Peasants, Zamindars And The State
Examine the role played by zamindars in Mughal India.
The zamindars were that class of the people who did not directly participate in the processes of agricultural production. They enjoyed an elevated status in society.
(i) The zamindars were the proprietors of their land. They considered their land as their property (milkiyat). They could sell, give and mortgage it. They enjoyed many social and economic privileges because of their superior status in society.
(ii) The zamindars belonged to the upper caste. It added to their exalted status in society.
(iii) The zamindars rendered certain services (khidmat) for the state. So they got respect and position in the state.
(iv) The zamindars became very powerful because they collected revenue on bahalf of the state. They also got financial compensation for this work.
(v) Another source for the power of zamindars in society was their control over the military resources. They kept a fortress as well as an armed unit comprising cavalry, artillery and infantry.
(vi) The zamindars played an important role in inhabiting and developing the agricultural land. They helped in the settlements of farmers by lending them money and agricultural instruments. Because of the sale and purchase of land by the zamindars, the market became quite brisk. Besides the zamindars used to sell the crops grown on their land. There are evidences that the zamindars held bazaars where even the farmers came to sell their crops.
(vii) If we observe social relations of villages of Mughal age, as a pyramid then zamindars were at the top i.e. their place was the highest.
(viii) There is no doubt in the fact that the zamindars belonged to an exploitative class. But their relations with the farmers depended on their mutual togetherness and hereditary patronage. That’s why zamindars often got support of peasants in case of their revolt against the state.
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Examine the role played by zamindars in Mughal India.
Discuss the ways in which panchayats and village headmen regulated rural society.
On an outline map of the world, mark the areas which had economic links with the Mughal Empire, and trace out possible routes of communication.
Visit a neighbouring village. Find out how many people live there, which crops are grown, which animals are raised, which artisanal groups reside
there, whether women own land, how the local panchayat functions. Compare this information with what you have learnt about the sixteenth-
seventeenth centuries, noting similarities and differences. Explain both the changes and the continuities that you find.
How were the village artisans compensated by the villagers for their services? Write about any one.
How did the zamindars derive their power during the Mughal period? Mention any two ways.
What was Jati Panchayat? State any two of its functions.
Why had an artificial system of irrigation to be devised in India during sixteenth and seventeenth centuries ? Mention one such system.
Define the following terms : Polaj and Parati lands.
Why were women considered an important resource in agrarian society? Mention two reasons.
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