Iltutmish
![Indian miniature painting depicting Iltutmish][float-right] ./assets/Photograph_of_an_Indian_miniature_painting_depicting_Iltutmish_of_the_Mamluk_Sultanate%252C_published_in_'Tawarikh-i-Ghuri'by_Munshi_Bulaqi_Das_Sahib$1881 Shams ud-Din Iltutmish (died 30 April 1236) was a mamluk sultan of the Delhi Sultanate who reigned from 1211 to 1236 as the third ruler of the Mamluk dynasty.[1] Of Turkic origin from the Ilbari tribe, he was sold into slavery as a youth and purchased by Qutb ud-Din Aibak, under whom he rose to prominence as a military commander and son-in-law before succeeding to the throne after deposing Aram Shah.[2] Iltutmish consolidated the fragile sultanate by defeating rival Turkish nobles such as Taj al-Din Yildiz and Nasir ud-Din Qabacha, reasserting control over Punjab, Sindh, Bengal, and Bihar, and thereby establishing Delhi as the unchallenged center of Muslim power in northern India.[3][4] His reign marked the effective foundation of the Delhi Sultanate as an independent Islamic state, free from subordination to Central Asian overlords, through administrative reforms including the iqta land grant system and the creation of a corps of loyal slave officers known as the Turkan-i-Chihalgani.[5] In 1229, he secured legitimacy by obtaining a formal investiture and robe of honor from Abbasid Caliph al-Mustansir Billah, the first such recognition for a ruler in India.[6] Iltutmish introduced the silver tanka and copper jital as standardized currencies, weighing approximately 175 grains for the tanka, which became the basis for subsequent sultanate coinage.[7] Architecturally, he completed the Qutb Minar initiated by Aibak, constructed his own tomb in the Qutb complex, and developed the Hauz-i-Shamsi reservoir, contributing to Delhi's emergence as a major Islamic cultural center.[8] Despite repelling Mongol incursions under Genghis Khan, internal challenges persisted, leading him to nominate his capable daughter Razia as heir over his sons, a decision that foreshadowed succession disputes after his death from illness.[4]Names and Early Life
Etymology of Name and Official Titles
The name Iltutmish originates from Turkic roots, composed of il (referring to "realm," "country," or "people") and tut- (meaning "to hold" or "grasp"), collectively signifying "holder of the realm" or "maintainer of the kingdom."[9][10] This etymology aligns with historical linguistic analyses of Central Asian nomenclature among Turkic elites.[11] Iltutmish's primary honorific, Shams al-Din, is an Arabic phrase translating to "Sun of the Faith," a common laudatory title denoting religious and temporal radiance in Islamic contexts.[12] On his coinage, he employed the extended formulation Shams al-Dunya wa al-Din Iltutmish al-Sultan ("Sun of the World and the Faith, Iltutmish the Sultan"), emphasizing his dual worldly and spiritual authority.[13] In 1229 CE, the Abbasid Caliph al-Mustansir bi-llah granted Iltutmish formal investiture through a robe of honor and a patent (manshur), legitimizing his sovereignty over the Delhi Sultanate and conferring titles such as Nasir Amir al-Mu'minin ("Helper of the Commander of the Faithful").[2] This endorsement elevated his status from a de facto ruler to one recognized within the broader Islamic caliphal framework.[14]Origins, Enslavement, and Arrival in India
Shams al-Dīn Iltutmish originated from the Ilbari tribe, a group of Turkish Qipchāq nomads in Central Asia, where he was born around 1180. Historical accounts, primarily drawn from the 13th-century chronicler Minhaj-i-Siraj's Tabaqāt-i Nāṣirī, describe his family as belonging to a moderately prosperous clan led by his father, Ilam Khān, though details of his precise birthplace—possibly near Balkh—remain unverified beyond traditional narratives.[15] These sources portray Iltutmish as intelligent and physically attractive from a young age, traits that reportedly incited jealousy among his uncles or brothers, leading to his sale into slavery despite his noble tribal lineage.[16] Following his enslavement, Iltutmish was transported by merchants to Bukhara, where he was acquired by the family of a local religious authority, possibly the Sadr-i-Jahān, who provided him with education in the Quran, Arabic, and Persian over several years.