Till Akbar the Moghul rule was golden period, but then afterwards it declined.
Mughal Emperor Akbar the Great's rule was free of War, tolerant of all religions & spread a love of art & architecture.
Mughal Emperor Akbar the Great's rule was free of War, tolerant of all religions & spread a love of art & architecture.
Akbar was a great mughal emperor and a tolerant ruler. His tolerance also kept the mughal empire united. He was a great warrier and won many battles. Though he was illiterate he managed his empire very well. Babur and Akbar brought the Mughal rule to most of India. They used artillery and swift cavalry tactics vs. their enemies the capture Delhi.
First battle of panipat laid the foundation of Mughal rule in India.
Architecture, the arts and literature flousrished under their rule. Mughal. One of the nomads who ...
The word 'mughal' is derived from the word 'mongol'. The Mughals were the descendants of the Mongols of Mongolia in Central Asia. They used artillery in war.Babur, the founder of Mughal dynasty, was a direct descendant of Timur through his father, and a descendant also of Genghis Khan through his mother.the mughal empire was very vast. it replaced the Delhi sultanate in India it was the first mughal rule in India there were great kings like Akbar Jahangir etc. it covered nearly the whole of India
Muslim culture dominated in parts of India.
Akbar is actually a Mughal Emperor who was The ruler in India during the early 1700s. Before Akbar's rule Mughal era was not well known. Akbar was very good with keeping perfect political relations. This ruler singlehandedly almost unfied India in all its multi-ethinicity. However he was still an invader from the west. Hence it is quite ambiguious where he lies on terms of being a good or bad ruler. But in comparison to his grandson aurangazeb who desecrated andd destroyed temples, Akbar was a very good ruler. So yea make your choice.
Akbar
No. Akbar the Great ruled the modern countries of India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Bangladesh.
Akbar the Great (15 October 1542 - 27 October 1605)
akbar ali khan