Master and Munshī
Rajeev Kinra
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Rajeev Kinra: Northwestern University, Department of History
The Indian Economic & Social History Review, 2010, vol. 47, issue 4, 527-561
Abstract:
This article aims to contribute to a growing body of scholarship on the cultural world of the early modern Indo-Persian state secretary, or munshÄ«. Our guide will be the celebrated Mughal munshÄ«, Chandar BhÄ n Brahman (d. 1662-63), whose life and career shed considerable light on the ideals of administrative conduct that informed political and intellectual culture during the reigns of the emperors JahÄ ngÄ«r and ShÄ h JahÄ n. After examining Chandar BhÄ n's background and socio-intellectual milieu, we will focus in particular on a section of his prose magnum opus, ChahÄ r Chaman (_The Four Gardens’), which served as both a memoir of his career in Mughal service and a didactic guide for exemplary ministerial theory and practice, or wizÄ rat. Chandar BhÄ n's ideal wazÄ«r, embodied by ministers like Afzal KhÄ n Shirazi (d. 1639), Sa’d AllÄ h KhÄ n (d. 1656), and RaghÅ«nÄ th RÄ y-i RÄ yÄ n (d. 1664), was not only tolerant and humane in the exercise of power, but also an expert in the secretarial arts in his own right, and a model of civility (akhlÄ q) and mystical awareness (ma’rifat) for others. In modern historiography such virtues tend to be primarily associated with Akbar's court, but at least in Chandar BhÄ n's eyes, they continued to have lasting relevance throughout the Mughal seventeenth century.
Keywords: Mughal Empire; governance; mysticism; nobility; munshīs; wazīrs; Chandar Bhan Brahman (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2010
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:sae:indeco:v:47:y:2010:i:4:p:527-561
DOI: 10.1177/001946461004700405
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