[17] He later moved to Ghazni under another master, Jamal al-Dīn, a merchant who recognized his potential; there, Iltutmish's reputation for wisdom and horsemanship reached the Ghurid court.[3] The Ghurid ruler Muʿizz al-Dīn Muḥammad (r. 1173–1206) reportedly took interest, directing his slave-commander Quṭb al-Dīn Aibak to purchase Iltutmish for service. Iltutmish arrived in northern India in the late 1190s or early 1200s, acquired by Aibak in Delhi on behalf of the Ghurids, marking his entry into the military hierarchy that would define his career. This transaction, valued at a significant sum—accounts mention up to 1,000 gold coins—reflected his perceived utility amid the Ghurid expansion into the subcontinent following their 1192 victory at Tarain.[15] Primary chronicles like Tabaqāt-i Nāṣirī emphasize his rapid adaptation, though they provide limited contemporaneous evidence for the enslavement sequence, relying on later oral traditions filtered through Minhaj's perspective as a court historian writing decades after the events.[18]Service under Qutb ud-Din Aibak
Iltutmish, originally a slave of Turkish origin, was acquired by Qutb ud-Din Aibak, the Ghurid viceroy in northern India, sometime in the late 1190s after passing through several owners. Under Aibak's patronage, he quickly distinguished himself through loyalty, intelligence, and martial ability, rising from the status of a mamluk to a trusted commander in the nascent Turkish administration.[2][4] By 1197–1198, following Aibak's conquest of the strategic town of Badaun in the Doab region, Iltutmish was appointed its governor (shiqdar-i-shik), marking his entry into provincial administration and revenue management via the iqta system. This assignment underscored his reliability in consolidating Ghurid gains against local Rajput and Hindu chiefs. Concurrently, Aibak arranged Iltutmish's marriage to one of his daughters, Turkan Khatun, forging a familial alliance that elevated his standing among the Turkish nobility (umara).[19][4] In 1205–1206, Iltutmish led forces in suppressing the Khokhar tribal rebellion in the Punjab hills, a critical campaign to secure the northwestern frontier against these semi-nomadic hill people who had ambushed Ghurid detachments. His valor in these engagements impressed Sultan Muhammad of Ghor, who, upon Aibak's recommendation, ordered Iltutmish's formal manumission, granting him freedom and further iqtas, including possibly extensions around Badaun and the Siwalik foothills. These actions solidified his role as a key military subordinate during Aibak's brief sultanate from 1206 to 1210, amid ongoing efforts to stabilize conquests from Muhammad Ghori's invasions of 1192 and 1194.[2][20]Rise to Power and Consolidation
Overthrow of Aram Shah and Ascension to the Throne
Following the death of Qutb ud-Din Aibak in November 1210 CE during a polo accident in Lahore, the Turkish amirs there enthroned Aram Shah as sultan, viewing him as Aibak's son, though this filiation remains debated among historians due to inconsistencies in contemporary accounts.[21][22] Aram Shah's rule, lasting approximately eight months from December 1210 to June 1211 CE, proved ineffective and unpopular, marked by his inability to command loyalty from the nobility or maintain administrative control over the nascent sultanate's territories.[4][21] Faced with this instability, the influential Turkish nobles (amirs) in Delhi, seeking a capable leader to preserve the Ghurid conquests in northern India, invited Shams ud-Din Iltutmish—then governor of Badaun and Aibak's son-in-law—to intervene and assume power.[2][23] Iltutmish, recognizing the opportunity to legitimize his claim through prior service under Aibak and his military prowess, marched from Badaun toward Delhi with loyal forces, effectively seizing control of the capital without immediate opposition from local factions.[5][24] Aram Shah, based in Lahore, mobilized an army to challenge this usurpation but was decisively defeated by Iltutmish's troops; historical accounts differ on the precise location, with some placing the engagement at Tarain near Delhi and others at Bagh-i Jud, as per the contemporary chronicler Minhaj-i-Siraj.[25][20] Aram Shah was captured or killed in the aftermath, ending his brief reign and clearing the path for Iltutmish's unchallenged ascension to the throne in 1211 CE.[26][23] Iltutmish promptly established Delhi as the fixed capital, marking the transition to stable Mamluk rule and his adoption of the title Sultan, which he later sought formal recognition for from the Abbasid caliph.[4][2]Defeat of Yildiz and Internal Turkish Rivals
