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Bengal Subah

The Bengal Subah (Bengali: সুবাহ বাংলা; Persian: صوبه بنگاله), also referred to as Mughal Bengal (Bengali: মোগল বাংলা), was the largest subdivision of the Mughal Empire (and later an independent state under the Nawabs of Bengal) encompassing much of the Bengal region, which includes modern Bangladesh and the Indian state of West Bengal, Indian state of Bihar, Jharkhand, Odisha between the 16th and 18th centuries. The state was established following the dissolution of the Bengal Sultanate, a major trading nation in the world, when the region was absorbed into the Mughal Empire. Bengal was the wealthiest region in the Indian subcontinent, due to their thriving merchants, Seth's, Bankers and traders and its proto-industrial economy showed signs of driving an Industrial revolution.

Bengal Subah
Viceroyalty of Bengal
صوبه بنگاله
সুবাহ বাংলা
1576–1765
Flags
  • Left: During viceroyalty
  • Right: During Nawab
Map of the Bengal Subah
Status
Capital
Common languages
Religion
Government
Subahdar[a]/Nawab Nazims[b] 
• 1574–1575
Munim Khan (first)[c]
• 1717–1727
Murshid Quli Khan[d]
• 1756–1757
Siraj ud-Daulah[e]
• 1763–1765
Mir Jafar (last)
Historical eraEarly modern period
1576
1571–1611
• Establishment of Jahangirnagar
1608
• Independence from Mughal Empire
1717
1741–1751
1757
1764
• Dissolved
1765
CurrencyTaka
Today part of
  1. ^ Used from 1574 to 1717
  2. ^ Used from 1717 to 1765
  3. ^ appointed by the Mughal emperor
  4. ^ First independent ruler
  5. ^ Last independent ruler

Bengal Subah has been variously described the "Paradise of Nations"[6] and the "Golden Age of Bengal".[7][8] It alone accounted for 40% of Dutch imports from Asia.[9] The eastern part of Bengal was globally prominent in industries such as textile manufacturing and shipbuilding,[10] and it was a major exporter of silk and cotton textiles, steel, saltpeter, and agricultural and industrial produce in the world.[11] The region was also the basis of the Anglo-Bengal War.[12]

Dutch East India Company factory in Hugli-Chuchura, Bengal by Hendrik van Schuylenburgh (c. 1665)

By the 18th century, Bengal emerged as an independent state, under the rule of the Nawabs of Bengal, it has started observing the proto-industrialization, which made direct significant contribution to the first Industrial Revolution[13][14][15][16] (substantially textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution), but it also led to its deindustrialization,[13][14][15][11] after being conquered by the British East India Company at the Battle of Plassey in 1757. The Subah was later established as the Bengal Presidency.

History

Mughal Empire

 
The Mughal absorption of Bengal initially progressed during the reigns of the first two emperors Babur and Humayun
 
Akbar developed the modern Bengali calendar
 
Dhaka, the capital of Bengal, was named Jahangir Nagar in honor of the fourth Mughal monarch Jahangir

Bengal's physical features gave it such a fertile soil, and a favourable climate that it became a terminus of a continent-wide process of Turko-Mongol conquest and migration, informs Prof. Richard Eaton.[17]

The Mughal absorption of Bengal began during the reign of the first Mughal emperor Babur. In 1529, Babur defeated Sultan Nasiruddin Nasrat Shah of the Bengal Sultanate during the Battle of Ghaghra. Babur later annexed parts of Bengal. His son and successor Humayun occupied the Bengali capital Gaur, where he stayed for six months.[18] Humayun was later forced to seek in refuge in Persia because of Sher Shah Suri's conquests. Sher Shah Suri briefly interrupted the reigns of both the Mughals and the Bengal Sultans.

The Mughal conquest of Bengal began with the victory of Akbar's army over Sultan of Bengal Daud Khan Karrani, the independent ruler of the province, at the Battle of Tukaroi on 3 March 1575. After the final defeat of Daud Karrani at the Battle of Rajmahal the following year,[19] Mughal Emperor Akbar announced the creation of Bengal as one of the original twelve Subahs (top-level provinces), bordering Bihar and Orissa subahs, as well as Burma.[citation needed] It took many years to overcome the resistance of ambitious and local chiefs. By a royal decree in November 1586, Akbar introduced uniform subah administration throughout the empire. However, in historian Tapan Raychaudhuri's view, "the consolidation of Mughal power in Bengal and the pacification of the province really began in 1594".[20]

Many of the chiefs subjugated by the Mughals, some of the Baro-Bhuyans in particular, were upstarts who grabbed territories during the transition from Afghan to Mughal rule, but others, such as the Rajas of Chandradwip, Malla, and Shushang, were older families who had ruled independently from time immemorial.[21] By the 17th century, the Mughals subdued opposition from the Baro-Bhuyans landlords, notably Isa Khan. Bengal was integrated into a powerful and prosperous empire; and shaped by imperial policies of pluralistic government. The Mughals built a new imperial metropolis in Dhaka from 1610, with well-developed fortifications, gardens, tombs, palaces and mosques. It served as the Mughal capital of Bengal for 75 years.[22] The city was renamed in honour of Emperor Jahangir.

The Mughal conquest of Chittagong in 1666 defeated the (Burmese) Kingdom of Arakan and reestablished Bengali control of the port city, which was renamed as Islamabad.[23] The Chittagong Hill Tracts frontier region was made a tributary state of Mughal Bengal and a treaty was signed with the Chakma Circle in 1713.[24]

Between 1576 and 1717, Bengal was ruled by a Mughal Subedar (imperial governor). Members of the imperial family were often appointed to the position. Viceroy Prince Shah Shuja was the son of Emperor Shah Jahan. During the struggle for succession with his brothers Prince Aurangazeb, Prince Dara Shikoh and Prince Murad Baksh, Prince Shuja proclaimed himself as the Mughal Emperor in Bengal. He was eventually defeated by the armies of Aurangazeb. Shuja fled to the Kingdom of Arakan, where he and his family were killed on the orders of the King at Mrauk U. Shaista Khan was an influential viceroy during the reign of Aurangazeb. He consolidated Mughal control of eastern Bengal. Prince Muhammad Azam Shah, who served as one of Bengal's viceroys, was installed on the Mughal throne for four months in 1707. Viceroy Ibrahim Khan II gave permits to English and French traders for commercial activities in Bengal. The last viceroy Prince Azim-us-Shan gave permits for the establishment of the British East India Company's Fort William in Calcutta, the French East India Company's Fort Orleans in Chandernagore and the Dutch East India Company's fort in Chinsura. During Azim-us-Shan's tenure, his prime minister Murshid Quli Khan emerged as a powerful figure in Bengal. Khan gained control of imperial finances. Azim-us-Shan was transferred to Bihar. In 1717, the Mughal Court upgraded the prime minister's position to the hereditary Nawab of Bengal. Khan founded a new capital in Murshidabad. His descendants formed the Nasiri dynasty. Alivardi Khan founded a new dynasty in 1740. The Nawabs ruled over a territory which included Bengal proper, Bihar and Orissa.

Independent Nawabs of Bengal

The Nawab of Bengal[25][26][27][28] was the hereditary ruler of Bengal Subah in Mughal India. The Nawab of a princely state or autonomous province is comparable to the European title of Grand Duke. In the early 18th-century, the Nawab of Bengal was the de facto independent ruler of some part of Bengal and other parts were ruled by Bengal Rajas such as Bardhaman Raj, Cooch Behar State which constitute the modern-day sovereign country of Bangladesh and the Indian states of West Bengal.[29][30][31] They are often referred to as the Nawab of Bengal, Bihar and Orissa.[32] The Nawabs were based in Murshidabad which was centrally located within Bengal. Their chief, a former prime minister, became the first Nawab. The Nawabs continued to issue coins in the name of the Mughal Emperor. But for all practical purposes, the Nawabs governed as independent monarchs. Bengal continued to contribute the largest share of funds to the imperial treasury in Delhi. The Nawabs, backed by bankers such as the Jagat Seth, became the financial backbone of the Mughal court. During the 18th-century, the Nawabs of Bengal were among the wealthiest rulers in the world.[33]

The Rajas of Bengal, Nawabs of Bengal oversaw a period of proto-industrialization. The Bengal-Bihar-Orissa triangle was a major production center for cotton muslin cloth, silk cloth, shipbuilding, gunpowder, saltpetre, and metalworks. Factories were set up in Murshidabad, Dhaka, Patna, Sonargaon, Chittagong, Rajshahi, Cossimbazar, Balasore, Pipeli, and Hugli among other cities, towns, and ports. The region became a base for the British East India Company, the French East India Company, the Danish East India Company, the Austrian East India Company, the Ostend Company, and the Dutch East India Company.

