Against the Mughals: Dreams and Wars of Dattū Sarvānī, a Sixteenth-Century Indo-Afghan Soldier by Simon Digby

Series Name: The Life and Works of Simon Digby edited by David Lunn

 

Against the Mughals: Dreams and Wars of Dattū Sarvānī, a Sixteenth-Century Indo-Afghan Soldier

 

AUTHOR- Simon Digby

SERIES EDITOR: David Lunn

INTRODUCTION BY: Samira Sheikh

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INFORMATION

  • AUTHOR : Simon Digby
  • SERIES EDITOR: David Lunn
  • HB ISBN : 978-93-6177-387-7
  • Year : 2024
  • Extent : 340
  • Discount available on checkout
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The Life and Works of Simon Digby is intended to bring most of Simon Digby’s publications, together with a large body of work left unpublished at his death, to new and wider audiences.

The series stands as testimony to his extraordinary scholarship. Publication of this series has been made possible by the Simon Digby Memorial Charity (SDMC). Registered in the Channel Island of Jersey where Digby was based, the SDMC was established to further the study of subjects that were of particular interest to Simon Digby. The SDMC has donated much of his collection to Oxford University’s Ashmolean Museum and Bodleian Library, to the British Museum, and to other museums across the globe. It has funded the production of this series through a postdoctoral fellowship at SOAS University of London, aided in the publication of a volume on Digby’s historical method, and continues to fund projects in fields associated with his research.

The first book in the volume, Against the Mughals reconstructs the worldviews of Dattū Sarvānī, an Indo-Afghan soldier who believed in the power of dreams: to predict, warn, guide and inform. He also believed in the ability of his Sufi pīr, ‘Abd al-Quddūs Gangohī, both to appear in his dreams, and to change the course of history through his spiritual power and authority.

In this first volume of ‘The Life and Works of Simon Digby’, the author translates the dreams of Dattū Sarvānī—a unique source for the period—and uses them to illuminate the political and social worlds of the early sixteenth century, when invasions under Bābur and Humāyūn led to the downfall of the north Indian sultanates and the establishment of the Mughal Empire. Drawing on a vast array of primary and secondary material, with meticulous close readings and a wide-ranging historical lens, Digby weaves accounts of military campaigns, Sufi devotion, and daily family life together in a rich analytical tapestry. Sultans, shaykhs and soldiers play their various roles, and the vital though oft-neglected world of pre-Mughal north India comes alive before the readers’ eyes.

Contents

Editor’s Note and Acknowledgements by DAVID LUNN

Introduction by SAMIRA SHEIKH

AGAINST THE MUGHALS

Preface

Historical Introduction

  1. The Laa’if-i Quddusi of Rukn al-Din: Translation of the Anecdotes of Dattu Sarvani
  2. Thirty Years On: Some Reflections on Dattu and the Sarvanis

Appendices: The Context and Implications of the Anecdotes

  1. The Kingdom of Bhatta and Muslim India
  2. The Chronology of Sikandar Lodi’s Reign
  3. An Old Pretender to the Throne of Dehli: Sultan ‘Ala’ al-Din ‘Alam Khan b. Sultan Buhlul and His Namesakes
  4. Humayun’s Campaign against Sultan Bahadur of Gujarat: Dattu’s Evidence Collated with Other Sources
  5. A Sketch of the Life of Shaykh ‘Abd al-Quddus
  6. The Cult of Salar Ma‘sud Ghazi
  7. Badi‘al-Din Madar and His Followers

Simon Digby: A Life  by SIMON DIGBY, RICHARD HARRIS, AND DAVID LUNN

Bibliography

Index

Forthcoming in the Series: 

  1. Encounters with Jogīs in Indian Sūfī Hagiography
  2. Sufis in the Life of Medieval India
  3. Tales, Translations, Trajectories
  4. War-Horse and Elephant in the Dehli Sultanate: Revised Edition with Supplementary Materials
  5. The North Indian Sultanates: Studies and Stories
  6. Sufis and Soldiers in Awrangzeb’s Deccan I: New Revised Edition
  7. Sufis and Soldiers in Awrangzeb’s Deccan II: A Historian’s Handbook
  8. Indian Art and Numismatics
  9. Overseas and Far Horizons I: Essays and Documents on Indo-Persian Perceptions in the Age of the Europeans
  10. Overseas and Far Horizons II: Travel Accounts, from Pilgrims to Princes

The Author

Simon Digby (1932–2010) was one of the foremost scholars on pre-Mughal India as well as a prolific writer, translator and collector. He was Honorary Librarian of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, curator in the Department of Eastern Art of the Ashmolean Museum of the University of Oxford, and a member of the Oriental Institute of the university. His contribution to the study of Indian history can be seen by a glance through his bibliography, which demonstrates his wide-ranging research into disparate fields. Throughout his illustrious career, he wrote several books that are considered path-breaking in their field, including Wonder Tales of South Asia and War-Horse and Elephant in the Dehli Sultanate.

The Editor

David Lunn was the Simon Digby Postdoctoral Fellow at SOAS (2015–18) and is currently an independent scholar. He taught extensively at SOAS in the fields of South Asian, postcolonial, cultural and gender studies (2007–23) and was, latterly, branch secretary of the UCU trade union. He has published on Hindi–Urdu and Hindu–Muslim relations in pre-Independence India, early Hindustani cinema, a unique Malay poetic account of Muharram in nineteenth-century Singapore, the poetry of Emperor Shāh ‘Ālam II, and the queer satire of the Indo-Irish author Aubrey Menen.