Zamindar

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Sir Nawab Khwaja Salimullah was a zamindar with the title of nawab. His family's landholdings in Bengal were one of the largest in British India.

A zamindar

landowner in Persian
. They were typically hereditary, and held the right to collect tax on behalf of imperial courts or for military purposes.

During the period of British colonial rule in India many wealthy and influential zamindars were bestowed with princely and royal titles such as Maharaja, Raja/Rai, Babu, Malik, Chaudhary, Nawab, Khan and Sardar.

During the

Hindu by religion and usually Brahmin, Bhumihar, Kayastha, Rajput and Jats (Punjab region) by caste.[3][4] During the colonial era, the Permanent Settlement consolidated what became known as the zamindari system. The British rewarded supportive zamindars by recognising them as princes. Many of the region's princely states were pre-colonial zamindar holdings elevated to a greater protocol. The British also reduced the land holdings of many pre-colonial princely states and chieftaincy, demoting their status to a zamindar from previously higher ranks of royalty.[citation needed
]

Jitendra Deshprabhu Viscount of Pernem, one of the largest zamindar families of Portuguese India and the highest ranking non white in European nobility

The system was abolished during land reforms in East Pakistan (Bangladesh) in 1950,[5] India in 1951[6] and West Pakistan in 1959.[7]

The zamindars often played an important role in the regional histories of the subcontinent. One of the most notable examples is the 16th-century confederation formed by twelve zamindars in the

Indo-Saracenic
architecture.

Mughal era

Burdwan Raj
) as a young man, c. 1840–45 AD.

When

Sultans of Delhi), receive allowance and maintenance."[8]

According to Arif Qandhari, one of the contemporary historian of Akbar's reign, there were around two to three hundred rajas or rais and zamindars who ruled their territory from strong forts under the emperor's suzerainty. Each of these rajas and zamindars commanded an army of their own generally consisting of their clansmen and the total numbers of their troops as Abul Fazl tells us, stood at forty four lakhs comprising 384,558 cavalry, 4,277,057 infantry; 1863 elephants, 4260 guns and 4500 boats.[9] During the Mughal Era there was no clear difference between the princely states and zamindari estates. Even the ruling autonomous chiefs of princely states were called zamindars. Moreland was one of the first historian who draw our attention to the importance of zamindars in medieval India. He defines zamindars as "vassal chiefs". He points out that there were areas under direct control of Mughals where there were no zamindars and then there were territories of the vassal chiefs who had autonomy over their state, but were subjugated by the Mughals and paid a tribute/ nazarana to the Mughal Emperor. However Irfan Habib in his book Agrarian system of Mughal India, divided the zamindars into two categories : the autonomous chiefs who enjoyed "sovereign power" in their territories and the ordinary zamindars who exercised superior rights in land and collected land revenue and were mostly appointed by the Mughals.[10][11] These people were known as the zamindars (intermediaries)[12] and they collected revenue primarily from the Ryots (peasants).[13] The zamindari system was more prevalent in the north of India because Mughal influence in the south was less apparent.[12]

Historian

S. Nurul Hasan divided the zamindars into three categories: (i) The Autonomous Rai/ Rajas or Chiefs, (ii) the intermediary zamindars and (iii) the primary zamindars.[14]

British era

The East India Company established themselves in India by first becoming zamindars of three villages of Calcutta, Sultani and Govindpur. Later they acquired the 24-Parganas and in 1765 got control of Bengal, Bihar and Orissa.[15] Later in 1857 the British Crown was established as the sovereign.

During Mughal Era the zamindars were not proprietors. They used to engage in wars and used to plunder neighbouring kings. So they never looked after the improvements in their land. The East India Company under

better source needed] This Permanent Settlement created the new zamindari system as we know it today. After 1857 the army of the majority of zamindars were abolished with exception of a small number of force for policing/digwari/kotwali in their respective estates. If the zamindars were not able to pay the rent until sunset, parts of their estates were acquired and auctioned. This created a new class of zamindars in the society. As the rest of India came later under the control of the East India Company
(EIC), different ways were implemented in different provinces to in regards to the ruling authorities in the region to get them to accede to Company authority.

The British generally adopted the extant zamindari system of revenue collection in the north of the country. They recognised the zamindars as landowners and proprietors as opposed to Mughal government and in return required them to collect taxes. Although some zamindars were present in the south, they were not so in large numbers and the British administrators used the ryotwari (cultivator) method of collection, which involved selecting certain farmers as being land owners and requiring them to remit their taxes directly.[12]

The Zamindars of Bengal were influential in the development of Bengal. They played pivotal part during the Indian Rebellion of 1857.[17]

The British continued the tradition of bestowing both royal and noble titles to zamindars who were loyal to the paramount. The title of Raja, Maharaja, Rai Saheb, Rai Bahadur, Rao, Nawab, Khan Bahadur were bestowed to princely state rulers and to many zamindars from time to time. According to an estimate in the Imperial Gazetteer of India, there were around 2000 ruling chiefs holding the royal title of Raja and Maharaja which included the rulers of princely states and several large chiefdoms. This numbers increases tenfold if zamindar/ jagirdar chiefs with other non royal but noble title are taken into count.

