The student of India who would at
the same time be an historian, discovers to his sorrow
that the land of his researches is lamentably poor
in historical sources. And if within the realm
of historical investigation, a more seductive charm
lies for him in the analysis of great personalities
than in ascertaining the course of historical development,
then verily may he look about in vain for such personalities
in the antiquity and middle ages of India. Not
that the princely thrones were wanting in great men
in ancient India, for we find abundant traces of them
in Hindu folk-lore and poetry, but these sources do
not extend to establishing the realistic element in
details and furnishing life-like portraits of the
men themselves. That the Hindu has ever been
but little interested in historical matters is a generally
recognized fact. Religious and philosophical speculations,
dreams of other worlds, of previous and future existences,
have claimed the attention of thoughtful minds to
a much greater degree than has historical reality.
The misty myth-woven veil which hangs
over persons and events of earlier times, vanishes
at the beginning of the modern era which in India
starts with the Mohammedan conquest, for henceforth
the history of India is written by foreigners.
Now we meet with men who take a decisive part in the
fate of India, and they appear as sharply outlined,
even though generally unpleasing, personalities.
Islam has justly been characterized
as the caricature of a religion. Fanaticism and
fatalism are two conspicuously irreligious emotions,
and it is exactly these two emotions, which Islam understands
how to arouse in savage peoples, to which it owes
the part it has played in the history of the world,
and the almost unprecedented success of its diffusion
in Asia, Africa and Europe.
About 1000 A.D. India was invaded
by the Sultan Mahmud of Ghasna. “With Mahmud’s
expedition into India begins one of the most horrible
periods of the history of Hindustan. One monarch
dethrones another, no dynasty continues in power,
every accession to the throne is accompanied by the
murder of kinsmen, plundering of cities, devastation
of the lowlands and the slaughter of thousands of men,
women and children of the predecessor’s adherents;
for five centuries northwest and northern India literally
reeked with the blood of multitudes." Mohammedan
dynasties of Afghan, Turkish and Mongolian origin
follow that of Ghasna. This entire period is filled
with an almost boundless series of battles, intrigues,
imbroglios and political revolutions; nearly
all events had the one characteristic in common, that
they took place amid murder, pillage and fire.
The most frightful spectacle throughout
these reeking centuries is the terrible Mongolian
prince Timur, a successor of Genghis-Khan, who fell
upon India with his band of assassins in the year 1398
and before his entry into Delhi the capital, in which
he was proclaimed Emperor of India, caused the hundred
thousand prisoners whom he had captured in his previous
battles in the Punjab, to be slaughtered in one single
day, because it was too inconvenient to drag them around
with him. So says Timur himself with shameless
frankness in his account of the expedition, and he
further relates that after his entry into Delhi, all
three districts of the city were plundered “according
to the will of God." In 1526 Baber, a descendant
of Timur, made his entry into Delhi and there founded
the dominion of the Grand Moguls (i.e., of the great
Mongols). The overthrow of this dynasty was
brought about by the disastrous reign of Baber’s
successor Aurungzeb, a cruel, crafty and treacherous
despot, who following the example of his ancestor Timur,
spread terror and alarm around him in the second half
of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth
centuries. Even to-day Hindus may be seen to
tremble when they meet the sinister fanatical glance
of a Mohammedan.
Princes with sympathetic qualities
were not entirely lacking in the seven centuries of
Mohammedan dominion in India, and they shine forth
as points of light from the gloomy horror of this time,
but they fade out completely before the luminous picture
of the man who governed India for half a century (1556-1605)
and by a wise, gentle and just reign brought about
a season of prosperity such as the land had never
experienced in the millenniums of its history.
This man, whose memory even to-day is revered by the
Hindus, was a descendant of Baber, Abul Fath Jelaleddin
Muhammed, known by the surname Akbar “the Great,”
which was conferred upon the child even when he was
named, and completely supplanted the name that properly
belonged to him. And truly he justified the epithet,
for great, fabulously great, was Akbar as man, general,
statesman and ruler, all in all a prince
who deserves to be known by every one whose heart
is moved by the spectacle of true human greatness.
When we wish to understand a personality
we are in the habit of ascertaining the inherited
characteristics, and investigating the influences
exercised upon it by religion, family, environment,
education, youthful impressions, experience, and so
forth. Most men are easily comprehensible as
the products of these factors. The more independent
of all such influences, or the more in opposition to
them, a personality develops, the more attractive
and interesting will it appear to us. At the
first glance it looks as if the Emperor Akbar had
developed his entire character from himself and by
his own efforts in total independence of all influences
which in other cases are thought to determine the
character and nature of a man. A Mohammedan, a
Mongol, a descendant of the monster Timur, the son
of a weak incapable father, born in exile, called
when but a lad to the government of a disintegrated
and almost annihilated realm in the India of the sixteenth
century, which means in an age of perfidy,
treachery, avarice, and self-seeking, Akbar
appears before us as a noble man, susceptible to all
grand and beautiful impressions, conscientious, unprejudiced,
and energetic, who knew how to bring peace and order
out of the confusion of the times, who throughout
his reign desired the furtherance of his subjects’
and not of his own interest, who while increasing
the privileges of the Mohammedans, not only also declared
equality of rights for the Hindus but even actualized
that equality, who in every conceivable way sought
to conciliate his subjects so widely at variance with
each other in race, customs, and religion, and who
finally when the narrow dogmas of his religion no longer
satisfied him, attained to a purified faith in God,
which was independent of all formulated religions.
A closer observation, however, shows
that the contrast is not quite so harsh between what
according to our hypotheses Akbar should have been
as a result of the forces which build up man, and what
he actually became. His predilection for science
and art Akbar had inherited from his grandfather Baber
and his father Humayun. His youth, which was
passed among dangers and privations, in flight and
in prison, was certainly not without a beneficial
influence upon Akbar’s development into a man
of unusual power and energy. And of significance
for his spiritual development was the circumstance
that after his accession to the throne his guardian
put him in the charge of a most excellent tutor, the
enlightened and liberal minded Persian Mir Abdullatif,
who laid the foundation for Akbar’s later religious
and ethical views. Still, however high we may
value the influence of this teacher, the main point
lay in Akbar’s own endowments, his susceptibility
for such teaching as never before had struck root
with any Mohammedan prince. Akbar had not his
equal in the history of Islam. “He is the
only prince grown up in the Mohammedan creed whose
endeavor it was to ennoble the limitation of this
most separatistic of all religions into a true religion
of humanity."
Even the external appearance of Akbar
appeals to us sympathetically. We sometimes find
reproduced a miniature from Delhi which pictures Akbar
as seated; in this the characteristic features of the
Mongolian race appear softened and refined to a remarkable
degree. The shape of the head is rather round,
the outlines are softened, the black eyes large, thoughtful,
almost dreamy, and only very slightly slanting, the
brows full and bushy, the lips somewhat prominent and
the nose a tiny bit hooked. The face is beardless
except for the rather thin closely cut moustache which
falls down over the curve of the month in soft waves.
According to the description of his son, the Emperor
Jehangir, Akbar’s complexion is said to have
been the yellow of wheat; the Portuguese Jesuits who
came to his court called it plainly white. Although
not exactly beautiful, Akbar seemed beautiful to many
of his contemporaries, including Europeans, probably
because of the august and at the same time kind and
winsome expression which his countenance bore.
Akbar was rather tall, broad-shouldered, strongly
built and had long arms and hands.
