Post Tughlaq phase
🟥 Timur’s Invasion (1398 CE): The Death Knell of the Tughlaq Empire
Background:
- Timur (Tamerlane): Turkic conqueror, claimed descent from Changez Khan through the female line.
- Born in 1336 in Kesh (modern Shahrisabz, Uzbekistan).
- Founded the Timurid Dynasty and ruled from Samarkand.
- Had already conquered Central Asia, West Asia, and parts of Europe.
Why India?
- Weak Delhi Sultanate after Firoz Shah’s death.
- India was seen as a source of wealth, not a territory for governance.
- Crossed the Indus on 30 September 1398.
Impact:
- Delhi sacked for 3 days—massacres, destruction, and looting.
- Thousands were killed. Temples, mosques, and towns were ruined.
- No attempt at administration—he returned with booty, leaving a power vacuum.
- Timur appointed Khizr Khan as governor of Multan, indirectly sowing the seed of the Sayyid Dynasty.
📌 Timur’s invasion did not establish an empire but created chaos that permanently weakened the Sultanate.
🟦 Sayyid Dynasty (1414–1451 CE): The “Caretakers” of Delhi
Establishment:
- Founded by Khizr Khan (former governor under Timur).
- Considered themselves vassals of Timur’s descendants.
- Ruled only Delhi and its vicinity—never truly sovereign in spirit or geography.
Four Rulers:
Sultan | Reign | Features |
Khizr Khan | 1414–1421 | Founded dynasty, tried to consolidate control. |
Mubarak Shah | 1421–1434 | Faced rebellions; commemorated in Tarikh-i-Mubarak Shahi by Yahya bin Ahmad Sirhindi. |
Muhammad Shah | 1434–1445 | Weak, spent time suppressing internal conspiracies. |
Alam Shah | 1445–1451 | Ineffective; abdicated in favor of Bahlul Lodi. Retired voluntarily. |
⚠️ The Sayyid dynasty marked a transitional phase—too weak to control provinces but too legitimate to be overthrown immediately.
🟩 Lodi Dynasty (1451–1526 CE): The Last Phase of the Delhi Sultanate
Background:
- Afghan lineage (Pashtun). First non-Turkish rulers of Delhi.
- Power was based on tribal networks and Afghan egalitarianism.
- Lodi kings were considered “first among equals”, not absolute monarchs.
Bahlul Lodi (1451–1489):
- Took power from Alam Shah (Sayyid).
- Recovered Jaunpur, strengthened Afghan identity.
- Consolidated, not expanded.
Sikandar Lodi (1489–1517):
Area | Features |
Administration | Strong, centralized. Shifted capital from Delhi to Agra. |
Infrastructure | Built roads, provided irrigation, and constructed mosques & tombs. |
Architecture | Moth ki Masjid, Lodi Gardens. |
Culture | Patron of learning; wrote Persian poetry as Gulrukhi. |
Religion | Intolerant. Destroyed temples at Mathura, Jwalamukhi, etc. Promoted Sunni orthodoxy. |
🟡 Sikandar Lodi combined effective governance with religious bigotry—a blend of Firuz Tughlaq and Alauddin Khalji in different proportions.
Ibrahim Lodi (1517–1526):
- Arrogant, autocratic, unpopular among Afghan nobles.
- Insulted and punished nobles—destroyed tribal consensus.
- Daulat Khan Lodi, governor of Punjab, invited Babur from Kabul.
End of Lodi Rule:
- First Battle of Panipat (1526): Babur defeated and killed Ibrahim Lodi.
- Marked the end of the Delhi Sultanate and the beginning of the Mughal Empire.
âš« TIMELINE COMPARISON TABLE:
Dynasty | Duration | Notable Rulers | Features |
Tughlaq (1320–1414) | ~94 years | Muhammad bin Tughlaq, Firuz Shah | Ambitious but overreaching policies, eventual disintegration |
Sayyid (1414–1451) | 37 years | Khizr Khan, Mubarak Shah | Weak, transitional, ruled only Delhi |
Lodi (1451–1526) | 75 years | Bahlul, Sikandar, Ibrahim | Afghan tribal rule, ended by Babur |