ambitious adventurer by
        surprise, and bring him to his knees, but Firuz rebuked him for his jealousy of Ala-ud-din, whereupon Ahmad
        Chip struck his hands together in despair and left the council chamber,
        exclaiming, “If you return to Delhi you slay us with your own hand”.'
         
         The Khaljis 
         Ala-ud-din was well served at court by his brother Ulugh Khan,
        who exerted such influence over Firuz that he refused to listen to any
        warnings, and who kept his brother informed of all that passed at court. It was
        by his advice that Ala-ud-din
        assumed an attitude of apprehensive penitence, declaring that his actions and
        designs had been so misrepresented that he feared to appear at court. Ulugh
        Khan drew a pitiable picture of his brother's fear and anxiety and so worked on
        his uncle's feelings by describing his hesitation between taking poison and
        fleeing to a distant country that he persuaded the old man to visit Kara in
        person, and himself carried to Ala-ud-din the assurance of his uncle's forgiveness and the
        news of his approaching visit.
         Firuz, disregarding the warnings of his counselors, set out from Delhi
        and travelled down the Ganges by boat, escorted by his troops, which moved by
        land under the command of Ahmad Chap. Ala-ud-din crossed from Kara to Manikpur and, as the royal
        barge came into sight, drew up his troops under arms and sent his brother to
        lure Firuz into the trap set for him. Ala-ud-din was represented as being still apprehensive and the
        king was implored not to permit his troops to cross to the eastern bank of the
        river, and to dismiss all but a few personal attendants. The murmurs of the
        courtiers were met with the explanation that Ala-ud-din’s troops were drawn up to receive the king with due
        honor, Firuz Shah's complaints of Ala-ud-din’s obstinacy were silenced by the excuse that he was
        occupied in preparing a feast and in arranging his spoils for presentation, and
        Ulugh Khan even persuaded his uncle to order his few personal attendants to lay
        aside their arms. As Firuz landed Ala-ud-din advanced to meet him and bowed to the ground. The
        kindly old man raised him up, embraced him, and chid him for his fears, and then took his hand and led him towards the boat, still
        speaking affectionately to him. Ala-ud-din gave a preconcerted signal
        and one of his companions, Muhammad Salim, struck two
        blows at the king with a sword, wounding him with the second. Firuz attempted
        to run towards his boat, crying “Ala-ud-din, wretch, what have you done?” But another assassin,
        Ikhtiyar-ud-din, came up behind him, struck him down,
        severed his head from his body, and presented it to Ala-ud-din. The few attendants of the king were murdered and
        the royal umbrella was raised above the head of Ala-ud-din, who was proclaimed king in his camp on July 19,
        1296. The unnatural wretch caused the head of his uncle and benefactor to be
        placed on a spear and carried through Manikpur and Kara, and afterwards through
        Ajodhya. The faithful Ahmad Chap would not acknowledge the usurper but returned
        by forced marches, and led the army, exhausted by a most arduous march in the
        rainy season, into Delhi.
         Ala-ud-din, doubting his power to cope with the adherents of
        Firuz Shah’s lawful heir, was hesitating whether he should march on Delhi or
        retire into Bengal when his difficulty was solved by his old enemy, his
        mother-in-law. Arkali Khan, the heir, was at Multan,
        and Firuz Shah’s widow, “the most foolish of the foolish”, deeming that a king
        de facto was necessary, in such a crisis, to the security of Delhi, proclaimed
        the younger son of Firuz as king, under the title of Rukn-ud-din Ibrahim. Arkali Khan
        sulked at Multan and his partisans at Delhi refused to recognize his brother.
        These divisions encouraged Ala-ud-din
        to march on Delhi and his spoils provided him with the means of conciliating
        the populace. At every stage a balista set up before his tent scattered small gold and
        silver coins among the mob. At Budaun he halted, for an army had been sent from
        Delhi to bar his way, but no battle was fought, for the nobles were lukewarm in
        the cause of Ibrahim and Ala-ud-din’s
        bursting coffers justified a transference of allegiance. He was thus enabled to
        advance on Delhi at the head of an army of 60,000 horse and 60,000 foot, and
        Ibrahim, after a feeble demonstration, fled towards Multan with his mother and
        the faithful Ahmad Chap, and on October 3, 1296, Ala-ud-din was enthroned in the Red Palace of Balban, which he
        made his principal place of residence.
         
         Ala-ud-din’s reign 
         The new king, having gained the throne by an act of treachery and
        ingratitude seldom equaled even in oriental annals, conciliated the populace by
        a lavish distribution of his southern gold, but his example was infectious and
        attempts to follow it disturbed the early years of his reign. These and other
        causes, irruptions of the Moguls and the necessity for subjugating the Hindu
        rulers of Rajputana, Malwa and Gujarat protected the
        Deccan for a while from a second visitation, for the king of Delhi could not
        conduct war after the fashion of the desperate adventurer who had been ready to
        risk all on a single throw.
         Ulugh Khan and Hijabruddin were sent with an
        army of 40,000 to Multan to secure the persons of Arkali Khan, Ibrahim, and their mother. The city surrendered at once and the princes
        and their few remaining adherents fell into the hands of Ulugh Khan, and by the
        king's instructions they, their brother-in-law Ulghu Khan the Mogul and Ahmad
        Chap were blinded when they reached Hansi, and the
        widow of Firuz was kept under close restraint.
         During the early years of his reign Ala-ud-din was ably and faithfully served by four men, his
        brother Ulugh Khan, Nusrat Khan, who was rewarded for
        his services at Deogir with the post of minister, Zafar Khan, who had served him well at Kara, and Alp Khan of Multan. Ala-ul-Mulk, his faithful lieutenant at Kara, received the
        post of Kotwal of Delhi, being now too gross for more active employment.
         Ala-ud-din had been no more than a few months on the throne
        when a large horde of Moguls invaded his kingdom. Zafar Khan, who was sent against them, defeated them with great slaughter near
        Jullundur, and his victory was celebrated with rejoicings at Delhi, but his
        military genius rendered him an object of jealousy and suspicion to his master.
         After the repulse of the Moguls the king considered the case of those
        nobles whom his own bribes had seduced from their allegiance to his
        predecessor. It ill became him to condemn them but it was evident that they
        were not to be trusted, and cupidity and policy pointed in the same direction.
        They were despoiled by degrees, first of their hoards and then of their lands,
        and when nothing else remained they suffered in their persons. Some were put to
        death, some were blinded, and some were imprisoned for life, and the families
        of all were reduced to beggary. All deserved their fate, but none was so guilty
        as he who decided it.
         In 1297 Ala-ud-din
        resolved to undertake the conquest of the Hindu kingdom of Gujarat which,
        though frequently plundered, had never yet been subdued, and had long enjoyed
        immunity, even from raids. Ulugh Khan and Nusrat Khan
        were selected for the task and invested and took its ancient capital,
        Anhilvara, now Patan, captured the wife of raja
        Karan, its ruler, and sent to Delhi as a trophy the idol which had been set up
        at Somnath to replace that destroyed by Mahmud. Raja Karan and his daughter, Deval Devi, fled, and found an asylum for a time with
        Ramachandra of Deogir. Nusrat Khan plundered the
        wealthy merchants of the port of Cambay and obtained, with much other booty, a
        Hindu eunuch nicknamed at first Kafur and afterwards Hazardinari, “the
        thousand dinar Slave” from the price for which he had originally been bought.
        This wretch became successively the king’s vile favorite, lieutenant of the
        kingdom, and, for a short time before and after Ala-ud-din’s death, its ruler.
         After establishing a Muslim government in Gujarat Ulugh Khan and Nusrat Khan set out for Delhi, and at Jalor distributed the plunder taken in the expedition. The allotment of the greater
        part of it caused grave discontent, and the New Muslims mutinied and slew Nusrat Khan’s brother and a nephew of Ala-ud-din. The great drums were sounded, the troops responded
        to the call to arms, and the mutineers, outnumbered, took to flight and were
        pursued with great slaughter. Those who escaped took refuge with various Hindu
        chieftains, principally with Hamir Deo, raja of
        Ranthambhor, but were unable to escape vicarious punishment, for the fierce
        tyrant of Delhi put their wives and families to death in circumstances of
        revolting brutality, and Nusrat Khan avenged his
        brother's death by delivering the wives of the murderers to the embraces of the
        scavengers of Delhi, an unspeakable degradation.
