Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-c47g7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-18T15:17:27.310Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

3 - Muslim India: the Delhi sultanate

from PART I - THE IMPACT OF THE STEPPE PEOPLES

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2011

David O. Morgan
Affiliation:
University of Wisconsin, Madison
Anthony Reid
Affiliation:
National University of Singapore
Get access

Summary

The emergence of an independent Muslim state in India

Following Muʿizz al-Dīn Muḥammad’s assassination in 602/1206 the Muslim conquests in the Indo-Gangetic plain went their own way. While the Ghūrid heartlands, Ghūr and Fīrūzkūh, were contested among the various princes of his dynasty, further east the beneficiaries were the Turkish slave (ghulām; banda) commanders to whom the sultan had largely delegated authority. Two of them – Tāj al-Dīn Yildiz in Ghazna and Quṭb al-Dīn Aybak in Lahore – were quick to establish their de facto autonomy. Aybak was acknowledged by the Khalaj rulers who succeeded Muḥammad b. Bakhtiyār at Lakhnawti in Bengal, and thus became the paramount ruler in Muslim India. But Aybak, who contested Ghazna with Yildiz, in turn recognised the overlordship of Muʿizz al-Dīn’s nephew and successor, Ghiyāth al-Dīn Maḥmūd; numismatic evidence suggests that he bore no higher title than malik. After Aybak’s death in 607/1210f., his heir Ārām Shāh was soon defeated and killed by Aybak’s slave and governor in Budaon, Iltutmish, who had been set up at Delhi. Aybak’s territories were now disputed among Iltutmish, Yildiz and another former Ghūrid slave lieutenant, Nāṣir al-Dīn Qubacha, who held Multān and Uchch in Sind.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

ʿAfī f, Shams-i Sirāj, Tārīkh-i Fīrūzshāhī, ed. Hosain, Maulavi Vilayat, Calcutta, 1891.Google Scholar
ʿAlāʾ al-Dīn, Aṭā Malik Juwaynī, Tārīkh-i Jahān-gushā, ed. Muḥammad Qazwīnī, Mīrzā, 3 vols., Gibb Memorial Series, vol. XVI (Leiden and London, 1912–37), vol. I, p.Google Scholar
ʿIṣāmī, , Futūḥ al-salaṭīn, ed. Usha, A. S., Madras, 1948; trans. A. M. Husain, 3 vols., Aligarh, 1967–77.Google Scholar
Ḥamīd, Qalandar, Khayr al-majālis, ed. Nizami, Khaliq Ahmad, Aligarh, [1959].Google Scholar
Jūzjānī, Minhāj-i Sirāj, Ṭabaqāt-i Nāṣirī, ed. Ḥabībī, ʿAbd al-Ḥayy, 2nd edn, 2 vols., Kabul, AH solar 1342–3.Google Scholar
Sirhindī, Yaḥyāʾ ibn Aḥmad, Tārīkh-i Mubārakshāhī, ed. Hosain, S. M. Hidayat, Calcutta, 1931.Google Scholar
Juwaynī, ʿAlāʾ al-Dīn Aṭā Malik, Tārīkh-i jahān-gushā, ed. Qazwīnī, Mīrzā Muḥammad, 3 vols., Gibb Memorial Series XVI, Leiden, 1912–37; trans. John Andrew Boyle, The history of the world-conqueror, 2 vols., Manchester, 1958, repr. in 1 vol., 1997.Google Scholar
Māhrū, Ibn, ʿAyn al-Mulk ʿAbd-allāh b. Muḥammad, Inshā-yi Māhrū, ed. Rashid, Shaikh Abdur, Lahore, 1965.Google Scholar
al-ʿUmarī, Ibn Faḍl-allāh, Masālik al-abṣār fī mamālik al-amṣār, partial edn by Spies, Otto, Ibn Faḍlallāh al-ʿOmarī’s Bericht über Indien, Leipzig, 1943, and trans. Iqtidar Husain Siddiqi and Qazi Muhammad Ahmad, A fourteenth-century Arab account of India under Sultan Muhammad bin Tughlaq, Aligarh, [1975]; partial edn by Klaus Lech, Das mongolische Weltreich, Asiatische Forschungen, 22, Wiesbaden, 1968.Google Scholar
