The Skull-Studded Canopy: Auditing Shah Jahan’s Schizoid Superpower
How 17th-Century Global Silver, Prestige Infrastructure, and Towers of Human Heads Engineered the Most Extractive State in South Asian History History has a notorious habit of falling in love with a good PR campaign. For nearly four centuries, the standard historical brochure for the 1630s Mughal Empire has invited the world to marvel at a golden, silver-gilded oasis of infinite capital. It is an era framed by the intoxicating silhouette of the emerging Taj Mahal, the absolute symmetry of the kos minars lining the imperial highways, and the blinding opulence of a newly minted Peacock Throne that cost twice as much as the grand mausoleum itself. But if one strips away the mandatory, court-sponsored reverence of the Padshahnama—where every imperial stutter is recorded as a stroke of divine genius—and steps into the dusty boots of Peter Mundy, an English East India Company merchant logistics officer walking the Agra-Patna axis in 1632, the glittering canopy collapses. What emerges i...