Relations of Golkonda with Iran: Diplomacy, Ideas, and Commerce, 1518-1687
AUTHOR- M.Z.A. Shakeb
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INFORMATION
- AUTHOR : M.Z.A. Shakeb
- HB ISBN : 978-93-84082-91-8
- POD ISBN : 978-93-84092-42-9
- Year : 2017
- Extent : 260
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- Usually dispatched within 3 to 5 working days.
Relations of Golkonda with Iran
HB ₹ 895 . $ . ₤ |
PB ₹ . $ . ₤ |
|
POD ₹ . $ . ₤ |
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INFORMATION
- AUTHOR – M.Z.A. Shakeb
- ISBN – 978-93-84082-91-8
- Year – 2017
- Extent: 400 + 40 coloured illustrations
- 10% discount + free shipping
- Usually dispatched within 3 to 5 working days.
This book traces the diplomatic connections and intellectual linkages of the Golkonda sultanate with Safavid Iran and Mughal Hindustan. Complementing studies of early modern empires, it examines a breadth of Persian manuscripts, epistolary correspondence, archival documents, and European travel accounts from the Deccan. It is one of the first of its kind to explore the movement of knowledge, talent, and people in the early modern world from the perspective of a non-imperial, regional polity. Regional sultanates were not merely receivers of statecraft, religion, and politics from large empires, but also a critical site where diplomatic negotiations and new forms of intellectual exchange transpired and bore upon broader shifts in the eastern Islamic world.
The Author
M.Z.A. Shakeb is Historian-archivist of Mughal India and the Deccan.
The Editor
Subah Dayal is Assistant Professor, Department of History, Clemson University, South Carolina.
This book traces the diplomatic connections and intellectual linkages of the Golkonda sultanate with Safavid Iran and Mughal Hindustan. Complementing studies of early modern empires, it examines a breadth of Persian manuscripts, epistolary correspondence, archival documents, and European travel accounts from the Deccan. It is one of the first of its kind to explore the movement of knowledge, talent, and people in the early modern world from the perspective of a non-imperial, regional polity. Regional sultanates were not merely receivers of statecraft, religion, and politics from large empires, but also a critical site where diplomatic negotiations and new forms of intellectual exchange transpired and bore upon broader shifts in the eastern Islamic world.
The Author
M.Z.A. Shakeb is Historian-archivist of Mughal India and the Deccan.
The Editor
Subah Dayal is Assistant Professor, Department of History, Clemson University, South Carolina.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Foreword By Muzaffar Alam | Ix-X |
Acknowledgements | Xi |
Editor’s Introduction | 1-16 |
Abbreviations | 17-22 |
Introduction: Two Dynasties | 23-49 |
Political And Diplomatic Relations | 50-114 |
Ties Of Religion And The Traffic Of Ideas | 115-151 |
Commercial Contacts | 152-185 |
Conclusion | 186-188 |
Appendices | 189-226 |
Bibliography | 227-240 |
Index | 241-245 |