Syed Ali Nadeem Rezavi

Sadiq Ali’s A Vindication of Aurangzeb, published in 1916, occupies a distinctive yet largely forgotten place in the historiography of Mughal India. Overshadowed almost immediately by Sir Jadunath Sarkar’s monumental five-volume History of Aurangzib (1912–1924), the work nevertheless deserves recognition as one of the earliest nationalist interventions in the writing of Mughal history. It was initially brought to my notice by my teacher, Professor M. Athar Ali, when he taught us about Aurangzeb decades ago. More recently, it was kindly mentioned by my friend and former colleague, Professor Muhammad Sajjad, who asked my opinion of the work.
At a time when colonial historiography had almost canonised Aurangzeb as the archetype of religious intolerance and oriental despotism, Sadiq Ali sought to challenge what he believed were deeply rooted misconceptions based upon European prejudice and careless scholarship. Although many of his conclusions have not stood the test of time, his insistence upon questioning inherited narratives anticipated later developments in Indian historiography.
The significance of the work lies not merely in its defence of Aurangzeb but in the intellectual climate in which it was written. The early twentieth century witnessed an increasing effort among Indian scholars to reclaim the country’s past from colonial interpretations. European historians had frequently presented the Mughal Empire through moral judgements that reflected Victorian sensibilities as much as historical evidence. Muslim rulers, particularly Aurangzeb, were often portrayed as fanatical despots whose religious intolerance had inevitably brought about the decline of the empire. Such interpretations became deeply embedded in educational curricula and public memory.
Sadiq Ali openly challenged this intellectual orthodoxy. In the very beginning he declared that his principal object was to caution students of Indian history against accepting European historians uncritically, accusing many of them of committing ‘gross and unpardonable mistakes’ in their treatment of Aurangzeb’s reign. Even more revealing is his candid admission that he himself had once accepted those views before undertaking a careful study of Persian and English sources. The work therefore represents an attempt at intellectual emancipation as much as historical revision.
Perhaps the most remarkable feature of the book visible from its beginning is its political purpose. Writing in September 1916, during a period of growing Indian nationalism and shortly before the Lucknow Pact, Sadiq Ali declared that one of his principal objectives was to promote ‘brotherly love among the Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims’. He believed that distorted portrayals of Aurangzeb had contributed to communal misunderstanding and that historical truth could become an instrument of national harmony. This reveals how closely historical writing had become intertwined with the politics of colonial India. For Sadiq Ali, correcting the image of Aurangzeb was not simply an academic exercise but part of a larger nationalist project.
The structure of A Vindication of Aurangzeb differs significantly from conventional historical narratives. Rather than presenting a chronological account of the emperor’s reign, Sadiq Ali organised the work around the principal accusations levelled against Aurangzeb and attempted to rebut them one by one. The chapters examine the reliability of European travellers such as Niccolao Manucci and François Bernier, the war of succession, the imprisonment of Shah Jahan, the execution of Dara Shukoh, the Deccan campaigns, the question of jizya, religious policy, and Aurangzeb’s personal character. The second half of the volume consists largely of replies to criticisms directed against his earlier arguments. The result resembles a lawyer’s defence brief more than a conventional work of history. Actually it reminds me of how M Athar Ali used to project the history of Aurangzeb through his classes when he taught us.
One of Sadiq Ali’s most valuable contributions lies in his treatment of historical sources. Long before the emergence of postcolonial historiography, he questioned the authority that nineteenth-century historians had accorded to European travel accounts. He argued that writers such as Bernier and Manucci often relied upon rumour, court gossip and limited personal observation rather than direct knowledge. Bernier, he observed, spent only a relatively brief period at the Mughal court and had little direct access to Aurangzeb himself. Manucci, whose colourful narratives fascinated European readers, was criticised for his adventurous career, changing professions and dependence upon hearsay. Sadiq Ali therefore insisted that such accounts should be subjected to critical scrutiny rather than accepted as unquestionable historical authority.
In retrospect, this methodological insight was ahead of its time. Modern Mughal historiography has indeed become far more cautious in its use of European travel narratives. Contemporary historians routinely compare Bernier, Manucci and Tavernier with Persian chronicles, administrative documents, correspondence, revenue records and regional sources before accepting their testimony. In recognising the need for such source criticism, Sadiq Ali anticipated an important development in historical method.
Yet the strength of his work also became its principal weakness. Having demonstrated that European accounts contained exaggerations and inaccuracies, he frequently assumed that this automatically vindicated Aurangzeb. Historical criticism, however, requires equal scepticism towards every category of source. Persian court chronicles were themselves products of particular political contexts and cannot simply be accepted because European accounts contain errors. Sadiq Ali often substituted one form of selectivity for another, treating Persian evidence with a confidence that modern historians would regard as excessive.