Akbar, the son of the dethroned Emperor
Humayun, was born on October 14, 1542, at Amarkot
in Sindh, two years after his father had been deprived
of his kingdom by the usurper Sher Chan. After
an exile of fifteen years, or rather after an aimless
wandering and flight of that length, the indolent
pleasure-and opium-loving Humayun was again permitted
to return to his capital in 1555, not through
his own merit but that of his energetic general Bairam
Chan, a Turk who in one decisive battle had overcome
the Afghans, at that time in possession of the dominion.
But Humayun was not long to enjoy his regained throne;
half a year later he fell down a stairway in his palace
and died. In January 1556 Akbar, then thirteen
years of age, ascended the throne. Because of
his youthful years Bairam Chan assumed the regency
as guardian of the realm or “prince-father”
as it is expressed in Hindi, and guided the wavering
ship of state with a strong hand. He overthrew
various insurgents and disposed of them with cold cruelty.
But after a few years he so aroused the illwill of
Akbar by deeds of partiality, selfishness and violence
that in March 1560 Akbar, then 17 years of age, decided
to take the reins of government into his own hand.
Deprived of his office and influence Bairam Chan hastened
to the Punjab and took arms against his Imperial Master.
Akbar led his troops in person against the rebel and
overcame him. When barefooted, his turban thrown
around his neck, Bairam Chan appeared before Akbar
and prostrated himself before the throne, Akbar did
not do the thing which was customary under such circumstances
in the Orient in all ages. The magnanimous youth
did not sentence the humiliated rebel to a painful
death but bade him arise in memory of the great services
which Bairam Chan had rendered to his father and later
to himself, and again assume his old place of honor
at the right of the throne. Before the assembled
nobility he gave him the choice whether he would take
the governorship of a province, or would enjoy the
favor of his master at court as a benefactor of the
imperial family, or whether, accompanied by an escort
befitting his rank, he would prefer to undertake a
pilgrimage to Mecca. Bairam Chan was wise enough
to choose the last, but on the way to Mecca he was
killed by an Afghan and the news caused Akbar sincere
grief and led him to take the four year old son of
Bairam Chan under his special protection.
Mahum Anaga, the Emperor’s nurse,
for whom he felt a warm attachment and gratitude,
a woman revengeful and ambitious but loyal and devoted
to Akbar, had contributed in bringing about the fall
of the regent. She had cared for the Emperor
from his birth to his accession and amid the confusion
of his youth had guarded him from danger; but for this
service she expected her reward. She sought nothing
less than in the rôle of an intimate confidante of
the youthful Emperor to be secretly the actual ruler
of India.
Mahum Anaga had a son, Adham Chan
by name, to whom at her suggestion Akbar assigned
the task of reconquering and governing the province
of Malwa. Adham Chan was a passionate and violent
man, as ambitious and avaricious as his mother, and
behaved himself in Malwa as if he were an independent
prince. As soon as Akbar learned this he advanced
by forced marches to Malwa and surprised his disconcerted
foster-brother before the latter could be warned by
his mother. But Adham Chan had no difficulty
in obtaining Akbar’s forgiveness for his infringements.
On the way back to Agra, where the
Emperor at that time was holding court, a noteworthy
incident happened. Akbar had ridden alone in
advance of his escort and suddenly found himself face
to face with a powerful tigress who with her five
cubs came out from the shrubbery across his path.
His approaching attendants found the nineteen year
old Emperor standing quietly by the side of the slaughtered
beast which he had struck to the ground with a single
blow of his sword. To how much bodily strength,
intrepidity, cold-blooded courage and sure-sightedness
this blow of the sword testified which dared not come
the fraction of a second too late, may be judged by
every one who has any conception of the spring of
a raging tigress anxious for the welfare of her young.
And we may easily surmise the thoughts which the sight
aroused in the minds of the Mohammedan nobles in Akbar’s
train. At that moment many ambitious wishes and
designs may have been carried to their grave.
The Emperor soon summoned his hot-headed
foster-brother Adham Chan to court in order to keep
him well in sight for he had counted often enough
on Akbar’s affection for his mother Mahum Anaga
to save him from the consequences of his sins.
Now Mahum Anaga, her son and her adherents, hated
the grand vizier with a deadly hatred because they
perceived that they were being deprived of their former
influence in matters of state. This hatred finally
impelled Adham Chan to a senseless undertaking.
The embittered man hatched up a conspiracy against
the grand vizier and when one night in the year 1562
the latter was attending a meeting of political dignitaries
on affairs of state in the audience hall of the Imperial
palace, Adham Chan with his conspirators suddenly
broke in and stabbed the grand vizier in the breast,
whereupon his companions slew the wounded man with
their swords. Even now the deluded Adham Chan
counted still upon the Emperor’s forbearance
and upon the influence of his mother. Akbar was
aroused by the noise and leaving his apartments learned
what had happened. Adham Chan rushed to the Emperor,
seized his arm and begged him to listen to his explanations.
But the Emperor was beside himself with rage, struck
the murderer with his fist so that he fell to the
floor and commanded the terrified servants to bind
him with fetters and throw him head over heels from
the terrace of the palace to the courtyard below.
The horrible deed was done but the wretch was not
dead. Then the Emperor commanded the shattered
body of the dying man to be dragged up the stairs
again by the hair and to be flung once more to the
ground.
I have related this horrible incident
in order to give Akbar’s picture with the utmost
possible faithfulness and without idealization.
Akbar was a rough, strong-nerved man, who was seldom
angry but whose wrath when once aroused was fearful.
It is a blemish on his character that in some cases
he permitted himself to be carried away to such cruel
death sentences, but we must not forget that he was
then dealing with the punishment of particularly desperate
criminals, and that such severe judgments had always
been considered in the Orient to be righteous and
sensible. Not only in the Orient unfortunately, even
in Europe 200 years after Akbar’s time tortures
and the rack were applied at the behest of courts
of law.
Mahum Anaga came too late to save
her son. Akbar sought with tender care to console
her for his dreadful end but the heart-broken woman
survived the fearful blow of fate only about forty
days. The Emperor caused her body to be buried
with that of her son in one common grave at Delhi,
and he himself accompanied the funeral procession.
At his command a stately monument was erected above
this grave which still stands to-day. His generosity
and clemency were also shown in the fact that he extended
complete pardon to the accomplices in the murder of
the grand vizier and even permitted them to retain
their offices and dignities because he was convinced
that they had been drawn into the crime by the violent
Adham Chan. In other ways too Akbar showed himself
to be ready to grant pardon to an almost incomprehensible
extent. Again and again when an insubordinate
viceroy in the provinces would surrender after an
unsuccessful uprising Akbar would let him off without
any penalty, thus giving him the opportunity of revolting
again after a short time.
It was an eventful time in which Akbar
arrived at manhood in the midst of all sorts of personal
dangers.
I will pass over with but few comments
his military expeditions which can have no interest
for the general public. When Akbar ascended the
throne his realm comprised only a very small portion
of the possessions which had been subject to his predecessors.
With the energy which was a fundamental characteristic
of his nature he once more took possession of the
provinces which had been torn from the empire, at
the same time undertaking the conquest of new lands,
and accomplished this task with such good fortune
that in the fortieth year of his reign the empire
of India covered more territory than ever before;
that is to say, not only the whole of Hindustan including
the peninsula Gujerat, the lands of the Indus and
Kashmir but also Afghanistan and a larger part of
the Dekkhan than had ever been subject to any former
Padishah of Delhi. At this time while the Emperor
had his residence at Lahore the phrase was current
in India, “As lucky as Akbar."
