Overview

Previous Year UPSC-CSE Questions By the end you will be able to draft model answers for the following UPSC questions. Each question carries a collapsible framework showing how to approach it in the exam.

  1. UPSC Prelims 2015 GS-IConsider the following. The arrival of Babur into India led to the:
    1. Introduction of gunpowder in the subcontinent.
    2. Introduction of the arch and dome in the region's architecture.
    3. Establishment of Timurid dynasty in the region.

    Which of the above statements is/are correct?

    1. a 1 and 2 only
    2. b 3 only
    3. c 1 and 3 only
    4. d 1, 2 and 3
    How to approach this Prelims question

    Question type: Multi-statement question on what Babur's arrival brought to India; only statement 3 is correct.

    Approach: Test each: gunpowder (1) was already in India under the Delhi Sultans, so wrong; the arch and dome (2) came with the Delhi Sultanate, so wrong; the Timurid dynasty (3) was established by Babur, so correct.

    Trap to watch: Do not credit Babur with introducing gunpowder or the arch and dome; both were already in India. He established the Timurid dynasty.

    Key facts to recall:

    • Babur established the Timurid (Mughal) dynasty.
    • Gunpowder was already used by the Delhi Sultans before Babur.
    • The arch and dome came to India with the Delhi Sultanate.

    Answer signal: 3 only.

  2. UPSC Prelims 2001 GS-IConsider the following statements:
    1. Assertion (A): The Battle of Khanua was certainly more decisive and significant than the First Battle of Panipat.
    2. Reason (R): Rana Sanga, the Rajput hero, was certainly a more formidable adversary than Ibrahim Lodi.

    Which one of the following is correct in respect of the above statements?

    1. a Both A and R are individually true, and R is the correct explanation of A
    2. b Both A and R are individually true, but R is NOT a correct explanation of A
    3. c A is true, but R is false
    4. d A is false, but R is true
    How to approach this Prelims question

    Question type: Assertion-Reason on Khanwa versus the First Battle of Panipat; A is false, R is true.

    Approach: Judge the assertion (Panipat, not Khanwa, was the decisive founding battle, so A is false) and the reason (Rana Sanga was a more formidable foe than Ibrahim Lodi, so R is true) separately.

    Trap to watch: The First Battle of Panipat is the decisive founding battle (A false); but the reason about Rana Sanga is independently true (R true).

    Key facts to recall:

    • The First Battle of Panipat (1526) founded the Mughal Empire.
    • Khanwa (1527) secured the empire against the Rajputs.
    • Rana Sanga was a more formidable adversary than Ibrahim Lodi.

    Answer signal: A is false, but R is true.

Babur (1483-1530) was the founder of the Mughal Empire, the greatest of the empires of medieval India. A Timurid prince of Central Asia, descended from Timur on his father's side and from Genghis Khan on his mother's, he ruled Farghana and then Kabul before he turned to the conquest of Hindustan. At the First Battle of Panipat in 1526 he defeated Ibrahim Lodi, the last Sultan of Delhi, by the skilful use of field artillery and the flanking tactic of the steppe, and seized Delhi and Agra. He went on to defeat Rana Sanga of Mewar at Khanwa, the Rajput Medini Rai at Chanderi, and the Afghans on the Ghaghra. He left a vivid memoir, the Baburnama. This part covers his background and conquest, his battles, his legacy, and the exam focus.

Babur, the Timurid Prince

From Farghana and Kabul to the First Battle of Panipat

What is the significance of Babur: he founded the Mughal Empire, the dynasty that would rule the north of India for more than two centuries and make its golden age.

Babur was a prince of Central Asia. He was descended from the great conqueror Timur on his father's side and from Genghis Khan on his mother's, and ruled first the small kingdom of Farghana and then, from 1504, the city of Kabul. Driven from his homeland in the north, he turned his eyes to the rich plains of Hindustan, then ruled by the Lodi Sultans of Delhi.

The First Battle of Panipat founded the empire. In 1526 Babur met Ibrahim Lodi, the last Sultan of Delhi, on the field of Panipat. Though his army was far smaller, he won by the skilful use of his field artillery and the tulughma, the flanking tactic of the steppe, by which he wheeled around the enemy and broke them. He took Delhi and Agra, and a new dynasty was born. The map below sets out his conquest.

Babur’s Conquest of Hindustan, 1526-1529From Kabul to Panipat, Khanwa, Chanderi and the GhaghraR. GangaR. YamunaThe Lodi SultanateRajputana (Rana Sanga)The Afghans of the EastBabur’s invasion from KabulPanipat (1526)DelhiAgraKhanwa (1527)Chanderi (1528)Ghaghra (1529)Arabian SeaN0200 kmThe campaign of conquestThe four battles: Panipat, Khanwa, Chanderi, GhaghraDelhi and Agra, the captured capitalsBabur’s invasion from KabulThe Ganga and the YamunaBoundaries are indicative. The subcontinent is shown on the official map; base traced on Natural Earth geometry.
Figure 1. Babur's conquest of Hindustan, 1526-1529, from the invasion out of Kabul to the four great battles.