 

The British company eventually rivaled the authority of the Nawabs. In the aftermath of the siege of Calcutta in 1756, in which the Nawab's forces overran the main British base, the East India Company dispatched a fleet led by Robert Clive who defeated the last independent Nawab Siraj-ud-Daulah at the Battle of Plassey in 1757. Mir Jafar was installed as the puppet Nawab. His successor Mir Qasim attempted in vain to dislodge the British. The defeat of Nawab Mir Qasim of Bengal, Nawab Shuja-ud-Daula of Oudh, and Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II at the Battle of Buxar in 1764 paved the way for British expansion across India. The South Indian Kingdom of Mysore led by Tipu Sultan overtook the Nawab of Bengal as the subcontinent's wealthiest monarchy; but this was short-lived and ended with the Anglo-Mysore War. The British then turned their sights on defeating the Marathas and Sikhs.

The Nawabs of Bengal entered into treaties with numerous European colonial powers, including joint-stock companies representing Britain, Austria, Denmark, France and the Netherlands.

Maratha rule

The resurgent Maratha Empire launched raids against Bengal in the 18th century, which further added to the decline of the Nawabs of Bengal. A decade of Maratha conquest of Bengal from the 1740s to early 1750s forced the Nawab of Bengal to pay Rs. 1.2 million of tribute annually as the chauth of Bengal and Bihar to the Marathas, and the Marathas agreed not to invade Bengal again

The expeditions, led by Raghuji Bhonsle of Nagpur, also established de facto Maratha control over Orissa, which was formally incorporated in the Maratha Empire in 1752.[34][35] The Nawab of Bengal also paid Rs. 3.2 million to the Marathas, towards the arrears of chauth for the preceding years.[36] The chauth was paid annually by the Nawab of Bengal to the Marathas up to 1758, until the British occupation of Bengal.[37]

British colonization

 
Shah Alam II granting Robert Clive the "Diwani rights of Bengal, Behar and Odisha" in return for the annexed territories of the Nawab of Awadh after the Battle of Buxar, on 12 August 1765 at the Benares.

By the late-18th century, the British East India Company emerged as the foremost military power in the region, defeating the French-allied Siraj-ud-Daulah at the Battle of Plassey in 1757, that was largely brought about by the betrayal of the Nawab's once trusted general Mir Jafar. The company gained administrative control over the Nawab's dominions, including Bengal, Bihar and Orissa. It gained the right to collect taxes on behalf of the Mughal Court after the Battle of Buxar in 1765. Bengal, Bihar and Orissa were made part of the Bengal Presidency and annexed into the British colonial empire in 1793. The Indian mutiny of 1857 formally ended the authority of the British East India Company, when the British Raj replaced Company rule in India.

Other European powers also carved out small colonies on the territory of Bengal, including the Dutch East India Company's Dutch Bengal settlements, the French colonial settlement in Chandernagore, the Danish colonial settlement in Serampore and the Habsburg monarchy Ostend Company settlement in Bankipur.

Military campaigns

 
Mobile artillery battries, loyal to the Nawab of Bengal.

According to João de Barros, Bengal enjoyed military supremacy over Arakan and Tripura due to good artillery.[38] Its forces possessed notable large cannons. It was also a major exporter of gunpowder and saltpeter to Europe.[39][40] The Mughal Army built fortifications across the region, including Idrakpur Fort, Sonakanda Fort, Hajiganj Fort, Lalbagh Fort and Jangalbari Fort. The Mughals expelled Arakanese and Portuguese pirates from the northeastern coastline of the Bay of Bengal. Throughout the late medieval and early modern periods, Bengal was notable for its navy and shipbuilding. The following table covers a list of notable military engagements by Mughal Bengal:


Architecture

 
Bengali curved roofs were copied by Mughal architects in other parts of the empire, such as in the Naulakha Pavilion in Lahore
 
Nimtoli Deuri, named after the neem tree, is now a property of the Asiatic Society of Bangladesh, situated in Dhaka, Bangladesh is now a Heritage Museum.[42][43]

Mughal architecture proliferated Bengal in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, with the earliest example being the Kherua Mosque in Bogra (1582).[44] They replaced the earlier sultanate-style of architecture. It was in Dhaka that the imperial style was most lavishly indulged in.[citation needed] Its Lalbagh Fort was an elaborately designed complex of gardens, fountains, a mosque, a tomb, an audience hall (Diwan-i-Khas) and a walled enclosure with gates. The Great Caravanserai and Shaista Khan Caravanserai in Dhaka were centres of commercial activities. Other monuments in the city include the Dhanmondi Shahi Eidgah (1640), the Sat Gambuj Mosque (c. 1664–76), the Shahbaz Khan Mosque (1679) and the Khan Mohammad Mridha Mosque (1704).[44] The city of Murshidabad also became a haven of Mughal architecture under the Nawabs of Bengal, with the Caravanserai Mosque (1723) being its most prominent monument.

In rural hinterlands, the indigenous Bengali Islamic style continued to flourish, blended with Mughal elements. One of the finest examples of this style is the Atiya Mosque in Tangail (1609).[44] Several masterpieces of terracotta Hindu temple architecture were also created during this period. Notable examples include the Kantajew Temple (1704) and the temples of Bishnupur (1600–1729).

Art

An authentic Bengali art was reflected in the muslin fabric of Jamdani (meaning "flower" in Persian). The making of Jamdani was pioneered by Persian weavers. The art passed to the hands of Bengali Muslim weavers known as juhulas. The artisan industry was historically based around the city of Dhaka. The city had over 80,000 weavers. Jamdanis traditionally employ geometric designs in floral shapes. Its motifs are often similar to those in Iranian textile art (buta motif) and Western textile art (paisley). Dhaka's jamdanis enjoyed a loyal following and received imperial patronage from the Mughal court in Delhi and the Nawabs of Bengal.[45][11]

A provincial Bengali style of Mughal painting flourished in Murshidabad during the 18th century. Scroll painting and ivory sculptures were also prevalent.

Demographics

 
A riverside mosque in Mughal Dhaka
 
The Armenian church and cemetery in Dhaka

Population

Bengal's population is estimated to have been 30 million prior to the Great Bengal famine of 1770, which reduced it by as much as a third.[46]

Religion

Bengal was an affluent province with a Bengali Muslim majority, along with a large Bengali Hindu minority.[13]

Immigration

There was a significant influx of migrants from the Safavid Empire into Bengal during the Mughal period. Persian administrators and military commanders were enlisted by the Mughal government in Bengal.[47] An Armenian community settled in Dhaka and was involved in the city's textile trade, paying a 3.5% tax.[48]

Economy and trade

 
Maddison's estimates of global GDP,[49] China and India being the most powerful until the 18th century.

The Bengal Subah had the largest regional economy in that period. It was described as the paradise of nations. The region exported grains, fine cotton muslin and silk, liquors and wines, salt, ornaments, fruits, and metals. European companies set up numerous trading posts in Bengal during the 17th and 18th centuries. Dhaka was the largest city in Bengal and the commercial capital of the empire.[citation needed] Chittagong was the largest seaport, with maritime trade routes connecting it to Arakan, Ayuthya, Aceh, Melaka, Johore, Bantam, Makassar, Ceylon, Bandar Abbas, Mocha and the Maldives.[50][51][page needed]

Parthasarathi estimates that grain wages for weaving and spinning in Bengal and Britain were comparable in the mid 18th century.[52] However, due to the scarcity of data, more research is needed before drawing any conclusions.[53]

Bengal had many traders and bankers. Among them was the Jagat Seth Family, who were the wealthiest bankers in the region.

Agrarian reform

The Mughals launched a vast economic development project in the Bengal delta which transformed its demographic makeup.[54] The government cleared vast swathes of forest in the fertile Bhati region to expand farmland. It encouraged settlers, including farmers and jagirdars, to populate the delta. It assigned Sufis as the chieftains of villages. Emperor Akbar re-adapted the modern Bengali calendar to improve harvests and tax collection. The region became the largest grain producer in the subcontinent.