His discussion of the war of succession illustrates this tendency. He rejected the familiar picture of Aurangzeb as an ambitious prince who deliberately engineered civil war. Instead, he argued that Dara Shukoh’s conduct following Shah Jahan’s illness effectively forced Aurangzeb into armed resistance. Dara, according to Sadiq Ali, monopolised imperial authority, interrupted communications with the provinces and refused every opportunity for peaceful reconciliation. Aurangzeb’s military action is therefore presented as political necessity rather than personal ambition.
Similarly, the imprisonment of Shah Jahan is interpreted in political rather than moral terms. Sadiq Ali argued that Aurangzeb continued to treat his father with respect and ensured his comfort, restricting his liberty only because Shah Jahan continued secretly to support Dara’s cause. He even cited Stanley Lane-Poole’s observations regarding the respectful treatment accorded to the imprisoned emperor. Such arguments were intended to demonstrate that Aurangzeb acted according to political necessity rather than filial cruelty.
His treatment of Dara Shukoh is more problematic. Dara appears as a politically inept prince whose religious eclecticism rendered him unacceptable to orthodox Muslim opinion. Aurangzeb’s opposition is explained not merely in political terms but as a religious duty intended to preserve Islam in India. Such arguments reveal that Sadiq Ali was himself writing from a clearly defined ideological standpoint. His defence of Aurangzeb therefore sometimes reflects contemporary religious apologetics more than detached historical analysis.
The chapters dealing with religion represent the least satisfactory portions of the book when viewed in the light of subsequent scholarship. Sadiq Ali defended the reimposition of jizya as moderate and equitable, interpreted conversion policy as essentially mild, and attempted to minimise or justify temple destructions. Such arguments now appear insufficiently nuanced. Later historians, including Satish Chandra, M. Athar Ali, Muzaffar Alam, Richard Eaton and Audrey Truschke, have demonstrated that Aurangzeb’s religious policies cannot be explained either as simple fanaticism or as entirely benign administration. They reflected a complex interaction of political expediency, legal theory, fiscal considerations and changing imperial circumstances.
The literary style of the work also limited its influence. Sadiq Ali wrote with considerable passion but often sacrificed analytical precision for polemical effect. Chapters contain lengthy quotations, repeated assertions and extended replies to anticipated critics. The second part of the volume is devoted almost entirely to defending earlier chapters against objections. While this approach reveals the author’s determination, it also deprives the work of narrative coherence.
These limitations help explain why A Vindication of Aurangzeb was rapidly eclipsed by Sir Jadunath Sarkar’s History of Aurangzib. Sarkar possessed advantages that few historians of his generation could equal. He had access to an enormous range of Persian manuscripts, Marathi records, European archives and official correspondence. His mastery of languages, extraordinary documentary scholarship and elegant prose combined to produce a work that remained authoritative for decades. His interpretation, whether accepted or challenged, became the unavoidable point of departure for every subsequent historian of Aurangzeb.
Sadiq Ali, by contrast, worked as an independent scholar from Kapurthala without comparable institutional resources or archival access. His work lacked the documentary depth, philological precision and analytical sophistication that characterised Sarkar’s scholarship. Consequently, while Sarkar’s volumes entered university curricula throughout India, Sadiq Ali’s work gradually disappeared from historical discussion.
There is nevertheless an irony in this historiographical story. Although Sadiq Ali’s general defence of Aurangzeb has not been accepted by modern scholarship, several of his methodological criticisms have been vindicated. Historians today no longer treat European travel narratives as infallible. Colonial moral judgements are approached with considerable caution. Aurangzeb is now studied within the political and administrative context of seventeenth-century India rather than solely through nineteenth-century notions of religious tolerance. Modern scholarship rejects both the colonial caricature of Aurangzeb as a fanatical tyrant and the apologetic portrayal of him as a faultless ruler.
Seen from this perspective, this book deserves to be remembered not because it successfully rehabilitated Aurangzeb, but because it represented one of the earliest Indian attempts to challenge colonial authority over the interpretation of India’s past. Its lasting importance lies less in the correctness of its conclusions than in its insistence that historical evidence should be examined independently rather than accepted on inherited authority.
For this reason, Sadiq Ali’s book occupies an important, if neglected, place in the evolution of Mughal historiography. It stands at the intersection of colonial scholarship and emerging nationalist history writing. While Sir Jadunath Sarkar’s monumental achievement inevitably overshadowed it, A Vindication of Aurangzeb remains a significant reminder that the struggle over Aurangzeb’s reputation began not in contemporary political debates but more than a century ago, when Indian scholars first sought to reclaim the interpretation of their own history from colonial hands.