         The historians of India attribute to Ala-ud-din the introduction of the barbarous practice of
        visiting the sins of rebels on the heads of their innocent wives and children;
        but the accusation is not strictly just, for there are instances of the
        practice before his time. It was he, however, who first elevated it into a
        political principle.
         In this year the Moguls again invaded India and took the fortress of Sibi, which Zafar Khan recaptured
        after a short siege, and took their leader with 1700 of his followers and their
        wives and daughters, and sent them to Delhi; but the success was another step
        towards his ruin.
         Hitherto Ala-ud-din
        had prospered in everything to which he had set his hand, and his success had
        turned his brain. He detected an analogy between himself with his four faithful
        servants and the founder of his faith with his four companions and successors,
        Abu Bakr, Usman, Umar, and Ali, and dreamed of
        spiritual as well as material conquests. In the latter he sought to surpass
        Alexander of Macedon and in the former Muhammad. He would ask his boon
        companions, over the wine-cups, why he should not surpass both. His suggestion
        that he should declare himself a prophet was received in silence by his
        associates but his proposal to emulate Alexander was applauded.
         These projects had been considered at the royal symposia for some time
        before Ala-ul-Mulk the Kotwal, who by reason of his
        corpulence was excused from attendance at court oftener than once a month, was
        commanded to deliver his opinion upon them. After demanding that the wine
        should be removed and that all but the king's most intimate associates should
        withdraw he deprecated Ala-ud-din’s
        wrath and proceeded to speak his mind. Innovations in religion; he said, were
        for prophets, and not for kings. Their success depended not on might, nor on
        power, but on the will of the Lord of Hosts. It was useless for a king, however
        great, to attempt the foundation of a new religion, for unless he were truly
        inspired of God he would not long be able to deceive himself, much less the
        world.
         Ala-ud-din remained for some time sunk in thought, and at
        length, raising his head, acknowledged the justice of the rebuke and declared
        that he had abandoned his impious design. Against the second project Ala-ul-Mulk had no moral objections to urge, but he
        observed that a great part of India remained yet unconquered, that the land
        was a constant prey to marauding Moguls, that there was no Aristotle to govern
        the realm in the king’s absence and that there were no officers to whom the
        government of conquered kingdoms could be entrusted. Waxing bolder he exhorted Ala-ud-din to avoid excess in
        wine, and to devote less of his time to the chase and more to public business.
        The king professed himself grateful for this candid advice and generously
        rewarded his honest counselor, but he could not forgo the petty vanity of
        describing himself on his coins as “the Second Alexander”.
         In 1299 an army of 200,000 Moguls under Qutlugh Khvaja invaded India. Their object on this occasion was conquest, not plunder; they
        marched from the Indus to the neighborhood of Delhi without molesting the
        inhabitants, encamped on the banks of the Jumna, and prepared to invest the
        city. Refugees from the surrounding country filled the mosques, streets, and
        bazaars, supplies were intercepted by the invaders, and famine was imminent.
        The king appointed Ala-ul-Mulk to the government of
        the city and led his army out to the suburb of Siri,
        where he summoned his nobles to join him. The timid Kotwal ventured to resume the
        character of adviser, and implored Ala-ud-din to temporize with the Moguls instead of risking all
        by attacking them at once, but the king refused, in his own phrase, to sit on
        his eggs like a hen. “Man” he said, with good-humored contempt, to the unwieldy Kotwal,
        “you are but a scribe, the son of a scribe; what should you know of war?” On
        the morrow he attacked the Moguls. The bold and impetuous Zafar Khan charged the enemy's left with such vigor that he drove it before him and
        pursued it until he was lost to the sight of the rest of the army. Other bodies
        of the enemy turned and followed him, so that he was surrounded and slain,
        after refusing to surrender. Even in this moment of peril Ala-ud-din and Ulugh Khan saw with satisfaction that the object
        of their jealousy had rushed to certain death, made no attempt to support or
        succor him, and contented themselves with a languid demonstration against the
        diminished army which remained opposed to them; but the valor of Zafar Khan had so impressed the invaders that they
        retreated precipitately in the night, and when the sun rose Ala-ud-din, finding that they had decamped, returned to Delhi,
        hardly less thankful for the death of Zafar Khan than
        for the flight of the enemy. It is said that the name of Zafar Khan was for some years afterwards used by the Moguls as that of Richard of
        England is said to have been used by the Saracens of Palestine, and that they
        would urge their weary beasts to drink by asking whether they had seen Zafar Khan, that they feared to slake their thirst.
         
         The rebellion of Akat Khan 
         The strength of Ranthambhor, formerly an outpost of the Muslims, but
        long since a stronghold of the Hindus, had defied Balban’s arms and daunted
        Firuz; its ruler, Hamir Deo, who boasted descent from
        Prithvi Raj, had recently insulted Ala-ud-din by harboring the rebellious New Muslims, and the
        king resolved to punish him. Ulugh Khan and Nusrat Khan were sent against him and, having first reduced Jhain,
        encamped before Ranthambhor. The death of Nusrat Khan, who was slain by a stone from a balista, discouraged the army, and a sortie by Hamir Deo drove Ulugh Khan back to Jhain. Ala-ud-din marched from
        Delhi to his aid but halted for some days at Tilpat to enjoy his favorite recreation, the chase. After a long day’s sport he and
        his small escort were benighted at a distance from his camp, and when he rose
        in the morning he ordered his men to drive some game towards him while he
        awaited it, seated on a stool. His absence had caused some anxiety, and as he
        awaited the game his brother’s son, Akat Khan,
        arrived in search of him with a hundred horse, New Muslims of his own retinue. Akat Khan’s ambition was suddenly kindled by the sight of
        his uncle’s defenseless condition and he ordered his Mogul archers to draw
        their bows on him. The king defended himself bravely, using his stool as a
        shield, and a faithful slave named Manik stood before
        him and intercepted the arrows, but he was wounded in the arm and fell. Some
        foot soldiers of his escort ran up and, drawing their swords, stood round him,
        crying out that he was dead. Akat Khan, without
        waiting to ascertain whether they spoke the truth, galloped back to the camp,
        announced that he had slain Ala-ud-din,
        and demanded the allegiance of the army. He held a hurried and informal court,
        at which some officers rashly came forward and offered him their
        congratulations, but when he attempted to enter the harem the more cautious
        guards refused to admit him until he should produce his uncle’s head.
         In the meantime stray horsemen, to the number of sixty or seventy, had
        gathered round Ala-ud-din
        and dressed his wounds, and on his way towards the camp he was joined by other
        small bodies of horse, which brought his numbers up to five or six hundred.
        Ascending a knoll he caused the royal umbrella to be raised over his head, and
        the sight drew the troops and the courtiers out to join him. Akat Khan, finding himself deserted, fled, but was pursued,
        taken, and beheaded. The tedium of Ala-ud-din’s convalescence was alleviated by the punishment of Akat Khan’s associates, who were put to death with torture,
        and when he had recovered he marched on to Ranthambhor, where Ulugh Khan,
        encouraged by the news of his approach, had already opened the siege.
         While the siege was in progress news reached him that his sister’s sons,
        Amir Umar and Mangu Khan, had raised the standard of
        revolt in Budaun and Oudh, but loyal fief-holders speedily overpowered and
        captured the young men, and sent them to their uncle, in whose presence their
        eyes were cut out.
         This rebellion had hardly been suppressed when a serious revolt in the
        capital was reported. Ala-ul-Mulk, the fat Kotwal, was now
        dead, and the oppressive behavior of his successor, Tarmadi,
        aroused the resentment of the populace, who found a willing leader in the
        person of Haji Maula, an old officer who resented his
        supersession by Tarmadi. Encouraged by rumors of
        discontent in the army before Ranthambhor he assembled a number of dismissed
        and discontented members of the city police and others, and by exhibiting to
        them a forged decree purporting to bear the royal seal, induced them to join
        him in attacking Tarmadi. On reaching his house they
        found that he, like most Muslims in the city, was asleep, for the faithful were
        keeping the annual fast, which fell in that year in May and June, the hottest
        months of summer. He was called forth on the pretext of urgent business from
        the camp, and was at once seized and beheaded. The crowd which had been
        attracted by the disturbance was satisfied by the exhibition of the forged
        decree, and Haji Maula, having caused the gates of
        the city to be shut, attempted to deal with Ayaz, the Kotwal of Siri, as he had dealt with Tarmadi,
        but Ayaz had heard of Tarmadi’s fate, and refused to be inveigled from the fortress of Siri.