It was apparent often enough in the
military expeditions that Akbar far surpassed his
contemporaries in generalship. But it was not
the love of war and conquest which drove him each
time anew to battle; a sincere desire inspired by
a mystical spirit impelled him to bring to an end
the ceaseless strife between the small states of India
by joining them to his realm, and thus to found a
great united empire.
More worthy of admiration than the
subjugation of such large territories in which of
course many others have also been successful, is the
fact that Akbar succeeded in establishing order, peace,
and prosperity in the regained and newly subjugated
provinces. This he brought about by the introduction
of a model administration, an excellent police, a
regulated post service, and especially a just division
of taxes. Up to Akbar’s time corruption had
been a matter of course in the entire official service
and enormous sums in the treasury were lost by peculation
on the part of tax collectors.
Akbar first divided the whole realm
into twelve and later into fifteen viceregencies,
and these into provinces, administrative districts
and lesser subdivisions, and governed the revenues
of the empire on the basis of a uniformly exact survey
of the land. He introduced a standard of measurement,
replacing the hitherto customary land measure (a leather
strap which was easily lengthened or shortened according
to the need of the measuring officer) by a new instrument
of measurement in the form of a bamboo staff which
was provided with iron rings at definite intervals.
For purposes of assessment land was divided into four
classes according to the kind of cultivation practiced
upon it. The first class comprised arable land
with a constant rotation of crops; the second, that
which had to lie fallow for from one to two years
in order to be productive; the third from three to
four years; the fourth that land which was uncultivated
for five years and longer or was not arable at all.
The first two classes of acreage were taxed one-third
of the crop, which according to our present ideas seems
an exorbitantly high rate, and it was left to the
one assessed whether he would pay the tax in kind
or in cash. Only in the case of luxuries or manufactured
articles, that is to say, where the use of a circulating
medium could be assumed, was cash payment required.
Whoever cultivated unreclaimed land was assisted by
the government by the grant of a free supply of seed
and by a considerable reduction in his taxes for the
first four years.
Akbar also introduced a new uniform
standard of coinage, but stipulated that the older
coins which were still current should be accepted
from peasants for their full face value. From
all this the Indian peasants could see that Emperor
Akbar not only desired strict justice to rule but
also wished to further their interests, and the peasants
had always comprised the greatest part of the inhabitants,
(even according to the latest census in 1903, vol.
I, , 50 to 84 percent of the inhabitants of India
live by agriculture). But Akbar succeeded best
in winning the hearts of the native inhabitants by
lifting the hated poll tax which still existed side
by side with all other taxes.
The founder of Islam had given the
philanthropical command to exterminate from the face
of the earth all followers of other faiths who were
not converted to Islam, but he had already convinced
himself that it was impossible to execute this law.
And, indeed, if the Mohammedans had followed out this
precept, how would they have been able to overthrow
land upon land and finally even thickly populated
India where the so-called unbelievers comprised an
overwhelming majority? Therefore in place of
complete extermination the more practical arrangement
of the poll tax was instituted, and this was to be
paid by all unbelievers in order to be a constant reminder
to them of the loss of their independence. This
humiliating burden which was still executed in the
strictest, most inconsiderate manner, Akbar removed
in the year 1565 without regard to the very considerable
loss to the state’s treasury. Nine years
later followed the removal of the tax upon religious
assemblies and pilgrimages, the execution of which
had likewise kept the Hindus in constant bitterness
towards their Mohammedan rulers.
Sometime previous to these reforms
Akbar had abolished a custom so disgusting that we
can hardly comprehend that it ever could have legally
existed. At any rate it alone is sufficient to
brand Islam and its supreme contempt for followers
of other faiths, with one of the greatest stains in
the history of humanity. When a tax-collector
gathered the taxes of the Hindus and the payment had
been made, the Hindu was required “without the
slightest sign of fear of defilement” to open
his mouth in order that the tax collector might spit
in it if he wished to do so. This was much more
than a disgusting humiliation. When the tax-collector
availed himself of this privilege the Hindu lost thereby
his greatest possession, his caste, and was shut out
from any intercourse with his equals. Accordingly
he was compelled to pass his whole life trembling
in terror before this horrible evil which threatened
him. That a man of Akbar’s nobility of
character should remove such an atrocious, yes devilish,
decree seems to us a matter of course; but for the
Hindus it was an enormous beneficence.
Akbar sought also to advance trade
and commerce in every possible way. He regulated
the harbor and toll duties, removed the oppressive
taxes on cattle, trees, grain and other produce as
well as the customary fees of subjects at every possible
appointment or office. In the year 1574 it was
decreed that the loss which agriculture suffered by
the passage of royal troops through the fields should
be carefully calculated and scrupulously replaced.
Besides these practical regulations
for the advancement of the material welfare, Akbar’s
efforts for the ethical uplift of his subjects are
noteworthy. Drunkenness and debauchery were punished
and he sought to restrain prostitution by confining
dancing girls and abandoned women in one quarter set
apart for them outside of his residence which received
the name aitanpura or “Devil’s City."
The existing corruption in the finance
and customs department was abolished by means of a
complicated and punctilious system of supervision
(the bureaus of receipts and expenditures were kept
entirely separated from each other in the treasury
department,) and Akbar himself carefully examined
the accounts handed in each month from every district,
just as he gave his personal attention with tireless
industry and painstaking care to every detail in the
widely ramified domain of the administration of government.
Moreover the Emperor was fortunate in having at the
head of the finance department a prudent, energetic,
perfectly honorable and incorruptible man, the Hindu
Todar Mal, who without possessing the title of vizier
or minister of state had assumed all the functions
of such an office.
It is easily understood that many
of the higher tax officials did not grasp the sudden
break of a new day but continued to oppress and impoverish
the peasants in the traditional way, but the system
established by Akbar succeeded admirably and soon brought
all such transgressions to light. Todar Mal held
a firm rein, and by throwing hundreds of these faithless
officers into prison and by making ample use of bastinado
and torture, spread abroad such a wholesome terror
that Akbar’s reforms were soon victorious.
How essential it was to exercise the
strictest control over men occupying the highest positions
may be seen by the example of the feudal nobility
whose members bore the title “Jagirdar.”
Such a Jagirdar had to provide a contingent of men
and horses for the imperial army corresponding to
the size of the estate which was given him in fief.
Now it had been a universal custom for the Jagirdars
to provide themselves with fewer soldiers and horses
on a military expedition than at the regular muster.
Then too the men and horses often proved useless for
severe service. When the reserves were mustered
the knights dressed up harmless private citizens as
soldiers or hired them for the occasion and after
the muster was over, let them go again. In the
same way the horses brought forward for the muster
were taken back into private service immediately afterwards
and were replaced by worthless animals for the imperial
service. This evil too was abolished at one stroke,
by taking an exact personal description of the soldiers
presented and by branding the heads of horses, elephants
and camels with certain marks. By this simple
expedient it became impossible to exchange men and
animals presented at the muster for worthless material
and also to loan them to other knights during muster.
The number of men able to bear arms
in Akbar’s realm has been given as about four
and a half millions but the standing army which was
held at the expense of the state was small in proportion.
It contained only about twenty-five thousand men,
one-half of whom comprised the cavalry and the rest
musketry and artillery; Since India does not produce
first class horses, Akbar at once provided for the
importation of noble steeds from other lands of the
Orient which were famed for horse breeding and was
accustomed to pay more for such animals than the price
which was demanded. In the same way no expense
was too great for him to spend on the breeding and
nurture of elephants, for they were very valuable
animals for the warfare of that day. His stables
contained from five to six thousand well-trained elephants.