 
A 3D reconstruction of the Bara Katra in modern-day Dhaka

There are sparse accounts of the Bengal revenue administration in Abul Fazl's Ain-i-Akbari and some in Mirza Nathan's Baharistan-i-Ghaibi.[55] According to the former,

The demands of each year are paid by instalments in eight months, they (the ryots) themselves bringing mohurs and rupees to the appointed place for the receipt of revenue, as the division of grain between the government and the husbandman is not here customary. The harvests are always abundant, measurement is not insisted upon, and the revenue demands are determined by estimate of the crop.[55]

In contrast, the Baharistan says there were two collections per year, following the spring and autumn harvests. It also says that, at least in some areas, revenue demands were based on survey and land measurement.[55]

Bengali peasants were quick to adapt to profitable new crops between 1600 and 1650. Bengali peasants rapidly learned techniques of mulberry cultivation and sericulture, establishing Bengal Subah as a major silk-producing region of the world.[56]

The increased agricultural productivity led to lower food prices. In turn, this benefited the Indian textile industry. Compared to Britain, the price of grain was about one-half in South India and one-third in Bengal, in terms of silver coinage. This resulted in lower silver coin prices for Indian textiles, giving them a price advantage in global markets.[57]

Industrial economy

In the 17th century, Bengal was an affluent province that was, according to economic historian Indrajit Ray, globally prominent in industries such as textile manufacturing and shipbuilding.[10] Bengal's capital city of Dhaka was the empire's financial capital, with a population exceeding a million people, and with an estimated 80,000 skilled textile weavers. It was an exporter of silk and cotton textiles, steel, saltpeter, and agricultural and industrial produce.[11] Bengal's industrial economy in this era has been described as a form of proto-industrialization.[58][page needed]

Many historians have built on the perspective of R. C. Dutt who wrote, "The plunder of Bengal directly contributed to the Industrial Revolution in Britain."[13][14][15][16] This analysis states that the capital amassed from Bengal was used to invest in British industries such as textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution and greatly increase British wealth, while at the same time leading to deindustrialization in Bengal.[13][14][15][11] According to Indrajit Ray, domestic industries expanded for decades even after Plassey. Although colonial-based price manipulation and state discrimination initiated from the 1790s, Bengal's industries retained some comparative advantages. Ray states that "Bengali entrepreneurs continued in industries such as cotton and silk textiles where there were domestic market supports", and major deindustrialisation occurred as late as the 1830s to 1850s.[59]

Textile industry

 
A woman in Dhaka clad in fine Bengali muslin, 18th century

Bengal was a centre of the worldwide muslin, jute and silk trades. During this era, the most important center of jute and cotton production was Bengal, particularly around its capital city of Dhaka, leading to muslin being called "daka" in distant markets such as Central Asia.[60] Domestically, much of India depended on Bengali products such as rice, silks and cotton textiles. Overseas, Europeans depended on Bengali products such as cotton textiles, silks and opium; Bengal accounted for 40% of Dutch imports from Asia, for example, including more than 50% of textiles and around 80% of silks.[9] From Bengal, saltpetre was also shipped to Europe, opium was sold in Indonesia, raw silk was exported to Japan and the Netherlands, and cotton and silk textiles were exported to Europe, Indonesia and Japan.[61] The jute trade was also a significant factor.

Shipbuilding industry

Bengal had a large shipbuilding industry. Indrajit Ray estimates shipbuilding output of Bengal during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries at 223,250 tons annually, compared with 23,061 tons produced in nineteen colonies in North America from 1769 to 1771.[62] He also assesses ship repairing as very advanced in Bengal.[62]

An important innovation in shipbuilding was the introduction of a flushed deck design in Bengal rice ships, resulting in hulls that were stronger and less prone to leak than the structurally weak hulls of traditional European ships built with a stepped deck design. The British East India Company later duplicated the flushed deck and hull designs of Bengal rice ships in the 1760s, leading to significant improvements in seaworthiness and navigation for European ships during the Industrial Revolution.[63]

Administrative divisions

In the revenue settlement by Todar Mal in 1582, Bengal Subah was divided into 24 sarkars (districts), which included 19 sarkars of Bengal proper and 5 sarkars of Orissa. In 1607, during the reign of Jahangir Orissa became a separate Subah. These 19 sarkars were further divided into 682 parganas.[64] In 1658, subsequent to the revenue settlement by Shah Shuja, 15 new sarkars and 361 new parganas were added. In 1722, Murshid Quli Khan divided the whole Subah into 13 chakalahs, which were further divided into 1660 parganas.[citation needed]

Initially the capital of the Subah was Tanda.[citation needed] On 9 November 1595, the foundations of a new capital were laid at Rajmahal by Man Singh I who renamed it Akbarnagar.[65] In 1610 the capital was shifted from Rajmahal to Dhaka[66] and it was renamed Jahangirnagar. In 1639, Shah Shuja again shifted the capital to Rajmahal. In 1660, Muazzam Khan (Mir Jumla) again shifted the capital to Dhaka. In 1703, Murshid Quli Khan, then diwan (prime minister in charge of finance) of Bengal shifted his office from Dhaka to Maqsudabad and later renamed it Murshidabad.[citation needed]

In 1656, Shah Shuja reorganised the sarkars and added Orissa to the Bengal Subah.[citation needed]

The sarkars (districts) and the parganas/mahallahs (tehsils) of Bengal Subah were:[64]

Sarkar Pargana
Udamabar/Tanda (modern-day areas include North Birbhum, Rajmahal and Murshidabad) 52 parganas
Jannatabad (Lakhnauti) (Modern day Malda division) 66 parganas
Fatehabad 31 parganas
Mahmudabad (modern-day areas include North Nadia and Jessore) 88 parganas
Khalifatabad 35 parganas
Bakla 4 parganas
Purniyah 9 parganas
Tajpur (East Dinajpur) 29 parganas
Ghoraghat (South Rangpur Division, Bogura) 84 parganas
Pinjarah 21 parganas
Barbakabad (West Dinajpur) 38 parganas
Bazuha 32 parganas
Sonargaon modern day Dhaka Division 52 parganas
Srihatta 8 mahals
Chittagong 7 parganas
Sharifatabad 26 parganas
Sulaimanabad 31 parganas
Satgaon (Modern day Hooghly District and Howrah District) 53 parganas
Mandaran 16 parganas

Sarkars of Orissa:

Sarkar Mahal
Jaleswar 28
Bhadrak 7
Kotok (Cuttack) 21
Kaling Dandpat 27
Raj Mahendrih 16

Government

The state government was headed by a Viceroy (Subedar Nizam) appointed by the Mughal Emperor between 1576 and 1717. The Viceroy exercised tremendous authority, with his own cabinet and four prime ministers (Diwan). The three deputy viceroys for Bengal proper, Bihar and Orissa were known as the Naib Nazims. An extensive landed aristocracy was established by the Mughals in Bengal. The aristocracy was responsible for taxation and revenue collection. Land holders were bestowed with the title of Jagirdar. The Qadi title was reserved for the chief judge. Mansabdars were leaders of the Mughal Army, while faujdars were generals. The Mughals were credited for secular pluralism during the reign of Akbar, who promoted the religious doctrine of Din-i Ilahi. Later rulers promoted more conservative Islam.

In 1717, the Mughal government replaced Viceroy Azim-us-Shan due to conflicts with his influential deputy viceroy and prime minister Murshid Quli Khan.[67] Growing regional autonomy caused the Mughal Court to establish a hereditary principality in Bengal, with Khan being recognised in the official title of Nazim. He founded the Nasiri dynasty. In 1740, following the Battle of Giria, Alivardi Khan staged a coup and founded the short-lived Afsar dynasty. For all practical purposes, the Nazims acted as independent princes. European colonial powers referred to them as Nawabs or Nababs.[68]

List of Viceroys (Governor or Subahdar)

 
Munim Khan (seated, right), the first Viceroy of Mughal Bengal (1574–1575)
 
Man Singh I, the Rajput Viceroy of Bengal (1594–1606)
 
Shaista Khan, Viceroy (1664–1688)
 