The Battles for Hindustan

Khanwa, Chanderi and the Ghaghra

What is the significance of the battles: the victory at Panipat won Delhi, but it took three more great battles to secure the new empire against its rivals.

Khanwa broke the Rajput power. The most formidable of Babur's foes was Rana Sanga of Mewar, who led a great confederacy of the Rajputs. At the Battle of Khanwa in 1527 Babur defeated him, again by his guns and his tactics, and so secured his rule against the strongest power of northern India. He then took the fort of Chanderi from the Rajput Medini Rai in 1528.

The Ghaghra finished the work. The last of his great battles was fought in 1529 on the river Ghaghra, against the Afghans of the east, who had held Bihar and Bengal. With their defeat the rule of the new dynasty was secure from the Indus to the borders of Bengal. The table below sets out his four great battles.

Table 1. The four great battles of Babur.
Battle Year Defeated Outcome
First Panipat 1526 Ibrahim Lodi, Sultan of Delhi Won Delhi and Agra; founded the empire.
Khanwa 1527 Rana Sanga of Mewar Broke the Rajput confederacy.
Chanderi 1528 Medini Rai Took the fort of Chanderi in Malwa.
Ghaghra 1529 The Afghans of the east Secured the east to the borders of Bengal.
The Battles of BaburThe four victories that won an empire, 1526-1529Panipat, 1526Babur defeated Ibrahim Lodi withhis field guns and the tulughmatactic, and took Delhi and Agra.Khanwa, 1527He defeated the great Rajputconfederacy under Rana Sanga ofMewar, securing his new rule.Chanderi, 1528He took the fort of Chanderi fromthe Rajput Medini Rai, pressing hispower into Malwa.Ghaghra, 1529He defeated the Afghans of the easton the river Ghaghra, the last ofhis great battles.
Figure 2. The four battles of Babur, from Panipat in 1526 to the Ghaghra in 1529.

The Man and the Legacy

Babur the Soldier, the Writer and the Founder

What is the significance of Babur's legacy: he was not only the founder of an empire but a soldier and a writer of the first rank, whose own memoirs are a chief source for his age.

He was a great writer as well as a soldier. Babur wrote the Baburnama, also called the Tuzuk-i-Baburi, his frank and vivid memoirs, in the Chagatai Turkic tongue of his fathers; it is one of the great autobiographies of the world, full of his observations on the lands, peoples, plants and animals of India. It was rendered into Persian only later, in the reign of his grandson Akbar.

He founded a lasting dynasty. What Babur brought to India was not gunpowder, which the Sultans of Delhi had used before him, nor the arch and the dome, which were already old in the land, but the Timurid, or Mughal, dynasty itself, the line that would rule the north of India for two centuries.

He died after only four years in India. Babur died in 1530, and was buried at Agra; his remains were carried later, as he had wished, to a garden at Kabul. The figure below sets out the man and his legacy.

Babur, the First of the MughalsThe prince, the soldier, the writer and the founderThe Timurid PrinceDescended from Timur on hisfather’s side and Genghis Khanon his mother’s, he ruled Farghanaand Kabul before he came to India.The SoldierA bold and resourceful general, hewon by the skilful use of fieldartillery and the tulughma, theflanking tactic of the steppe.The WriterHe wrote the Baburnama, his frankand vivid memoirs in the ChagataiTurkic tongue, one of the greatautobiographies of the world.The FounderHe founded the Mughal, or Timurid,dynasty that would rule the northof India for two centuries and more,the greatest of its medieval empires.
Figure 3. Babur, the first of the Mughals: the Timurid prince, the soldier, the writer and the founder.

UPSC Relevance and Exam Focus

Where Babur Fits in the UPSC-CSE Syllabus

This topic belongs to General Studies Paper I: medieval Indian history, and Babur, with his battles and his memoirs, is the starting point of the much-examined history of the Mughal Empire.

The questions most often test the First Battle of Panipat of 1526, the Battle of Khanwa against Rana Sanga, and the nature of what Babur brought to India, the Timurid dynasty rather than gunpowder or the arch.

Several linked points recur and are worth holding in working memory:

  • The First Battle of Panipat: 1526, against Ibrahim Lodi; founded the Mughal Empire.
  • The method: field artillery and the tulughma flanking tactic, not the introduction of gunpowder, which was already known.
  • Khanwa: 1527, against Rana Sanga of Mewar, the most formidable of Babur’s foes.
  • The Baburnama: his memoirs, written in Chagatai Turkic, translated into Persian under Akbar.
  • The dynasty: Babur founded the Mughal, or Timurid, dynasty in India.

