Medieval History Set 3 | MROY Class
Certificate of Excellence
Awarded to a Distinguished Scholar
For Successfully Completing the Medieval History Set 3 Evaluation
Score: 0/30
Issued by MROY CLASS β’ Medieval History Set 3
MROY Class
Medieval History Set 3
π
π Quick Summary β Medieval History Set 3
- Ghaznavids: Alp-tigin established an independent kingdom at Ghazni.
- Literature: Firdausi, poet laureate at Mahmud’s court, wrote the Shah Namah.
- Hindushahis: Capital was at Udbhanda (Waihind) during initial Ghaznavid raids.
- Invasions: Mahmud of Ghazni plundered the Temple of Somnath in Gujarat in 1025.
- Rajputs: The Gahadavalas established their capital at Kanauj.
- Architecture: Nagara style (tall curved spiral roof) became prominent in North India.
- Chandellas: Built magnificent temples like Kandarya Mahadeo at Khajuraho.
- Tarain: Muizzuddin Muhammad was routed by Prithviraj Chauhan in the First Battle (1191).
- Ghurids: Muizzuddin defeated Jaichandra at the Battle of Chandawar (1194).
- Khalji Raids: Bakhtiyar Khalji destroyed Nalanda and Vikramasila monasteries.
- Sena Dynasty: Lakshmana Sena fled when Bakhtiyar Khalji attacked Nadia in 1204.
- Iqta System: Turkish system for land grants to maintain large standing armies.
- Sultanate: Qutbuddin Aibak died in 1210 from a polo (chaugan) accident.
- Iltutmish: Considered the real consolidator of the Turkish conquests in North India.
- Mongols: Changez Khan destroyed the Khwarizmi empire and reached the Indus in 1221.
- Chahalgani: Powerful group of Turkish chiefs (‘the forty’) who opposed Raziya.
- Raziya: Opposed for her ties to Yaqut Khan, Superintendent of the Royal Stable.
- Balban: Briefly ousted in 1253 and replaced by Indian Muslim Imaduddin Raihan.
- Monarchy: Balban claimed descent from the legendary Iranian king Afrasiyab.
- Reforms: Balban reorganized the diwan-i-arz (military department) against Mongols.
- Policy: Balban adopted a ‘Blood and Iron’ strategy to clear outposts and robbers.
- Customs: Balban introduced Iranian sijada and paibos (prostration/kissing feet).
- Diplomacy: Balban received envoys from Halaku, the Mongol Il-Khan of Iran.
- Mongol Threat: A massive Mongol force under Qutlugh Khwaja attacked Delhi in 1299.
- Siri Fort: Built by Alauddin Khalji as a new capital after the 1303 Mongol attack.
- Bengal: Balban’s only distant campaign was hunting down the rebel Tughril.
- Rebellions: Balban crushed the Katehariya Rajputs to pacify Badaun.
- Ranthambhor: Rajput state that defied the Sultanate until falling to Alauddin Khalji.
- Weakness: Rajput clans were exclusive, treating war as sport without broader brotherhood.
- Succession: Bughra Khan, Balban’s son, preferred ruling Bengal over the Delhi throne.
Click any card to flip and reveal the summarized answer!
Smart Review: Questions you got wrong appear here for focused study.