Bābur, Ẓahīr al-Dīn Muḥammad, Bābur-nāma, trans. Beveridge, Annette S., The Bābur-nāma in English, 2 vols., London, 1921–2; repr. in 1 vol., 1969.Google Scholar
Bihāmadkhānī, Muḥammad, Tārīkh-i Muḥammadī, British Library ms. Or. 137; partial trans. by , Muhammad Zaki, Aligarh, 1972.Google Scholar
al-Hamadānī, Rashīd al-Dīn Faḍl-allāh, Jāmiʿ al-tawrīkh, partial edn and trans. by Jahn, Karl, Die Indiengeschichte des Rašīd ad-Dīn, 2nd edn, Vienna, 1980.Google Scholar
Aḥmad, Yādgār, Tārīkh-i Shāhī, ed. Hidayat Hosain, M. (Calcutta, 1939), p..Google Scholar
Abdul, Majed Khan, ‘The historicity of Ibn Batuta re Shamsuddin Firuz Shah, the so-called Balbani king of Bengal’, Indian Historical Quarterly, 18 (1942) –70.Google Scholar
Ahmad, Aziz, ‘The early Turkish nucleus in India’, Turcica, 9 (1977) –109.Google Scholar
Ḥasan Dihlawī, Amīr, Fawāʾid al-fuʾād, ed. Malik, Muḥammad Laṭīf, Lahore, AH 1386.Google Scholar
Khusraw Dihlawī, Amīr, Rasāʾil al-iʿjāz, lithograph edn, 5 vols. in 2, Lucknow, 1876.Google Scholar
Khusraw Dihlawī, Amīr, Tughluq-nāma, ed. Hāshimī Farīdābādī, Sayyid, Aurangabad, 1933.Google Scholar
Dihlawī, Amīr Khusraw, Nuh sipihr, ed. Wahd Mīrzā, Muḥammad, London, 1950.Google Scholar
Dihlawī, Amīr Khusraw, Khazāʾin al-futūḥ, ed. Mīrzā, Muḥammad Wahīd, Calcutta, 1953.Google Scholar
Dihlawī, Amīr Khusraw, Miftāḥ al-futūḥ, ed. Rashid, Shaikh Abdur, Aligarh, 1954.Google Scholar
Dihlawī, Amīr Khusraw, Dīwal Rānī-yi Khaḍir Khān, ed. Sālim Anṣārī, Rashīd Aḥmad, Aligarh, AH 1336.Google Scholar
Dihlawī, Amīr Khusraw, Qirān al-saʿdayn, ed. Ismāʿīl, Maulavi Muḥammad and Baranī, Sayyid Ḥasan, Aligarh, AH 1337.Google Scholar
Annemarie, Schimmel, ‘Turk and Hindu: A poetical image and its application to historical fact’, in Vryonis, Jr Speros J. (ed.), Islam and cultural change in the Middle Ages (Wiesbaden, 1975) –26.Google Scholar
Aubin, Jean, ‘L’ethnogénèse des Qaraunas’, Turcica, 1 (1969) –94.Google Scholar
Baranī, Ḍiyā-yi, Tārīkh-i Fīrūzshāhī, ed. Khán, Saiyid Ahmad, Calcutta, 1861–2.Google Scholar
Baranī, Ḍiyā-yi, Fatāwā-yi Jahāndārī, ed. Saleem Khan, Afsar, Lahore, 1972.Google Scholar
Biran, Michal, Qaidu and the rise of the independent Mongol state in Central Asia, Richmond, 1997.Google Scholar
Bosworth, C. E. and Sir Gerard, Clauson, ‘Al-Xwārazmī on the peoples of Central Asia’, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society (1965), 8Google Scholar
Chakravarti, Ranabir, ‘Horse trade and piracy at Tana (Thana, Maharashtra, India): Gleanings from Marco Polo’, Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 34 (1991) –82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chattopadhyaya, Brajadulal, Representing the Other? Sanskrit sources and the Muslims (eighth to fourteenth century), New Delhi, 1998.Google Scholar
Conermann, Stephan, Die Beschreibung Indiens in der ‘Riḥla’ des Ibn Baṭṭūṭa: Aspekte einer herrschaftssoziologischen Einordnung des Delhi-Sultanates unter Muḥammad Ibn Tuġluq, Islamkundliche Untersuchungen, Berlin, 1993.Google Scholar
Dani, Ahmad Hasan, ‘Shamsuddīn Ilyās Shāh, Shāh-i Bangālah’, in Hari Ram, Gupta et al. (eds.), Essays presented to Sir Jadunath Sarkar, 2 vols., Hoshiarpur, 1958, vol. II –8.Google Scholar
