The Mughal Empire, also known as the Moghul Empire, ruled much of South Asia from the 1520s to the early 1700s. After that it declined drastically, though remnants survived until 1857. The Mughals were great builders; many of the finest and best-known buildings in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, including the Taj Mahal which may be the most famous of all, were built under their rule.
They also had a tremendous influence on many other aspects of culture. Perhaps most importantly, the Mughals were largely responsible for the spread of Islam in the region. They were Muslims that reigned over a population that was largely Hindu at the time. Their reign was not free of religious tension but, compared especially to the contemporaneous Christian Spanish Empire, it was also remarkably tolerant of other religions. To this day the presence of Islam in the countries that were once part of that empire is mostly due to the reign of the Mughal Empire.
See also: Mongol Empire
The Empire was established by Babur, a Persian-speaking Muslim whose ancestors included Genghis Khan; the term Mughal is derived from Mongol. Timur, known in the West as Tamerlane, was Babur's great-great-grandfather and another great Central Asia conqueror. Mughal is the usual term in western accounts of the period and is common in modern Indian or Pakistani writing, but the rulers called themselves the Timurid Dynasty.
Babur's father ruled the Ferghana Valley region on the Silk Road, near Timur's capital, Samarkand. The family and their subordinates had both Mongol and Turkic ancestors, but culturally they were Persian; their homeland was on the northern edge of the old Persian Empire. The son led an army from there through Bactria, over the Salang Pass to Afghanistan, then through the Khyber Pass into the subcontinent. He went on to conquer much of what are now Pakistan and northern India and to establish his capital at Agra.
The empire is usually dated from Babur's victory at Panipat in 1526. The light orange line on the map shows its extent at Babur's death in 1530. His successors expanded it greatly, as shown by other lines on the map.
The golden age of the Mughals extended through 150 years and the reign of four emperors, from Akbar taking the throne in 1556 to the death of Aurangzeb in 1707. In this period the empire expanded and the arts and sciences flourished; in particular, many great buildings were constructed. Akbar ruled 1556-1605 and expanded the empire to include most of northern India, all of what is now Pakistan, and parts of Afghanistan, as shown by the medium-orange line on the map. He built a new capital, Fatehpur Sikri, near Agra and ruled from there for a few years, then moved the capital to Lahore in what is now Pakistan, and later back to Agra. Today both the entire royal city of Fatepur Sikri and the Lahore Fort are UNESCO World Heritage Sites, among the finest examples of Mughal architecture.
Jahangir ruled 1605-1627. He lost Kandahar to the Persians but expanded the Mughal Empire within the subcontinent.
Shah Jahan ruled 1627-1658 and Mughal art and architecture reached their peak during his reign. Among other things, he built the Taj Mahal and several of Delhi's finest buildings.
Aurangzeb was a ruthless fellow who imprisoned his father, Shah Jahan, after seizing the throne from him. He ruled 1658-1707 and expanded the empire to its greatest extent, shown by the heavy red line on the map.
The empire reached its largest extent, shown by the heavy red line on the map, at the end of Aurangzeb's reign in 1707. From then on it was nearly all downhill.
Persian invaders sacked Delhi, the Mughal capital, in 1736. The Hindu Maratha Empire defeated the Mughals in several battles, and by 1750 the Marathas controlled much of the subcontinent. After the battle of Plassey in 1757, the British took Bengal and for the next hundred years they expanded their territory and influence greatly at the expense of both Mughals and Marathas.
By the mid-1800s there was still a Mughal Emperor, but not much of an empire. The definitive end of the dynasty came just after the establishment of the British Raj in 1858. The last Mughal Emperor had supported the rebels in the Indian mutiny of 1857, so the British convicted him of treason, seized his lands, and exiled him to Burma. Even after that, though, various Mughal-related Muslim rulers such as the Nizam of Hyderabad remained quite important.