Medieval History is one of the most heavily tested segments in the UPSC Civil Services Examination, covering dynasties, administrative systems, religious movements, and cultural developments spanning roughly the 6th to the 18th century. Aspirants frequently lose marks not because they lack knowledge but because they confuse overlapping dynasties - for instance, mixing up the administrative reforms of the Tughlaq dynasty with those of the Khilji dynasty, or misattributing Vijayanagar architectural styles. These UPSC Medieval History notes available on EduRev are structured to prevent exactly those errors, offering dynasty-wise timelines, cheat sheets, and topic-deep-dives. Whether you are preparing for Prelims or Mains, this material covers the Rajputs, the Delhi Sultanate, the Mughal Empire, the Bhakti-Sufi movements, the Maratha Confederacy, and the early phase of European commerce. Each note is crafted to make retention easier and exam application faster.
A solid chronological framework is the foundation of Medieval History preparation. Many aspirants struggle to place events in the correct century, especially when Prelims questions ask about contemporaneous rulers across different regions. These notes provide a clear, era-by-era timeline and a dedicated guide to important places of Medieval India - locations like Hampi, Fatehpur Sikri, and Thanjavur that recur in both Prelims and Mains questions.
The Rajput clans - Paramaras, Chandellas, Chahamanas - dominated northern India between the 7th and 12th centuries and are a frequent source of Prelims questions on their resistance to early Turkic invasions. These notes also include a cheat sheet on early medieval India in its broader world context, helping aspirants understand trade networks and cultural exchanges that influenced Indian polity during this period.
The tripartite struggle among the Pratiharas, Palas, and Rashtrakutas for control over the Gangetic plains is a classic UPSC topic that candidates often oversimplify. These notes cover the political and military manoeuvring of each power alongside the Chandellas and Chahamanas, and include a separate, focused note on the Rashtrakuta dynasty's administration and cultural contributions, particularly their cave temples at Ellora.
The Pallavas of Kanchipuram were instrumental in shaping Dravidian temple architecture, and their rock-cut monuments at Mahabalipuram remain a UNESCO World Heritage Site. UPSC Mains questions on South Indian art and culture frequently reference Pallava contributions. These notes cover their political history, naval expeditions, and their enduring cultural influence on Southeast Asia through trade and religious missions.
The Palas were the last great Buddhist imperial power in the Indian subcontinent, and their patronage of Nalanda and Vikramashila universities is directly relevant to UPSC questions on education and Buddhism. These notes clearly distinguish between the Pala and Sena periods, a distinction many aspirants blur, and cover the Sena dynasty's role in reinforcing Brahmanical orthodoxy in Bengal.
Social history is increasingly tested in UPSC Mains, and understanding the stratification of caste, land rights, and agrarian relationships in early medieval northern India is essential. These notes explain how the proliferation of sub-castes and the decline of trade guilds reshaped economic power, a process that directly influenced political fragmentation before the Turkic invasions.
The Gurjara-Pratihara dynasty served as a crucial bulwark against Arab expansion into the Indian subcontinent during the 8th and 9th centuries, a fact that UPSC Prelims questions occasionally probe. These notes cover the dynasty's rise under Nagabhata I, its peak under Mihira Bhoja, and its eventual decline due to Rashtrakuta pressure and internal fragmentation, with key dates clearly laid out.
The Chola dynasty represents one of the richest topics in Medieval History for UPSC, spanning land revenue systems, naval conquests, and the unparalleled Dravidian temple architecture of Thanjavur. A common error among aspirants is conflating the administrative Mandalam system with the village assemblies (Sabha, Ur, Nagaram). These notes separate the Chola chronology, army organisation, land revenue, art, architecture, and society into distinct, easily navigable sections. A cheat sheet consolidates key facts for last-minute revision.
The Delhi Sultanate (1206-1526) is among the most expansive topics in UPSC Medieval History, covering five successive dynasties, each with distinct administrative innovations. The Iqta system introduced by the early Sultans, Alauddin Khilji's market reforms, and Muhammad bin Tughlaq's controversial token currency policy are perennial UPSC Prelims and Mains topics. A cheat sheet and dynasty-wise notes - covering the Slave, Khilji, Tughlaq, Sayyid, and Lodhi dynasties - make this vast topic manageable, while a dedicated note on kingship and nobility clarifies the political theory underlying Sultanate governance.
The cultural synthesis of the Sultanate period produced a distinctive Indo-Islamic literary tradition. Persian became the language of the court, while Sanskrit scholarship continued in regional kingdoms. These notes cover the contributions of poets like Amir Khusrau - who pioneered the Khayal form in music and wrote in both Persian and Hindavi - and the evolution of literature under Sultanate patronage, a topic that appears in UPSC Mains culture questions.
