Concepts

Jizya

CAPF wiki1 min read6 sections
At a glance
SubjectHistory

Definition

A tax levied on non-Muslim subjects (dhimmis) under Islamic rule in medieval India in lieu of military service and in return for state protection, a recurring marker of religious policy in the Delhi Sultanate and the Mughal Empire.

Key points

  • Collected through the Delhi Sultanate; rulers like Firuz Shah Tughlaq enforced it strictly and extended it to groups previously exempted, including Brahmins.
  • Akbar abolished the jizya in 1564, as part of his liberal policy of sulh-i-kul, along with the pilgrimage tax on Hindus.
  • Aurangzeb re-imposed the jizya in 1679, a move associated with his orthodox policy and with growing friction with the Rajputs, Marathas, and others.
  • The tax was conceptually separate from the land tax (kharaj); jizya was a poll tax on adult non-Muslim males, with exemptions for women, children, the old, and the disabled.
  • Its imposition and abolition are standard markers used to contrast the religious policies of Akbar (tolerant) and Aurangzeb (orthodox).

Why it matters for CAPF

Akbar's abolition (1564) versus Aurangzeb's re-imposition (1679) is one of the most frequently tested contrasts in Mughal religious policy.

Common confusion

Jizya (poll tax on non-Muslims) is different from kharaj (land tax); Akbar abolished it in 1564 and Aurangzeb revived it in 1679, do not swap the rulers.

One-line recall

Poll tax on non-Muslims; abolished by Akbar (1564), re-imposed by Aurangzeb (1679); a key marker of Mughal religious policy.

Parent note

mughal empire

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