Viceroy Muhammad Azam Shah (1678–1679), later Mughal Emperor
 
Viceroy Azim-us-Shan (1697–1712), later Mughal Emperor
Personal name[69] Reign
Munim Khan Khan-i-Khanan
منعم خان، خان خاناں
25 September 1574 – 23 October 1575
Hussain Quli Beg Khan Jahan I
حسین قلی بیگ، خان جہاں اول
15 November 1575 – 19 December 1578
Muzaffar Khan Turbati
مظفر خان تربتی
1579–1580
Mirza Aziz Koka Khan-e-Azam
میرزا عزیز کوکہ،خان اعظم
1582–1583
Shahbaz Khan Kamboh Lahori
شھباز خان کمبوہ
1583–1585
Sadiq Khan
صادق خان
1585–1586
Wazir Khan Tajik
وزیر خان
1586–1587
Sa'id Khan
سعید خان
1587–1594
Raja Man Singh I
راجہ مان سنگھ
4 June 1594 – 1606
Qutb-ud-din Khan Koka
قطب الدین خان کوکہ
2 September 1606 – May 1607
Jahangir Quli Beg
جہانگیر قلی بیگ
1607–1608
Sheikh Ala-ud-din Chisti Islam Khan Chisti
اسلام خان چشتی
June 1608 – 1613
Qasim Khan Chishti
قاسم خان چشتی
1613–1617
Ibrahim Khan Fateh Jang
ابراہیم خان فتح جنگ
1617–1622
Mahabat Khan
محابت خان
1622–1625
Mirza Amanullah Khan Zaman II
میرزا أمان اللہ ، خان زماں ثانی
1625
Mukarram Khan Chishti
مکرم خان
1625–1627
Fidai Khan
فدای خان
1627–1628
Qasim Khan Juvayni Qasim Manija
قاسم خان جوینی، قاسم مانیجہ
1628–1632
Mir Muhammad Baqir Azam Khan
میر محمد باقر، اعظم خان
1632–1635
Mir Abdus Salam Islam Khan Mashhadi
اسلام خان مشھدی
1635–1639
Sultan Shah Shuja
شاہ شجاع
1639–1660
Mir Jumla II
میر جملہ
May 1660 – 30 March 1663
Mirza Abu Talib Shaista Khan I
میرزا ابو طالب، شایستہ خان
March 1664 – 1676
Azam Khan Koka, Fidai Khan II
اعظم خان کوکہ، فدای خان ثانی
1676–1677
Sultan Muhammad Azam Shah Alijah
محمد اعظم شاہ عالی جاہ
1678–1679
Mirza Abu Talib Shaista Khan I
میرزا ابو طالب، شایستہ خان
1680–1688
Ibrahim Khan ibn Ali Mardan Khan
ابراہیم خان ابن علی مردان خان
1688–1697
Sultan Azim-us-Shan
عظیم الشان
1697–1712
Others were appointed but did not show up from 1712 to 1717 and managed by Deputy Subahdar Murshid Quli Khan.
Murshid Quli Khan
مرشد قلی خان
1717–1727

List of independent Nawab Nazims

Portrait Regnal name Personal name Birth Reign Death
Nasiri dynasty
  Jaafar Khan Bahadur Nasiri Murshid Quli Khan 1665 1717– 1727 30 June 1727
  Ala-ud-Din Haidar Jang Sarfaraz Khan Bahadur Dakhni ? 1727–1727 29 April 1740
  Shuja ud-Daula Shuja-ud-Din Muhammad Khan or Mirza Deccani Around 1670 (date not available) July 1727 – 26 August 1739 26 August 1739
  Ala-ud-Din Haidar Jang Sarfaraz Khan Bahadur Dakhni ? 13 March 1739 – April 1740 29 April 1740
Afsar dynasty
  Hashim ud-Daula Muhammad Alivardi Khan Bahadur Before 10 May 1671 29 April 1740 – 9 April 1756 9 April 1756
  Siraj ud-Daulah Muhammad Siraj-ud-Daulah 1733 April 1756 – 2 June 1757 2 July 1757

