Peasants, Zamindars And The State
Describe the life led by the forest dwellers during the Mughal era in 16th-17th centuries.
The life of forest dwellers in the Mughal era:
(i) Forest dwellers were termed jangli in contemporary texts. Being jangli, however did not mean an absence of civilization. The term described those whose livelihood came from gathering forest produce, hunting and shifting agriculture.
(ii) These activities were largely season specific that perpetuated mobility which was a distinctive feature of tribes inhabiting these forests. For the state, the forest was a subversive place-a place of refuge for troublemakers.
(iii) External forces entered the forest in different ways. The state required elephants for the army so the peshkash levied from forest people often included a supply of elephants.
(iv) The hunt symbolized the overwhelming concern of the state to ensure justice to all its subjects, rich and poor. The hunt was a subject frequently painted by courts artists.
(v) The spread of commercial agriculture was an important external factor that impinged on the life of those who lived in forests. Forest products-like honey, beeswax and gum lac- were in great demand and became major items of overseas export from India.
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What are the problems in using the Ain as a source for reconstructing agrarian history? How do historians deal with this situation?
To what extent is it possible to characterise agricultural production in the sixteenth-seventeenth centuries as subsistence agriculture? Give reasons for your answer.
Describe the role played by women in agricultural production.
Discuss, with examples, the significance of monetary transactions during the period under consideration.
Examine the evidence that suggests that land revenue was important for the Mughal fiscal system.
To what extent do you think caste was a factor in influencing social and economic relations in agrarian society?
How were the lives of forest dwellers transformed in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries?
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.
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