Day, U. N., The government of the sultanate, 2nd edn, New Delhi, 1993.Google Scholar
Desai, Ziyaud-din A. (ed.), A topographical list of Arabic, Persian and Urdu inscriptions of south India, New Delhi, 1989.Google Scholar
Desai, Ziyaud-din A. (ed.), Arabic, Persian and Urdu inscriptions of west India: A topographical list, New Delhi, 1999.Google Scholar
Deyell, John S., Living without silver: The monetary history of early medieval north India, Oxford and Delhi, 1990.Google Scholar
Digby, Simon, War-horse and elephant in the Delhi sultanate: A study of military supplies, Oxford and Delhi, 1971.Google Scholar
Digby, Simon, ‘The sufi shaykh and the sultan: A conflict of claims to authority in medieval India’, Iran, 28 (1990) –81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Digby, Simon, ‘Before Timur came: Provincialization of the Delhi sultanate through the fourteenth century’, Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 47 (2004) –356.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eaton, Richard M., The rise of Islam and the Bengal frontier, 1204–1760, Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1993.Google Scholar
Eaton, Richard Maxwell, Sufis of Bijapur 1300–1700: Social roles of sufis in medieval India, Princeton, 1978.Google Scholar
Eaton, Richard M., ‘Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states’, Journal of Islamic Studies, 11 (2000) –319; repr. in Gilmartin and Lawrence (eds.), Beyond Turk and Hindu, pp. 246–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ernst, Carl W., Eternal garden: Mysticism, history and politics at a South Asian Sufi center, Albany, 1992.Google Scholar
Fakhr-i, Mudabbir, Shajarat [or Baḥr] al-ansāb, partial edn by Sir Denison Ross, E. as Taʿríkh [sic]-i Fakhr al-Dín Mubáraksháh, London, 1927.Google Scholar
Firishta, (Muḥammad Qāsim Hindūshāh Astarābādī), Gulshan-i Ibrāhīmī, lithograph edn, 2 vols., Bombay, AH 1247.Google Scholar
Fīrūz, Shāh (Sultan), Futūḥāt- Fīrūzshāhī, ed. Rashid, Shaikh Abdur, Aligarh, 1954.Google Scholar
Frykenberg, Robert E. (ed.), Delhi through the ages: Essays in urban history, culture and society, Oxford and Delhi, 1986.Google Scholar
Gilmartin, David and Bruce B, Lawrence. (eds.), Beyond Turk and Hindu: Rethinking religious identities in Islamicate South Asia, Gainesville, FL, 2000.Google Scholar
Gommans, Jos, ‘The silent frontier of South Asia, c. AD 1100–1800’, Journal of World History, 9 (1998) –23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gommans, Jos, ‘Warhorse and gunpowder in India c. 1000–1850’, in Jeremy, Black (ed.), War in the early modern world, London, 1999 –27.Google Scholar
Goswamy, B. N. and Grewal, J. S. (eds.), The Mughals and the Jogis of Jakhbar (Simla, 1967) –1Google Scholar
Habib, Irfan, ‘Economic history of the Delhi sultanate – an essay in interpretation’, Indian Historical Review, 4 (1977) –303.Google Scholar
Habib, Irfan, ‘Baranī’s theory of the history of the Delhi sultanate’, Indian Historical Review, 7 (1980–1) –115.Google Scholar
