"The country we had to traverse was a wood…so overgrown, that nobody could penetrate it…When the camp had been arranged, [Dhamaghani] set out on horseback to the forest, accompanied by soldiers…Every infidel found in the forest was taken prisoner. They sharpened stakes at both ends and made their captives carry them on their shoulders. Each was accompanied by his wife and children and they were thus led to the camp. It is the custom of these people to surround their camp with a palisade having four gates. They call it catcar round the habitation of the king.[.] The next morning, the Hindu prisoners were divided into four sections and taken to each of the four gates of the great catcar. There, on the stakes they had carried, the prisoners were impaled. Afterwards, their wives were killed and tied by their hair to these pales. Little children were massacred on the bosoms of their mothers and their corpses left there. Then, the camp was raised…In the same manner did they treat their later Hindu prisoners. This is shameful conduct such as I have not known any other sovereign guilty of. It is for this that God hastened the death of Ghiyath-eddin [Ghiyath-ud-din]. One day whilst the Kadhi (Kazi) and I were having our food with [Ghiyath-ud-din], the Kazi to his right and I to his left, an infidel was brought before him accompanied by his wife and son aged seven years. The Sultan made a sign with his hand to the executioners to cut off the head of this man; then he said to them in Arabic: ‘and the son and the wife.’ They cut off their heads and I turned my eyes away. When I looked again, I saw their heads lying on the ground. I was another time with the Sultan Ghiyath-eddin when a Hindu was brought into his presence. He uttered words I did not understand, and immediately several of his followers drew their daggers. I rose hurriedly, and he said to me: ‘Where are you going?” I replied: ‘I am going to say my afternoon (4 o’clock) prayers.’ He understood my reason, smiled, and ordered the hands and feet of the idolater to be cut off. On my return I found the unfortunate swimming in his blood."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Ibn Batuta, quoted in SOUTH INDIA & HER MUHAMMADAN INVADERS, S. KRISHNASWAMY AIYANGAR, quoted from The Madurai Sultanate_ A Concise History - Sandeep Balakrishna
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Madurai_Sultanate
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Madurai Sultanate
Ma'bar Sultanate (Persian: مابار سلطنت), unofficially known as the Madurai Sultanate, was a short lived independent kingdom based in the city of Madurai in Tamil Nadu, India. The sultanate was proclaimed in 1335 when the then viceroy of Madurai, Jalaluddin Ahsan Khan declared his independence from the Delhi Sultanate. Ahsan Khan and his descendants ruled Madurai and surrounding territories until 1378 when the last sultan, Ala-ud-Din Sikandar Shah fell in battle against the forces of the Vijayan
7 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Madurai Sultanate →
Related Quotes
"When I arrived at Madura, there was a contagious disease prevalent there which killed people in a short time. Those w…"
"the Hindu prisoners were divided into four sections and taken to each of the four gates of the great catcar. There, o…"
"The country through which we were to pass was an uninterrupted and impassable jungle of trees and reeds. The sultan g…"
"O mighty and brave king! Go forth then, and without further delay uproot from my lands this Kingdom of turuShkas, pai…"
"I very much lament for what has happened to the groves in Madhura. The coconut trees have all been cut and in their p…"
"The God of death takes his undue toll of what are left [of] lives if undestroyed by the Yavanas."
"During the winter of 1998/99, Pakistanis had stealthily occupied several Himalayan mountain peaks on the Indian side.…"
"Now compare this with the attitude of the BBC during the Kargil war. Most of us foreign correspondents know by now th…"
"A report by Time Magazine (dated 30th June 1980) read, “In the worst massacre, in the village of Mandai, the tribals …"
"Ex-Mandai MLA recounted, Manoranjan Debbarma. “Children were spiked to death and wombs of pregnant women were ripped …"