References

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Further reading

bengal, subah, bengali, persian, صوبه, بنگاله, also, referred, mughal, bengal, bengali, গল, largest, subdivision, mughal, empire, later, independent, state, under, nawabs, bengal, encompassing, much, bengal, region, which, includes, modern, bangladesh, indian,. The Bengal Subah Bengali স ব হ ব ল Persian صوبه بنگاله also referred to as Mughal Bengal Bengali ম গল ব ল was the largest subdivision of the Mughal Empire and later an independent state under the Nawabs of Bengal encompassing much of the Bengal region which includes modern Bangladesh and the Indian state of West Bengal Indian state of Bihar Jharkhand Odisha between the 16th and 18th centuries The state was established following the dissolution of the Bengal Sultanate a major trading nation in the world when the region was absorbed into the Mughal Empire Bengal was the wealthiest region in the Indian subcontinent due to their thriving merchants Seth s Bankers and traders and its proto industrial economy showed signs of driving an Industrial revolution Bengal SubahViceroyalty of Bengal صوبه بنگاله স ব হ ব ল 1576 1765FlagsLeft During viceroyaltyRight During NawabMap of the Bengal SubahStatusSubah of Mughal Empire 1576 1717 Independent kingdom 1717 1757 Vassal state of British East India Company 1757 1765 CapitalTanda 1576 1590 1 Rajmahal 1595 96 1639 1660 2 Jahangirnagar 1608 39 1660 1711 3 Murshidabad 1711 1763 Munger 1763 1765 Common languagesPersian official Bengali official Arabic religious ReligionShia Islam dynastic 4 5 Sunni Islam majority Hinduism and other Indian religionsGovernmentViceroyalty 1576 1757 Absolute monarchy 1717 1757 Oligarchy with restricted monarchial figurehead 1757 1765 Subahdar a Nawab Nazims b 1574 1575Munim Khan first c 1717 1727Murshid Quli Khan d 1756 1757Siraj ud Daulah e 1763 1765Mir Jafar last Historical eraEarly modern period Battle of Raj Mahal1576 Baro Bhuiyan revolt1571 1611 Establishment of Jahangirnagar1608 Independence from Mughal Empire1717 Maratha invasions1741 1751 Battle of Plassey1757 Battle of Buxar1764 Dissolved1765CurrencyTakaPreceded by Succeeded byBengal SultanateBaro BhuyanPortuguese ChittagongKingdom of Mrauk U Bengal PresidencyFrench IndiaDutch BengalDanish IndiaBankipur Bengal Today part of Bangladesh India Myanmar Used from 1574 to 1717 Used from 1717 to 1765 appointed by the Mughal emperor First independent ruler Last independent rulerBengal Subah has been variously described the Paradise of Nations 6 and the Golden Age of Bengal 7 8 It alone accounted for 40 of Dutch imports from Asia 9 The eastern part of Bengal was globally prominent in industries such as textile manufacturing and shipbuilding 10 and it was a major exporter of silk and cotton textiles steel saltpeter and agricultural and industrial produce in the world 11 The region was also the basis of the Anglo Bengal War 12 Dutch East India Company factory in Hugli Chuchura Bengal by Hendrik van Schuylenburgh c 1665 By the 18th century Bengal emerged as an independent state under the rule of the Nawabs of Bengal it has started observing the proto industrialization which made direct significant contribution to the first Industrial Revolution 13 14 15 16 substantially textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution but it also led to its deindustrialization 13 14 15 11 after being conquered by the British East India Company at the Battle of Plassey in 1757 The Subah was later established as the Bengal Presidency Contents 1 History 1 1 Mughal Empire 1 2 Independent Nawabs of Bengal 1 3 Maratha rule 1 4 British colonization 2 Military campaigns 3 Architecture 4 Art 5 Demographics 5 1 Population 5 2 Religion 5 3 Immigration 6 Economy and trade 6 1 Agrarian reform 6 2 Industrial economy 6 2 1 Textile industry 6 2 2 Shipbuilding industry 7 Administrative divisions 8 Government 9 List of Viceroys Governor or Subahdar 10 List of independent Nawab Nazims 11 References 12 Further readingHistory EditMughal Empire Edit Further information Mughal Empire The Mughal absorption of Bengal initially progressed during the reigns of the first two emperors Babur and Humayun Akbar developed the modern Bengali calendar Dhaka the capital of Bengal was named Jahangir Nagar in honor of the fourth Mughal monarch Jahangir Bengal s physical features gave it such a fertile soil and a favourable climate that it became a terminus of a continent wide process of Turko Mongol conquest and migration informs Prof Richard Eaton 17 The Mughal absorption of Bengal began during the reign of the first Mughal emperor Babur In 1529 Babur defeated Sultan Nasiruddin Nasrat Shah of the Bengal Sultanate during the Battle of Ghaghra Babur later annexed parts of Bengal His son and successor Humayun occupied the Bengali capital Gaur where he stayed for six months 18 Humayun was later forced to seek in refuge in Persia because of Sher Shah Suri s conquests Sher Shah Suri briefly interrupted the reigns of both the Mughals and the Bengal Sultans The Mughal conquest of Bengal began with the victory of Akbar s army over Sultan of Bengal Daud Khan Karrani the independent ruler of the province at the Battle of Tukaroi on 3 March 1575 After the final defeat of Daud Karrani at the Battle of Rajmahal the following year 19 Mughal Emperor Akbar announced the creation of Bengal as one of the original twelve Subahs top level provinces bordering Bihar and Orissa subahs as well as Burma citation needed It took many years to overcome the resistance of ambitious and local chiefs By a royal decree in November 1586 Akbar introduced uniform subah administration throughout the empire However in historian Tapan Raychaudhuri s view the consolidation of Mughal power in Bengal and the pacification of the province really began in 1594 20 Many of the chiefs subjugated by the Mughals some of the Baro Bhuyans in particular were upstarts who grabbed territories during the transition from Afghan to Mughal rule but others such as the Rajas of Chandradwip Malla and Shushang were older families who had ruled independently from time immemorial 21 By the 17th century the Mughals subdued opposition from the Baro Bhuyans landlords notably Isa Khan Bengal was integrated into a powerful and prosperous empire and shaped by imperial policies of pluralistic government The Mughals built a new imperial metropolis in Dhaka from 1610 with well developed fortifications gardens tombs palaces and mosques It served as the Mughal capital of Bengal for 75 years 22 The city was renamed in honour of Emperor Jahangir The Mughal conquest of Chittagong in 1666 defeated the Burmese Kingdom of Arakan and reestablished Bengali control of the port city which was renamed as Islamabad 23 The Chittagong Hill Tracts frontier region was made a tributary state of Mughal Bengal and a treaty was signed with the Chakma Circle in 1713 24 Between 1576 and 1717 Bengal was ruled by a Mughal Subedar imperial governor Members of the imperial family were often appointed to the position Viceroy Prince Shah Shuja was the son of Emperor Shah Jahan During the struggle for succession with his brothers Prince Aurangazeb Prince Dara Shikoh and Prince Murad Baksh Prince Shuja proclaimed himself as the Mughal Emperor in Bengal He was eventually defeated by the armies of Aurangazeb Shuja fled to the Kingdom of Arakan where he and his family were killed on the orders of the King at Mrauk U Shaista Khan was an influential viceroy during the reign of Aurangazeb He consolidated Mughal control of eastern Bengal Prince Muhammad Azam Shah who served as one of Bengal s viceroys was installed on the Mughal throne for four months in 1707 Viceroy Ibrahim Khan II gave permits to English and French traders for commercial activities in Bengal The last viceroy Prince Azim us Shan gave permits for the establishment of the British East India Company s Fort William in Calcutta the French East India Company s Fort Orleans in Chandernagore and the Dutch East India Company s fort in Chinsura During Azim us Shan s tenure his prime minister Murshid Quli Khan emerged as a powerful figure in Bengal Khan gained control of imperial finances Azim us Shan was transferred to Bihar In 1717 the Mughal Court upgraded the prime minister s position to the hereditary Nawab of Bengal Khan founded a new capital in Murshidabad His descendants formed the Nasiri dynasty Alivardi Khan founded a new dynasty in 1740 The Nawabs ruled over a territory which included Bengal proper Bihar and Orissa Independent Nawabs of Bengal Edit Further information Nawabs of Bengal The Nawab of Bengal 25 26 27 28 was the hereditary ruler of Bengal Subah in Mughal India The Nawab of a princely state or autonomous province is comparable to the European title of Grand Duke In the early 18th century the Nawab of Bengal was the de facto independent ruler of some part of Bengal and other parts were ruled by Bengal Rajas such as Bardhaman Raj Cooch Behar State which constitute the modern day sovereign country of Bangladesh and the Indian states of West Bengal 29 30 31 They are often referred to as the Nawab of Bengal Bihar and Orissa 32 The Nawabs were based in Murshidabad which was centrally located within Bengal Their chief a former prime minister became the first Nawab The Nawabs continued to issue coins in the name of the Mughal Emperor But for all practical purposes the Nawabs governed as independent monarchs Bengal continued to contribute the largest share of funds to the imperial treasury in Delhi The Nawabs backed by bankers such as the Jagat Seth became the financial backbone of the Mughal court During the 18th century the Nawabs of Bengal were among the wealthiest rulers in the world 33 