30. Muhammad bin Tughlaq
¤ A Sultan With Great
Vision, Surprising Insight
Muhammad-bin-Tughlaq who
succeeded Ghazi was one of the most interesting,
colorful and eccentric sultans of the Delhi
Sultanate. Vivid accounts have been left for us
by contemporary writers who had to bear the
brunt of his idiosyncrasies and were probably
less amused than us by them. Muhammad was
actually a brilliant man, with great vision and
surprising insight. But he was a dreamer, an
artist. He lacked the ability to see his plans
through to their logical conclusion. In fact
many historians are of the view that he was far
ahead of his time – though Barani seems to
suggest that Muhammad was not so much ahead of
time, as much as just far out.
Satpula
Muhammad-bin-Tughlaq was never satisfied with
stereotypical, tried-and-tested answers to
posers. His was a highly original mind,
comparable to that of an inventor’s or
scientist’s. He was the first sultan to have the
vision to see India as a whole country, and not
just as a sort of cake for every ambitious
aspirant to carve a kingdom out of. He wanted to
turn it into one strong single unit, both
politically and administratively. At the time of
his ascension there was much political confusion
in Central Asia. Muhammad figured that the ruler
of a powerful Hindustan could be the potential
leader of Central Asia.
¤ Maintained Relations With
Neighboring Countries
Muhammad’s political
insight also included diplomacy – he was a keen
believer in keeping good relations with the
world in general. He sent envoys to China,
Khurasan, Egypt and many such places. The rulers
before Muhammad had never shown any such
inclination, and to be fair to them, they did
not have the time to indulge in all of this.
Muhammad changed all of that. Missions poured
into India from China, Iran, Iraq and Syria,
heralding a new era in cultural and bilateral
exchange.
The sultan shocked the
nobility with his radical beliefs – such as, all
offices must be open to talent. In pursuance of
this philosophy he disregarded such things as
caste, race and nobility and put the lowest-born
people on the loftiest of levels in the
hierarchy. He was also one of the few sultans of
Delhi to patronize Hindus and the Hindustani
language.
of course this did not win
him any friends from the Turks and Afghans, and
the resentment was to surface soon. He had to
earn the epithet of Pagla Tughlaq (the mad
Tughlaq).
¤ Laid Down Taxation
Policies
Very early in his reign,
Muhammad Tughlaq began to show an interest in
the matters of taxation. He ordered the
compilation of the revenue and expenditure of
all the provinces of his kingdom. This meant
that the governors of the provinces were
required to send to Delhi all relevant accounts
and any other information required for the
records. The result was that the revenue
department in Delhi came to know the exact
income and expense of each province.
Consequently the whole revenue system worked
pretty smoothly.
With his very next idea the
sultan displayed the lack of balanced judgement
that he soon came to be associated with. The
Doab region between the Ganga and the Yamuna
river was, and still is, a very fertile plain.
So Muhammad quite fairly concluded that since
the farmers of this region were rich they could
afford to pay more tax than those of less
fertile regions. The idea itself was sound, the
execution was not.
Taxes were increased as
much as twentyfold and, what’s more, the sultan
also insisted in reviving old forgotten taxes
and levying those too in this region. Worse, the
measure was adopted at a time when the area was
in the grip of a severe famine. Consequently
thousands perished and the peasantry started
fleeing their homes.
¤ Most Discontent Decisions
of Sultan
When the state woke up to
the situation relief work was taken up, however
even then the need to recall the taxes was not
realized. Instead, Muhammad became quite enraged
at the peasants leaving their homes and used
force to get them back. This incident,
unfortunately, left a lasting and bitter taste
in the mouth of the people of the Doab.
Ultimately it was to prove detrimental to the
future of the Tughlaqs.
Another one of Muhammad’s
ideas was to bring more land into cultivation to
help the peasants. A large tract of land, about
60msq, was chosen and cultivated. Two years and
7,000,000 rupees later, the experiment was
declared a failure. No one had realized that the
chosen land was infertile.
After this Muhammad, much
to the revenue department’s relief and the alarm
of others, turned his attention elsewhere. He
did things like transferring his capital from
Delhi to Daulatabad (in andhra Pradesh) so that
he could control the Deccan better and keep his
capital safe from invasions. The idea of
shifting the capital in itself was not
fundamentally bad. However the choice of Deogir
(Daulatabad) was unfortunate. A more centrally
located place would have been a far better idea
as the sultan himself realized later.
¤ Shifting of The Capital
To Daulatabad Was A Failure
However, as things stood,
the entire army, the royal household (in itself
a circus), ministries, scholars, poets,
musicians and so on were ordered to march out
and settle in Daulatabad. The king went all out
and did his best for his new capital. However
the people of Delhi were understandably hesitant
to go traipsing all over India to settle in a
new place. The sultan lost his always-precarious
equilibrium and ordered everyone to move it –
not even the cats and dogs were spared. By the
time they reached Daulatabad, Muhammad had
changed his mercurial mind once again and
decided that the idea wouldn’t work. He realized
that while this capital was tucked in deep
enough to be safe from invasions, it was also
too far away to protect northern India. So he
ordered a return march in which very few
survived.
The consequences for Delhi
were grave. Not only had she lost her peoples
she had also lost her former prosperity and
grandeur. The sultan tried his best to make
amends and invited many scholars and artistes to
settle in the city. However clearly the impact
of this incident was far-reaching - when Ibn
Batuta, the famous traveler, came to Delhi in
1334 (Muhammad’s reign was from 1325-1351) he
found certain parts of the city still deserted.
The consequences for
Muhammad weren’t all that happy either. There
was widespread resentment against the sultan and
the bitterness rankled on for years to come.
There were several other experiments that the
indefatigable Muhammad-bin-Tughlaq undertook. He
brought about a change in the coinage system,
several innovations in the administration, in
his foreign policy (he had ideas of universal
conquest) and so on. When he finally died in
1351, one wry contemporary observer (Badauni)
quipped, ‘…and so the king was freed from his
people, and they from him.’
Muhammad-bin-Tughlaq
started building the fifth city of Delhi,
Jahanpanah or the refuge of the world. His
intention was to combine the four previous
cities of Delhi (Dilli, Siri, Tughlaqabad and
Jahanpanah) in one boundary wall. However he
soon realized that the expense involved would be
prohibitive and gave up the idea. Parts of
Jahanpanah today lie forgotten near the busy
roads of south Delhi’s Panchsheel Park.