Early
in the sixteenth century, Babur, who was descended from Timur on his
father's side and from Genghis Khan on his mother's, was driven out of his
father's kingdom in the Ferghana Valley (which straddles contemporary
Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan) by the Shaybani Uzbeks, who had
wrested Samarkand from the Timurids. After several unsuccessful attempts to
regain Ferghana and Samarkand, Babur crossed the Amu Darya and captured
Kabul from the last of its Mongol rulers in 1504. In his invasion of India
in 1526, Babur's army of 12,000 defeated a less mobile force of 100,000 at
the First Battle of Panipat, about forty-five kilometers northwest of Delhi.
Although the seat of the great Mughal Empire he founded was in India,
Babur's memoirs stressed his love for Kabul--both as a commercial strategic
center as well as a beautiful highland city with an "extremely delightful"
climate.
Although
Indian Mughal rule technically lasted until the nineteenth century, its days
of power extended from 1526 until the death of Babur's
great-great-great-grandson, Aurangzeb in 1707. The Mughals originally had
come from Central Asia, but once they had taken India, the area that is now
Afghanistan was relegated to a mere outpost of the empire. Indeed,
during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, most of the Hindu Kush area
was hotly contested between the Mughals of India and the powerful Safavids
of Iran. Just as Kabul dominates the high road from Central Asia into India,
Qandahar commands the only approach to India that skirts the Hindu Kush. The
strategically important Kabul-Qandahar axis was the primary forces of
competition between the Mughals and the Safavids, and Qandahar itself
changed hands several times during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
The Safavids and the Mughals were not the only contenders, however. Less
powerful but closer at hand were the Uzbeks of Central Asia, who fought for
control of Herat in western Afghanistan and for the northern regions as well
where neither the Mughals nor the Safavids were in strength.
The
Mughals sought not only to block the historical western invasion routes into
India but also to control the fiercely independent tribes who accepted only
nominal control from Delhi in their mountain strongholds between the Kabul-Qandahar
axis and the Indus River--especially in the Pashtun area of the Suleiman
mountain range. As the area around Qandahar changed hands back and forth
between the two great empires on either side, the local Pashtun tribes
exploited the situation to their advantage by extracting concessions from
both sides. By the middle of the seventeenth century, the Mughals had
abandoned the Hindu Kush north of Kabul to the Uzbeks, and in 1748 they lost
Qandahar to the Safavids for the third and final time.
Toward
the end of the seventeenth century, as the power of both the Safavids and
the Mughals waned, new groups began to assert themselves in the Hindu Kush
area. Early in the eighteenth century, one of the Pashtun tribes, the Hotaki,
seized Qandahar from the Safavids, and a group of Ghilzai Pashtuns
subsequently made greater inroads into Safavid territory. The Ghilzai
Pashtuns even managed briefly to hold the Safavid capital of Isfahan, and
two members of this tribe ascended the throne before the Ghilzai were
evicted from Iran by a warrior, Nadir Shah, who became known as the "Persian
Napoleon."
Nadir
Shah conquered Qandahar and Kabul in 1738 along with defeating a great
Mughal army in India, plundering Delhi, and massacring thousands of its
people. He returned home with vast treasures, including the Peacock Throne,
which thereafter served.