A 2015 question asked what the arrival of Babur led to, and the answer was that it established the Timurid dynasty alone; it did not introduce gunpowder, which the Delhi Sultans had already used, nor the arch and dome, which were already old in Indian building.

A 2001 question set the claim that Khanwa was more decisive than the First Battle of Panipat; the assertion is false, for it was Panipat that founded the empire and was the more significant, though it is true that Rana Sanga was a more formidable adversary than Ibrahim Lodi.

Prelims MCQ practice

Each question below tests one specific concept on the topic. Click to reveal the answer and a full option-wise explanation.

Q1. The First Battle of Panipat, which founded the Mughal Empire, was fought in 1526 between Babur and which one of the following?

  1. Rana Sanga
  2. Ibrahim Lodi
  3. Sher Shah Suri
  4. Hemu
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Ibrahim Lodi

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. At the First Battle of Panipat in 1526 Babur defeated Ibrahim Lodi, the last Sultan of Delhi; the Second Battle of Panipat (1556) was against Hemu. Hence option (b).

Q2. At the Battle of Khanwa in 1527, Babur defeated which one of the following Rajput leaders?

  1. Maharana Pratap
  2. Rana Sanga
  3. Medini Rai
  4. Jai Singh
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Rana Sanga

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. At Khanwa in 1527 Babur defeated Rana Sanga of Mewar, who led the Rajput confederacy; Maharana Pratap fought Akbar later at Haldighati. Hence option (b).

Q3. Babur's memoirs, the Baburnama, were originally written in which one of the following languages?

  1. Persian
  2. Chagatai Turkic
  3. Arabic
  4. Urdu
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Chagatai Turkic

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. The Baburnama was written in Chagatai Turkic, Babur's own tongue; it was translated into Persian only later, under Akbar. Hence option (b).

Q4. Which one of the following was Babur's chief contribution to India, according to the standard view tested in the examination?

  1. The introduction of gunpowder
  2. The introduction of the arch and dome
  3. The establishment of the Timurid dynasty
  4. The introduction of the rupee
Show answer and explanation

Answer: The establishment of the Timurid dynasty

Explanation.

Option (c) is correct. Babur established the Timurid, or Mughal, dynasty; gunpowder and the arch and dome were already in India under the Delhi Sultans, and the rupee was Sher Shah's. Hence option (c).

Q5. With reference to Babur, consider the following statements:

  1. He was descended from Timur and Genghis Khan.
  2. He won the First Battle of Panipat in 1526.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

  1. 1 only
  2. 2 only
  3. Both 1 and 2
  4. Neither 1 nor 2
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Both 1 and 2

Explanation.

Both statements are correct. Babur was descended from Timur (father) and Genghis Khan (mother), and won the First Battle of Panipat in 1526. Hence option (c).

Q6. Babur's last great battle, fought in 1529 against the Afghans of the east, was the Battle of which one of the following?

  1. Chanderi
  2. Ghaghra
  3. Khanwa
  4. Chausa
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Ghaghra

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. The Battle of Ghaghra (1529), against the Afghans of the east, was Babur's last great battle; Chausa (1539) was a battle of Sher Shah and Humayun. Hence option (b).

Sources and Further Reading

Editorial Disclaimer

This article is for UPSC preparation. The history of Babur rests on his own memoirs, the Persian chronicles and the standard scholarship on the Mughal Empire.

Part 1 of 14 · The Mughals

All 14 parts in this cluster
  1. 1 Part 1: Babur and the Founding of the Mughal Empire (this article)
  2. 2 Part 2: Humayun and the Struggle for the Throne
  3. 3 Part 3: Sher Shah Suri and the Sur Interregnum
  4. 4 Part 4: Akbar: The Conquests and the Expansion of the Empire
  5. 5 Part 5: Akbar: The Rajput Policy and the Nobility
  6. 6 Part 6: Akbar: Administration, Mansabdari and the Revenue System
  7. 7 Part 7: Akbar: Religion, the Din-i-Ilahi and Sulh-i-kul
  8. 8 Part 8: Jahangir and Nur Jahan
  9. 9 Part 9: Shah Jahan and the Zenith of Mughal Splendour
  10. 10 Part 10: Aurangzeb and the Turn of the Empire
  11. 11 Part 11: The Rivals of the Mughals: the Marathas, the Sikhs and the Rajputs
  12. 12 Part 12: Mughal Administration, Society and Economy
  13. 13 Part 13: Mughal Art, Architecture and Painting
  14. 14 Part 14: The Decline and Disintegration of the Mughal Empire