The Rajas of Bengal Nawabs of Bengal oversaw a period of proto industrialization The Bengal Bihar Orissa triangle was a major production center for cotton muslin cloth silk cloth shipbuilding gunpowder saltpetre and metalworks Factories were set up in Murshidabad Dhaka Patna Sonargaon Chittagong Rajshahi Cossimbazar Balasore Pipeli and Hugli among other cities towns and ports The region became a base for the British East India Company the French East India Company the Danish East India Company the Austrian East India Company the Ostend Company and the Dutch East India Company Robert Clive meets Mir Jafar at the Battle of Plassey in 1757 The British company eventually rivaled the authority of the Nawabs In the aftermath of the siege of Calcutta in 1756 in which the Nawab s forces overran the main British base the East India Company dispatched a fleet led by Robert Clive who defeated the last independent Nawab Siraj ud Daulah at the Battle of Plassey in 1757 Mir Jafar was installed as the puppet Nawab His successor Mir Qasim attempted in vain to dislodge the British The defeat of Nawab Mir Qasim of Bengal Nawab Shuja ud Daula of Oudh and Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II at the Battle of Buxar in 1764 paved the way for British expansion across India The South Indian Kingdom of Mysore led by Tipu Sultan overtook the Nawab of Bengal as the subcontinent s wealthiest monarchy but this was short lived and ended with the Anglo Mysore War The British then turned their sights on defeating the Marathas and Sikhs The Nawabs of Bengal entered into treaties with numerous European colonial powers including joint stock companies representing Britain Austria Denmark France and the Netherlands Maratha rule Edit The resurgent Maratha Empire launched raids against Bengal in the 18th century which further added to the decline of the Nawabs of Bengal A decade of Maratha conquest of Bengal from the 1740s to early 1750s forced the Nawab of Bengal to pay Rs 1 2 million of tribute annually as the chauth of Bengal and Bihar to the Marathas and the Marathas agreed not to invade Bengal againThe expeditions led by Raghuji Bhonsle of Nagpur also established de facto Maratha control over Orissa which was formally incorporated in the Maratha Empire in 1752 34 35 The Nawab of Bengal also paid Rs 3 2 million to the Marathas towards the arrears of chauth for the preceding years 36 The chauth was paid annually by the Nawab of Bengal to the Marathas up to 1758 until the British occupation of Bengal 37 British colonization Edit Further information Bengal Presidency Shah Alam II granting Robert Clive the Diwani rights of Bengal Behar and Odisha in return for the annexed territories of the Nawab of Awadh after the Battle of Buxar on 12 August 1765 at the Benares By the late 18th century the British East India Company emerged as the foremost military power in the region defeating the French allied Siraj ud Daulah at the Battle of Plassey in 1757 that was largely brought about by the betrayal of the Nawab s once trusted general Mir Jafar The company gained administrative control over the Nawab s dominions including Bengal Bihar and Orissa It gained the right to collect taxes on behalf of the Mughal Court after the Battle of Buxar in 1765 Bengal Bihar and Orissa were made part of the Bengal Presidency and annexed into the British colonial empire in 1793 The Indian mutiny of 1857 formally ended the authority of the British East India Company when the British Raj replaced Company rule in India Other European powers also carved out small colonies on the territory of Bengal including the Dutch East India Company s Dutch Bengal settlements the French colonial settlement in Chandernagore the Danish colonial settlement in Serampore and the Habsburg monarchy Ostend Company settlement in Bankipur Military campaigns EditSee also Gunpowder empires Mobile artillery battries loyal to the Nawab of Bengal According to Joao de Barros Bengal enjoyed military supremacy over Arakan and Tripura due to good artillery 38 Its forces possessed notable large cannons It was also a major exporter of gunpowder and saltpeter to Europe 39 40 The Mughal Army built fortifications across the region including Idrakpur Fort Sonakanda Fort Hajiganj Fort Lalbagh Fort and Jangalbari Fort The Mughals expelled Arakanese and Portuguese pirates from the northeastern coastline of the Bay of Bengal Throughout the late medieval and early modern periods Bengal was notable for its navy and shipbuilding The following table covers a list of notable military engagements by Mughal Bengal Conflict Year s Leader s Enemy Rival leader s ResultBattle of Tukaroi 1575 Akbar Bengal Sultanate Daud Khan Karrani Mughal victoryBattle of Raj Mahal 1576 Khan Jahan I Bengal Sultanate Daud Khan Karrani Mughal victoryConquest of Bhati 1576 1611 Khan Jahan IShahbaz Khan KambohMan Singh Baro Bhuyan Isa KhanMusa Khan Mughal victoryAhom Mughal conflicts 1615 1682 Qasim Khan ChishtiMir JumlaRam Singh I Ahom kingdom Ahom kings Assamese victory 41 Mughal Arakan War 1665 66 Shaista Khan Kingdom of Mrauk U Thiri Thudhamma Mughal victoryBattle of Plassey 1757 Siraj ud Daulah British Empire Robert Clive British victory Daud Khan receives a robe from Munim Khan Bibi Mariam Cannon Jahan Kosha Cannon Battle of Chittagong in 1666 between the Mughals and ArakaneseArchitecture EditSee also Mughal architecture and Bengali architecture Bengali curved roofs were copied by Mughal architects in other parts of the empire such as in the Naulakha Pavilion in Lahore Nimtoli Deuri named after the neem tree is now a property of the Asiatic Society of Bangladesh situated in Dhaka Bangladesh is now a Heritage Museum 42 43 Mughal architecture proliferated Bengal in the 16th 17th and 18th centuries with the earliest example being the Kherua Mosque in Bogra 1582 44 They replaced the earlier sultanate style of architecture It was in Dhaka that the imperial style was most lavishly indulged in citation needed Its Lalbagh Fort was an elaborately designed complex of gardens fountains a mosque a tomb an audience hall Diwan i Khas and a walled enclosure with gates The Great Caravanserai and Shaista Khan Caravanserai in Dhaka were centres of commercial activities Other monuments in the city include the Dhanmondi Shahi Eidgah 1640 the Sat Gambuj Mosque c 1664 76 the Shahbaz Khan Mosque 1679 and the Khan Mohammad Mridha Mosque 1704 44 The city of Murshidabad also became a haven of Mughal architecture under the Nawabs of Bengal with the Caravanserai Mosque 1723 being its most prominent monument In rural hinterlands the indigenous Bengali Islamic style continued to flourish blended with Mughal elements One of the finest examples of this style is the Atiya Mosque in Tangail 1609 44 Several masterpieces of terracotta Hindu temple architecture were also created during this period Notable examples include the Kantajew Temple 1704 and the temples of Bishnupur 1600 1729 Art EditSee also Islamic art Muslin and kalighat painting An authentic Bengali art was reflected in the muslin fabric of Jamdani meaning flower in Persian The making of Jamdani was pioneered by Persian weavers The art passed to the hands of Bengali Muslim weavers known as juhulas The artisan industry was historically based around the city of Dhaka The city had over 80 000 weavers Jamdanis traditionally employ geometric designs in floral shapes Its motifs are often similar to those in Iranian textile art buta motif and Western textile art paisley Dhaka s jamdanis enjoyed a loyal following and received imperial patronage from the Mughal court in Delhi and the Nawabs of Bengal 45 11 A provincial Bengali style of Mughal painting flourished in Murshidabad during the 18th century Scroll painting and ivory sculptures were also prevalent Jamdani muslin is a legacy of Mughal Bengal Murshidabad style painting of a woman playing the sitar Scroll painting of a Ghazi riding a Bengal tigerDemographics Edit A riverside mosque in Mughal Dhaka The Armenian church and cemetery in Dhaka Population Edit Bengal s population is estimated to have been 30 million prior to the Great Bengal famine of 1770 which reduced it by as much as a third 46 Religion Edit Bengal was an affluent province with a Bengali Muslim majority along with a large Bengali Hindu minority 13 Immigration Edit There was a significant influx of migrants from the Safavid Empire into Bengal during the Mughal period Persian administrators and military commanders were enlisted by the Mughal government in Bengal 47 An Armenian community settled in Dhaka and was involved in the city s textile trade paying a 3 5 tax 48 Economy and trade Edit Maddison s estimates of global GDP 49 China and India being the most powerful until the 18th century The Bengal Subah had the largest regional economy in that period It was described as the paradise of nations The region exported grains fine cotton muslin and silk liquors and wines salt ornaments fruits and metals European companies set up numerous trading posts in Bengal during the 17th and 18th centuries Dhaka was the largest city in Bengal and the commercial capital of the empire citation needed Chittagong was the largest seaport with maritime trade routes connecting it to Arakan Ayuthya Aceh Melaka Johore Bantam Makassar Ceylon Bandar Abbas Mocha and the Maldives 50 51 page needed Parthasarathi estimates that grain wages for weaving and spinning in Bengal and Britain were comparable in the mid 18th century 52 However due to the scarcity of data more research is needed before drawing any conclusions 53 Bengal had many traders and bankers Among them was the Jagat Seth Family who were the wealthiest bankers in the region Agrarian reform Edit Further