Read Raiders from the North: Empire of the Moghul Online
Authors: Alex Rutherford
EMPIRE OF THE MOGHUL
Alex Rutherford
Thomas Dunne Books
St. Martin’s Press
New York
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
THOMAS DUNNE BOOKS
.
An imprint of St. Martin’s Press.
RAIDERS FROM THE NORTH
. Copyright © 2009 by Alex Rutherford. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. For information, address St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Rutherford, Alex, 1948-
Raiders from the north : empire of the Moghul /Alex
Rutherford.—1st U.S. ed.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-0-312-59700-9
1. Farghona (Uzbekistan)—History—Fiction. 2. Babur, Emperor of Hindustan, 1483-1530—Fiction. 3. Mogul Empire—History-Fiction. 4. Mogul Empire—Kings and rulers—Fiction. I.Title.
PR6118.U92R35 2010
823'.92—dc22
2010002336
First published in Great Britain by Headline Review, an imprint of Headline Publishing Group
First U.S. Edition: May 2010
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Sketch Map of Babur’s World
Samarkand
Babur’s parents, siblings, grandmother and uncle
Ahmed, King of Samarkand, Babur’s uncle
Esan Dawlat, Babur’s maternal grandmother
Jahangir, Babur’s half-brother
Khanzada, Babur’s older sister
Kutlugh Nigar, Babur’s mother
Umar-Shaikh, King of Ferghana, Babur’s father
Babur’s wives
Ayisha, daughter of the chief of the Mangligh clan
Maham, Babur’s favourite wife and mother of Humayun
Gulrukh, mother of Kamran and Askari
Bibi Mubarak, daughter of the chief of the Yusufzai clan
Dildar, mother of Hindal
Babur’s sons
Humayun
Kamran
Askari
Hindal
Babur’s cousins
Azar Khan, nobleman of Ferghana
Mahmud, Prince of Kunduz
Mirza Khan, chieftain of Ferghana
Tambal, nobleman of Ferghana
Babur’s inner circle
Baburi, a former market boy and Babur’s closest friend
Baisanghar, originally an officer of Samarkand, subsequently Babur’s loyal commander and, even later, father-in-law
Kasim, one of Babur’s political advisers, often used by him as an ambassador
Wazir Khan, milk-brother to Babur’s father and Babur’s guide and chief mentor in his childhood and early years as king
Abdul-Malik, a physician
Ferghana
Baba Qashqa, comptroller of the royal household
Baqi Beg, court astrologer
Fatima, chief waiting woman
Qambar-Ali, vizier
Rehana, an old woman whose grandfather rode with Timur to sack Delhi
Roxanna, concubine of Babur’s father and mother of Jahangir
Walid Butt, Esan Dawlat’s steward
Yadgar, Babur’s favourite inhabitant of a Ferghana brothel
Yusuf, keeper of the treasury
Babur’s tribal leaders
Ali-Dost, a chieftain from western Ferghana
Ali Gosht, Babur’s master-of-horse and later chief quartermaster
Ali Mazid Beg, lord of Shahrukiyyah
Baba Yasaval, warrior from near Herat
Hussain Mazid, headman of Sayram and cousin of Ali Mazid Beg
Babur’s chief enemy in Central Asia
Shaibani Khan, powerful leader of the Uzbek clans and blood enemy of Babur’s people and all those descended from Timur
Persia
Shah Ismail of Persia
Mullah Husayn, Shiite mullah serving Shah Ismail
Turkey
Ali-Quli, master-gunner
Kabul
Bahlul Ayyub, grand vizier
Haydar Taqi, keeper of the Royal Seal
Muhammad-Muquim Arghun, chief of the Hazaras
Wali Gul, guardian of the Royal Treasuries
Hindustan
Buwa, mother of Sultan Ibrahim Lodi
Firoz Khan, Hindustani warlord
Gwalior royal family, owners of the Koh-i-Nur diamond, the ‘Mountain of Light’
Rana Sanga, Hindu ruler of the Rajput state of Mewar
Sultan Ibrahim Lodi, ruler of the great Delhi Sultanate and overlord of Hindustan
Roshanna, Buwa’s serving woman
Babur’s ancestors
Genghis Khan
Timur, known in the West as Tamburlaine from a corruption of ‘Timur-i-Lang’, ‘Timur the Lame’
I do not write this to complain; I have written the plain truth. I do not write to praise myself but to set down exactly what happened. In this history I have been determined to write truthfully about everything. As a consequence I have set down all that is good or bad I have seen of father, kinsman or stranger. Reader, pardon this . . .