        Haji Maula then marched to the Red Palace, released
        all the prisoners, broke into the treasury, and distributed bags of money among
        his followers. He seized an unfortunate Sayyid, with
        the suggestive name of Shahinshah, who happened to be
        descended through his mother from Iltutmish, enthroned him nolens volens, and, dragging the leading men of
        the city by force from their houses, compelled them to make obeisance to the
        puppet. The dregs of the populace, lured by the hope of plunder, swelled the
        ranks of the rebels, but the more respectable citizens halted between the fear
        of present violence and the apprehension of the royal vengeance. In the seven
        or eight days during which Delhi was in the hands of the rebels, several
        reports of their proceedings reached Ala-ud-din, but he set his face, concealed the news from his
        army, and continued the siege.
         On the third or fourth day after the rebellion had broken out Malik
        Hamid-ud-din, entitled Amir-i-Kuh, assembled his sons and relations, forced the western
        gate of the city, marched through to the Bhandarkal gate and there maintained himself against the determined attacks of the rebels.
        His small force was gradually swelled by the adhesion of some loyal citizens,
        and by a reinforcement of troops from some of the districts near the capital,
        and he sallied forth from his quarters at the Bhandarkal gate, defeated the rebels, and slew Haji Maula with
        his own hand. The troops recaptured the Red Palace, beheaded the unfortunate Sayyid, and sent his head to the royal camp. Ala-ud-din still remained before
        Ranthambhor but sent Ulugh Khan to Delhi to see that order was thoroughly
        restored.
         
         Fall of Ranthambhor 
         These successive rebellions convinced Ala-ud-din that something was wrong in his system of
        administration, and after taking counsel with his intimate advisers he traced
        them to four causes:
         1.-The neglect of espionage,
        which left him ignorant of the condition, the doings, and the aspirations of
        his people;
         2.-The general use of wine, which, by loosening the tongue and raising
        the spirits, bred plots and treason;
         3.-Frequent intermarriages, between the families of the nobles which, by
        fostering intimacy and reciprocal hospitality, afforded opportunities for
        conspiracy; and
         4.-The general prosperity which, by relieving many of the necessity for
        working for their bread, left them leisure for idle thoughts and mischievous
        designs.
         He resolved to remedy these matters on his return, and in the meantime
        brought the siege of Ranthambhor to a successful conclusion. Hamir Deo, the New Muslims who had found an asylum with
        him, and his minister, Ranmal, who had, with many
        other Hindus, deserted him during the siege and joined Ala-ud-din, were put to death. It was characteristic of Ala-ud-din to avail himself of
        the services of traitors and then to punish them for the treason by which he
        had profited. After appointing officers to the government of Ranthambhor he
        returned to Delhi to find that his brother Ulugh Khan, who had been making
        preparations for an expedition to the Deccan, had just died.
         Ala-ud-din now addressed himself, in accordance with the
        decision at which he had arrived, to the enactment of laws for the prevention
        of rebellion, and, with the severity which was part of his nature, framed
        regulations which might have been designed to punish actual rather than
        forestall potential rebels. Private property was the first institution which he
        attacked, and he began by confiscating all religious endowments and all grants
        of rent-free land, both of which supported numbers of useless idlers.
        Tax-collectors were appointed and were instructed to extort gold, on any
        pretext that could be devised, from all who possessed it. The result of this
        ordinance, as described by the contemporary historian, was that gold was not to
        be found save in the houses of the great nobles, the officers of state, and the
        wealthiest merchants, and that excepting lands of an annual rental of a few
        thousand tangas in the neighborhood of Delhi all rent-free grants in the kingdom were resumed.
         The second ordinance established an army of informers, whose business it
        was to spy upon all and to report to the king anything deemed of sufficient
        importance for his ear. Everything which passed in the houses of the nobles and
        officers of state was known, and was reported the morning after its occurrence,
        until the victims of the system hardly dared to converse in open spaces
        otherwise than by signs. Even the gossip and transactions of the market place
        reached the king's ear.
         By the third ordinance the use of intoxicating liquor and drugs was
        prohibited, and those who used them were banished from the city, thrown into
        prison, or heavily fined. The king himself set the example of obedience by
        causing his wine vessels to be broken and the wine to be poured out near the
        Budaun gate, but the habit could not be eradicated. Stills were set up in
        private houses and liquor was distilled and sold in secret, or smuggled into
        the city on pack animals, under other merchandise, but the system of espionnage made
        all attempts at evasion dangerous, and many were compelled to cross the Jumna
        and travel twenty or twenty-five miles to satisfy their craving, for the
        suburbs were as closely watched as the city itself. Offenders were cruelly
        flogged and confined in pits so noisome that many died in their fetid and
        polluted atmosphere, and those who were dragged forth alive escaped only with
        constitutions permanently shattered. At length Ala-ud-din learnt that the use of intoxicants cannot be
        prevented by legislation, and the ordinance was so far relaxed as to permit the
        private manufacture and consumption of strong drink, but its sale and
        convivial use remained forbidden.
         The fourth ordinance prohibited social gatherings in the houses of the
        nobles and marriages between members of their families without special
        permission. Fear of the informers ensured obedience, and even at court the
        nobles were so closely watched that they dared not exchange whispered
        complaints of the tyranny under which they lived.
         Ala-ud-din next framed a special code of laws against Hindus,
        who were obnoxious to him partly by reason of their faith, partly by reason of
        the wealth which many of them enjoyed, and partly by reason of their
        turbulence, especially in the Doab. The Hindu hereditary officials enjoyed a
        percentage on revenue collections and the wealthier
        Hindus and those of the higher castes were inclined to shift to the shoulders
        of their poorer brethren the burdens which they should themselves have borne.
        All this was now changed, and it was decreed that all should pay in proportion
        to their incomes, but that to none was to be left sufficient to enable him to
        ride on a horse, to carry arms, to wear rich clothes, or to enjoy any of the
        luxuries of life. The government's share of the land was fixed at half the
        gross produce, and heavy grazing dues were levied on cattle, sheep, and goats.
        The officials and clerks appointed to administer these harsh laws were closely
        watched, and any attempt to defraud the revenue was severely punished. Hindus
        throughout the kingdom were reduced to one dead level of poverty and misery,
        or, if there were one class more to be pitied than another, it was that which
        had formerly enjoyed the most esteem, the hereditary assessors and collectors
        of the revenue. Deprived of their emoluments, but not relieved of their duties,
        these poor wretches were herded together in droves, with ropes round their
        necks, and hauled, with kicks and blows, to the villages where their services
        were required. The Muslim officials, under Sharaf Qai, the new minister of finance, earned the hatred of all
        classes, and were so despised that no man would give his daughter in marriage
        to one of them. This measure of Ala-ud-din's is remarkable as one of the very few instances, if
        not the only instance, except the jizya, or poll-tax, of legislation specially directed
        against the Hindus.
         It was not until these repressive and vexatious laws were in full
        operation that Ala-ud-din,
        disturbed possibly by murmurs which had reached his ears, began to entertain
        doubts of their consonance with the Islamic law, and sought the opinion of Qazi Mughis-ud-din of Bayana, one of
        the few ecclesiastics who still frequented the court, on the ordinances and
        other questions. The fearless and conscientious qazi replied that an order for
        his instant execution would save both time and trouble, as he could not consent
        to spare the king’s feelings at the expense of his own conscience, but, on
        being reassured, delivered his opinion on the questions propounded to him. The
        first was the persecution of the Hindus, which he pronounced to be not only
        lawful, but less rigorous than the treatment sanctioned by the sacred law for
        misbelievers. The apportionment of the plunder of Deogir was a more delicate
        question, and though Ala-ud-din
        defended himself by maintaining that the enterprise had been all his own, and
        that nobody had even heard the name of Deogir until he had resolved to attack
        it, the qazi insisted that he had sinned in appropriating the whole of the plunder and in
        depriving both the army and the public treasury of their share. Last came the
        question of the cruel punishments decreed for various offences, and the qazi rose from
        his seat, retired to the place reserved for suppliants, touched the ground with
        his forehead, and cried: “Your Majesty may slay me or blind me, but I declare
        that all these punishments are unlawful and unauthorized, either by the sacred
        traditions or by the writings of orthodox jurists”. Ala-ud-din, who had displayed some heat in the discussion, rose
        and retired without a word, and the qazi went home, set his affairs in order, bade his family
        farewell, and prepared for death. To his surprise he was well received at court
        on the following day. The king commended his candor, rewarded him with a
        thousand tangas,
        and condescended to explain that although he desired to rule his people in
        accordance with the Islamic law their turbulence and disobedience compelled him
        to resort to punishments of his own devising.
