Trade, State, and Religion in Early Modern India: Devotionalism and the Market Economy in the Mughal Empire |
Contents
Mughal stateformation and the market economy | 44 |
Caste devotionalism and the commercial | 83 |
Devotional religion trading communities | 136 |
Copyright | |
4 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
administrative Agra agrarian Akbar Alam argue artisans Aurangzeb authority Bayly Bitak Brahmans Bundela Bundelkhand Cambridge Economic History central chapter Chhatrasal claim commercial activity commercial economy commodity communities concerning Dadu Dayal Delhi Devchandra devotional movements devotionalism devotionalist disciple discussed early modern India eighteenth century elite exchange expansion followers growth Gujarat Guru hagiographical Hindu Hinduism History of India Ibid ideology imperial Indian Society interaction Irfan Habib Islam Jahangir Jain Janmlila Kabir Khatri Mahamat Maharaja Chhatrasal market economy McLeod Medieval mercantile Mughal court Mughal emperors Mughal Empire Mughal India Mughal Nobility Mughal officials Mughal period Muslim Nanak nobles North India Oxford pilgrimage centers poetry political Prannath production Rajput regional religion religious policy renunciants represented revenue ritual role rulers sampradaya Satish Chandra Schomer sect seventeenth century Shah Jahan significant Sikh Singh social socio-religious South Asia spiritual sufi Tapan Raychaudhuri temples Townsmen and Bazaars trade urban Vallabhacharya verses wealth