India in the Persianate Age: 1000-1765, by Richard M. Eaton, is a fascinating history of India in the age of Persian influence, from about the year 1000 to the advent of British Imperial control in 1765. This period of history is vast and saw numerous changes to Indian politics, culture, religion, and so forth, and also brought India heavily into the geopolitical reality of first the Middle East, and then Europe, after a fairly insular period due to the geopolitical isolation of India past the Khyber Pass. This book looks at the history of Turko-Afghani and Persian invasions in the 11th century, with first the Gazhanids, and then Ghurids invading Northern India from Afghanistan. These groups first sought loot and would invade with large armies to take away loot, rather than by conquest. However, due to the changing nature of steppe politics, these groups began to settle down in larger and larger numbers in Northern India, eventually founding the Delhi Sultanate. This polity would dominate Indian history for a few centuries after its founding in the early 13th century. Eaton notes that far from the traditional (ie. British Colonial) histories of India written over the past few hundred years, the advent of Islamic culture into India was not a "dark period" akin to the "dark ages" of European history. Much of India's political culture would change in this time, moving away from the Mandala-influenced spheres of control that traditional Indian Kingdoms would set up, toward a polity that revolved around the personal rule, with turbulent succession, and semi-frequent regime changes. These changes would ensure a large amount of political innovation in Indian, as Islamic rulers with Persian traditions and cultural influences would interact with a largely Hindu population.
The effect of these changes to political and cultural norms was profound and affected almost every corner of the Indian subcontinent. Delhi spread far south into the Deccan and would go on to visualize much of southern India. It also invaded far into Bengal, bringing this distinct and diverse region into the greater Indian orbit. Although Delhi struggled to control these regions for long periods of time, due to internal political issues, the influence it would have on the politics of these regions lasted far into the future. The successor state of the Deccan - the Bahmani Sultanate, used many of the trappings on Delhi's former ruling structures far after Delhi had retreated back North, and subsequently crumbled. In Bengal, the area continued to be ruled by an offshoot of the former Governors of Bengal from Delhi, who had always operated as semi-independent vassals anyway. Farther south, the Vijayanagara state would emerge, using a Persianized ruling system, promoting Persian culture, and utilizing massive armies of Afghani-Turks, while also maintaining a distinct Hindu aesthetic and culture. Repeated raids from the Timurids, including a brief but influential occupation of Northern India, followed.
Over time, these regions would splinter, coalesce around new states, like Bihar, Gondwana, Manipur, and so forth. In Northern India, continued invasions from Afghanistan were the norm, and in the 16th century, Babur, former ruler of Samarkand, would flee the Uzbek hordes into Northern India, and found the lasting Mughal Empire. He carved out a state that, for a long period of time, united Northern India with Afghanistan, and brought into the fold the distinct regions of Sindh, Gujrat, Bengal, and the Deccan. Eventually, Mughal control would stretch over almost the entirety of the Indian subcontinent. Eaton discusses the cultural changes of this time, with the advent of an Islamic Empire, that nonetheless closely utilized its Rajput vassals as military leaders and governors. Babur's grandson, Akbar, was famous for his House of Wisdom, where different religious leaders, Hindus, Jains, Sufis, Christians, and so forth, would debate religion and philosophy endlessly. This was an era of much philosophical and religious change in India, where Sikhism would rise in Punjab, the Maratha's gained prominence in south/central India, and Islamic culture and religion would mix with Hinduism and Buddhism to create a cultural milieu.
Eaton describes these events in much greater detail throughout the book. I found the discussions on the intermixing of religions and philosophies to be enlightening; especially when much English history of India is focused on colonialism and the British. Far from being a "dark age", this was an age of intense and long-lasting cultural fusion, which changed the very make-up of the Indian subcontinent. The Mughal's especially was a fascinating polity that brought much innovation, while also engaging with the ideas and innovations brought forward from the ever-changing Hindu religion and cultural sphere. This book discredits racist and colonial histories, instead of bringing to light the vast complexities of this region during this time period, and looking to bring a fresh perspective to Indian history that goes beyond either British nostalgia, or Indian/Pakistani nationalism. A thorough text through and through, on a fascinating time-period and place.