Riders to Emperors is a true epic about how nomad horsemen from the Central Asian steppe became the jeweled emperors of Mughal India-and how their legacy still shapes South Asia today. Blending vivid storytelling with deep research, the book follows the line that runs from Mongol raiders to Mughal garden‑builders, from felt tents to the marble domes of the Taj Mahal.
Tudor Finneran braids together three strands: gripping scenes from the lives of conquerors, queens, traders, and artisans; on‑the‑ground journeys through deserts, passes, and river cities where their world once stood; and a big‑picture investigation into how conquest, climate, faith, and finance built one of the most powerful empires in early modern history.
Along the way, Riders to Emperors reveals how steppe ideas about loyalty, data‑driven taxation, and religious authority were reinvented in the monsoon lands of Hindustan-and how the arguments over that past continue to fuel politics and identity in the present.
Narrative in pace and scope, yet rich in ideas, this is history that reads like a novel: cavalry charges and court intrigues, caravan routes and counting houses, monsoon gardens and burning cities. For readers who want their summer books to be both immersive and illuminating, Riders to Emperors offers an unforgettable ride from the roar of hooves to the whisper of palace marble.