Shankranthi
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- Jul 18, 2013
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Agreed..Their focus was simply on collecting Chauth instead of building the framework for an empire.
I don't recall the Marathas patronizing arts, sciences, architecture at all...Mughals took a whole different route to the same and had their tentacles entrenched deep within the Indian society and economy.
The federal structure is probably a HUGE reason for their downfall..the bickering between tribal chiefs even lead to the fall of Panipat.
That is not completely true. The maratha empire was always in fire fighting mode. It had an existential threat that never went away. They were surrounded by muslim kingdoms who wanted to destroy them, and it was also a time when the British, French, Dutch and Portuguese were also making strong military bases in India.
So most of the infrastructure they built were stuff like Forts (many of them they built from scratch) since that was the need of the hour, and for social integration Temples. In fact most of the beautiful steps you see on the banks of the Ganga in Varanasi were built by the Marathas.
Mughals were able to have a more stable empire due to the strategy of Akbar who had 300 Wives most of who were princesses of various Hindu kingdoms held as hostage (not to mention his 1000's of concubines). This continued for most mughal kings. The Maratha king / peshwa never had more than 1 or 2 wives for most times.
The Value systems of the Hindu kings were of a much higher standards but it was a pity that the value systems were not backed by military and political strength.
Also the Federal structure had its own strength, but what it could not provide was leadership that could bind them irrevocably together. Their failure was to build a strong central command structure and framework.
Another area of serious weakness was their version of "secularism". The Maratha army had all kinds of men. Arabs, Sikhs, Rajputs, Sindhis, Rohillas and Pathans. However there was disparity in pay. An Arab soldier was paid Rs 18 per month, a Christain one Rs 15 and a Maratha Rs 7. You can very well guess the end result.
On a separate note:
Isn't it Ironic that during partition, the Muslim league wanted the exact decentralized federal structure that the Marathas had set up. Pakistan did end up becoming a federal union and we can see that they are facing the same governing issues and hurdles that the Marathas faced. Glad India learnt from its history.
India too has a Federal structure. In fact Federalism is the core of our Constitution.
But what we also have is a very clear definition of roles and responsibilities between the Centre and states. We also have institutions that ensures this command and control. However it is fair to say we did learn from history.
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