The breeding of camels and mules he also advanced
with a practical foresight and understood how to overcome
the widespread prejudice in India against the use
of mules.
Untiringly did Akbar inspect stables,
arsenals, military armories, and shipyards, and insisted
on perfect order in all departments. He called
the encouragement of seamanship an act of worship
but was not able to make India, a maritime power.
Akbar had an especial interest in
artillery, and with it a particular gift for the technique
and great skill in mechanical matters. He invented
a cannon which could be taken apart to be carried more
easily on the march and could be put up quickly, apparently
for use in mountain batteries. By another invention
he united seventeen cannons in such a way that they
could be shot off simultaneously by one fuse.
Hence it is probably a sort of mitrailleuse.
Akbar is also said to have invented a mill cart which
served as a mill as well as for carrying freight.
With regard to these inventions we must take into
consideration the possibility that the real inventor
may have been some one else, but that the flatterers
at the court ascribed them to the Emperor because
the initiative may have originated with him.
(II, 372) because of the so-called
“organ cannons” which were
in use in Europe as early
as the 15th century.
The details which I have given will
suffice to show what perfection the military and civil
administration attained through Akbar’s efforts.
Throughout his empire order and justice reigned and
a prosperity hitherto unknown. Although taxes
were never less oppressive in India than under Akbar’s
reign, the imperial income for one year amounted to
more than $120,000,000, a sum at which contemporary
Europe marveled, and which we must consider in the
light of the much greater purchasing power of money
in the sixteenth century. A large part of Akbar’s
income was used in the erection of benevolent institutions,
of inns along country roads in which travelers were
entertained at the imperial expense, in the support
of the poor, in gifts for pilgrims, in granting loans
whose payment was never demanded, and many similar
ways. To his encouragement of schools, of literature,
art and science I will refer later.
Of decided significance for Akbar’s
success was his patronage of the native population.
He did not limit his efforts to lightening the lot
of the subjugated Hindus and relieving them of oppressive
burdens; his efforts went deeper. He wished to
educate the Mohammedans and Hindus to a feeling of
mutual good-will and confidence, and in doing so he
was obliged to contend in the one case against haughtiness
and inordinate ambition, and in the other against
hate and distrustful reserve. If with this end
in view he actually favored the Hindus by keeping
certain ones close to him and advancing them to the
most influential positions in the state, he did it
because he found characteristics in the Hindus (especially
in their noblest race, the Rajputs) which seemed to
him most valuable for the stability of the empire
and for the promotion of the general welfare.
He had seen enough faithlessness in the Mohammedan
nobles and in his own relatives. Besides, Akbar
was born in the house of a small Rajput prince who
had shown hospitality to Akbar’s parents on their
flight and had given them his protection.
The Rajputs are the descendants of
the ancient Indian warrior race and are a brave, chivalrous,
trustworthy people who possess a love of freedom and
pride of race quite different in character from the
rest of the Hindus. Even to-day every traveler
in India thinks he has been set down in another world
when he treads the ground of Rajputana and sees around
him in place of the weak effeminate servile inhabitants
of other parts of the country powerful upright men,
splendid warlike figures with blazing defiant eyes
and long waving beards.
While Akbar valued the Rajputs very
highly his own personality was entirely fitted to
please these proud manly warriors. An incident
which took place before the end of the first year of
Akbar’s reign is characteristic of the relations
which existed on the basis of this intrinsic relationship.
Bihari Mal was a prince of the small
Rajput state Ambir, and possessed sufficient political
comprehension to understand after Akbar’s first
great successes that his own insignificant power and
the nearness of Delhi made it advisable to voluntarily
recognize the Emperor as his liege lord. Therefore
he came with son, grandson and retainers to swear
allegiance to Akbar. Upon his arrival at the imperial
camp before Delhi, a most surprising sight met his
eyes. Men were running in every direction, fleeing
wildly before a raging elephant who wrought destruction
to everything that came within his reach. Upon
the neck of this enraged brute sat a young man in
perfect calmness belaboring the animal’s head
with the iron prong which is used universally in India
for guiding elephants. The Rajputs sprang from
their horses and came up perfectly unconcerned to observe
the interesting spectacle, and broke out in loud applause
when the conquered elephant knelt down in exhaustion.
The young man sprang from its back and cordially greeted
the Rajput princes (who now for the first time recognized
Akbar in the elephant-tamer) bidding them welcome
to his red imperial tent. From this occurrence
dates the friendship of the two men. In later
years Bihari Mai’s son and grandson occupied
high places in the imperial service, and Akbar married
a daughter of the Rajput chief who became the mother
of his son and successor Selim, afterwards the Emperor
Jehangir. Later on Akbar received a number of
other Rajput women in his harem.
Not all of Akbar’s relations
to the Rajputs however were of such a friendly kind.
As his grandfather Baber before him, he had many bitter
battles with them, for no other Indian people had opposed
him so vigorously as they. Their domain blocked
the way to the south, and from their rugged mountains
and strongly fortified cities the Rajputs harassed
the surrounding country by many invasions and destroyed
order, commerce and communication quite after the manner
of the German robber barons of the Middle Ages.
Their overthrow was accordingly a public necessity.
The most powerful of these Rajput
chiefs was the Prince of Mewar who had particularly
attracted the attention of the Emperor by his support
of the rebels. The control of Mewar rested upon
the possession of the fortress Chitor which was built
on a monstrous cliff one hundred and twenty meters
high, rising abruptly from the plain and was equipped
with every means of defence that could be contrived
by the military skill of that time for an incomparably
strong bulwark. On the plain at its summit which
measured over twelve kilometers in circumference a
city well supplied with water lay within the fortification
walls. There an experienced general, Jaymal,
“the Lion of Chitor,” was in command.
I have not time to relate the particulars of the siege,
the laying of ditches and mines and the uninterrupted
battles which preceded the fall of Chitor in February,
1568. According to Akbar’s usual custom
he exposed himself to showers of bullets without once
being hit (the superstition of his soldiers considered
him invulnerable) and finally the critical shot was
one in which Akbar with his own hand laid low the
brave commander of Chitor. Then the defenders
considered their cause lost, and the next night saw
a barbarous sight, peculiarly Indian in character:
the so-called Jauhar demanded his offering according
to an old Rajput custom. Many great fires gleamed
weirdly in the fortress. To escape imprisonment
and to save their honor from the horrors of captivity,
the women mounted the solemnly arranged funeral pyres,
while all the men, clad in saffron hued garments,
consecrated themselves to death. When the victors
entered the city on the next morning a battle began
which raged until the third evening, when there was
no one left to kill. Eight thousand warriors
had fallen, besides thirty thousand inhabitants of
Chitor who had participated in the fight.
With the conquest of Chitor which
I have treated at considerable length because it ended
in a typically Indian manner, the resistance of the
Rajputs broke down. After Akbar had attained his
purpose he was on the friendliest terms with the vanquished.
It testifies to his nobility of character as well
as to his political wisdom that after this complete
success he not only did not celebrate a triumph, but
on the contrary proclaimed the renown of the vanquished
throughout all India by erecting before the gate of
the imperial palace at Delhi two immense stone elephants
with the statues of Jaymal, the “Lion of Chitor,”
and of the noble youth Pata who had performed the most
heroic deeds in the defense of Chitor. By thus
honoring his conquered foes in such a magnanimous
manner Akbar found the right way to the heart of the
Rajputs. By constant bestowal of favors he gradually
succeeded in so reconciling the noble Rajputs to the
loss of their independence that they were finally
glad and proud to devote themselves to his service,
and, under the leadership of their own princes, proved
themselves to be the best and truest soldiers of the
imperial army, even far from their home in the farthest
limits of the realm.
