Chapter 20 World History q1
The end of the fourteenth century marked the stunning rise of Temur Gurgan, who was widely known from the Persian rendering of his name as Timur the _____.
Lame.
Aurangzeb spent much of the last two decades of his life campaigning against the _________.
Hindu Marathas
The Mughals appointed members of the new _________ elite to positions in the provincial governments and state ministries.
Mansabdar
For the English, the acquisition of Bombay (Mumbai) from the _________ in the 1660s gave the British East India Company a superb harbor.
Portuguese
Akbar wore his hair long under his turban like the __________.
Sikhs
Muhammad Ghauth Gwaliori's ___________ tapped sources from Hindu and Muslim astrology, Jewish Kabbala traditions, and Sufi mysticism.
The Five Jewels
Zahir ud-Din Muhammad was better known by his nickname, Babur, which means "leopard" or "tiger" in __________.
Persian
Mughal relations with Safavid Persia, where _________ was the official state religion, meant a certain influence on the Mughal court was unavoidable.
Shia Islam
Inconsolable after the loss of his wife Mumtaz Mahal, Shah Jahan built a magnificent tomb complex in her honor near _________.
Calicut
Indian _________ calicoes (named for the Indian port of Calicut) proved immensely popular in Europe for underwear and summer clothing.
Cotton
The familiar term "pajamas" comes from the __________ word pajama, the lightweight summer garments worn in India and popularized as sleepwear in Europe.
Hindi
Akbar married the Rajput princess Manmati, despite her adherence to:
Hinduism
In the 1550s, Mughal forces secured the eastern, southern, and western flanks of their lands, anchoring Islam with the territory they called "__________".
Hindustan
Jahangir's son Khusrau was forced to watch as his comrades were put to death by ____________.
Impalement
________ turned the running of his empire over to his wife, the striking Persian princess Nur Jahan, on several occasions, and she mediated the succession wars after his death.
Jahangir
__________ reimposed the hated jizya tax on non-Muslims, which had been abolished by Akbar.
Aurangzeb
A four-way struggle broke out among the sons of Shah Jahan upon his death in ________.
1657
The Golden Temple in the city of ________ became the religious center of the Sikhs, and they defended their faith against the repressive policies of Aurangzeb.
Amritsar
The Mughals built fortresses at strategic points throughout their inner domains as well as along the frontier, and the largest was the Red Fort in _______.
Delhi
The Gunpowder empires, named for their reliance on cannons and small arms in their military campaigns, included all of the following except:
the Habsburgs