Following his ascension in January 1211, Iltutmish faced entrenched opposition from internal Turkish rivals, primarily the aristocratic amirs and iqta holders inherited from Qutb ud-Din Aibak's regime, who viewed his low-born slave origins—purchased in his youth from the Ilbari tribe—as disqualifying for supreme rule and favored puppets or claimants tied to Ghurid free nobility. These factions, including holdouts loyal to Aram Shah and regional governors in areas like Hansi and Meerut, engaged in intrigues and minor revolts to destabilize his nascent authority, forcing Iltutmish to conduct punitive expeditions and purge disloyal elements through executions and reallocations of fiefs to his trusted band of fellow Turkish slave officers, thereby forging a loyal military cadre that underpinned his consolidation.[21][27] Compounding these domestic challenges was the incursion of Taj al-Din Yildiz, a former Ghurid slave-general and viceroy of Ghazni, who positioned himself as the rightful successor to Muhammad of Ghor. Expelled from Ghazni by Khwarazmian forces under Muhammad II in 1215, Yildiz seized Lahore and expanded into Punjab up to Thanesar, asserting suzerainty over Delhi's territories and demanding Iltutmish's submission or tribute.[28] Iltutmish rejected these overtures, leading to open conflict; the armies clashed at Tarain (Taraori) on January 25, 1216, where Iltutmish's disciplined forces, leveraging superior tactics and morale, decisively defeated Yildiz's larger host, capturing the claimant alive amid the rout. Yildiz was publicly humiliated by parading through Delhi's streets before imprisonment in Badaun, followed by execution later that year, an act that eradicated a potent external threat and signaled Iltutmish's unchallenged sovereignty to remaining internal dissidents and neighboring powers.[28][29]Initial Clashes with Qabacha and Defense against Khwarazmians
Following his victory over Yildiz at Tarain in January 1216, Shams ud-Din Iltutmish directed attention to Nasir ud-Din Qabacha, a former Ghurid subordinate who had established semi-independent control over Multan, Uch, and parts of Punjab since around 1210. Qabacha's ambitions threatened Iltutmish's western borders, prompting an initial military expedition in 1217. Iltutmish's forces successfully expelled Qabacha from Punjab, recapturing Lahore and restoring Delhi's authority over the region, though Qabacha retained strongholds in Sindh and continued sporadic resistance.[30][31] These clashes remained limited, as Iltutmish prioritized internal consolidation and eastern expansions, allowing Qabacha a respite in the Indus Valley. Qabacha, bolstered by alliances and local revenues, rebuilt his position, but the 1217 campaign established Iltutmish's dominance in Punjab and set the stage for later decisive annexations of Qabacha's territories after 1227. Primary accounts, such as those in Minhaj-i-Siraj's Tabaqat-i Nasiri, attribute Iltutmish's success to superior cavalry tactics and loyalty among his Turkish slave officers, though Qabacha's defensive fortifications delayed full subjugation.[32] In late 1221, following his defeat by Mongol forces under Genghis Khan at the Battle of the Indus on November 24, Jalal al-Din Mangburni, the fugitive Khwarazm Shah, crossed into Punjab seeking asylum and military alliance with Iltutmish to regroup against the Mongols. Iltutmish, recognizing the risk of provoking a full Mongol invasion into India, deliberated for several days before refusing, citing the unsuitability of his realm for such a powerful refugee. This decision, chronicled by the Persian historian Ata-Malik Juvayni in Tarikh-i Jahangushay, prioritized long-term strategic caution over short-term gains, effectively shielding the nascent Sultanate from immediate Mongol wrath.[33] Jalal al-Din, rebuffed, turned to raiding Punjab and clashed with Qabacha, defeating the latter's army near Bhakkar and briefly occupying parts of Sindh in 1221–1222. Iltutmish responded by reinforcing border defenses and dispatching scouts, but avoided direct engagement, allowing Jalal al-Din's internal divisions and further Mongol pursuits to erode his threat; the Khwarazmian leader was assassinated by a Kurd in 1231 without mounting a sustained campaign against Delhi. This defensive posture, grounded in realistic assessment of Mongol military superiority—evidenced by their devastation of Khwarazm—preserved Iltutmish's resources for domestic stability, as corroborated in regional historiographies emphasizing his prudence over adventurism.[34][35]Military Campaigns and Territorial Expansion