information History of agriculture in the Indian subcontinent The Mughals launched a vast economic development project in the Bengal delta which transformed its demographic makeup 54 The government cleared vast swathes of forest in the fertile Bhati region to expand farmland It encouraged settlers including farmers and jagirdars to populate the delta It assigned Sufis as the chieftains of villages Emperor Akbar re adapted the modern Bengali calendar to improve harvests and tax collection The region became the largest grain producer in the subcontinent A 3D reconstruction of the Bara Katra in modern day Dhaka There are sparse accounts of the Bengal revenue administration in Abul Fazl s Ain i Akbari and some in Mirza Nathan s Baharistan i Ghaibi 55 According to the former The demands of each year are paid by instalments in eight months they the ryots themselves bringing mohurs and rupees to the appointed place for the receipt of revenue as the division of grain between the government and the husbandman is not here customary The harvests are always abundant measurement is not insisted upon and the revenue demands are determined by estimate of the crop 55 In contrast the Baharistan says there were two collections per year following the spring and autumn harvests It also says that at least in some areas revenue demands were based on survey and land measurement 55 Bengali peasants were quick to adapt to profitable new crops between 1600 and 1650 Bengali peasants rapidly learned techniques of mulberry cultivation and sericulture establishing Bengal Subah as a major silk producing region of the world 56 The increased agricultural productivity led to lower food prices In turn this benefited the Indian textile industry Compared to Britain the price of grain was about one half in South India and one third in Bengal in terms of silver coinage This resulted in lower silver coin prices for Indian textiles giving them a price advantage in global markets 57 Industrial economy Edit In the 17th century Bengal was an affluent province that was according to economic historian Indrajit Ray globally prominent in industries such as textile manufacturing and shipbuilding 10 Bengal s capital city of Dhaka was the empire s financial capital with a population exceeding a million people and with an estimated 80 000 skilled textile weavers It was an exporter of silk and cotton textiles steel saltpeter and agricultural and industrial produce 11 Bengal s industrial economy in this era has been described as a form of proto industrialization 58 page needed Many historians have built on the perspective of R C Dutt who wrote The plunder of Bengal directly contributed to the Industrial Revolution in Britain 13 14 15 16 This analysis states that the capital amassed from Bengal was used to invest in British industries such as textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution and greatly increase British wealth while at the same time leading to deindustrialization in Bengal 13 14 15 11 According to Indrajit Ray domestic industries expanded for decades even after Plassey Although colonial based price manipulation and state discrimination initiated from the 1790s Bengal s industries retained some comparative advantages Ray states that Bengali entrepreneurs continued in industries such as cotton and silk textiles where there were domestic market supports and major deindustrialisation occurred as late as the 1830s to 1850s 59 Textile industry Edit Further information Muslin trade in Bengal A woman in Dhaka clad in fine Bengali muslin 18th century Bengal was a centre of the worldwide muslin jute and silk trades During this era the most important center of jute and cotton production was Bengal particularly around its capital city of Dhaka leading to muslin being called daka in distant markets such as Central Asia 60 Domestically much of India depended on Bengali products such as rice silks and cotton textiles Overseas Europeans depended on Bengali products such as cotton textiles silks and opium Bengal accounted for 40 of Dutch imports from Asia for example including more than 50 of textiles and around 80 of silks 9 From Bengal saltpetre was also shipped to Europe opium was sold in Indonesia raw silk was exported to Japan and the Netherlands and cotton and silk textiles were exported to Europe Indonesia and Japan 61 The jute trade was also a significant factor Shipbuilding industry Edit Bengal had a large shipbuilding industry Indrajit Ray estimates shipbuilding output of Bengal during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries at 223 250 tons annually compared with 23 061 tons produced in nineteen colonies in North America from 1769 to 1771 62 He also assesses ship repairing as very advanced in Bengal 62 An important innovation in shipbuilding was the introduction of a flushed deck design in Bengal rice ships resulting in hulls that were stronger and less prone to leak than the structurally weak hulls of traditional European ships built with a stepped deck design The British East India Company later duplicated the flushed deck and hull designs of Bengal rice ships in the 1760s leading to significant improvements in seaworthiness and navigation for European ships during the Industrial Revolution 63 Administrative divisions EditIn the revenue settlement by Todar Mal in 1582 Bengal Subah was divided into 24 sarkars districts which included 19 sarkars of Bengal proper and 5 sarkars of Orissa In 1607 during the reign of Jahangir Orissa became a separate Subah These 19 sarkars were further divided into 682 parganas 64 In 1658 subsequent to the revenue settlement by Shah Shuja 15 new sarkars and 361 new parganas were added In 1722 Murshid Quli Khan divided the whole Subah into 13 chakalahs which were further divided into 1660 parganas citation needed Initially the capital of the Subah was Tanda citation needed On 9 November 1595 the foundations of a new capital were laid at Rajmahal by Man Singh I who renamed it Akbarnagar 65 In 1610 the capital was shifted from Rajmahal to Dhaka 66 and it was renamed Jahangirnagar In 1639 Shah Shuja again shifted the capital to Rajmahal In 1660 Muazzam Khan Mir Jumla again shifted the capital to Dhaka In 1703 Murshid Quli Khan then diwan prime minister in charge of finance of Bengal shifted his office from Dhaka to Maqsudabad and later renamed it Murshidabad citation needed In 1656 Shah Shuja reorganised the sarkars and added Orissa to the Bengal Subah citation needed The sarkars districts and the parganas mahallahs tehsils of Bengal Subah were 64 Sarkar ParganaUdamabar Tanda modern day areas include North Birbhum Rajmahal and Murshidabad 52 parganasJannatabad Lakhnauti Modern day Malda division 66 parganasFatehabad 31 parganasMahmudabad modern day areas include North Nadia and Jessore 88 parganasKhalifatabad 35 parganasBakla 4 parganasPurniyah 9 parganasTajpur East Dinajpur 29 parganasGhoraghat South Rangpur Division Bogura 84 parganasPinjarah 21 parganasBarbakabad West Dinajpur 38 parganasBazuha 32 parganasSonargaon modern day Dhaka Division 52 parganasSrihatta 8 mahalsChittagong 7 parganasSharifatabad 26 parganasSulaimanabad 31 parganasSatgaon Modern day Hooghly District and Howrah District 53 parganasMandaran 16 parganasSarkars of Orissa Sarkar MahalJaleswar 28Bhadrak 7Kotok Cuttack 21Kaling Dandpat 27Raj Mahendrih 16Government EditThe state government was headed by a Viceroy Subedar Nizam appointed by the Mughal Emperor between 1576 and 1717 The Viceroy exercised tremendous authority with his own cabinet and four prime ministers Diwan The three deputy viceroys for Bengal proper Bihar and Orissa were known as the Naib Nazims An extensive landed aristocracy was established by the Mughals in Bengal The aristocracy was responsible for taxation and revenue collection Land holders were bestowed with the title of Jagirdar The Qadi title was reserved for the chief judge Mansabdars were leaders of the Mughal Army while faujdars were generals The Mughals were credited for secular pluralism during the reign of Akbar who promoted the religious doctrine of Din i Ilahi Later rulers promoted more conservative Islam In 1717 the Mughal government replaced Viceroy Azim us Shan due to conflicts with his influential deputy viceroy and prime minister Murshid Quli Khan 67 Growing regional autonomy caused the Mughal Court to establish a hereditary principality in Bengal with Khan being recognised in the official title of Nazim He founded the Nasiri dynasty In 1740 following the Battle of Giria Alivardi Khan staged a coup and founded the short lived Afsar dynasty For all practical purposes the Nazims acted as independent princes European colonial powers referred to them as Nawabs or Nababs 68 List of Viceroys Governor or Subahdar Edit Munim Khan seated right the first Viceroy of Mughal Bengal 1574 1575 Man Singh I the Rajput Viceroy of Bengal 1594 1606 Shaista Khan Viceroy 1664 1688 Viceroy Muhammad Azam Shah 1678 1679 later Mughal Emperor Viceroy Azim us Shan 1697 1712 later Mughal Emperor Personal name 69 ReignMunim Khan Khan i Khanan منعم خان خان خاناں 25 September 1574 23 October 1575Hussain Quli Beg Khan Jahan I حسین قلی بیگ خان جہاں اول 15 November 1575 19 December 1578Muzaffar Khan Turbati مظفر خان تربتی 1579 1580Mirza Aziz Koka Khan e Azam میرزا عزیز کوکہ خان اعظم 1582 1583Shahbaz Khan Kamboh Lahori شھباز خان کمبوہ 1583 1585Sadiq Khan صادق خان 1585 1586Wazir Khan Tajik وزیر خان 1586 1587Sa id Khan سعید خان 1587 1594Raja Man Singh I راجہ مان سنگھ 4 June 1594 1606Qutb ud din Khan Koka قطب الدین خان کوکہ 2 September 1606 May 1607Jahangir Quli Beg جہانگیر قلی بیگ 1607 1608Sheikh Ala ud din Chisti Islam Khan Chisti اسلام خان چشتی June 1608 1613Qasim Khan