Habib, Irfan, ‘The price regulations of ʿAlāʾuddīn Khaljī – a defence of Ẓiāʾ Baranī’, Indian Economic and Social History Review, 21 (1984) –414.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Habib, Irfan, ‘Formation of the sultanate ruling class of the thirteenth century’, in Irfan Habib, (ed.), Medieval India 1: Researches in the history of India 1200–1750, Oxford and Delhi, 1992 –21.Google Scholar
Habib, Mohammad and Nizami, Khaliq Ahmad (eds.), A comprehensive history of India, vol. V: The Delhi Sultanate AD 1206–1526, New Delhi, 1970.Google Scholar
Habibullah, A. B. M., The foundation of Muslim rule in India, 2nd edn, Allahabad, 1961.Google Scholar
Hambly, Gavin R. G., ‘Who were the Chihilgānī, the forty slaves of Sultan Shams al-Dīn Iltutmish of Delhi?’, Iran, 10 (1972) –62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardy, Peter, Historians of medieval India: Studies in Indo-Muslim historical writing, London, 1960, repr., with new preface, New Delhi, 1997.Google Scholar
Hardy, Peter, ‘The growth of authority over a conquered political elite: The early Delhi sultanate as a possible case study’, in John, S. Richards (ed.), Kingship and authority in South Asia, Madison, WI, 1978 –214.Google Scholar
Hardy, Peter, ‘The authority of mediaeval Muslim kings in South Asia’, in Marc, Gaborieau (ed.), Islam et société en Asie du Sud, Collection Puruṣārthe, 9, Paris, 1986 –55.Google Scholar
Hodivala, S. H., Studies in Indo-Muslim history, 2 vols., Bombay, 1939–57.Google Scholar
Husain, Agha Mahdi, Tughluq dynasty, Calcutta, 1963.Google Scholar
Husain, Agha Mahdi, The rise and fall of Muhammad bin Tughluq, Calcutta, 1938.Google Scholar
Ibn, Baṭṭūṭa, Tuḥfat al-nuẓẓār, ed. Defrémery, Ch. and Sanguinetti, B. R., 4 vols. Paris, 1853–8; trans. H. A. R. Gibb and C. F. Beckingham, The travels of Ibn Battuta AD 1325–1354, 5 vols., Hakluyt Society, Cambridge and London, 1958–2000.Google Scholar
Islam, Zafarul, ‘The Fatāwā Fīrūz Shāhī as a source for the socio-economic history of the sultanate period’, Islamic Culture, 60 (1986), part 2 –117.Google Scholar
Islam, Zafarul, ‘Fīrūz Shāh’s attitude towards non-Muslims – a reappraisal’, Islamic Culture, 64 (1990), part 4 –79.Google Scholar
Jackson, Peter, The Delhi sultanate: A political and military history, Cambridge, 1999.Google Scholar
Jackson, Peter, ‘The Mongols and the Delhi sultanate in the reign of Muḥammad Tughluq (1325–1351)’, Central Asiatic Journal, 19 (1975) –57.Google Scholar
Jackson, Peter, ‘Jalāl al-Dīn, the Mongols and the Khwarazmian conquest of the Panjāb and Sind’, Iran, 28 (1990) –54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, Peter, ‘The Mamlūk institution in early Muslim India’, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society (1990) –58.Google Scholar
Jackson, Peter, ‘The fall of the Ghurid dynasty’, in Carole, Hillenbrand (ed.), Studies in honour of Clifford Edmund Bosworth, vol. II: The sultan’s turret: Studies in Persian and Turkish culture, Leiden, 2000 –37.Google Scholar
Jahn, Karl, ‘Zum Problem der mongolischen Eroberungen in Indien (13.–14. Jahrhundert)’, in Akten des XXIV. internationalen Orientalisten-Kongresses München … 1957, Wiesbaden, 1959 –19.Google Scholar
Jauhri, R. C., ‘Ghiyāthu’d-Dīn Tughluq – his original name and descent’, in Krüger, Horst (ed.), Kunwar Mohammad Ashraf: An Indian scholar and revolutionary 1905–1962 (Berlin, 1966) –6.Google Scholar