Campaigns in Eastern India and Rajasthan
Following his ascension and suppression of internal rivals, Iltutmish directed military efforts toward reasserting Delhi's authority over eastern provinces that had fragmented after Qutb ud-Din Aibak's death in 1210, including Bihar and Bengal, where local Muslim governors had declared independence. Bihar was brought under control in the early 1210s through expeditions that subdued resistant chieftains and reimposed iqta assignments, securing the route to Bengal.[36][2] Bengal's subjugation required multiple campaigns due to persistent rebellions by Khalji governors. In 1225, Iltutmish launched an initial invasion against Ghiyas ud-Din Iwaz Khalji, who had asserted autonomy; Iwaz submitted temporarily but soon revolted, prompting Iltutmish to dispatch his eldest son, Nasir ud-Din Mahmud, in 1226–1227. Nasir ud-Din defeated and killed Iwaz near the Ganges, capturing Lakhnauti (Gaur) and installing himself as governor, though full annexation was deferred.[4][27][2] After Nasir ud-Din's death in 1229, fresh unrest erupted under Balka Khalji, Iwaz's son-in-law, who proclaimed independence in 1230. Iltutmish personally led an expedition that year, defeating Balka in battle, executing him, and fully incorporating Bengal into the sultanate by 1231, with coinage and administration reformed to acknowledge Delhi's suzerainty. These eastern victories, chronicled in Minhaj-i-Siraj's Tabaqat-i Nasiri, expanded taxable lands and integrated Bengal's resources, though the chronicler's patronage under later Balban rulers may emphasize successes over logistical strains.[4][27][37] In Rajasthan, Iltutmish targeted Rajput strongholds to secure flanks and frontiers, re-annexing territories like Ajmer, Bayana, and Gwalior that had slipped from control. The pivotal campaign was the 1226 siege of Ranthambore, a formidable hill fort held by Vagbhata Chauhan; after prolonged assaults, Delhi forces breached it, temporarily garrisoning the site despite its reputation for impregnability, yielding tribute and weakening Rajput confederacies.[36][27][38] These Rajasthan operations, less decisive than eastern gains due to guerrilla resistance and terrain, nonetheless disrupted Rajput alliances and facilitated iqta distributions, though Ranthambore reverted to local control post-Iltutmish, highlighting limits of sustained projection without naval or Mongol threats diverting resources.[36][38]Annexation of Qabacha's Territories in Sindh
Following the weakening of Nasir ud-Din Qabacha's position due to conflicts with the invading Khwarazm Shah Jalal ud-Din Mangburni, who defeated Qabacha near Multan around 1221 and forced him into a precarious hold over remaining territories, Shams ud-Din Iltutmish launched a decisive campaign against him in 1227–1228.[28] Qabacha, originally a subordinate governor under the Ghurids and later an independent ruler controlling Multan, Uch, and portions of Sindh since approximately 1206, had previously clashed with Iltutmish's forces but retained autonomy in the Indus Valley amid Delhi's internal consolidations.[27] Iltutmish exploited this vulnerability to expand Delhi Sultanate control westward, dispatching a general to besiege Multan while personally leading the main army to Uch, a fortified stronghold central to Qabacha's defenses in upper Sindh.[28] The siege of Uch lasted three months, culminating in May 1228 when Qabacha, facing imminent capture and with no viable escape, drowned himself in the Indus River to avoid surrender; contemporary accounts attribute this to his desperation amid the encirclement.[27] [28] Qabacha's death triggered the collapse of his regime, as his surviving troops and administrators transferred allegiance to Iltutmish, enabling the rapid annexation of Multan, Uch, and adjacent Sindh territories without prolonged resistance.