         During the winter of 1302-03 Ala-ud-din marched into the country of the Rajputs,
        and without much difficulty captured Chitor and carried the Rana, Ratan Singh, a prisoner to Delhi. At the same time he
        dispatched an expedition under the command of Chhajju, nephew and successor of Nusrat Khan, from Kara into Telingana.
        For some obscure reason this expedition marched on Warangal, the capital of the
        Kakatiya rajas, by the then unexplored eastern route, through Bengal and
        Orissa. Unfortunately no detailed account of the march has been preserved, but
        the expedition was a failure. The army reached Warangal, or its neighborhood,
        but was demoralized by the hardships which it had endured in heavy rain on
        difficult roads, and, after suffering a defeat, lost most of its baggage, camp
        equipage, and material of war and returned to Kara in disorder.
         
         Mogul Invasion 
         The Moguls had missed the opportunity offered by the siege of
        Ranthambhor and the simultaneous disorders of the kingdom, but the news of Ala-ud-din’s departure for
        Chitor, the siege of which appeared likely to be protracted, encouraged them to
        make another attempt on Delhi, and Targhi, their
        chief; led an army of 120,000 into India and encamped on the Jumna, in the
        neighborhood of the capital, but Ala-ud-din had already returned from Chitor. He had lost many
        horses and much material of war in the siege and during his retirement, the
        army of Kara was so disorganized by the unsuccessful campaign in Telingana that before it could reach Baran and Koil the
        Moguls had closed the southern and eastern approaches to the capital, and the
        movements of the invaders had been so rapid that they were threatening the city
        before the great fief-holders could join the king with their contingents. He
        was thus unable to take the field and retired into his fortress of Siri, where he was beleaguered for two months, while the
        Moguls plundered the surrounding country and even made raids into the streets
        of Delhi. Their sudden and unexpected retreat, attributed by the pious to the
        prayers of holy men, was probably due to their inexperience of regular sieges,
        the gradual assembly of reinforcements, and the devastation of the country,
        which obliged them to divide their forces to a dangerous degree in their search
        for supplies.
         This heavy and humiliating blow finally diverted Ala-ud-din’s attention from vague and extravagant designs of
        conquest to the protection of the kingdom which he had so nearly lost. On his
        north-western frontier and between it and the capital he repaired all old
        fortresses, even the most important of which had long been shamefully
        neglected, built and garrisoned new ones, and devised a scheme for increasing
        largely the strength of his army. This was no easy matter, for his subjects
        were already taxed almost to the limit of their endurance, but he overcame the
        difficulty by means of his famous edicts which, by arbitrarily fixing the
        prices of all commodities, from the simple necessaries of life to slaves,
        horses, arms, silks and stuffs, enabled him to reduce the soldier’s pay without
        causing hardship or discontent, for the prices of necessaries and of most
        luxuries were reduced in proportion. Strange as the expedient may appear to a
        modern economist, it was less unreasonable than it seems, for the treasure
        which he had brought from the south and had so lavishly distributed had
        cheapened inflated prices. The fall in the purchasing value of however, in
        those days of defective and imperfect port and communication, largely
        restricted to the suburban area, which were the centre of wealth to a degree
        hardly comprehensible by those who use railways. Nevertheless, so drastic a
        measure necessarily met with much opposition, which Ala-ud-din overcame, in the case of the grain-merchants, by
        prohibiting the purchase of grain elsewhere than at the state granaries, until
        the merchants were fain to agree to sell their stocks at a rate lower than
        originally fixed, and after surmounting a few initial difficulties he was able
        to maintain, through good years and bad, and without any real hardship to
        sellers, the scale of prices fixed by him. In the districts around the capital
        the land revenue was collected in kind, so that when scarcity threatened, in
        spite of edicts, to enhance prices, the king was enabled to flood the market
        with his own grain, and in the provinces the governors possessed the same
        power.
         These measures, crude as was the conception of political economy on
        which they were based, attained so well the object at which they aimed that Ala-ud-din was able to raise and
        maintain a standing army of nearly half a million horse. Nevertheless in 1304 a
        horde of Moguls invaded India under Ali Beg, a descendant of Chingiz, and
        another leader, whose name is variously given. The invasion was a mere raid,
        undertaken with no idea of conquest. The Moguls evaded the frontier garrisons
        and marched in a southeasterly direction, following the line of the Himalaya
        until they reached the neighborhood of Amroha, plundering, slaying, ravishing,
        and burning as they advanced. The king sent the eunuch Kafur Hazardinari,
        who was already in high favor, and Malik Ghiyas-ud-din Tughluq, master of the horse, against them. These
        two commanders intercepted them on their homeward journey, when they were
        burdened with plunder, and defeated them. The two leaders and 8000 others were
        taken alive and sent to Delhi, together with 20,000 horses which the invaders
        had collected. Ala-ud-din
        held a court in the open air, beyond the walls of the city, and the two chiefs
        were trampled to death by elephants in view of the people. The other prisoners
        were decapitated and their heads were built into the walls of the fortress of
        Sin, where the king habitually dwelt.
         As a reward for his success on this occasion Tughluq was appointed, in
        1305, governor of the Punjab, and at the same time Alp Khan was made governor
        of Gujarat, and Ain-ul-Mulk, governor of Multan, was sent on an expedition to Jalor and to Ujjain and Chanderi in Malwa. As he advanced into Malwa the raja Koka, or Haranand, came forth at the head of an army of 40,000
        horse and 100,000 foot to oppose him. The armies met on December 9, and the
        Hindus, after a determined resistance, were routed. This victory, the news of
        which was received with great joy at Delhi, made the Muslims masters of Ujjain, Mandu, Dhar, and Chanderi, and so impressed Kaner Deo, the Chauhan raja of Jalor, that he accompanied
        Ain-ul-Mulk on his return to Delhi and swore allegiance to Ala-ud-din.
         The Rana had been imprisoned at Delhi ever
        since the fall of Chitor, two years before this time, and was so weary of his
        confinement that when Ala-ud-din
        demanded of him the surrender of his beautiful wife Padmani as the price of his
        liberty he was disposed to comply. His thakurs, or nobles, who were wandering as outlaws in the
        hills and jungles of Mewar, heard of his intention
        and sent him messages beseeching him not to disgrace the name of Rajput. They
        offered to send him poison, which would enable him to avert dishonor, but the
        fertile brain of his daughter devised a scheme for restoring him to liberty
        without the sacrifice of his honor or his life. He and his nobles were to feign
        compliance with the demand, and a train of litters, ostensibly containing the Rana’s wife and her retinue, but filled with armed men, was
        to be sent to Delhi, escorted by a large force of horse and foot. The cavalcade
        reached Ratan Singh’s prison in safety, the armed men
        sprang from their litters, slew the guards, and carried off their master.
        Bodies of Rajputs had been posted at intervals along
        the road to cover his flight, and though they were defeated one by one they so
        delayed the pursuers that Ratan Singh reached his
        country in safety and assembled in the hills a force which enabled him to raid
        even the environs of Chitor. Ala-ud-din
        avenged his discomfiture by removing from the government of Chitor his own son, Khizr Khan, an indolent and self-indulgent youth, and
        appointing in his place Ratan Singh’s sister’s son Arsi, who had entered his service, and thus sowed the seeds
        of dissension among the Rajputs. Many of the thakurs transferred their allegiance from Ratan Singh who had
        forfeited their respect, to Arsi, who remained loyal
        to Ala-ud-din and until his
        death attended regularly at court to present his tribute.