The great masses of the Hindu people
Akbar won over by lowering the taxes as we have previously
related, and by all the other successful expedients
for the prosperity of the country, but especially by
the concession of perfect liberty of faith and worship
and by the benevolent interest with which he regarded
the religious practices of the Hindus. A people
in whom religion is the ruling motive of life, after
enduring all the dreadful sufferings of previous centuries
for its religion’s sake, must have been brought
to a state; of boundless reverence by Akbar’s
attitude. And since the Hindus were accustomed
to look upon the great heroes and benefactors of humanity
as incarnations of deity we shall not be surprised
to read from an author of that time that every
morning before sunrise great numbers of Hindus crowded
together in front of the palace to await the appearance
of Akbar and to prostrate themselves as soon as he
was seen at a window, at the same time singing religious
hymns. This fanatical enthusiasm of the Hindus
for his person Akbar knew how to retain not only by
actual benefits but also by small, well calculated
devices.
It is a familiar fact that the Hindus
considered the Ganges to be a holy river and that
cows were sacred animals. Accordingly we can
easily understand Akbar’s purpose when we learn
that at every meal he drank regularly of water from
the Ganges (carefully filtered and purified to be
sure) calling it “the water of immortality,"
and that later he forbade the slaughtering of cattle
and eating their flesh. But Akbar did not go so
far in his connivance with the Hindus that he considered
all their customs good or took them under his protection.
For instance he forbade child marriages among the
Hindus, that is to say the marriage of boys under sixteen
and of girls under fourteen years, and he permitted
the remarriage of widows. The barbaric customs
of Brahmanism were repugnant to his very soul.
He therefore most strictly forbade the slaughtering
of animals for purposes of sacrifice, the use of ordeals
for the execution of justice, and the burning of widows
against their will, which indeed was not established
according to Brahman law but was constantly practiced
according to traditional custom. To be sure neither
Akbar nor his successor Jehangir were permanently successful
in their efforts to put an end to the burning of widows.
Not until the year 1829 was the horrible custom practically
done away with through the efforts of the English.
Throughout his entire life Akbar was
a tirelessly industrious, restlessly active man.
By means of ceaseless activity he struggled successfully
against his natural tendency to melancholy and in this
way kept his mind wholesome, which is most deserving
of admiration in an Oriental monarch who was brought
in contact day by day with immoderate flattery and
idolatrous veneration. Well did Akbar know that
no Oriental nation can be governed without a display
of dazzling splendor; but in the midst of the fabulous
luxury with which Akbar’s court was fitted out
and his camp on the march, in the possession of an
incomparably rich harem which accompanied the Emperor
on his expeditions and journeys in large palatial
tents, Akbar always showed a remarkable moderation.
It is true that he abolished the prohibition of wine
which Islam had inaugurated and had a court cellar
in his palace, but he himself drank only a little
wine and only ate once a day and then did not fully
satisfy his hunger at this one meal which he ate alone
and not at any definite time. Though he was not
strictly a vegetarian yet he lived mainly on rice,
milk, fruits and sweets, and meat was repulsive to
him. He is said to have eaten meat hardly more
than four times a year.
Akbar was very fond of flowers and
perfumes and especially enjoyed blooded doves whose
care he well understood. About twenty thousand
of these peaceful birds are said to have made their
home on the battlements of his palace. His historian
relates: “His Majesty deigned to improve
them in a marvelous manner by crossing the races which
had not been done formerly.”
Akbar was passionately fond of hunting
and pursued the noble sport in its different forms,
especially the tiger hunt and the trapping of wild
elephants, but he also hunted with trained falcons
and leopards, owning no less than nine hundred hunting
leopards. He was not fond of battue; he enjoyed
the excitement and exertion of the actual hunt as
a means for exercise and recreation, for training the
eye and quickening the blood. Akbar took pleasure
also in games. Besides chess, cards and other
games, fights between animals may especially be mentioned,
of which elephant fights were the most common, but
there were also contests between camels, buffaloes,
cocks, and even frogs, sparrows and spiders.
Usually, however, the whole day was
filled up from the first break of dawn for Akbar with
affairs of government and audiences, for every one
who had a request or a grievance to bring forward could
have access to Akbar, and he showed the same interest
in the smallest incidents as in the greatest affairs
of state. He also held courts of justice wherever
he happened to be residing. No criminal could
be punished there without his knowledge and no sentence
of death executed until Akbar had given the command
three times.
Not until after sunset did the Emperor’s
time of recreation begin. Since he only required
three hours of sleep he devoted most of the night
to literary, artistic and scientific occupations.
Especially poetry and music delighted his heart.
He collected a large library in his palace and drew
the most famous scholars and poets to his court.
The most important of these were the brothers Abul
Faiz (with the nom de plume Faizi) and Abul
Fazl who have made Akbar’s fame known to the
whole world through their works. The former at
Akbar’s behest translated a series of Sanskrit
works into Persian, and Abul Fazl, the highly gifted
minister and historian of Akbar’s court (who
to be sure can not be exonerated from the charge of
flattery) likewise composed in the Persian language
a large historical work written in the most flowery
style which is the main source of our knowledge of
that period. This famous work is divided in two
parts, the first one of which under the title Akbarname,
“Akbar Book,” contains the complete history
of Akbar’s reign, whereas the second part, the
Ain i Akbari, “The Institutions of Akbar,”
gives a presentation of the political and religious
constitution and administration of India under Akbar’s
reign. It is also deserving of mention in this
connection that Akbar instituted a board for contemporary
chronicles, whose duty it was to compose the official
record of all events relating to the Emperor and the
government as well as to collect all laws and decrees.
When Akbar’s recreation hours
had come in the night the poets of his court brought
their verses. Translations of famous works in
Sanskrit literature, of the New Testament and of other
interesting books were read aloud, all of which captivated
the vivacious mind of the Emperor from which nothing
was farther removed than onesidedness and narrow-mindedness.
Akbar had also a discriminating appreciation for art
and industries. He himself designed the plans
for some extremely beautiful candelabra, and the manufacture
of tapestry reached such a state of perfection in
India under his personal supervision that in those
days fabrics were produced in the great imperial factories
which in beauty and value excelled the famous rugs
of Persia. With still more important results
Akbar influenced the realm of architecture in that
he discovered how to combine two completely different
styles. For indeed, the union of Mohammedan and
Indian motives in the buildings of Akbar (who here
as in all other departments strove to perfect the
complete elevation of national and religious details)
to form an improved third style, is entirely original.
Among other ways Akbar betrayed the
scientific trend of his mind by sending out an expedition
in search of the sources of the Ganges. That a
man of such a wonderful degree of versatility should
have recognized the value of general education and
have devoted himself to its improvement, we would
simply take for granted. Akbar caused schools
to be erected throughout his whole kingdom for the
children of Hindus and Mohammedans, whereas he himself
did not know how to read or write. This remarkable
fact would seem incredible to us after considering
all the above mentioned facts if it was not confirmed
by the express testimony of his son, the Emperor Jehangir.
At any rate for an illiterate man Akbar certainly
accomplished an astonishing amount. The universal
character of the endowments of this man could not
have been increased by the learning of the schools.
