When Arab and Turkish armies marched into the Indian subcontinent, they didn't just conquer territory; they captured hundreds of thousands of people, fueling a massive, state-sponsored machine of enslavement. This video dives into the dark and highly regulated world of the medieval Muslim slave system in India, where the institution was tightly interwoven with the laws of marriage, sale, and inheritance. Unlike ancient forms of servitude, this system was intertwined with religious mandate and holy war, transforming human captives into the very gears of the medieval state.
We explore the bizarre paradox of the Mamluk "Slave Kings" of Delhi—men like Qutbuddin Aibak, Iltutmish, and Balban—who were purchased as property but wielded the sword to seize the throne, proving that loyalty was a luxury and conspiracy the rule. We'll look at the cold, hard economics of the slave markets, where rulers like Alauddin Khalji imposed strict price controls on human beings, trading them for horses or putting them to work in the tens of thousands to build massive monuments and fuel the state's workshops (Karkhanas).
The video also uncovers the grim reality of the sprawling royal harems and the horrific, systematic creation of tens of thousands of eunuch slaves to guard them—a practice so widespread that in places like Bengal, young boys were handed over to pay government revenue. Finally, uncover the forgotten story of how ordinary villagers fought back. Entire communities escaped into impenetrable jungles, choosing extreme poverty and isolation over chains and forced conversion—a defiant survival strategy that continues to shape India's social and demographic fabric today.
Source: Based on the historical research presented in The Muslim Slave System in Medieval India by K.S. Lal.
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