Accession

Unlike the autonomous or frontier chiefs, the hereditary status of the zamindar class was circumscribed by the Mughals, and the heir depended to a certain extent on the pleasure of the sovereign.[18] Heirs were set by descent or a times even adoption by religious laws.[19] Under the British Empire, the zamindars were to be subordinate to the Crown and not act as hereditary lords, but at times family politics was at the heart of naming an heir.[20] At times, a cousin could be named an heir with closer family relatives present;[21] a lawfully wedded wife could inherit the zamindari if the ruling zamindar named her as an heir.[22][23]

Abolition

The zamindari system was mostly abolished in independent India soon after its creation with the First Amendment of the Constitution of India which amended the right to property as shown in Articles 19 and 31.[24] In East Pakistan, the East Bengal State Acquisition and Tenancy Act of 1950 had a similar effect of ending the system.[25] Due to the zamindari system, small farmers could not become financially strong.[26][27]

In global health

Critics have likened the discipline of global health to a feudal structure where individuals and institutions in high-income nations act as zamindars over health issues of low-and-middle income nations,[28] thus sustaining the imperial nature of global health.[29][30][31]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Alternative spellings: zomindar, zomidar, and jamindar

References

  1. from the original on 8 March 2023. Retrieved 15 November 2015.
  2. ^ Acharya, Shreya (30 October 2011). "Give an account of the Ruling Classes of Mughal Empire". preservearticles.com. Archived from the original on 21 May 2013.
  3. .
  4. . The number of parganas with Jat zamindaris is surpris-ingly large and well spread out, though there are none beyond the Jhelum. They appear to be in two blocks, divided by a sparse zone between the Sutlej and the Sarasvati basin. The two blocks, in fact, represent two different segments of the Jats, the western one (Panjab) known as Jat (with short vowel) and the other (Haryanvi) as Jaat (with long vowel), though the A 'in-i Akbari has the same spelling for their names ('Jat' with short vowel). It was the western segment, which became the back-bone of the Sikh Panth in the seventeenth century, as was noted by the author of the Dabistan-i Mazahib in c.1653.9 That the Jats already held zamindari rights in a number of parganas in the Panjab was possibly one reason why their support to Sikhism proved to be especially effective
  5. .
  6. ^ "Abolition of Zamindari in India". gktoday.in. General Knowledge Today. Archived from the original on 30 November 2016.
  7. ^ "Land reforms in Pakistan". Dawn.com. 11 October 2010. Archived from the original on 30 November 2016.
  8. ^ Ansari, Tahir Hussain (2008). Mughal Administration and the Zamindars of Bihar (PDF) (PhD). Aligarh Muslim University. p. 1. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 November 2018. Retrieved 26 September 2019.
  9. ^ Fazl, Abul. Ain-i-Akbari (1. Saiyid Ahmad Khan, Delhi, 1856 ed.). p. 120.
  10. ^ Ansari, Tahir Hussain (2008). Mughal Administration and the Zamindars of Bihar (PDF) (PhD). Aligarh Muslim University. pp. 3–5. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 November 2018. Retrieved 26 September 2019.
  11. .
  12. ^ .
  13. . For the meanings of zamindar see pp. 140ff.
  14. . Professor S. Nurul Hasan's article, "The Position of the Zamindars in the Mughal Empire" was however, a major breakthrough ... He has classified the zamindars in the Mughal empire into three broad categories: (a) the autonomous chieftains; (b) the intermediary zamindars, and (c) the primary zamindars.
  15. ^ Nasserwanji Driver, Peshotan (1949). Problems of Zamindari and Land Reconstruction in India. Bombay: Bombay New Book Company LTD. p. 10.
  16. ^ "Provisions of the Permanent Settlement Act of 1793" (User-generated content). 29 November 2014. Archived from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  17. ^ Patnaik, Utsa (18 March 2007). "Patriotic And Comprador Zamindars In The Great Rebellion Of 1857". People's Democracy. Archived from the original on 5 May 2012.
  18. ^ Islam, Sirajul; Akhter, Shirin (2012). "Zamindar". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh. Archived from the original on 3 July 2015.
  19. ^ The Indian Law Reports: Madras series. Controller of Stationery and Print. 1888. p. 385.
  20. .
  21. ^ Madras High Court Reports: 1870 and 1871. J. Higgingbotham. 1872. p. 209.
  22. ^ Great Britain. Privy Council. Judicial Committee.; India. Courts. (1908). "Kashi Prasad v. Indar Kunwar". Allahabad Law Journal. 5. Indian Press: 596.
  23. ^ Woodman, Joseph Vere; Monnier, Emile Henry (1902). A Digest of Indian Law Cases: Containing High Court Reports, 1862-1900, and Privy Council Reports of Appeals from India, 1836-1900, with an Index of Cases. Vol. III. Superintendent of Government Printing, India. p. 5498.
  24. .
  25. ^ {{State Acquisition and Tenancy Act, 1950 [XXVII of 1951, Section 3]}}
  26. ^ "Land Revenue Systems in British India: Zamindari, Ryotwari and Mahalwari". ClearIAS. 1 August 2013. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022. Retrieved 28 April 2022.
  27. from the original on 8 March 2023, retrieved 28 April 2022
  28. .
  29. .
  30. .
  31. .