[27] Iltutmish appointed loyal governors, such as Nasir ud-Din Junaidi, to secure the region, integrating it into the iqta system and extending the Sultanate's frontier to the Arabian Sea for the first time.[28] This annexation not only eliminated a long-standing rival but also fortified Delhi's western borders against potential incursions from Central Asian nomads, incorporating strategic riverine and agrarian resources of Sindh that bolstered the Sultanate's military logistics and revenue base.[27] By August 1228, Iltutmish returned to Delhi, leaving the new provinces stabilized under centralized oversight, marking a pivotal step in the territorial unification of northern India under Mamluk rule.[28]Suppression of Rebellions and Border Security
During his reign, Iltutmish faced recurrent challenges from provincial governors asserting independence, particularly in the eastern territories. In 1225, he dispatched Nasir ud-Din Mahmud to suppress the rebellion of Husam ud-Din Iwaz Khalji, who had declared autonomy over Bihar and Bengal after withholding tribute and challenging Delhi's authority.[4] Mahmud's forces defeated Iwaz, capturing Lakhnauti and restoring central control, after which Iltutmish partitioned the region into separate provinces of Bengal and Bihar, appointing distinct governors to prevent future consolidation of power under a single rebel.[39] Subsequent unrest in Bengal under Ghiyas ud-Din Khilji prompted another expedition around 1227, where Iltutmish's troops killed the governor and reaffirmed Delhi's dominance, ensuring tribute flowed to the capital and reducing the risk of eastern secession.[27] To secure the northwestern borders against external threats, Iltutmish prioritized defensive fortifications and diplomatic caution, especially amid the Mongol expansions under Genghis Khan. He refused asylum to the fugitive Khwarazmian prince Jalal ud-Din Mangburni in 1221, calculating that harboring him would invite Mongol retaliation into Indian territories, a decision that preserved the Sultanate from immediate invasion.[3] Iltutmish reinforced garrisons in key frontier outposts such as Multan, Lahore, and Uch, tasking loyal governors with extending control over Punjab to create buffer zones against potential incursions via the Bamian route.[40] This policy of "aloofness" and military preparedness averted direct Mongol assaults during his rule (1211–1236), allowing resources to focus on internal stability rather than open warfare.[41]Administration and Reforms
Central Governance and the Iqta System
Shams ud-Din Iltutmish (r. 1211–1236) centralized the administration of the Delhi Sultanate by establishing a structured ministerial framework, including positions such as the wazir for finance and the naib as deputy, which supported the sultan's direct authority over revenue, military, and judicial affairs.[42] This system emphasized loyalty from a cadre of Turkish slave officers, preventing the fragmentation seen under predecessors by tying provincial control to Delhi through revocable grants rather than hereditary rights.[43] The iqta system, formalized by Iltutmish, divided the empire into revenue assignments granted to nobles (muqtis or iqtadars) and soldiers in lieu of cash salaries, enabling efficient tax collection and troop maintenance without devolving permanent land ownership.[44] Small iqtas, particularly in the Doab region, were assigned to around 2,000 Turkish soldiers for military service, while larger ones imposed administrative duties like law enforcement alongside revenue obligations.[43] Muqtis collected land revenue, covered personal and troop expenses from it, and remitted any surplus (fawazil) to the central treasury, ensuring fiscal dependence on the sultan.[42] To maintain central oversight, iqtas were non-hereditary and transferable every three to four years, curbing the emergence of feudal autonomies and compelling muqtis to prioritize loyalty to Delhi over local entrenchment.[44] This mechanism rewarded military service—requiring muqtis to supply troops during campaigns—while bureaucratic transfers and audits reinforced the sultan's control, linking distant territories to the core without fostering independent power bases.[43] By prioritizing assignments to trusted Turkish slaves, Iltutmish consolidated rule in conquered areas, transforming iqtas from mere rewards into tools for intensive governance and Turkish dominance.[45]Military Structure and the Corps of Turkish Slaves