Diary of Babur, Founder of the Moghul Empire
I
n a small dusty fortress in Central Asia in the summer of 1494, the baked-mud battlements, grey as elephant’s hide in daytime, were pinkening before Babur’s eyes with the sunset. Far beneath, the Jaxartes river gleamed a dull red as it flowed westward across the darkening plains. Babur shifted his weight on the stone step and returned his attention to his father, the king, who was pacing the fortress walls, hands clasped against the turquoise fastenings of his robes. His face was working excitedly as he launched into the story his twelve-year-old son had heard so many times before. But it was worth the retelling, Babur reflected. He listened carefully, alert for the new embellishments that always crept in. His lips moved with his father’s when the king reached the climax – the one part that never changed, each of its grandiose phrases sacrosanct.
‘And so it happened that our ancestor the great Timur – Timur the Warrior, whose name meant “Iron” and whose horses sweated blood as he galloped through the world – won a vast empire. Though he was so cruelly injured in his youth that one leg was longer than the other and he walked with a limp, he conquered from Delhi to the Mediterranean, from wealthy Persia to the wildernesses along the Volga. But was that enough for Timur? Of course not! Even when many years were upon him, he was still strong and robust in body, hard like a rock, his ambition boundless.
His final enterprise was ninety years ago against China. He rode out with the thunder of two hundred thousand horsemen in his ears and victory would have been his, had Allah not summoned him to rest with him in Paradise. But how did Timur, this greatest of warriors – greater even than your other ancestor Genghis Khan – do all this? I see the question in your eyes, my son, and you are right to ask it.’
The king patted Babur’s head approvingly, seeing that he held his complete attention. Then he resumed, voice rising and falling with poetic fervour.
‘Timur was clever and brave but, above all, he was a great leader of men. My grandfather told me that his eyes were like candles without brilliance. Once men looked into those slits of muted light they could not turn away. And as Timur gazed into their souls he spoke of glory that would echo through the centuries and stir the lifeless dust that would be all that was left of their bones on earth. He spoke of gleaming gold and shimmering gems. He spoke of fine-boned women whose black hair hung like curtains of silk such as they had seen in the slave markets of his capital of Samarkand. Above all he spoke of their birthright, their right to be the possessors of the earth. And as Timur’s deep voice flowed over and around them, visions filled their minds of what was theirs for the taking until they would have followed him through the burning gates of hell.
‘Not that Timur was a barbarian, my son.’ The king shook his head vigorously so that the fringe he liked to leave hanging from his maroon silk turban swung from side to side. ‘No. He was a cultured man. His great city of Samarkand was a place of grace and beauty, of scholarship and learning. But Timur knew that a conqueror must let nothing – no one – stand in his way. Ruthlessness ruled his soul until the job was done and the more who knew it the better.’ He closed his eyes, picturing the glory days of his magnificent ancestor. He had worked himself into such a lather of pride and excitement that beads of sweat were bursting out on his forehead. He took a yellow silk scarf and mopped it.
Exhilarated as usual by the images his father had conjured, Babur smiled up at him to show he shared the same joyous pride. But even as he watched, his father’s face changed. The fervent light in his dark eyes faded and his expression grew despondent, even brooding. Babur’s smile faltered. His father’s story usually finished with this paean to Timur, but today the king continued, his tone bleak, the vibrancy gone.
‘But I – descendant of the great Timur though I am – what have I? Just Ferghana, a kingdom not two hundred miles long or one hundred wide. Look at it – a place of sheep and goats grazing in valleys ringed on three sides by mountains.’ He flung out an arm towards the soaring, cloud-circled peaks of Mount Beshtor. ‘Meanwhile three hundred miles to the west my brother rules golden Samarkand, while south across the Hindu Kush my cousin holds wealthy Kabul. I am their poor relation to be snubbed and despised. Yet my blood – your blood – is as good as theirs.’