The enormous wealth of India attracted Muslim invaders and the stronghold of the Rajputs was lost to Mohammed Ghori in 1192, who left his slave Qutbuddin Aibak as his viceroy in India who established the Mamluk (Slave) Dynasty. The Qutb complex marks the advent of Islamic rule in India. This complex was built over the citadel of the Rajputs, and came about by destroying twenty-seven Jain and Hindu temples.
Delhi witnessed tumultuous times with different rulers and dynasties conquering, looting, plundering and ruling it for nearly 700 years. Starting with Qutbuddin Aibak who established the slave dynasty, to Khiljis, Tughlaqs, Sayyids, Lodis, Mughals, Sher Shah for a short time, then Mughals again. The Tughlaqs were followed by the Central Asian Turk invader-Taimur, who was later succeeded by the Sayyid dynasty. The two dynasties of Sayyids & Lodis constructed no separate cities but evolved a distinctive style of architecture. The city of Delhi passed into the hands of the British in 1803 AD, who conquered it by defeating the Marathas. The Mughal emperor was still the titular head, now called the king of Delhi.
Delhi has a history which encompasses all the various kings and emperors who fixed their royal citadels here… Lal Kot/ Qila Rai Pithora, Siri, Jahanpanah, Tughlakabad, Ferozabad, Dinpanah, and then Shahjahanabad. Combined and integrated into one, these ‘cities’ have always been called the 7 cities as Delhi has been destroyed and recreated 7 times. Adding to this New Delhi, the seat of the British when the Imperial capital was shifted from Calcutta to Delhi in 1911– we have the 8th city of Delhi.
India’s First War of Independence in 1857 was an attempt to unite India against the invading British and to restore power to the Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah. The resistance disintegrated primarily due to lack of leadership and unity on the part of Indians, as also to cruel suppression by the British Army. It was a remarkable event in Indian history that marked the end of the Mughal Empire and sealed India’s fate as a British colony for the next hundred years.
The colonial period, which also marks the political unification of the subcontinent, ended in 1947 when India became independent. It was the hoisting of the tricolour at Red Fort in Delhi on 15th August, 1947 that India was freed from British rule. India became a republic on January 26, 1950 and Delhi was made the capital of Independent India. Delhi was declared a state in 1992.