I have now come to the point which
arouses most strongly the universal human interest
in Akbar, namely, to his religious development and
his relation to the religions, or better to religion.
But first I must protest against the position maintained
by a competent scholar that Akbar himself was
just as indifferent to religious matters as was the
house of Timur as a whole. Against this view we
have the testimony of the conscientiousness with which
he daily performed his morning and evening devotions,
the value which he placed upon fasting and prayer
as a means of self-discipline, and the regularity with
which he made yearly pilgrimages to the graves of
Mohammedan saints. A better insight into Akbar’s
heart than these regular observances of worship which
might easily be explained by the force of custom is
given by the extraordinary manifestations of a devout
disposition. When we learn that Akbar invariably
prayed at the grave of his father in Delhi before
starting upon any important undertaking, or that during
the siege of Chitor he made a vow to make a pilgrimage
to a shrine in Ajmir after the fall of the fortress,
and that after Chitor was in his power he performed
this journey in the simplest pilgrim garb, tramping
barefooted over the glowing sand, it is impossible
for us to look upon Akbar as irreligious. On
the contrary nothing moved the Emperor so strongly
and insistently as the striving after religious truth.
This effort led to a struggle against the most destructive
power in his kingdom, against the Mohammedan priesthood.
That Akbar, the conqueror in all domains, should also
have been victorious in the struggle against the encroachments
of the Church (the bitterest struggle which a ruler
can undertake), this alone should insure him a place
among the greatest of humanity.
The Mohammedan priesthood, the community
of the Ulémas in whose hands lay also the execution
of justice according to the dictates of Islam, had
attained great prosperity in India by countless large
bequests. Its distinguished membership formed
an influential party at court. This party naturally
represented the Islam of the stricter observance,
the so-called Sunnitic Islam, and displayed the greatest
severity and intolerance towards the representatives
of every more liberal interpretation and towards unbelievers.
The chief judge of Agra sentenced men to death because
they were Shiites, that is to say they belonged to
the other branch of Islam, and the Ulémas urged
Akbar to proceed likewise against the heretics.
That arrogance and vanity, selfishness and avarice,
also belonged to the character of the Ulémas
is so plainly to be taken for granted according to
all analogies that it need hardly be mentioned.
The judicature was everywhere utilized by the Ulémas
as a means for illegitimate enrichment.
This ecclesiastical party which in
its narrow-minded folly considered itself in possession
of the whole truth, stands opposed to the noble skeptic
Akbar, whose doubt of the divine origin of the Koran
and of the truth of its dogmas began so to torment
him that he would pass entire nights sitting out of
doors on a stone lost in contemplation. The above
mentioned brothers Faizi and Abul Fazl introduced to
his impressionable spirit the exalted teaching of
Sufism, the Mohammedan mysticism whose spiritual pantheism
had its origin in, or at least was strongly influenced
by, the doctrine of the All-One, held by the Brahman
Vedanta system. The Sufi doctrine teaches religious
tolerance and has apparently strengthened Akbar in
his repugnance towards the intolerant exclusiveness
of Sunnitic Islam.
The Ulémas must have been
horror-stricken when they found out that Akbar even
sought religious instruction from the hated Brahmáns.
We hear especially of two, Purushottama and Debi by
name, the first of whom taught Sanskrit and Brahman
philosophy to the Emperor in his palace, whereas the
second was drawn up on a platform to the wall of the
palace in the dead of the night and there, suspended
in midair, gave lessons on profound esoteric doctrines
of the Upanishads to the emperor as he sat by the
window. A characteristic bit of Indian local
color! The proud Padishah of India, one of the
most powerful rulers of his time, listening in the
silence of night to the words of the Brahman suspended
there outside, who himself as proud as the Emperor
would not set foot inside the dwelling of one who in
his eyes was unclean, but who would not refuse his
wisdom to a sincere seeker after truth.
Akbar left no means untried to broaden
his religious outlook. From Gujerat he summoned
some Parsees, followers of the religion of Zarathustra,
and through them informed himself of their faith and
their highly developed system of ethics which places
the sinful thought on the same level with the sinful
word and act.
From olden times the inhabitants of
India have had a predisposition for religious and
philosophical disputations. So Akbar, too, was
convinced of the utility of free discussion on religious
dogmas. Based upon this idea, and perhaps also
in the hope that the Ulémas would be discomfited
Akbar founded at Fathpur Sikri, his favorite residence
in the vicinity of Agra, the famous Ibadat Khana,
literally the “house of worship,” but
in reality the house of controversy. This was
a splendid structure composed of four halls in which
scholars and religious men of all sects gathered together
every Thursday evening and were given an opportunity
to defend their creeds in the presence and with the
cooperation of the Emperor. Akbar placed the discussion
in charge of the wise and liberal minded Abul Fazl.
How badly the Ulémas, the representatives of
Mohammedan orthodoxy, came off on these controversial
evenings was to be foreseen. Since they had no
success with their futile arguments they soon resorted
to cries of fury, insults for their opponents and
even to personal violence, often turning against each
other and hurling curses upon their own number.
In these discussions the inferiority of the Ulémas,
who nevertheless had always put forth such great claims,
was so plainly betrayed that Akbar learned to have
a profound contempt for them.
In addition to this, the fraud and
machinations by means of which the Ulémas had
unlawfully enriched themselves became known to the
Emperor. At any rate there was sufficient ground
for the chastisement which Akbar now visited upon
the high clergy. In the year 1579 a decree was
issued which assigned to the Emperor the final decision
in matters of faith, and this was subscribed to by
the chiefs of the Ulémas, with what
personal feelings we can well imagine. For by
this act the Ulémas were deprived of their ecclesiastical
authority which was transferred to the Emperor.
That the Orient too possesses its particular official
manner of expression in administrative matters is very
prettily shown by a decree in which Akbar “granted
the long cherished wish” of these same chiefs
of the Ulémas to undertake the pilgrimage to Mecca,
which of course really meant a banishment of several
years. Other unworthy Ulémas were displaced
from their positions or deprived of their sinécures;
others who in their bitterness had caused rebellion
or incited or supported mutiny were condemned for
high treason. The rich property of the churches
was for the most part confiscated and appropriated
for the general weal. In short, the power and
influence of the Ulémas was completely broken
down, the mosques stood empty and were transformed
into stables and warehouses.
Akbar had long ceased to be a faithful
Moslem. Now after the fall of the Ulémas
he came forward openly with his conviction, declared
the Koran to be a human compilation and its commands
folly, disputed the miracles of Mohammed and also
the value of his prophecies, and denied the doctrine
of recompense after death. He professed the Brahman
and Sufistic doctrine that the soul migrates through
countless existences and finally attains divinity
after complete purification.
The assertion of the Ulémas that
every person came into the world predisposed towards
Islam and that the natural language of mankind was
Arabic (the Jews made the same claim for Hebrew and
the Brahmáns for Sanskrit), Akbar refuted by
a drastic experiment which does not correspond with
his usual benevolence, but still is characteristic
of the tendency of his mind. In this case a convincing
demonstration appeared to him so necessary that some
individuals would have to suffer for it. Accordingly
in the year 1579 he caused twenty infants to be taken
from their parents in return for a compensation and
brought up under the care of silent nurses in a remote
spot in which no word should be spoken. After
four years it was proved that as many of these unhappy
children as were still alive were entirely dumb and
possessed no trace of a predisposition for Islam.
Later the children are said to have learned to speak
with extraordinary difficulty as was to be expected.
