eng
competition

Text Practice Mode

World's TOUGHEST Typing Test

created Jan 25th 2018, 12:48 by Narottam


4


Rating

327 words
38 completed
00:00
BABUR 1526-1530
1526 - defeated Ibrahim Lodi and his Afghan supporters at Panipat.
1527 - defeated Rana Sanga, Rajput rulers and allies at Khanua.
1528 - defeated the Rajputs at Chanderi.
Established control over Agra and Delhi before his death.
HUMAYUN 1530-1540, 1555-1556
(1) Humayun divided his inheritance according to the will of his father. His brothers were each given a province. The ambitions of his brother Mirza Kamran weakened Humayun's cause against Afghan competitors. Sher Khan defeated Humayun at Chausa (1539) and Kanauj (1540), forcing him to flee to Iran.
(2) In Iran Humayun received help from the Safavid Shah. He recaptured Delhi in 1555 but died in an accident the following year.
AKBAR 1556-1605
Akbar was 13 years old when he became emperor. His reign can be divided into three periods.
(1) 1556-1570 - Akbar became independent of the regent Bairam Khan and other members of his domestic staff. Military campaigns were launched against the Suris and other Afghans, against the neighbouring kingdoms of Malwa and Gondwana, and to suppress the revolt of his half-brother Mirza Hakim and the Uzbegs. In 1568 the Sisodiya capital of Chittor was seized and in 1569 Ranthambhor.
(2) 1570-1585 - military campaigns in Gujarat were followed by campaigns in the east in Bihar, Bengal and Orissa. These campaigns were complicated by the 1579-1580 revolt in support of Mirza Hakim.
(3) 1585-1605 - expansion of Akbar's empire. Campaigns in the north-west. Qandahar was seized from the Safavids, Kashmir was annexed, as also Kabul, after the death of Mirza Hakim. Campaigns in the Deccan started and Berar, Khandesh and parts of Ahmadnagar were annexed.
Jahangir 1605-1627
Military campaigns started by Akbar continued. The Sisodiya ruler of Mewar, Amar Singh, accepted Mughal service. Less successful campaigns against the Sikhs, the Ahoms and Ahmadnagar followed. Prince Khurram, the future Emperor Shah Jahan, rebelled in the last years of his reign. The efforts of Nur Jahan, Jahangir's wife, to marginalise him were unsuccessful.
 

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