The Vijayanagar Empire (1336-1646) is essential for both Prelims and Mains, particularly for questions on South Indian polity, the nayankara land system, and the vibrant trade economy that attracted Portuguese merchants. A recurring UPSC trap is confusing Krishnadevaraya's military campaigns against the Bahmani successor states. These notes cover the Vijayanagar-Bahmani conflict, Krishnadevaraya's reign, social and economic conditions, administrative structure, revenue sources, and the empire's remarkable cultural and artistic legacy.
The Bhakti and Sufi movements transformed medieval Indian society by challenging caste orthodoxy and sectarian boundaries. UPSC Mains questions often ask about the socio-religious significance of saints like Kabir, Mirabai, and Ramananda, and the Sufi silsilahs - particularly the Chishti and Suhrawardi orders - that spread across the subcontinent. These notes cover both movements comprehensively, including changes in devotional texts and their societal impact.
The Mughal Empire (1526-1857) dominates the later portion of Medieval History in the UPSC syllabus. Akbar's Mansabdari system, the Ain-i-Dahsala land revenue settlement by Todar Mal, and the architectural legacy from Humayun's tomb to the Taj Mahal are all exam-critical topics. These notes cover the empire's administrative structure, land revenue policies, agricultural conditions, painting traditions, and a cheat sheet for rapid revision. Sher Shah Suri's interregnum and the Sur Empire are treated separately given their administrative significance.
The provincial kingdoms that emerged after the decline of the Delhi Sultanate - in Gujarat, Bengal, Kashmir, Malwa, Mewar, Sind, Khandesh, and the Deccan - are frequently tested in Prelims through questions on their art, architecture, and administrative innovations. The Bahmani Kingdom in particular is important as a precursor to the Deccan Sultanates. These notes cover the political history and cultural contributions of each provincial dynasty clearly and concisely.
The Kakatiya dynasty of Warangal (12th-14th centuries) ruled the Telugu-speaking Deccan and contributed significantly to regional art, the tank-irrigation system, and trade. Their Ramappa Temple is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. UPSC questions on the Kakatiyas often focus on their society, economy, and political organisation, and these notes address all four dimensions - society, economy, polity, and culture - in a structured format.
The rise of the Marathas under Shivaji Bhonsle represents a pivotal shift in 17th-century Indian politics, and UPSC Mains questions regularly probe the Ashtapradhan council, Shivaji's revenue system, and the later Peshwa-led confederacy. A common mistake is attributing Maratha military innovations solely to Shivaji while neglecting the structural contributions of his successors and the Peshwas. These notes cover the factors behind the Maratha rise, Shivaji's administration, and the careers of his successors.
The arrival of Vasco da Gama at Calicut in 1498 opened a sea route that permanently altered Indian Ocean trade and eventually led to colonial rule. These notes trace the Portuguese commercial foothold, the subsequent entry of the English and French trading companies, and the formal establishment of the British East India Company on 31 December 1600 - a date that UPSC Prelims has tested directly. The Carnatic Wars, which decided Anglo-French supremacy in India, are also covered.
Most aspirants treat Medieval History as a rote-memorisation subject, but UPSC Mains GS-I questions demand analytical answers - for instance, explaining why the Iqta system was both an administrative strength and a political vulnerability of the Delhi Sultanate. The most effective approach is to read the dynasty-wise notes first, then cross-reference the cheat sheets to consolidate facts, and finally test retention through previous year questions. EduRev's structured notes enable this three-step method by keeping descriptive content, timelines, and cheat sheets in separate, focused documents rather than in a single unwieldy text.
From the Pallava cave temples of Mahabalipuram to the Mughal Mansabdari system and Shivaji's Ashtapradhan, the UPSC Medieval History syllabus rewards aspirants who understand administrative and cultural themes across dynasties, not just isolated facts. EduRev's notes are mapped directly to these recurring themes, ensuring that you cover land revenue systems, art and architecture, socio-religious movements, and the emergence of European powers - all high-weightage areas - without leaving any gap before the Civil Services Examination.
| 1. What are the major dynasties covered in UPSC medieval history notes? | ![]() |
| 2. How do I remember the Mughal emperors and their contributions for UPSC exams? | ![]() |
| 3. What's the difference between the Delhi Sultanate and Mughal Empire in medieval Indian history? | ![]() |
| 4. Which architectural and cultural achievements should I focus on for UPSC medieval history? | ![]() |
| 5. What were the major economic and trade systems during medieval India that UPSC asks about? | ![]() |