Akbar’s repugnance to Islam
developed into a complete revulsion against every
thing connected with this narrow religion and made
the great Emperor petty-souled in this particular.
The decrees were dated from the death of Mohammed
and no longer from the Hejra (the flight from Mecca
to Medina). Books written in Arabic, the language
of the Koran were given the lowest place in the imperial
library. The knowledge of Arabic was prohibited,
even the sounds characteristically belonging to this
language were avoided. Where formerly according
to ancient tradition had stood the word Bismilahi,
“in the name of God,” there now appeared
the old war cry Allahu akbar “God is
great,” which came into use the more generally on
coins, documents, etc. the more the
courtiers came to reverse the sense of the slogan
and to apply to it the meaning, “Akbar is God.”
Before I enter into the Emperor’s
assumption of this flattery and his conception of
the imperial dignity as conferred by the grace of God,
I must speak of the interesting attempts of the Jesuits
to win over to Christianity the most powerful ruler
of the Orient.
As early as in the spring of 1578
a Portuguese Jesuit who worked among the Bengals as
a missionary appeared at the imperial court and pleased
Akbar especially because he got the better of the Ulémas
in controversy. Two years later Akbar sent a
very polite letter to the Provincial of the Jesuit
order in Goa, requesting him to send two Fathers in
order that Akbar himself might be instructed “in
their faith and its perfection.” It is
easy to imagine how gladly the Provincial assented
to this demand and how carefully he proceeded with
the selection of the fathers who were to be sent away
with such great expectations. As gifts to the
Emperor the Jesuits brought a Bible in four languages
and pictures of Christ and the Virgin Mary, and to
their great delight when Akbar received them he laid
the Bible upon his head and kissed the two pictures
as a sign of reverence.
In the interesting work of the French
Jesuit Du Jarric, published in 1611, we possess very
detailed accounts of the operations of these missionaries
who were honorably received at Akbar’s court
and who were invited to take up their residence in
the imperial palace. The evening assemblies in
the ‘Ibadat Khana’ in Fathpur Sikri at
once gave the shrewd Jesuits who were schooled in
dialectics, an opportunity to distinguish themselves
before the Emperor who himself presided over this
Religious Parliament in which Christians, Jews, Mohammedans,
Brahmáns, Buddhists and Parsees debated with each
other. Abul Fazl speaks with enthusiasm in the
Akbarname of the wisdom and zealous faith of
Father Aquaviva, the leader of this Jesuit mission,
and relates how he offered to walk into a fiery furnace
with a New Testament in his hand if the Mullahs would
do the same with the Koran in their hand, but that
the Mohammedan priests withdrew in terror before this
test by fire. It is noteworthy in this connection
that the Jesuits at Akbar’s court received a
warning from their superiors not to risk such rash
experiments which might be induced by the devil with
the view of bringing shame upon Christianity. The
superiors were apparently well informed with regard
to the intentions of the devil.
In conversation with the Jesuits Akbar
proved to be favorably inclined towards many of the
Christian doctrines and met his guests half way in
every manner possible. They had permission to
erect a hospital and a chapel and to establish Christian
worship in the latter for the benefit of the Portuguese
in that vicinity. Akbar himself occasionally
took part in this service kneeling with bared head,
which, however, did not hinder him from joining also
in the Mohammedan ritual or even the Brahman religious
practices of the Rajput women in his harem. He
had his second son Murad instructed by the Jesuits
in the Portuguese language and in the Christian faith.
The Jesuits on their side pushed energetically
toward their goal and did not scorn to employ flattery
in so far as to draw a parallel between the Emperor
and Christ, but no matter how slyly the fathers proceeded
in the accomplishment of their plans Akbar was always
a match for them. In spite of all concessions
with regard to the excellence and credibility of the
Christian doctrines the Emperor never seemed to be
entirely satisfied. Du Jarric “complains
bitterly of his obstinacy and remarks that the restless
intellect of this man could never be quieted by one
answer but must constantly make further inquiry."
The clever historian of Islam makes the following
comment: “Bad, very bad; perhaps
he would not even be satisfied with the seven riddles
of the universe of the latest natural science."
To every petition and importunity
of the Jesuits to turn to Christianity Akbar maintained
a firm opposition. A second and third embassy
which the order at Goa sent out in the nineties of
the sixteenth century, also labored in vain for Akbar’s
conversion in spite of the many evidences of favor
shown by the Emperor. One of the last Jesuits
to come, Jerome Xavier of Navarre, is said to have
been induced by the Emperor to translate the four
Gospels into Persian which was the language of the
Mohammedan court of India. But Akbar never thought
of allowing himself to be baptized, nor could he consider
it seriously from political motives as well as from
reasons of personal conviction. A man who ordered
himself to be officially declared the highest authority
in matters of faith to be sure not so much
in order to found an imperial papacy in his country
as to guard his empire from an impending religious
war at any rate a man who saw how the prosperity
of his reign proceeded from his own personal initiative
in every respect, such a man could countenance no will
above his own nor subject himself to any pangs of conscience.
To recognize the Pope as highest authority and simply
to recognize as objective truth a finally determined
system in the realm in which he had spent day and
night in a hot pursuit after a clearer vision, was
for Akbar an absolute impossibility.
Then too Akbar could not but see through
the Jesuits although he appreciated and admired many
points about them. Their rigid dogmatism, their
intolerance and inordinate ambition could leave him
no doubt that if they once arose to power the activity
of the Ulémas, once by good fortune overthrown,
would be again resumed by them to a stronger and more
dangerous degree. It is also probable that Akbar,
who saw and heard everything, had learned of the horrors
of the Inquisition at Goa. Moreover, the clearness
of Akbar’s vision for the realities of national
life had too often put him on his guard to permit him
to look upon the introduction of Christianity, however
highly esteemed by him personally, as a blessing for
India. He had broken the power of Islam in India;
to overthrow in like manner the second great religion
of his empire, Brahmanism, to which the great majority
of his subjects clung with body and soul, and then
in place of both existing religions to introduce a
third foreign religion inimically opposed to them such
a procedure would have hurled India into an irremediable
confusion and destroyed at one blow the prosperity
of the land which had been brought about by the ceaseless
efforts of a lifetime. For of course it was not
the aim of the Jesuits simply to win Akbar personally
to Christianity but they wished to see their religion
made the state religion of this great empire.
As has been already suggested, submission
to Christianity would also have been opposed to Akbar’s
inmost conviction. He had climbed far enough
up the stony path toward truth to recognize all religions
as historically developed and as the products of their
time and the land of their origin. All the nobler
religions seemed to him to be radiations from the
one eternal truth. That he thought he had found
the truth with regard to the fate of the soul in the
Sufi-Vedantic doctrine of its migration through countless
existences and its final ascension to deity has been
previously mentioned. With such views Akbar could
not become a Catholic Christian.
The conviction of the final reabsorption
into deity, conditions also the belief in the emanation
of the ego from deity. But Akbar’s relation
to God is not sufficiently identified with this belief.
Akbar was convinced that he stood nearer to God than
other people. This is already apparent in the
title “The Shadow of God” which he had
assumed. The reversed, or rather the double, meaning
of the sentence Allahu akbar, “Akbar
is God,” was not displeasing to the Emperor as
we know. And when the Hindus declared him to be
an incarnation of a divinity he did not disclaim this
homage. Such a conception was nothing unusual
with the Hindus and did not signify a complete apotheosis.
Although Akbar took great pains he was not able to
permanently prevent the people from considering him
a healer and a worker of miracles. But Akbar
had too clear a head not to know that he was a man, a
man subject to mistakes and frailties; for when he
permitted himself to be led into a deed of violence
he had always experienced the bitterest remorse.
