Farid-ud-Din Sher Shah, Afghan ruler of North India from 1540, has driven his foes from Bengal, Bihar, Hindustan, and the Punjab, and suppressed the Baluch chiefs on the northwestern frontier.
He has reorganized the Mughal organization, efficiently administered the army and tax collections, and built roads, rest houses, and wells for his people.
He is generally tolerant of non-Muslims, a notable exception being his massacre of Hindus after the surrender of Raisen.
Intent on expanding the sultanate of Delhi, the throne of which he had earlier wrested from Babur’s son and successor Humayun, ...