         
         Capture of Deval Dag 
         In 1306 the Moguls invaded India to avenge Ali Beg. A horde under Kabk crossed the Indus near Multan, marched towards the
        Himalaya, plundered the country, and was returning homewards in the hot weather
        when it found the passage of the Indus barred by a large army under Tughluq, who
        now bore the title of Ghazi Malik. Faint and weary, and well-nigh perishing for
        want of water, they were compelled to attack the foe who stood in their path,
        and of fifty or sixty thousand no more than three or four thousand escaped. Kabk and many others were taken alive and carried by Ghazi
        Malik to Delhi, where they were thrown under the feet of elephants. Traces of
        the column built of their heads on the plain outside the Budaun gate are said
        to have been visible more than two hundred and fifty years later, in the reign
        of Akbar. Their wives and children were sold as slaves in Delhi and in the
        principal cities of northern India. During Ala-ud-din’s reign the Moguls only once again ventured to
        invade his kingdom. In 1307-08 a chieftain named Iqbalmand led a horde across the Indus and was defeated and slain. The captives were, as
        usual, sent to Delhi and crushed to death, and this last defeat deterred the
        barbarians from invading India until the disorders arising from the
        misgovernment of Ala-ud-din's
        son, Qutb-ud-din Mubarak,
        invited their aggression.
         In 1306-07 Ala-ud-din
        observed that Ramachandra of Deogir had for three successive years failed to
        remit to Delhi the revenues of the Ellichpur province, and a large army was sent under the command of Kafur Hazardinari,
        now entitled Malik Naib, or lieutenant of the
        kingdom, to punish his negligence and reduce him to obedience. The expedition
        had a secondary object. The wife of raja Karan of Gujarat, Kamala Devi, longed
        for the society of her daughter, Deval Devi, who had
        been carried off by her father to Deogir, and Malik Naib was instructed to secure her and bring her to Delhi.
         Karan, after his flight from Gujarat, had not remained an idle guest at
        Ramachandra’s court, but had rebuilt the town and fortress of Nandurbar and ruled, as Ramachandra’s vassal, a small
        principality. Malik Naib passed through Malwa and
        entered the Deccan, and Alp Khan, governor of Gujarat, who had been ordered to
        cooperate with him, attacked Karan, who for two months offered a most determined
        resistance.
         Shankar Deo, the eldest son of Ramachandra, had for some time been a
        suitor for the hand of Deval Devi, but Karan’s Rajput
        pride would not consent to his daughter's union with one whom he stigmatized as
        a Maratha. Shankar took advantage of Karan's difficulties to renew his suit,
        and sent his younger brother Bhim Deo with an escort to convey Deval Devi to Deogir. Karan could not but prefer for his
        daughter an alliance with the Yadava prince to captivity with the unclean
        foreigners, and surrendered her to Bhim Deo, who carried her off towards
        Deogir.
         Alp Khan, ignorant of Deval Devi’s departure,
        attempted to capture her by overwhelming her father with his whole force,
        defeated him, and pursued him towards Deogir. In the neighborhood of that
        fortress he granted leave to three or four hundred of his men to visit the
        wonderful cave temples of Ellora, situated in the
        hills above the town. While they were inspecting the temples they perceived,
        marching towards them, a Hindu force which they suspected of the intention of
        cutting them off, and accordingly received with a flight of arrows. The force
        was, in fact, Deval Devi’s escort, commanded by Bhim
        Deo, and one of the arrows wounded the horse on which the princess rode. As the
        pursuers came up with her her attendants revealed her
        identity and besought them to respect her honor. She was at once escorted to
        Alp Khan, who retired to Gujarat and dispatched her thence to Delhi, where she
        rejoined her mother and was married, in the summer of 1307, to Khizr Khan, the king's eldest son. The story of their loves
        is told by Amir Khusrav in a long poem. The enmity between Malik Naib and Alp Khan, which had fatal results for the latter
        at the end of the reign, undoubtedly arose from his forestalling the eunuch on
        this occasion.
         Malik Naib obviated any future default in the
        remittance of the revenues of Ellichpur by appointing
        Muslim officers to administer the province, and advanced to Deogir, where
        Ramachandra, profiting by past experience, was prepared to make his submission.
        Leaving his son Shankar Deo in the citadel he went forth with his principal
        officers of state to make obeisance to the king’s representative. He was
        courteously received and was sent to Delhi with a letter of recommendation from
        Malik Naib. The gifts which he offered in place of
        the arrears of tribute due from him and as a peace offering included 700
        elephants, and the king, with a generosity which was attributed to a
        superstitious regard for Deogir and its ruler as the origin of his wealth and
        power, freely pardoned him, bestowed on him the title of Rai-i-Rayan (Chief of chiefs) and
        appointed him to the government of Deogir as a vassal of Delhi.
         While Malik Naib was engaged in restoring
        Muslim supremacy in the Deccan an army from Delhi was besieging Siwana in Marwar, described
        later, in the Ain-i-Akbari,
        as one of the most important strongholds in India. The siege progressed
        languidly until Ala-ud-din
        himself appeared on the scene and infused such vigor into the operations that Sital Deo, the raja, sued for peace. In order to escape the
        humiliation of appearing before his conqueror as a suppliant he caused a golden
        image of himself to be made and sent it, with a hundred elephants and many
        other gifts to Ala-ud-din,
        but he was disappointed, for the king retained all the gifts and returned a
        message to the effect that no overtures would be considered until Sital Deo made them in person. After his submission Ala-ud-din parceled out Marwar among his own nobles and swept the fort clean of everything
        that it contained, “even the knives and needles”, but permitted the raja to
        retain the empty stronghold.
         Kaner Deo of Jalor had been permitted to return to his dominions, though
        he had once aroused the king’s wrath by the foolish vaunt that he was prepared
        at any time to meet him in the field. The boast was not forgotten, and on the
        raja’s exhibiting signs of contumacy Ala-ud-din sent against him, in bitter contempt, an army under
        the command of one of the female servants of his palace, named Guli-Bihisht (the Rose of Paradise). The woman was a
        capable commander, the Kaner Deo was on the point of
        surrendering to her when she fell sick and died. Her son Shahin,
        who succeeded her in the command, had less military ability than his mother,
        and was defeated and slain, but after the arrival of reinforcements under Kamal-ud-din Gurg (the Wolf) Jalor was taken and Kaner Deo and
        his relations were put to death.
         In 1308 Ala-ud-din
        made a second attempt to establish his authority in Telingana,
        and a large army under the command of Malik Naib and Khvaja Haji was dispatched from Delhi by way of Deogir. He
        had no intention of annexing more territory than could be conveniently
        administered from Delhi, and Malik Naib's instructions were to insist upon no more than the formal submission of the raja
        of Warangal and an undertaking to pay tribute. Ramachandra hospitably
        entertained the whole army during its halt at Deogir, and when it advanced
        towards Telingana supplied it with an efficient
        commissariat.
         
         Conquests in the
        South 
               Malik Naib, after passing Indur,
        the frontier town between the kingdoms of Deogir and Warangal, wasted the
        country with fire and sword, driving its inhabitants before him towards
        Warangal. The reigning king at this time was Prataparudradeva II, the seventh known raja of the Kakatiya dynasty, who had succeeded to the
        throne when his grandmother Rudramma Devi, alarmed,
        in 1294, by the news of Alduddin’s descent on Deogir,
        abdicated in his favor. The statement of the historian Budauni,
        who says that the dynasty had reigned for 700 years before its final extinction
        in 1321, is corroborated by Hindu tradition, but so far as our knowledge at
        present extends the first of the line was Tribhuvanamalla Betmaraja, who reigned in the first half of the
        twelfth century.
         Rudramma Devi had surrounded the city of Warangal with an outer wall of earth,
        which enclosed an area about two miles in diameter, and within this was an
        inner wall of stone, with a circumference of four miles and six hundred and
        thirty yards, which had been designed by her husband Ganpati and completed under her supervision, and formed an inner line of defence. The
        invaders, after numerous assaults in which the garrison suffered heavy loss,
        carried the outer line of defence and captured large numbers of the citizens
        with their families, and the raja tendered his submission, offering, as an
        immediate indemnity, three hundred elephants, seven thousand horses, and large
        quantities of coined money and jewels, and, for the future, the payment of an annual
        tribute. The terms were accepted, and Malik Naib returned towards Delhi, where the news of his success, which preceded him,
        relieved the prevalent misgivings as to his fate, for during the siege the
        Hindus had intercepted the postal runners between the army and the frontier of Telingana.