Jazarī, Shams al-Dīn Muḥammad, Ḥawādith al-zamān, ed. Tadmurī, ʿAbd al-Salām, 3 vols., Beirut AH 1419.Google Scholar
Khan, Iqtidar Alam, Gunpowder and firearms: Warfare in medieval India, Oxford and Delhi, 2004.Google Scholar
Khan, Iqtidar Alam, ‘Origin and development of gunpowder technology in India: AD 1250–1500’, Indian Historical Review, 4 (1977–8) –9.Google Scholar
Khan, Iqtidar Alam, ‘The coming of gunpowder to the Islamic world and north India: Spotlight on the role of the Mongols’, Journal of Asian History, 30 (1996) –45.Google Scholar
Khan, Iqtidar Alam, ‘The role of the Mongols in the introduction of gunpowder and firearms in South Asia’, in Brenda, J. Buchanan (ed.), Gunpowder: The history of an international technology, Bath, 1996 –44.Google Scholar
Khuhro, Hamida (ed.), Sind through the centuries, Oxford and Karachi, 1981.Google Scholar
Klaus, Lech, Das mongolische Weltreich, Asiatische Forschungen, 22 (Wiesbaden, 1968)Google Scholar
Kūfī, ʿAlī b.Ḥāmid b, Abī Bakr, Chach-nāma, ed. Baloch, N. A. as Fathnāmah-i Sind, Islamabad, AH 1403.Google Scholar
Lal, Kishori Saran, A history of the Khaljis AD 1290–1320, 3rd edn, Delhi, 1980.Google Scholar
Lal, Kishori Saran, Twilight of the sultanate, 3rd edn, New Delhi, 1980.Google Scholar
(Muḥammad b. Mubārak Kirmānī), Mīr-i Khwurd, Siyar al-awliyāʾ, lithograph edn, Delhi, AH 1302.Google Scholar
Moreland, W. H., The agrarian system of Moslem India, Cambridge, 1929.Google Scholar
Naqvi, Hamida Khatoon, Agricultural, industrial and urban dynamism under the sultans of Delhi 1206–1555, New Delhi, 1986.Google Scholar
Nazir, Ahmad, ‘Bérúní’s Kitāb-aṣ-Ṣaydana and its Persian translation’, Indo-Iranica, 14, part 3 (1961), p.Google Scholar
Nizami, Khaliq Ahmad, Some aspects of religion and politics in India in the thirteenth century, Aligarh, 1961.Google Scholar
Nizami, Khaliq Ahmad, On history and historians of medieval India, New Delhi, 1983.Google Scholar
Otto, Spies, Ibn Faḍlallāh al-ʿOmarī’s Bericht über Indien (Leipzig, 1943)Google Scholar
Prasad, Pushpa (ed.), Sanskrit inscriptions of Delhi sultanate 1191–1526, Oxford and Delhi, 1990.Google Scholar
Raychaudhuri, Tapan and Irfan, Habib (eds.), The Cambridge economic history of India, vol. I: c.1200–c.1750, Cambridge, 1982.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robert, Hillenbrand, ‘Political symbolism in early Indo-Islamic mosque architecture: The case of Ajmīr’, Iran, 26 (1988) –17.Google Scholar
Shabānkāraʾī, Muḥammad b. ʿAlī, Majmaʿ al-ansāb, ed. Mīr Hāshim Muḥaddith, Tehran, AH solar 1363.Google Scholar
Shāmī, Niẓām-i, Ẓafar-nāma, ed. Tauer, Felix, Histoire des conquêtes de Tamerlan, 2 vols., Monografie Archivu Orientálního, 5, Prague, 1937–58.Google Scholar
Shokoohy, Mehrdad (ed.), Rajasthan I, Corpus inscriptionum Iranicarum, part IV: Persian inscriptions down to the early Safavid period, 49, London, 1986.Google Scholar
Shokoohy, Mehrdad (ed.), Haryana I, Corpus inscriptionum Iranicarum, part IV: Persian inscriptions down to the early Safavid period, 47, London, 1988.Google Scholar
Siddiqi, Iqtidar Husain, Some aspects of Afghān despotism in India, Aligarh, 1969.Google Scholar