Iltutmish reorganized the military of the Delhi Sultanate to emphasize a professional standing army centered on cavalry units manned by Turkish slaves, or ghulams, purchased from Central Asian markets and trained in horsemanship, archery, and lance warfare. These slaves, lacking local familial ties, provided unwavering loyalty to the sultan, forming the backbone of expeditions against rivals like Yildiz and Qabacha. The structure relied on iqta assignments, where land revenues funded military contingents under slave commanders, ensuring decentralized yet sultan-controlled forces without hereditary claims.[46][35] Central to this was the Corps of Forty (Turkan-i-Chahalgani), an elite cadre of forty Turkish slave nobles selected by Iltutmish for their proven valor and fidelity, serving as the sultan's privy council and core military leadership. Established around 1211–1236 during his reign, this group monopolized high commands, suppressing internal threats and enabling territorial expansion, such as the conquests in Sindh by 1228. Members like Qutb ud-Din Itbakin and Nizam ul-Mulk Junaidi exemplified promotions from slave status to amirs, with their influence persisting post-Iltutmish, though it later fragmented under successors.[47][48] This slave-centric model contrasted with tribal levies of prior Ghurid forces, prioritizing merit over ethnicity while maintaining Turkic dominance to counter Mongol incursions, as evidenced by repelling threats in 1221 without relying on unreliable free amirs. Iltutmish's system, drawing from Abbasid precedents of mamluk units, sustained the sultanate's viability amid succession crises, though its insularity bred factionalism by the 1240s.[49][50]Economic Policies and Introduction of Standard Coinage
Iltutmish's economic policies emphasized monetary stabilization and revenue consolidation to support the Delhi Sultanate's expansion and administration during his rule from 1211 to 1236. He addressed the instability caused by irregular coinage under prior Ghurid and early Mamluk rulers by establishing a uniform currency system, which facilitated trade, taxation, and military payments across diverse territories.[51][52] The cornerstone of these reforms was the introduction of the silver tanka as the primary coin, standardized at 175 grains (approximately 11.34 grams), alongside the copper jital for smaller transactions. These denominations, struck in mints such as Delhi and Budaun, bore Arabic inscriptions including the sultan's name, titles like Shams al-Dunya wa al-Din, and often references to the Abbasid Caliph for legitimacy.[7][52][53] Numismatic evidence from surviving tankas confirms their widespread circulation and role in unifying the economy, replacing debased billon and arabic-influenced issues with reliable, high-purity silver equivalents to the Abbasid dirham. This standardization reduced forgery risks, boosted commercial confidence, and endured as the basis for Sultanate coinage for centuries, contributing to economic growth amid conquests.[7][51][54] Iltutmish complemented coinage reforms with measures to enhance revenue collection, including systematic land assessments tied to iqta grants, though primarily agrarian, these supported urban trade hubs like Delhi by ensuring steady fiscal inflows. Policies implicitly favored merchant activities, as stable currency enabled cross-regional exchanges with regions like Sindh and Bengal, though direct evidence of trade promotion edicts remains limited to inferred outcomes from monetary reliability.[27][36]Religious Policies
Promotion of Sunni Orthodoxy and Suppression of Heresies