         Reports which he brought of the great wealth of the temples and the
        Hindu rulers of the extreme south excited the king’s cupidity, and in 1310
        Malik Naib and Khvaja Haji
        were again sent southwards with a large army to plunder the kingdom of the Hoysala Ballalas, which lay to
        the south of the Krishna, and to explore the southern extremity of the
        peninsula. The army marched again by way of Deogir, where Shankar Deo had
        succeeded his father who had, in the words of an uncompromising historian,
        “gone to hell”, either late in 1309 or early in 1310. Historians are not agreed
        on Shankar’s attitude to the Muslims. Some describe him as being as loyal as
        his father, but one says that his fidelity was not above suspicion, and that Malik Naib deemed it prudent to protect his communications
        by establishing a military post Jalna, on the
        Godavari. From Deogir he took the direct route to Dvaravatipura,
        the capital of the Hoysala Ballalas,
        called by Muslim historians Dhorasamundar, the ruins
        of which are still to be seen at Halebid, in the
        Hassan district of the Mysore State. The rapidity of his advance took the
        Hindus by surprise; Vira Ballala III, the tenth raja of the dynasty, was captured in the first attack on his
        capital, and the city itself fell, with great ease, into the hands of the
        invaders. Thirty-six elephants, the plunder of the great temple, and all the
        raja’s treasures rewarded them, and a dispatch announcing the victory was sent
        to Delhi. From Dvaravatipura Malik Naib marched to the kingdom of the Pandyas in the extreme south of the peninsula, to which the attention of Ala-ud-din had been attracted by
        recent events. Sundara Pandya had slain his father, Kulashekharadeva, and attempted
        to seize his throne, but was defeated by his brother, Vira Pandya, and in 1310 fled to Delhi. Malik Naib advanced to Madura, which Vira had evacuated, plundered and destroyed the great temple, and thence marched
        eastwards to the coast. Here he founded, either at Rameswaram on the island of Pamban or on the mainland opposite
        to it, a mosque which he named after his master.
         According to Muslim historians Malik Naib found two rajas ruling kingdoms in this region. One was Vira Pandya, and the other was probably Ravivarman or Kulashekharadeva of
        Kerala. Both were defeated and plundered, and a Muslim governor was left at
        Madura. An interesting fact recorded of the expedition into the kingdom of Dvaravatipura is the encounter of Malik Naib's army at Kadur with some Moplahs,
        who are described as half Hindus, and lax in their religious observances, but
        as they could repeat the Kalima,
        or symbol of Islam, their lives were spared.
         Malik Naib left Madura on April 24 and reached
        Delhi on October 18, 1311, with the enormous spoils of his enterprise, which
        included 312 elephants, 20,000 horses, 2,750 pounds of gold, equal in value to
        100,000,000 tangas,
        and chests of jewels. No such booty had ever before been brought to Delhi: the
        spoils of Deogir could not compare with those of Dvaravatipura and Madura, and the king, when receiving the leaders of the expedition in the
        Palace of the Thousand Pillars at Siri, distributed
        largesse to them and to the learned men of Delhi with a lavish hand.
         Ala-ud-din’s power, having reached its zenith, began to
        decline. He had hitherto shown considerable administrative capacity, and,
        though headstrong and self-willed, had usually sought and frequently followed
        the advice of others, even to the abandonment of some of his most cherished
        dreams; but his intellect was now clouded and his naturally fierce temper
        embittered by ill-health, and though he was physically and mentally less
        capable than formerly of transacting business of state, he rejected the
        counsels even of his own chosen ministers, and insisted on administering his
        vast dominions by the light of his own unaided intelligence, with the result
        that the affairs of the kingdom fell into such disorder that his declining
        years were darkened by rebellions and disturbances.
         
         The New Muslims 
         The New Muslims had been a perpetual source of trouble and anxiety
        during the reign. It was they who had rebelled when the army was returning from
        the conquest of Gujarat, and the followers of Akat Khan had been New Muslims. They were generally discontented, not entirely
        without cause. They had exchanged the cool highlands of the north for the
        burning plains of Hindustan, and their change of domicile and change of faith
        had not been adequately rewarded. Their prince, Ulghu Khan, had been treated
        with distinction by Firuz, but he had been blinded by Ala-ud-din, and if he was still alive was living in captivity
        and misery. No other Mogul appears to have attained to wealth or high place,
        which is not surprising, for though a few leaders may have received some veneer
        of civilization the mass of the tribe was probably not far removed in habits
        and customs from the ignorant and filthy savages described with such warmth of
        feeling and language by their sometime captive, the poet Amir Khusrav. Ala-ud-din dismissed all New
        Muslims from his service. They were permitted to enter that of any noble who
        would employ them, but those who could not obtain or would not accept such
        employment were told that they might depart whither they would. Many were too
        proud to serve the courtiers, and remained without employment until they could
        surreptitiously creep back into the royal service in inferior positions and on
        insufficient wages. They waited in vain for signs of relentment in the king, and at length in their despair hatched a wild plot to assassinate
        him while he was hawking near Delhi. The plot was discovered and the vengeance
        taken was characteristic of Ala-ud-din.
        Orders were issued that every New Muslim, wherever found, whether at Delhi or
        in the provinces, should be put to death, and obedience was ensured by a promise
        that the slayer of a New Muslim should become the owner of all that his victim
        had possessed. Between twenty and thirty thousand were massacred, and their
        wives, children, and property were appropriated by their murderers.
         In 1312 Khizr Khan was invested with an
        umbrella and designated heir-apparent. Ala-ud-din had paid no attention to his son’s education, and
        the young man had grown up weak, self-indulgent, thoughtless and slothful.
        Between him and the favorite, Malik Naib, there
        existed hatred and mistrust. The able and enterprising minister might well
        despise the weak and indolent prince, and Khizr Khan
        would have been worthless indeed had he felt anything but contempt for a
        creature so vile as the eunuch.
         Malik Naib was so resentful of Khizr Khan’s advancement and so weary of his quarrels with
        the prince's mother that he begged that he might be sent back to the Deccan,
        where the presence of an officer of high rank happened to be required. Prataparudradeva of Warangal had complained of the great distance
        to which he was obliged to send the tribute demanded of him, and had requested
        that an officer empowered to receive it might be posted at a reasonable
        distance from Warangal; and Shankar of Deogir had been guilty of some acts of
        defiance of the royal authority. He was accordingly dispatched, in 1313, to
        Deogir, where he put Shankar to death and assumed the government of the state.
        In order to establish his authority in its more remote districts he led an
        expedition southwards, captured Gulbarga, and annexed the tract between the
        Krishna and the Tungabhadra, after taking its chief fortresses, Raichur and Mudgal. After
        overrunning some of the southern districts of Telingana he marched westwards, took the seaports of Dabhol and Chaul, and then invaded for the second time the
        dominions of Vira Ballala III. Thence he returned to Deogir and dispatched to Delhi the spoils and
        tribute which he had collected.
         
         Death of Ala-ud-din 
         Ala-ud-din’s excesses had now so undermined his health that he
        was compelled to take to his bed. Neither his wife nor his eldest son bestowed
        much attention on him. The former, whom he had neglected, amused herself with
        arranging and attending marriages and other festivities of the harem, and the
        latter could spare no time from his wine parties, polo matches, music, dancing,
        and elephant fights. Ala-ud-din
        summoned Malik Naib from Deogir and Alp Khan from
        Gujarat, and complained bitterly to the former of the heartless conduct of his
        wife and son. The eunuch perceived an opportunity of destroying all his enemies
        at once, and assured his master that his wife and son were in league with Alp
        Khan to take his life. An inopportune proposal by the wife that her second son, Shadi Khan, should be permitted to marry the daughter
        of Alp Khan, confirmed Ala-ud-din’s
        suspicions. Khizr Khan was banished to Amroha, but on
        hearing that his father's health was restored returned to Delhi, in accordance
        with a vow, to offer thanks at some of the shrines near the capital. The act of
        disobedience was represented as a willful defiance of authority, and though Khizr Khan’s filial piety at first regained his father’s
        affection, Malik Naib’s persistence and his skilful distortion of facts confirmed the king’s belief in
        the existence of the conspiracy. Khizr Khan and Shadi Khan were sent to Gwalior, now apparently used for
        the first time as a state prison, their mother was removed from the harem and
        imprisoned at Old Delhi, Alp Khan was put to death, and Kamal-ud-din Gurg was sent to Jalor to slay his brother, Nizam-ud-din, who commanded that fortress.