Siddiqi, Iqtidar Husain, ‘Wajh-i Maʿash grants under the Afghan kings (1451–1555)’, Medieval India: A Miscellany, 2 (1972) –44.Google Scholar
Siddiqui, Iqtidar Husain, ‘The Qarlūgh kingdom in north-western India during the thirteenth century’, Islamic Culture, 54 (1980) –91.Google Scholar
Siddiqui, Iqtidar Husain, ‘The Afghans and their emergence in India as ruling elite during the Delhi sultanate period’, Central Asiatic Journal, 26 (1982) –61.Google Scholar
Siddiqui, Iqtidar Husain, ‘Politics and conditions in the territories under the occupation of Central Asian rulers in north-western India – 13th and 14th centuries’, Central Asiatic Journal, 27 (1983) –306.Google Scholar
Siddiqui, Iqtidar Husain, ‘Sultan Muhammad bin Tughluq’s foreign policy: A reappraisal’, Islamic Culture, 62 (1988), part 4 –22.Google Scholar
Siddiqui, Iqtidar Husain, Perso-Arabic sources of information on the lives and conditions in the sultanate of Delhi, New Delhi, 1992.Google Scholar
Siddiqui, Iqtidar Husain (ed.), Medieval India I: Essays in intellectual thought and culture, New Delhi, 2003.Google Scholar
Simon, Digby, ‘Iletmish or Iltutmish? A reconsideration of the name of the Dehli sultan’, Iran, 8 (1970) –64.Google Scholar
Tadmurī, ʿAbd al-Salām ed., Ḥawādith al-zamān, 3 vols. (Beirut, AH 1419), vol. III, p.Google Scholar
Talbot, Cynthia, ‘Inscribing the Other, inscribing the self: Hindu–Muslim identities in pre-colonial India’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 37 (1995) –722.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomas, Edward, Chronicles of the Pathan kings of Delhi, Delhi, 1871.Google Scholar
Venkata Ramanayya, N., ‘The date of the rebellions of Tilang and Kampila against Sultan Muhammad bin Tughlaq’, Indian Culture, 5 (1938–9) –46, 261–9.Google Scholar
Venkataramanyya, N., The early Muslim expansion in south India, Madras, 1942.Google Scholar
Verma, H. C., Dynamics of urban life in pre-Mughal India, New Delhi, 1986.Google Scholar
Waddington, H., ‘ʿĀdilābād: A part of the “fourth” Delhi’, Ancient India, 1 (1946) –76Google Scholar
Wagoner, Philip B., ‘“Sultan among Hindu kings”: Dress, titles, the Islamicization of Hindu culture at Vijayanagara’, Journal of Asian Studies, 55 (1996) –80CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Welch, Anthony and Howard, Crane, ‘The Tughluqs: Master builders of the Delhi sultanate’, Muqarnas, 1 (1983) –66.Google Scholar
Willis, Michael D. (ed.), Inscriptions of Gopakṣetra: Materials for the history of central India, London, 1996.Google Scholar
Wink, André, Al-Hind: The making of the Indo-Islamic world, vol. II: The slave kings and the Islamic conquest of India, 11th–13th centuries, Leiden, 1997.Google Scholar
Wink, André, Al-Hind: The making of the Indo-Islamic world, vol. III: Indo-Islamic society, 14th–15th centuries, Leiden, 2004.Google Scholar
Wright, H. Nelson, The coinage and metrology of the Sulṭāns of Delhī, Delhi, 1936; repr. New Delhi, 1974.Google Scholar
Yazdī, Ghiyāth al-Dīn ʿAlī, Rūz-nāma-yi ghazawāt-i Hindūstān, trans. Semenov, A. A., Dnevnik pokhoda Tīmūra v Indiiu, Moscow, 1958.Google Scholar
Abrū, Ḥāfiẓ-i, Zubdat al-tawārīkh, ed. Ḥāj Sayyid Jawādī, Sayyid Kamāl, 2 vols., Tehran, AH solar 1372.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×