About Book
The late Professor M. Athar Ali was one of the foremost authorities on Mughal history. This book is a selection of some of his best essays on a wide range of themes from the realm of ideas (including religion) to polity, administration, society and culture of the Mughal period (sixteenth to eighteenth centuries). Some essays are interpretative, others represent detailed research, and rest share both elements. What unites them is his critical approach and consistence proximity to the Persian source material. The book includes a critique of 'revisionist' approaches in the study of the Mughal polity, and a section on sources. Professor Irfan Habib has provided the preface. This selection of thirty-one essays on the Mughal period (with a few on the pre-Mughal period) will be extremely useful to students and researchers of history and scholars of Islam.
About Author
M. Athar Ali Was Professor, Aligarh Muslim University, as well as UGC National Professor; Visiting Professor at the Centre for South Asian Studies, University of Virginia, Charlottesville; and at the Centre d'etudes del'Inde et de l'Asie du Sud, Paris. He was also chosen as National Fellow, Indian Council of Historical Research; Smutts Fellow, University of Cambridge; Visiting Fellow at the School of Oriental and African Studies, London; and Wilson Fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Centre for Scholars, Washington DC. He was elected Secretary of the Indian History Congress (1977–80), and subsequently its General President (1989–90).