         These tyrannical acts caused widespread discontent. Alp Khan’s troops in
        Gujarat rose in rebellion, and when Kamal-ud-din Gurg was sent to restore order they seized him and put him
        to death with horrible tortures. The Rana of Chitor
        seized many Muslim officers who held fiefs in his dominions and threw them,
        bound, from the battlements of his fortress. In Deogir Harpal Deo, a son-in-law of Ramachandra, proclaimed himself independent and occupied
        most of the fortified posts established by the Muslims.
         The news of these successive rebellions augmented the king’s disorder,
        remedies failed of their effect, and he wasted away daily until, on January 2,
        1316, he died, his end, according to the generally accepted belief, having been
        hastened by his favorite, who, two days later, assembled the nobles present in
        the capital and read to them his will. This document, possibly authentic, but
        certainly procured by misrepresentation and undue influence, disinherited Khizr Khan and made Shihab-ud-din Umar, a child of five or six, heir to his father.
        The infant was enthroned and Malik Naib acted as
        regent. He caused Khizr Khan and Shadi Khan to be blinded and, eunuch though he was, he pretended to marry Ala-ud-din’s widow, possessed himself
        of all her jewellery and private property, and then
        again imprisoned her. His object was to destroy the whole of Ala-ud-din’s family and ascend
        the throne himself. He had already imprisoned Mubarak Khan, Ala-ud-din’s third son, a youth of seventeen or eighteen years
        of age, and now sent some men of the corps of infantry on guard at the Palace
        of the Thousand Pillars, which he had chosen as his residence, to blind him.
        The prince reminded the soldiers of the duty which they owed to his house,
        bribed them with some jewellery, and sent them back
        to the palace on another errand. That night, thirty-five days after the death
        of Ala-ud-din, they slew
        Malik Naib and his companions. The nobles then recognised Mubarak as regent for his infant brother, and
        for two months he acquiesced in this obviously temporary arrangement, but on
        April 1 blinded the unfortunate child and ascended the throne with the title of Qutb-ud-din Mubarak Shah.
         The new king, who had but lately been a prisoner trembling for his
        eyesight, if not for his life, began his reign by releasing all prisoners, by
        recalling all those who had been banished from the capital by his father, and
        by showing clemency and mercy to all except the murderers of Malik Naib. Like his father, he could inspire and profit by
        treachery, but he could not endure the sight of his instruments. The soldiers,
        however, brought their fate on themselves. They adopted an attitude similar to
        that of the Praetorian Guards of the Roman Emperors, and demanded extravagant
        honors. Their two principal officers, Bashir and Mushir,
        were put to death, and the corps was drafted, in small detachments, to distant
        garrisons.
         Mubarak gained much popularity in the early days of his reign by the
        rescission of all his father’s harsher enactments. The compulsory tariff was
        abolished, with the result that the prices of all commodities rose suddenly, to
        the great satisfaction of the mercantile community. Some of the lands and
        endowments resumed by the despot were restored to the original grantees, and
        the possession of wealth by private persons ceased to be regarded as a crime.
        The sudden removal of all the harsh restraints which the people had suffered
        produced an outburst of licentiousness similar to that which had disgraced the
        short reign of Kaiqubad, and once again the king's example encouraged the
        extravagance of his subjects, for his morals were no better than his father's
        and from the earliest days of his reign he was entirely under the influence of
        a vile favorite. This wretch was by origin a member of one of those castes
        whose touch is pollution to a Hindu, whose occupation is that of scavengers,
        and whose food consists largely of the carrion which it is their duty to remove
        from byre and field. He was nominally a Muslim, and received at his conversion
        the name of Hasan and from his infatuated master the
        title of Khusrav Khan and the office of chief minister of the kingdom.
         
         Plot against Mubarak 
         As soon as Mubarak was firmly established on the throne he took steps to
        restore order in the rebellious provinces of Gujarat and Deogir. Ain-ul-Mulk Multani was sent to the former province, and after he had
        quelled the rebellion Mubarak's father-in-law, who received the title of Zafar Khan, was appointed its governor. The other task
        Mubarak reserved for himself and, having appointed as regent in the capital a
        slave named Shahin, upon whom he conferred the title
        of Vafa Malik, he set out in 1317 for the Deccan. The
        usurper Harpal was not a formidable foe, and fled
        from Deogir as the army approached it, but was pursued and captured, and after
        he had been flayed and decapitated his skin was stretched upon, and his head
        placed above, one of the gates of the city. Mubarak spent the rainy season of
        1318 at Deogir, once more parceled out Maharashtra among Muslim officers, and
        appointed military governors to Gulbarga and Sagar,
        and even to distant Dvaravatipura. During his sojourn
        at Deogir he built the great mosque which yet stands within the walls of
        Daulatabad, as the town was afterwards named, using in its construction the
        materials of demolished temples, the pillars of which are still recognizable as
        Hindu handiwork. When the rains abated he appointed Malik Yaklaki to the government of Deogir, sent his favorite, Khusrav Khan, on an expedition
        to Madura, and set out for Delhi. On his way thither a serious conspiracy
        against his life was formed by his cousin Asad-ud-din, the son of Yaghrush Khan,
        brother of Firuz Shah. Mubarak was to have been assassinated in the camp, but
        the plot had ramifications in the capital, for two coins struck at Delhi in
        A.H. 718 (A.D. 1318-19) bear the title of Shams-ud-din
        Mahmud Shah, which was either that which Asad-ud-din intended to assume or, more probably, that of a
        ten-year old son of Khizr Khan, whose elevation to
        the throne was, according to Ibn Batutah,
        the object of the conspiracy. It was arranged that Mubarak should be attacked
        in his harem on an occasion on which he diverged, for the distance of a few
        marches, from the route followed by the army, and took a different road
        attended only by a small guard, but one of the conspirators lost heart and
        disclosed the design to Mubarak, and Asad-ud-din and his confederates were seized and executed.
        Mubarak at the same time caused all the family and descendants of his
        grand-uncle, Yaghrush Khan, at Delhi, to the number
        of twenty-nine, some of whom were mere children, to be put to death.
         From Jhain Mubarak dispatched an officer to
        Gwalior to put to death Khizr Khan, Shadi Khan, and Shihab-ud-din Umar. As the three princes had already been blinded
        their murder was wanton and superfluous, but Mubarak coveted Deval Devi, the wife of his eldest brother, and after the
        murder of her husband the unfortunate princess was brought to Delhi and placed
        in his harem.
         The murder of his brothers appears to have whetted Mubarak’s appetite
        for blood, and on his return to Delhi he summoned from Gujarat his
        father-in-law, Zafar Khan, and for no apparent reason
        put him to death. He also executed Shahan, who had
        been left as regent at Delhi, and though historians allege no specific crime
        against this victim it can hardly be doubted that he had been implicated in the
        recent conspiracy.
         Mubarak now indulged in the grossest licentiousness and the most
        disgusting buffoonery. He delighted to appear before his court tricked out in
        female finery and jewels. Harlots and jesters were assembled on his palace roof
        and greeted the great nobles, such men as Ain-ul-Mulk Multani and Qara Beg, who held no fewer than fourteen
        offices, with lewd gestures and foul abuse, and, descending from the roof, ran
        naked among the courtiers. Yet the degraded youth who could organize and enjoy
        such scenes as these assumed a character to which no former ruler of Delhi had
        ventured to aspire. Others had eagerly sought recognition by, and proudly owned
        allegiance to the Caliphs, and even Ala-ud-din had readily abandoned his brief and impious dream of
        posing as a prophet. It remained for his son, who inherited his vices without
        his genius, to arrogate to himself the titles of Supreme Pontiff and Vicegerent
        of the God of heaven and earth, and to assume the pontifical title of al-Wasiq-billah.
