The present work aims to fill a gap in Indian historical literature. So far back as 1788, Francis Gladwin published a short history of 'The Reign of Jahangir,' but it was practically a summary of the Maasir-i-Jahangiri. Elphinstone made some use of a few European accounts and of Price's spurious Memoirs of the Emperor Jahangir but he was content mainly to condense the version of the brilliant eighteenth-century historian, Khafi Khan. Most of the later writers relied on Elphinstone.
Here, for the first time, the contemporary Persian chronicles, such as the Tuzuk-i-Jahangiri, Motamad Khan's Iqbal-Nama, Kamghar Husaini's Maasir-i-Jahangiri, the Fath Kangara, the Makhzan Afghani, and others, have been fully sifted and utilized. The numerous contemporary European itineraries and letters, covering thousands of pages, have been critically examined and made to yield whatever results they are capable of. The Rajput sources have likewise been drawn upon. Nor have the later Indian and European records been "neglected. Some new farms and grants of Emperor Jahangir were discovered and used for purposes of verification.
It has thus been possible to give a continuous narrative of all the important political and military transactions of Jahangir's reign. From a critical study of the original authorities, the character of the Emperor is seen to be widely different from what it is commonly believed to have been. My conclusion about Jahangir's responsibility for the death of Sher Afkun, the first husband of Nur Jahan Begam may strike the reader as a novel, but I may be permitted to state that it is based on the critical examination of all available evidence. There is nothing to prove that Jahangir had ever seen Nur Jahan (or Miherunnisa as she was then called) before her first marriage, while there is every reason to believe that he sought neither the life nor the wife of Sher Afkun. The Emperor's marriage with Sher Atkun's widow came off in the way in which numerous marriages took place. The nature, character, and results of the Nur Jahan ascendancy have been analysed.
The fourth chapter discusses the character and workings of the Mughal Government, partly in terms of political science, from a new angle of vision. My conclusions may not command universal assent, but I may be permitted to state that they are the result of prolonged study.
I have aimed throughout at a simple style. On a few occasions, as in my description of the building of Fatehpur Sikri, I was led, despite myself, to adopt the phraseology of Gibbon, whom I happened to be studying but, I hope, I have been able to avoid all bombast and affectation.
I must gratefully acknowledge the generous loan, or per- mission to get copies, of books or manuscripts in the possession of the authorities of the Khuda Bakhsh Orienral Public Library, Bankipore; the Imperial Library, Calcutta; St. Xavier's College, Calcutta; the Jain Siddhanta Bhavan, Arrah; the India Office, London; the Fort Museum, Delhi; Their Highnesses the Maharajas of Jodhpur, Benares, and Chhatarpur and the Nawab of Rampur. L. Sri Ram, M.A., very generously permitted me to get copies of historical pictures in his possession.