Not the slightest symptom of Caesaromania can be discovered
in Akbar.
Akbar felt that he was a mediator
between God and man and believed “that the deity
revealed itself to him in the mystical illumination
of his soul." This conviction Akbar held in common
with many rulers of the Occident who were much smaller
than he. Idolatrous marks of veneration he permitted
only to a very limited degree. He was not always
quite consistent in this respect however, and we must
realize how infinitely hard it was to be consistent
in this matter at an Oriental court when the customary
servility, combined with sincere admiration and reverence,
longed to actively manifest itself.
Akbar, as we have already seen, suffered
the Hindu custom of prostration, but on the other
hand we have the express testimony to the contrary
from the author Faizi, the trusted friend of the Emperor,
who on the occasion of an exaggerated homage literally
says: “The commands of His Majesty expressly
forbid such devout reverence and as often as the courtiers
offer homage of this kind because of their loyal sentiments
His Majesty forbids them, for such manifestations of
worship belong to God alone," Finally however Akbar
felt himself moved to forbid prostration publicly,
yet to permit it in a private manner, as appears in
the following words of Abul Fazl:
“But since obscurantists consider
prostration to be a blasphemous adoration of man,
His Majesty in his practical wisdom has commanded
that it be put an end to with ignorant people of all
stations and also that it shall not be practiced even
by his trusted servants on public court days.
Nevertheless if people upon whom the star of good fortune
has shone are in attendance at private assemblies and
receive permission to be seated, they may perform
the prostration of gratitude by bowing their foreheads
to the earth and so share in the rays of good fortune.
So forbidding prostration to the people at large and
granting it to the select the Emperor fulfils the wishes
of both and gives the world an example of practical
wisdom.”
The desire to unite his subjects as
much as possible finally impelled Akbar to the attempt
to equalize religious differences as well. Convinced
that religions did not differ from each other in their
innermost essence, he combined what in his opinion
were the essential elements and about the year 1580
founded a new religion, the famous Din i Ilahi, the
“religion of God.” This religion recognizes
only one God, a purely spiritual universally efficient
being from whom the human soul is derived and towards
which it tends. The ethics of this religion comprises
the high moral requirements of Sufism and Parsism:
complete toleration, equality of rights among all men,
purity in thought, word and deed. The demand
of monogamy, too, was added later. Priests, images
and temples, Akbar would have none of these
in his new religion, but from the Parsees he took
the worship of the fire and of the sun as to him light
and its heat seemed the most beautiful symbol of the
divine spirit. He also adopted the holy cord of
the Hindus and wore upon his forehead the colored
token customary among them. In this eclectic
manner he accommodated himself in a few externalities
to the different religious communities existing in
his kingdom.
Doubtless in the foundation of his
Din i Ilahi Akbar was not pursuing merely ideal ends
but probably political ones as well, for the adoption
of the new religion signified an increased loyalty
to the Emperor. The novice had to declare himself
ready to yield to the Emperor his property, his life,
his honor, and his former faith, and in reality the
adherents of the Din i Ilahi formed a clan of the
truest and most devoted servitors of the Emperor.
It may not be without significance that soon after
the establishment of the Din i Ilahi a new computation
of time was introduced which dated from the accession
of Akbar to the throne in 1556.
After the new religion had been in
existence perhaps five years the number of converts
began to grow by the thousands but we can say with
certainty that the greater portion of these changed
sides not from conviction but on account of worldly
advantage, since they saw that membership in the new
religion was very advantageous to a career in the
service of the state. By far the greatest number
of those who professed the Din i Ilahi observed only
the external forms, privately remaining alien to it.
In reality the new religion did not
extend outside of Akbar’s court and died out
at his death. Hence if failure here can be charged
to the account of the great Emperor, yet this very
failure redounds to his honor. Must it not be
counted as a great honor to Akbar that he considered
it possible to win over his people to a spiritual
imageless worship of God? Had he known that the
religious requirements of the masses can only be satisfied
by concrete objects of worship and by miracles (the
more startling the better), that a spiritualized faith
can never be the possession of any but a few chosen
souls, he would not have proceeded with the founding
of the Din i Ilahi. And still we cannot call
its establishment an absolute failure, for the spirit
of tolerance which flowed out from Akbar’s religion
accomplished infinite good and certainly contributed
just as much to lessening the antagonisms in India
as did Akbar’s social and industrial reforms.
A man who accomplished such great
things and desired to accomplish greater, deserves
a better fortune than was Akbar’s towards the
end of life. He had provided for his sons the
most careful education, giving them at the same time
Christian and orthodox Mohammedan instructors in order
to lead them in their early years to the attainment
of independent views by means of a comparison between
contrasts; but he was never to have pleasure in his
sons. It seems that he lacked the necessary severity.
The two younger boys of this exceedingly temperate
Emperor, Murad and Danial, died of delirium tremens
in their youth even before their father. The
oldest son, Selim, later the Emperor Jehangir, was
also a drunkard and was saved from destruction through
this inherited vice of the Timur dynasty only by the
wisdom and determination of his wife. But he
remained a wild uncontrolled cruel man (as different
as possible from his father and apparently so by intention)
who took sides with the party of the vanquished Ulémas
and stepped forth as the restorer of Islam. In
frequent open rebellion against his magnanimous father
who was only too ready to pardon him, he brought upon
this father the bitterest sorrow; and especially by
having the trustworthy minister and friend of his father,
Abul Fazl, murdered while on a journey. Very
close to Akbar also was the loss of his old mother
to whom he had clung his whole life long with a touching
love and whom he outlived only a short time.
Akbar lost his best friends and his
most faithful servants before he finally succumbed
to a very painful abdominal illness, which at the
last changed him also mentally to a very sad extent,
and finally carried him off on the night of the fifteenth
of October, 1605. He was buried at Sikandra near
Agra in a splendid mausoleum of enormous proportions
which he himself had caused to be built and which even
to-day stands almost uninjured.
This in short is a picture of the
life and activities of the greatest ruler which the
Orient has ever produced. In order to rightly
appreciate Akbar’s greatness we must bear in
mind that in his empire he placed all men on an equality
without regard to race or religion, and granted universal
freedom of worship at a time when the Jews were still
outlaws in the Occident and many bloody persécutions
occurred from time to time; when in the Occident men
were imprisoned, executed or burnt at the stake for
the sake of their faith or their doubts; at a time
when Europe was polluted by the horrors of witch-persecution
and the massacre of St. Bartholemew. Under Akbar’s
rule India stood upon a much higher plane of civilization
in the sixteenth century than Europe at the same time.
Germany should be proud that the personality
of Akbar who according to his own words “desired
to live at peace with all humanity, with every creature
of God,” has so inspired a noble German of princely
blood in the last century that he consecrated the
work of his life to the biography of Akbar. This
man is the Prince Friedrich August of Schleswig-Holstein,
Count of Noer, who wandered through the whole of Northern
India on the track of Akbar’s activities, and
on the basis of the most careful investigation of
sources has given us in his large two-volumed work
the best and most extensive information which has
been written in Europe about the Emperor Akbar.
How much his work has been a labor of love can be
recognized at every step in his book but especially
may be seen in a touching letter from Agra written
on the 24th of April, 1868, in which he relates that
he utilized the early hours of this day for an excursion
to lay a bunch of fresh roses on Akbar’s grave
and that no visit to any other grave had ever moved
him so much as this.