         
         Khusrav Khan’s
        Treason 
               Hisam-ud-din, half-brother of Khusrav Khan, and partner with him
        in the king’s affections, was sent to Gujarat in the place of Zafar Khan, and his first act there was to attempt to raise
        a rebellion against his master, but the nobles of the province refused to
        follow such a leader, seized him, and sent him to Delhi, where, for his own
        sake and that of his brother, he was not only pardoned, but restored to favor.
         Malik Yaklaki, encouraged by reports of the
        demoralization of the court, raised the standard of rebellion in Deogir and
        proclaimed his independence, but was defeated and captured by an army sent
        against him and carried, with his associates, to Delhi, where Mubarak’s
        perverted sense of justice permitted him to put the subordinates to death while
        he inflicted on Yaklaki no heavier punishment than
        mutilation of the nose and ears, and shortly afterwards appointed him governor
        of Samana.
         Khusrav Khan was meanwhile active in the south. Having collected much
        booty in the Madura district he returned to Telingana,
        where he was detained by the rainy season and beguiled the tedium of inaction
        with ambitious dreams. He discussed with his intimates the possibility of
        establishing himself as an independent ruler in the south, and would have put
        the design into execution had not some of the officers of the army reported it
        to the king and compelled him to lead them back to Delhi. Mubarak ignored the
        report and, in his impatience to embrace his favorite, ordered him to travel
        from Deogir to the capital in a litter and by posting relays of bearers on the
        road enabled him to perform the journey of nearly 700 miles in seven days.
        Khusrav Khan at once resumed his former ascendency and persuaded his master
        that the reports sent from the camp were false and malicious. When his accusers
        reached Delhi, prepared to substantiate their charges and expecting at least
        commendation for their fidelity, they were dismissed from their posts and
        forbidden the court, and one of them, Malik Talbagha of Kara, was thrown into prison.
         Khusrav Khan’s treasonable design had failed principally because he had,
        although he was in chief command, no personal troops to support him against the
        nobles of whose contingents his army was composed, and so deeply was the king
        infatuated that, notwithstanding the revelation of his favorite’s treachery, he
        lent a sympathetic ear to his complaints and permitted him to raise in Gujarat
        a corps of 40,000 horse, largely composed of and exclusively commanded by
        members of his despised tribe. The long meditated treason was now nearly ripe
        for execution and, after a design for assassinating Mubarak in the hunting
        field had been abandoned as too dangerous, it was decided that he should be put
        to death in his palace.
         Khusrav Khan, by complaining that his nightly attendance prevented him
        from meeting his relations, obtained possession of the keys of the palace
        gates, and was enabled to admit large numbers of his relations and of his corps
        of horse to the palace, in the lower story of which they used nightly to
        assemble. A warning given to Mubarak on the eve of his death by his former
        tutor was repeated to Khusrav Khan, and served only as a text for hypocritical
        protestations; which entirely disarmed suspicion. On the night of April 14,
        1320, all was ready and he who had uttered the warning to the king was cut down
        as he was inspecting the guard. The uproar which ensued disturbed Mubarak in
        the upper story of his palace and he asked Khusrav Khan to see what was amiss.
        Khusrav, having ascertained from a glance into the courtyard that the work was
        already begun, told him that the men were trying to catch some horses which had
        broken loose. Even as he spoke the assassins were ascending the stairs and
        Mubarak, as they burst into his room, sprang up in terror and ran towards the
        female apartments, but Khusrav seized him by the hair and held him while Jaharya, one of the Parwaris,
        stabbed him to death. His head was severed from his body and thrown into the
        courtyard, as a signal to all that the throne was vacant, and the outcastes
        broke into the harem, murdered the children of the royal family, and outraged
        the women.
         When Mubarak’s head was recognised the royal
        guards on duty at the palace fled, and left all in the hands of Khusrav’s tribesmen. The palace was illuminated and all the
        great nobles then present in the capital were summoned to court, and hastened
        thither in ignorance of what had happened. They were detained until the morning
        and were then forced to attend a court at which the outcaste was proclaimed
        king under the title of Nasir-ud-din Khusrav Shah.
        The proclamation was followed by a massacre of many of the old servants of Ala-ud-din and Mubarak, whose
        known fidelity rendered them dangerous to the usurper; and the Khalji dynasty,
        which had reigned for no more than thirty years, but had given to the Muslim
        empire in India its first administrator, was wiped out. Khusrav possessed
        himself of the person of the unfortunate princess Deval Devi, who had been successively the wife of Khizr Khan and of his brother and murderer Mubarak. Against the union with the foul
        outcaste who became her third husband her proud Rajput blood must indeed have
        risen.
         In the distribution of honors and rewards with which Khusrav, following
        the usual custom, inaugurated his reign his own near relations and those of his
        tribe who had most distinguished themselves in the late tumult were the most
        favored, but an attempt was made to conciliate those powerful nobles who had
        been entrapped and compelled unwillingly to countenance by their presence the
        enthronement of the outcaste, and Wahid-ud-din Quraishi was entitled Tajul-Mulk and permitted to retain office as minister. Ain-ul-Mulk Multani received the titles of Alam Khan and Amir-ul-Umara, but Khusrav applied
        himself especially to the conciliation of the son of the powerful Ghazi Malik, Fakhr-ud-din Muhammad Jauna, whom he appointed master of the horse. Ghazi Malik
        himself had always avoided the intrigues of the capital, and seems never to
        have visited Delhi during Mubarak's brief and profligate reign, but he was
        dreaded by the gang of outcastes and pseudo-Muslims now in power both as a
        loyal adherent of the Khalji dynasty and as a rigid Muslim, and his son was
        valuable either as a supporter or as a hostage. The attempt to secure him
        failed, and he escaped from Delhi at midnight with only two or three followers,
        and took the road to Dipalpur, his father's
        headquarters. A force sent in pursuit of him failed to overtake him, and Jauna was joyfully welcomed by his father at Dipalpur. The governor of Multan hesitated to support Ghazi
        Malik against the king de facto, but was slain by a less scrupulous officer,
        Malik Bahram Aiba, who led the army of Multan to Dipalpur and joined the old warrior who stood forth as the
        champion of Islam.
         Islam stood in sore need of a champion. None of Khusrav’s tribe was a Muslim in more than name, and only a few had made profession of the
        faith. Muslim historians record with indignation the open celebration of
        idolatrous worship at court and the gross insults offered to their faith.
        Mosques were defiled and destroyed and copies of the scriptures of Islam were
        used as seats and stools.
         Ghazi Malik now set out for Delhi. He was first opposed by Yaklaki, the noseless and carless
        governor of Samaria, but swept the feeble obstacle from his path. Yaklaki fled to Samana and was preparing to join Khusrav at
        Delhi when the landholders of the district rose against him and cut him to
        pieces. At Sirsa Ghazi Malik defeated and put to
        flight an army under the command of Hisam-ud-din, the usurper’s half-brother, and continued his march
        to Delhi. Khusrav prepared to meet him near the old fort at Indarpat,
        and in attempting to secure the fidelity of his troops by donations varying in
        amount from four to two and a half years' pay and to conciliate by means of
        gifts the most respected professors of the religion which he and his followers
        had outraged, completely emptied the treasury. His profusion availed him
        little, for Ain-ul-Mulk, who was hardly less powerful than Ghazi Malik,
        deserted him and withdrew with his troops into Malwa.
         The armies met on September 5, and though Ai-nul-Mulk’s defection had damped the spirits of the usurper’s
        faction his troops fought bravely until they were overpowered by Ghazi Malik’s
        veterans. Khusrav attempted to save himself by flight, but was found lurking in
        a garden, and was brought before the conqueror and beheaded. Ghazi Malik halted
        for the night at Indarpat, where he received from
        some of the leading citizens the keys of the gates of Siri,
        and on the following day he entered the Palace of the Thousand Pillars and wept
        as he beheld the scene of destruction of his old master's family. He asked
        whether there yet remained any descendant of Ala-ud-din who might claim his allegiance, but was informed
        that the whole family had been extinguished and was urged to ascend the throne.
        After a decent profession of reluctance he was proclaimed king on September 8,
        under the title of Ghiyas-ud-din
        Tughluq Shah.
         
 
 CHAPTER VITHE REIGNS OF GHIYAS-UD-DIN TUGHLUQ AND MUHAMMAD TUGHLUQ,AND THE SECOND CONQUEST AND REVOLT OF THE DECCAN
 
 
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