Peasants, Zamindars and the State — Agrarian Society
"The Mughal Empire was built on the back of the peasant. His plough fed the army. His grain paid the revenue. His village was the foundation of the state."
1. Chapter Overview
Mughal India was a FISCAL-MILITARY STATE. Its army — and its entire administrative apparatus — was funded by LAND REVENUE. This chapter examines: the AGRICULTURAL BASE (crops, seasons, technology), the SOCIAL STRUCTURE of the village (peasants, zamindars, village headmen), the REVENUE SYSTEM (how the state extracted surplus), and the AIN-I-AKBARI — the extraordinary 16th-century document that RECORDED all of this.
2. The Agrarian Landscape — Crops, Seasons, Technology
What Was Grown?
- Kharif (monsoon) crops: Rice, millets, cotton, sugarcane
- Rabi (winter) crops: Wheat, barley, gram, mustard
- Regional VARIATION: rice in Bengal, wheat in the Ganga-Yamuna doab, millets in the Deccan, cotton in Gujarat
Agricultural Technology
- Primarily: the WOODEN PLOUGH with an iron tip. OXEN. Wells (for irrigation).
- Productivity was LOW by modern standards — but SUFFICIENT to feed the population and generate surplus for the state.
3. The Village Community — Peasants, Zamindars, and Others
Who Lived in the Village?
| Group | Role |
|---|---|
| Khud-Kashta | Resident peasants. OWNED their land (with hereditary rights). Paid revenue to the state. |
| Pahi-Kashta | Non-resident peasants. Cultivated land in a village where they did NOT live. |
| Zamindars | Intermediaries. Collected revenue from peasants on behalf of the state. Kept a share. ALSO: owned extensive personal lands (milkiyat). |
| Village Headman (Muqaddam) | Local leader. Represented the village in dealings with the state/zamindar. |
| Village Accountant (Patwari) | Kept records of land, cultivation, revenue |
| Landless labourers | Worked on others' land. At the bottom of village society. |
The Zamindar — Exploiter or Protector?
- The zamindar BOTH: (a) exploited peasants (extracted surplus, often used force), AND (b) protected them (against the state's excessive demands, against other zamindars)
- The zamindar was NOT the 'owner' of the land. Peasants had HEREDITARY RIGHTS. The zamindar had the right to collect revenue — a share of the produce.
- 'The zamindar was a complex figure — part tax collector, part local magnate, part protector. He was the state's agent AND the village's voice.'
4. The Mughal Revenue System
Land Revenue — The State's Lifeline
- Land revenue was the PRIMARY source of the Mughal state's income
- Revenue was assessed as a SHARE OF THE PRODUCE (typically 1/3 to 1/2)
Two Systems of Assessment
| System | How It Worked |
|---|---|
| Zabt | REVENUE FIXED IN CASH per unit of area, based on the AVERAGE YIELD and AVERAGE PRICES over 10 years. Used in the core Mughal provinces (Delhi, Agra, Lahore, Allahabad). |
| Batai / Galla-Bakhshi | The crop was PHYSICALLY DIVIDED between the peasant and the state. Used in OUTLYING provinces (Sindh, Kashmir, parts of Gujarat). |
The Role of the Zamindar in Revenue Collection
- In most areas: the zamindar COLLECTED revenue from the peasants and PASSED it on to the state
- Failure to pay: peasants could be EXPELLED from their land — or forced to sell their bullocks and ploughs
- BUT: zamindars could NOT arbitrarily evict peasants. Peasant rights were CUSTOMARY and RECOGNISED.
5. The Ain-i-Akbari — A Window into the Mughal World
What Is It?
- The THIRD VOLUME of the Akbar Nama — the official chronicle of Emperor Akbar's reign, written by his court historian Abul Fazl
- The Ain-i-Akbari is a STATISTICAL GAZETTEER and ADMINISTRATIVE MANUAL. It records:
- The ADMINISTRATION of the empire (provinces, officials, their duties)
- The ARMY (organisation, pay scales, horses, elephants)
- The REVENUE system (crops, yields, prices, assessments)
- The IMPERIAL HOUSEHOLD (kitchen, stables, workshops)
- The GEOGRAPHY and PEOPLE of India (a compendium of knowledge)
Significance
- 'The Ain is a document without parallel in the pre-modern world. No other 16th-century state produced such a systematic, quantitative record of itself.'
- It was used by the British (translated in the 19th century) to UNDERSTAND India and DESIGN their own revenue systems.
6. Exam Focus
- Village community — peasants (khud-kashta, pahi-kashta), zamindars, muqaddam, patwari
- Mughal revenue systems — zabt (fixed cash), batai/galla-bakhshi (crop-sharing)
- Ain-i-Akbari — what it is, what it records, significance
- Zamindar's role — revenue collection, exploitation AND protection
- Technology — wooden plough, oxen, well irrigation. Low productivity by modern standards.
7. Conclusion
The Mughal Empire was AN EMPIRE OF GRAIN:
- THE PEASANT: The foundation. His plough and sweat fed the empire and funded the court.
- THE ZAMINDAR: The intermediary. Revenue collector. Local magnate. Exploiter and protector.
- THE STATE: Extracted surplus. Maintained records. The Ain-i-Akbari — a document that 'photographed' an empire.
- THE SYSTEM: Cash-based (zabt) in the core. Crop-sharing (batai) in the periphery. 'An empire that knew, down to the last bigha, what grew where — and how much of it belonged to the state.'
'To understand the Mughal Empire, you must understand the village — because that's where the money came from.'
