Abū al-Faḍl ʿAllāmī (born January 14, 1551, Agra [India]—died August 22, 1602) was a historian, military commander, secretary, and theologian to the Mughal emperor Akbar.
Abū al-Faḍl ʿAllāmī studied with his father, Sheikh Mubārak Nāgawrī, a distinguished scholar, and, after teaching in his father’s school, was presented to Akbar in 1574 by the poet Fayzī, Abū al-Faḍl’s elder brother. Through his criticism of the traditional Muslim religious leaders, he influenced the development of Akbar’s religious synthesis. He opposed the narrow-mindedness of the religious leaders and their preoccupation with outward forms of worship instead of with the transcendent God. Abū al-Faḍl had immense influence at court. Having been appointed a military commander in the Deccan in 1599, he distinguished himself both as a soldier and as an administrator. He was called back to court during a rebellion of Akbar’s son Salīm (afterward the emperor Jahāngīr) but, at the instigation of Salīm, was stopped en route and assassinated.
Abū al-Faḍl’s major literary achievement was a history of Akbar and his ancestors, Akbar-nāmeh (“History of Akbar”), concluded by the Āʾīn-e Akbarī (“The Institutes of Akbar”). Āʾīn-e Akbarī is in three parts: (1) a manual of government operations ranging from the jewel office and elephant stables to the army and tax collection, (2) a description and short history of Akbar’s 12 provinces, and (3) an account of Hindu culture and sciences. Abū al-Faḍl is said to have translated the Bible into Persian. Collections of his letters are also extant.