Study the Medieval Period of Indo-Muslim Fusion of Culture

Exploring the Cultural Synthesis of the Delhi Sultanate in Medieval India

Authors

  • Bablu Kumar Jayswal
  • Dr. Sachin Tiwari

Keywords:

Delhi Sultanate, Indo-Muslim fusion of culture, medieval period, monuments, art, music, literature, religion, clothing, Urdu language

Abstract

The Delhi Sultanate is a term comprising five small Delhi dynasties, mostly Turkic or Pastun (Afgan) kingdoms or sultans, who are of Medieval origin in India. Between 1206 1526, the Sultan ruleed from Delhi, when the last Mughal dynasty took office. The subsequent Indo-Muslim cultural merger left monuments in art , music , literature, religion clothing to remain syncretistic. It is assumed that the Urdu language was born in this period as a result of the contact with immigrants speaking Persian and Turkish with Arabic under the Muslim leadership of the local Sanskrit Prairies. The Sultanate of Delhi is only the Indo-Muslim State, which was throned by Rajia Sultana(1236-1240) amongst the few Indian women rulers in 1256.

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Published

2018-09-01

How to Cite

[1]
“Study the Medieval Period of Indo-Muslim Fusion of Culture: Exploring the Cultural Synthesis of the Delhi Sultanate in Medieval India”, JASRAE, vol. 15, no. 7, pp. 589–595, Sep. 2018, Accessed: Jul. 17, 2024. [Online]. Available: https://ignited.in/jasrae/article/view/8749

How to Cite

[1]
“Study the Medieval Period of Indo-Muslim Fusion of Culture: Exploring the Cultural Synthesis of the Delhi Sultanate in Medieval India”, JASRAE, vol. 15, no. 7, pp. 589–595, Sep. 2018, Accessed: Jul. 17, 2024. [Online]. Available: https://ignited.in/jasrae/article/view/8749