Shams al-Din Iltutmish, a devout adherent of Sunni Islam, actively promoted orthodox Hanafi jurisprudence by patronizing religious scholars and establishing institutional frameworks for Sunni learning and administration. He assembled prominent ulema such as Minhaj-ud-Din Siraj, Nuruddin, Hasan Nizami, and Muhammad Aufi at his court, fostering an environment where Sunni theological discourse flourished and Delhi emerged as a center for Islamic scholarship.[55][39] To formalize Sunni governance, Iltutmish created a dedicated department under the Sheikh-ul Islam, alongside qazis and muftis, to enforce Sharia-compliant rulings and oversee religious affairs, thereby embedding Sunni orthodoxy into the sultanate's administrative core.[55] His construction of the Nasiriyya madrasa in Delhi further exemplified this commitment, serving as a hub for Sunni education and countering heterodox influences.[56] In contrast to his pragmatic stance toward non-Muslim subjects, Iltutmish exhibited marked intolerance toward Shia sects, viewing them as deviations from Sunni orthodoxy. Contemporary accounts describe him as fiercely orthodox, prioritizing the suppression of Shia elements deemed heretical within Sunni theological frameworks. He persecuted Ismaili Shias in Delhi, executing numerous members of the community following the discovery of an assassination plot against him, which underscored his resolve to eliminate perceived threats from sectarian dissidents.[57][26] This action targeted Ismailis, whose esoteric doctrines and political quietism were seen by Sunni authorities as subversive, leading to their marginalization under his rule.[58] Such measures aligned with broader efforts to consolidate Sunni dominance, though primary chroniclers like Minhaj-i-Siraj emphasized Iltutmish's piety without detailing the extent of sectarian violence.[58]Pragmatic Approach to Hindu Subjects and Temple Policies
Iltutmish imposed the jizya tax on Hindu subjects in accordance with Islamic legal traditions, treating them as dhimmis obligated to pay for protection and exemption from military service, which ensured a steady revenue stream vital to the nascent Sultanate's fiscal stability.[59] This taxation acknowledged the economic contributions of the Hindu majority without pursuing wholesale religious coercion, as the Sultanate's treasury relied heavily on agrarian and trade revenues from Hindu-dominated regions.[60] Unlike more ideologically driven ulama demands for enforced conversion or execution, Iltutmish rejected such extremism, reportedly informing a delegation of scholars that the state's survival depended on maintaining the productivity of its non-Muslim populace, numbering in the millions and forming the backbone of the economy.[4] His administration integrated Hindu elites into lower bureaucratic roles where their administrative expertise proved useful, fostering a degree of functional coexistence to prevent rebellions and sustain governance over diverse territories.[61] This approach prioritized causal stability—rooted in the reality that alienating Hindu landowners and merchants would undermine military funding and territorial control—over purist theological impositions, even as Iltutmish upheld Sunni orthodoxy in Muslim affairs. Hindu communities retained autonomy in local customs and religious observances, provided they fulfilled fiscal duties, which minimized disruptions to agricultural output and urban commerce in provinces like Rajasthan and the Doab.[59] ![Silver tanka of Iltutmish featuring Devanagari legend on obverse][float-right]Regarding temple policies, Iltutmish eschewed systematic iconoclasm, with historical records showing no major campaigns of temple destruction during his reign (1211–1236), in contrast to sporadic earlier raids under Qutb al-Din Aibak.[4] Temples often continued operating as economic hubs, generating pilgrimage fees and local taxes that indirectly bolstered state revenues, reflecting a utilitarian calculus that preserved infrastructure for potential reuse or revenue rather than obliteration. While selective repurposing of temple materials occurred for mosques like the Quwwat-ul-Islam, this was pragmatic adaptation amid resource scarcity, not doctrinal eradication, allowing many Hindu sites to persist intact to avoid provoking widespread unrest among subject populations.[62] Such restraint aligned with broader Mamluk priorities of consolidation, where temple desecrations were tied to political conquests rather than routine religious policy.[63] This framework of moderated fiscal exaction and non-interference in routine worship enabled Iltutmish to channel resources toward military defenses against Mongol threats and internal rivals, underscoring a governance model grounded in empirical necessities over ideological absolutism.[60]