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History

The Mughal Empire

Overview

Students explore the Mughal Empire as one of the largest and wealthiest empires in world history, examining its culture, governance, and legacy.

Learning Objective
Students understand the scale and achievements of the Mughal Empire and its significance in world history.

Resources needed

  • None

Lesson stages

0 / 7 done
  1. 1 Ask: what do you know about the history of South Asia or India?
  2. 2 Introduce the Mughal Empire: founded 1526, at its height covered most of the Indian subcontinent.
  3. 3 Describe its wealth: at its peak, the Mughal Empire produced around a quarter of world GDP.
  4. 4 Discuss key features: religious diversity under Akbar the Great, the Taj Mahal, sophisticated administrative systems.
  5. 5 Ask: why do empires eventually decline? Apply to the Mughal Empire.
  6. 6 Discuss the arrival of the British East India Company and eventual colonisation.
  7. 7 Ask: what legacy does the Mughal period leave in South Asia today?

Tap a step to mark it as done.

Variations

  • Focus specifically on Akbar the Great and his policy of religious tolerance.
  • Examine the Taj Mahal as a historical source — what does it tell us about Mughal culture?
  • Compare the Mughal Empire with the Ottoman Empire of the same period.
More information

Teach: empire, dynasty, Mughal, subcontinent, tolerance, architecture, legacy. Locating the empire on a sketch map makes its scale immediately impressive.

Focus on one ruler — Akbar or Shah Jahan — and their specific contribution rather than surveying the whole empire.

Can students describe two achievements of the Mughal Empire? Can they explain one reason for its eventual decline?

No resources needed. Draw a rough outline of the Indian subcontinent in soil. Teacher knowledge is the primary source.

Students often underestimate Asian empires compared to European ones. The Mughal Empire's wealth — greater than contemporary European kingdoms — is a powerful corrective.

The Mughal Empire is one of the most important empires in world history and directly relevant to understanding South Asian history, culture, and the origins of British colonialism in India.