Both the Quran and sharia (Islamic law) …

Years: 1396 - 1539

Both the Quran and sharia (Islamic law) provide the basis for enforcing Islamic administration over the independent Hindu rulers, but the sultanate had made only fitful progress in the beginning, when many campaigns were undertaken for plunder and temporary reduction of fortresses.

The effective rule of a sultan depends largely on his ability to control the strategic places that dominate the military highways and trade routes, extract the annual land tax, and maintain personal authority over military and provincial governors.

Sultan Ala-ud-Din had made an attempt to reassess, systematize, and unify land revenues and urban taxes and to institute a highly centralized system of administration over his realm, but his efforts were abortive.

Although agriculture in North India improved as a result of new canal construction and irrigation methods, including what comes to be known as the Persian wheel, prolonged political instability and parasitic methods of tax collection brutalize the peasantry.

Yet trade and a market economy, encouraged by the free-spending habits of the aristocracy, acquires new impetus both inland and overseas.

Experts in metalwork, stonework, and textile manufacture respond to the new patronage with enthusiasm.

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