References:
Books:
• Adige, S. (2015). The Mughal High Noon: The Ascent of Aurangzeb. Rupa Publications.
• Eraly, A. (2007). The Mughal World: Life in India's Last Golden Age. Penguin UK
• Jaffar, S. (1936). The Mughal Empire. From Babar To Aurangzeb. S.Muhammad Sadiq Khan
• Kocchar, S. (1984). Teaching of History. Sterling Publishers Pvt. Ltd
• Mukherjee, S. (2001). Royal Mughal Ladies and Their Contributions. Gyan Books
• Nath, R. (2004). Private Life of the Mughals of India. Rupa Publications
• Podder, T. (2013). Escape from Mughal Harem. Roli Books.
• Rogers, J. (1993). Mughal Miniatures. Interlink Books
• Sharma, P. & Nag, U. (2015). The Story of Babur. Good Earth, Puffin Books
• Skelton, R. (1984). Indian Heritage: Court Life and Arts Under Mughal Rule. Faber & Faber
• Sundaresan, I. (2002). The Twentieth Wife. The Taj Mahal trilogy #1. Harper Collins
School textbooks:
• Gaikwad, L. & Pathan, D (2013, April 21). History of Medieval India.
Standard Seven. Maharashtra State Textbook Bureau
• Yadav, N. (2013, April 21). Social Science, Our Pasts - II.
Textbook in History for Class VII. NCERT
Misc references:
• Balaji Telefilms. (2013-2015). Jodha Akbar. [television series]. Zee TV
• Gowarikar, A. (2008). Jodhaa Akbar. [motion picture]. UTV Motion Pictures
• 36 Days of Type. (2016). Retrieved from
http://www.36daysoftype.com/
Online Documents:
• Beveridge, H. (2000). Akbar-Nama - Volume 1. Scribd. Retrieved from
https://www.scribd.com/doc/114445735/Akbar-Nama-Volume-1#scribd
• Fazl, A. & Jones, Z. (2005) A'in-i-Akbari. An abridged translated version of the document. Columbia College. Retrieved from
http://www.columbia.edu/itc/mealac/pritchett/00litlinks/abulfazl/
• Sankrityayan, S. The Changing Representation of Indian history in NCERT Textbooks: Political and Academic Debates. Retrieved from
http://www.academia.edu/1782610/The_Changing_Representation_of_Indian_history_in_NCERT_ Textbooks_Political_and_Academic_Debates
Web Articles:
• Daftuar, S. (2014, Jan 1). A Mughal mystery. The Hindu. Retrieved from
http:// www.thehindu.com/books/books-authors/a-mughal-mystery/article5526209.ece
• Danino, M. (2015, May 24). The real issues confronting Indian history.
DNA India. Retrieved from
http://www.dnaindia.com/analysis/column-the-real-issues-confronting-indian-history-2088702
• Department of Islamic Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art. (2002, Oct).
The Art of the Mughals before 1600. The MET. Retrieved from
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/mugh/hd_mugh.htm
• Dubey, T. (2015, Aug 25). Herstory Flashback: Gulbadan Banu Begum. Retrieved from
http://her.yourstory.com/herstory-flashback-gulbadan-banu-begum-0823
• Fernando, B. (2016, Feb 21). New breed of game designers is looking at Indian culture to build games. Mid-day. Retrieved from
http://www.mid-day.com/articles/new-breed-of-game-designers-is-looking-at-indian-culture-to-build-games/16972180
• Gurbaxani, A. (2016, Apr 6). THINGS WE LOVE: BROWNBOX TOYS. The Daily Pao. Retrieved from
http://www.thedailypao.com/things-we-love-brownboxtoys-2/
• IANS. (2016, Apr 6). From somersaults to sending messages: the enduring Mughal fascination with pigeons. The Times of India. Retrieved from
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/interviews/Hindu-nationalists-carrying-forward-colonial-idea-of-demonising-Mughals/articleshow/51710879.cms?from=mdr
• Kapoor, D. & Gulati, S. (2014, June 22). Why should Smriti Irani ‘think out of the textbook’?. DNA India. Retrieved from
http://www.dnaindia.com/analysis/stand-point-why-should-smriti-irani-think-out-of-the-textbook-1997189
• Patil, V. (2012, Feb 8). Noor Jehan, The Most Powerful Mughal Queen. Personal Blog. Retrieved from
http://www.vimlapatil.com/vimlablog/noor-jehan-the-most-powerful-mughal-queen/
• Rigoglioso, M. (2015, Sept 15). We may now have proof Mughals were actually good for India. Daily O. Retrieved from
http://www.dailyo.in/politics/hindus-muslims-mughals-narendra-modi-british-brahmins-sanskrit-persian-islamic-rule-2002-gujarat-riots/story/1/6255.html
• Sarafan, G. (2011, Nov 6). Artistic Stylistic Transmission in the Royal Mughal Atelier. Sensible Reason. Retrieved from
http://sensiblereason.com/artistic-stylistic-transmission-in-the-royal-mughal-atelier/
• Selfportraitsofcolor. (2015, Dec 24). Unknown Mughal court artist, possibly female: Jahangir Being Entertained in the Zenana. Self-Portraits of Colour. Tumblr. Retrieved from
http://selfportraitsofcolor.tumblr.com/post/135888524191/unknown-mughal-court-artist-possibly-female
• Shah, S. (2012, Nov 2). History in capsules. The Hindu. Retrieved from
http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-features/tp-metroplus/history-in-capsules/ article4056491.ece
• Sharma, V. (2013, Dec 15). Reviving mystique of the Mughals. Spectrum. The Tribune. Retrieved from
http://www.tribuneindia.com/2013/20131215/spectrum/main1.htm
• Sims-Williams, U. (2016, Feb 8). From somersaults to sending messages: the enduring Mughal fascination with pigeons. Scroll.in. Retrieved from
http://scroll.in/article/777097/from-somersaults-to-sending-messages-the-enduring-mughal-fascination-with-pigeons
• Subrahmaniam, V. (2011, April 18). Muslim rulers deliberately projected as intolerant: Katju. The Hindu. Retrieved from
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/ article1704204.ece
Miniature Galleries:
• Sotheby's. Retrieved from
http://www.sothebys.com/en/search-results.html?keyword=mughal
• Victoria And Albert Museum: collections. Retrieved from
http://collections.vam. ac.uk/
Other Links:
• Useful resource e-links related to 'Communication Design'
• Visual Communication Design at IDC, IIT Bombay
Case Study Download:
• An Understanding of Indian History......
• An Understanding of Indian History- Report......
