Comprehension Passage
Read the passage and answer the five questions that follow
Mughal chronicles, especially the Akbar Nama, written by Abu’l Fazl, have bequeathed a vision of empire in which agency rests almost solely with the emperor, while the rest of the kingdom has been portrayed as following his orders. Yet if we look more closely at the rich information, these histories provide information about the apparatus of the Mughal State from which we may be able to understand the ways in which the imperial organization was dependent on several different institutions to be able to function effectively. One important pillar of the Mughal State was the nobility.
Mughal chronicles viewed the emperors as supreme sovereign because
1
Nobility wanted him to be one.
2
Vision of empire viewed the emperor as the sole ruler.
3
Chronicles were a rich source of history.
4
Imperial administration was weak.