Preface; 1. The History of Persian Kingship and Persianization in South Asia; 2. Kings in History: Persian Royal Genealogies and Muslim Rulers; 3. Warrior King: Slaying Demons, Hunting Beasts, and War; 4. Theory and Application of Persianate Political Ethics in India; 5. The Pen, the Sword, and the Vizier; Conclusion.
A study of Perso-Islamic kingship in India, as a way to understanding the political and cultural history of Muslim courts in India and their legacy.
Blain Auer is Professor of South Asian Studies at the University of Lausanne. He is the author of Symbols of Authority in Medieval Islam: History, Religion and Muslim Legitimacy in the Delhi Sultanate (2012), co-editor of Encountering Buddhism and Islam in Medieval Central and South Asia (2019) and serves as Editor for the journals Marginalia, Études asiatiques, and the book series Perspectives on Islamicate South Asia.
'If James Mill dismissed the Delhi Sultanate as “a government,
moulded and conducted agreeably to the properties of Persian
civilization, instead of a government moulded and conducted
agreeably to the properties of Hindu civilization” Blain Auer shows
the opposite. He argues that Muslim chroniclers of India
self-consciously connected their reigning patrons to pre-Islamic
Iranian kings precisely because this model provided a more
universal ideal of governance that was far more suited to the
diverse subject population of the subcontinent. Auer should be
commended for elucidating this theme in a monograph-length study.'
Ali Anooshahr, University of California, Davis
'Crisply narrated and richly detailed, this thought-provoking
re-evaluation of a key moment in South Asian history offers a
valuable corrective to the polarized narratives of the present.
Through a magnificent array of primary sources, Auer illuminates
the theory and praxis of politics during the rise of a 'Persian
imperium'.' Supriya Gandhi, Yale University
'A very important contribution to the study of Islamic
kingship. Every library interested in the history of India,
Iran and Central Asia should acquire this book.' Roy Parviz
Mottahedeh, Harvard University
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