Peasants, Zamindars And The State
Discuss the ways in which panchayats and village headmen regulated rural society.
Regulation of rural society by panchayats and headmen:
(i) Meaning of Panchayat : The Village Panchayat was an assembly of elders, usually important people of the village with hereditary right over their property
(ii) General composition and importance of panchayat decision : In mixed-caste villages, the panchayat was usually a heterogeneous body. An oligarchy, the panchayat represented various castes and communities in the village, though the village menial-cum-agricultural worker was unlikely to be represented there. The decisions made by these panchayats were binding on the members.
(iii) Selection, dismisal and main functions of headman or muqaddam: The panchayat was headed by a headman known as muqaddam or mandal. Some sources suggest that the headman was chosen through the consensus of the village elders, and that this choice had to be ratified by the zamindar. Headman held office as long as they enjoyed the confidence of the village elders, failing which they could be dismissed by them. The cheif function of the headman was to supervise the preparation of village accounts, assisted by the accountant or patwari of the panchayat.
(iv) Funding or sources of income of panchayat : The panchayat derives its funds from contributions made by individuals to a common financial pool.
(v) Items of expenditure : These funds were used for defraying the costs of entertaining revenue officials who visited the village from time to time. Expenses for community welfare activities such as tiding over natural calamities (like floods), were also met from these funds. Often these funds were also deployed in construction of a bund or digging a canal which peasants usually could not afford to do on their own.
(vi) Various functions of panchayat : One important function of the panchayat was to ensure that caste boundaries among the various communities inhabiting the village were upheld, In eastern India all marriages were held in the presence of the mandal. In other words one of the duties of the village headman was to oversee the conduct of the members of the village community “chiefly to prevent any offence against their caste”.
(vii) Imposing fines and expulsion from caste and community : Panchayat also had the authority to levy fines and inflict more serious forms of punishment like expulsion from the community. The later was a drastic step and was in most cases meted out for a limited period. It meant that a person forced to leave the village became an outcaste and lost his right t6 practise his profession. Such a measure was intended as a deterrent to violation of caste norms.
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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.
Mention two factors for enjoying social and economic privileges by the zamindars in the Mughal India.
Define the following terms : Chachar and Banjar.
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