Chishti قاسم خان چشتی 1613 1617Ibrahim Khan Fateh Jang ابراہیم خان فتح جنگ 1617 1622Mahabat Khan محابت خان 1622 1625Mirza Amanullah Khan Zaman II میرزا أمان اللہ خان زماں ثانی 1625Mukarram Khan Chishti مکرم خان 1625 1627Fidai Khan فدای خان 1627 1628Qasim Khan Juvayni Qasim Manija قاسم خان جوینی قاسم مانیجہ 1628 1632Mir Muhammad Baqir Azam Khan میر محمد باقر اعظم خان 1632 1635Mir Abdus Salam Islam Khan Mashhadi اسلام خان مشھدی 1635 1639Sultan Shah Shuja شاہ شجاع 1639 1660Mir Jumla II میر جملہ May 1660 30 March 1663Mirza Abu Talib Shaista Khan I میرزا ابو طالب شایستہ خان March 1664 1676Azam Khan Koka Fidai Khan II اعظم خان کوکہ فدای خان ثانی 1676 1677Sultan Muhammad Azam Shah Alijah محمد اعظم شاہ عالی جاہ 1678 1679Mirza Abu Talib Shaista Khan I میرزا ابو طالب شایستہ خان 1680 1688Ibrahim Khan ibn Ali Mardan Khan ابراہیم خان ابن علی مردان خان 1688 1697Sultan Azim us Shan عظیم الشان 1697 1712Others were appointed but did not show up from 1712 to 1717 and managed by Deputy Subahdar Murshid Quli Khan Murshid Quli Khan مرشد قلی خان 1717 1727List of independent Nawab Nazims EditPortrait Regnal name Personal name Birth Reign DeathNasiri dynasty Jaafar Khan Bahadur Nasiri Murshid Quli Khan 1665 1717 1727 30 June 1727 Ala ud Din Haidar Jang Sarfaraz Khan Bahadur Dakhni 1727 1727 29 April 1740 Shuja ud Daula Shuja ud Din Muhammad Khan or Mirza Deccani Around 1670 date not available July 1727 26 August 1739 26 August 1739 Ala ud Din Haidar Jang Sarfaraz Khan Bahadur Dakhni 13 March 1739 April 1740 29 April 1740Afsar dynasty Hashim ud Daula Muhammad Alivardi Khan Bahadur Before 10 May 1671 29 April 1740 9 April 1756 9 April 1756 Siraj ud Daulah Muhammad Siraj ud Daulah 1733 April 1756 2 June 1757 2 July 1757References Edit Akhtaruzzaman Muhammad 2012 Tandah In Islam Sirajul Miah Sajahan Khanam Mahfuza Ahmed Sabbir eds Banglapedia the National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh Online ed Dhaka Bangladesh Banglapedia Trust Asiatic Society of Bangladesh ISBN 984 32 0576 6 OCLC 52727562 OL 30677644M Retrieved 28 April 2023 Rajmahal India Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 5 April 2018 Dhaka national capital Bangladesh Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 5 April 2018 Rizvi Saiyid Athar Abbas 1986 A Socio intellectual History of the Isna ʼAshari Shiʼis in India 16th to 19th century A D Vol 2 Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers pp 45 47 Rieck Andreas 15 January 2016 The Shias of Pakistan An Assertive and Beleaguered Minority Oxford University Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 19 061320 4 Steel Tim 19 December 2014 The paradise of nations Op ed Dhaka Tribune Archived from the original on 17 May 2019 Retrieved 17 May 2019 Pakistan Quarterly Pakistan Quarterly 1956 Islam Sirajul 1992 History of Bangladesh 1704 1971 Economic history Asiatic Society of Bangladesh ISBN 978 984 512 337 2 a b Om Prakash Empire Mughal in John J McCusker ed History of World Trade Since 1450 vol 1 Macmillan Reference USA 2006 pp 237 240 World History in Context Retrieved 3 August 2017 a b Indrajit Ray 2011 Bengal Industries and the British Industrial Revolution 1757 1857 Routledge pp 57 90 174 ISBN 978 1 136 82552 1 a b c d e Khandker Hissam 31 July 2015 Which India is claiming to have been colonised The Daily Star Op ed Vaugn James September 2017 John Company Armed The English East India Company the Anglo Mughal War and Absolutist Imperialism c 1675 1690 Britain and the World 11 1 a b c d e Junie T Tong 2016 Finance and Society in 21st Century China Chinese Culture Versus Western Markets CRC Press p 151 ISBN 978 1 317 13522 7 a b c d John L Esposito ed 2004 The Islamic World Past and Present Vol 1 Oxford University Press p 174 ISBN 978 0 19 516520 3 a b c d Indrajit Ray 2011 Bengal Industries and the British Industrial Revolution 1757 1857 Routledge pp 7 10 ISBN 978 1 136 82552 1 a b Shombit Sengupta Bengal s plunder gifted the British Industrial Revolution The Financial Express 8 February 2010 Richard M Eaton 1996 The Rise of Islam and the Bengal Frontier 1204 1760 Oxford University Press p xxiii ISBN 0 520 20507 3 Humayun Banglapedia Retrieved 5 April 2018 Tapan Raychaudhuri 1953 Bengal under Akbar and Jahangir An Introductory Study in Social History Calcutta A Mukherjee p 1 OCLC 5585437 Tapan Raychaudhuri 1953 Bengal under Akbar and Jahangir An Introductory Study in Social History Calcutta A Mukherjee p 2 OCLC 5585437 Tapan Raychaudhuri 1953 Bengal under Akbar and Jahangir An Introductory Study in Social History Calcutta A Mukherjee pp 17 18 OCLC 5585437 Dhaka Encyclopaedia Britannica 14 July 2016 Retrieved 6 May 2016 Sir Robert Eric Mortimer Wheeler 1953 The Cambridge History of India The Indus civilization Vol Supplementary Cambridge University Publishers pp 237 Saradindu Shekhar Chakma Ethnic Cleansing in Chittagong Hill Tracts p 23 Farooqui Salma Ahmed 2011 A Comprehensive History of Medieval India From Twelfth to the Mid Eighteenth Century Pearson Education India pp 366 ISBN 978 81 317 3202 1 Kunal Chakrabarti Shubhra Chakrabarti 22 August 2013 Historical Dictionary of the Bengalis Scarecrow Press pp 237 ISBN 978 0 8108 8024 5 Bengal nawabs of act 1756 1793 rulers in India Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press 2004 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 63552 Subscription or UK public library membership required ʿAli Vardi Khan nawab of Bengal Encyclopaedia Britannica Bengal region Asia Encyclopaedia Britannica Odisha History Encyclopaedia Britannica Silliman Jael Murshidabad can teach the rest of India how to restore heritage and market the past Scroll in A Comprehensive History of India Sterling Publishers Pvt Ltd 1 December 2003 p 27 ISBN 978 81 207 2506 5 William Dalrymple 2019 The Anarchy The Relentless Rise of the East India Company Bloomsbury Publishing p 308 ISBN 978 1 4088 6440 1 Forgotten Indian history The brutal Maratha invasions of Bengal Scroll in Nitish K Sengupta 2011 Land of Two Rivers A History of Bengal from the Mahabharata to Mujib Penguin Books India ISBN 978 0 14 341678 4 Jaswant Lal Mehta 2005 Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707 1813 New Dawn Press p 201 ISBN 978 1 932705 54 6 Jadunath Sarkar 1991 First published 1932 Fall Of The Mughal Empire 4th ed Orient Longman ISBN 978 81 250 1149 1 Momtazur Rahman Tarafdar 1965 Husain Shahi Bengal 1494 1538 A D A Socio Political Study Asiatic Society of Pakistan p 105 OCLC 43324741 Tim Steel 31 October 2014 Gunpowder plots Dhaka Tribune Archived from the original on 29 September 2017 Retrieved 25 December 2017 Saltpetre Banglapedia Retrieved 5 April 2018 Richards John F 1993 The Mughal Empire Cambridge University Press p 247 Nimtoli Deuri becomes heritage museum The Daily Star 17 January 2019 Retrieved 31 October 2020 YouTube ঢ ক র ন মতল দ উড এখন ঐত হ য জ দ ঘর Nimtoli Deuri Becomes Heritage Museum Retrieved 31 October 2020 via YouTube a b c The Rise of Islam and the Bengal Frontier 1204 1760 University of California Press Retrieved 6 May 2016 In Search of Bangladeshi Islamic Art The Metropolitan Museum of Art i e The Met Museum Retrieved 5 April 2018 Janam Mukherjee 2015 Hungry Bengal War Famine and the End of Empire Oxford University Press p 27 ISBN 978 0 19 020988 9 Karim Abdul 2012 Iranians The In Islam Sirajul Jamal Ahmed A eds Banglapedia National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh Second ed Asiatic Society of Bangladesh Ali Ansar Chaudhury Sushil Islam Sirajul 2012 Armenians The In Islam Sirajul Jamal Ahmed A eds Banglapedia National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh Second ed Asiatic Society of Bangladesh Maddison Angus 2007 Contours of the World Economy 1 2030 AD Essays in Macro Economic History Oxford University Press Table A 7 ISBN 978 1 4008 3138 8 Pearson Michael 2003 The Indian Ocean Routledge pp 136 164 ISBN 978 0 415 21489 6 page 136 From 1500 1850 in Bengal the main market was Chittagong page 164 Mir Jumla who in the 1640s had his own ships travelling all over the ocean to Bengal Surat Arakan Ayuthya Aceh Melaka Johore Bantam Makassar Ceylon Bandar Abbas Mocha and the Maldives Nanda J N 2005 Bengal The Unique State Concept Publishing Company ISBN 9788180691492 Retrieved 6 May 2016 Prasannan Parthasarathi 2011 Why Europe Grew Rich and Asia Did Not Global Economic Divergence 1600 1850 Cambridge University Press p 39 ISBN 978 1 139 49889 0 Prasannan Parthasarathi 2011 Why Europe Grew Rich and Asia Did Not Global Economic Divergence 1600 1850 Cambridge University Press p 45 ISBN 978 1 139 49889 0 Richard Maxwell Eaton 1996 The Rise of Islam and the Bengal Frontier 1204 1760 University of California Press pp 312 313 ISBN 978 0 520 20507 9 Retrieved 6 May 2016 a b c Tapan Raychaudhuri 1953 Bengal under Akbar and Jahangir An Introductory Study in Social History Calcutta A Mukherjee p 24 OCLC 5585437 Richards John F 1993 The Mughal Empire The New Cambridge History of India Vol I 5 Cambridge University Press p 190 ISBN 978 0 521 56603 2 Prasannan Parthasarathi 2011 Why Europe Grew Rich and Asia Did Not Global Economic Divergence 1600 1850 Cambridge University Press p 42 ISBN 978 1 139 49889 0 Abhay Kumar Singh 2006 Modern World System and Indian Proto industrialization Bengal 1650 1800 Vol 1 Northern Book Centre ISBN 9788172112011 Indrajit Ray 2011 Bengal Industries and the British Industrial Revolution 1757 1857 Routledge pp 245 254 ISBN 978 1 136 82552 1 Richard Maxwell Eaton 1996 The Rise of Islam and the Bengal Frontier 1204 1760 page 202 University of California Press John F Richards 1995 The Mughal Empire page 202 Cambridge University Press a b Indrajit Ray 2011 Bengal Industries and the British Industrial Revolution 1757 1857 Routledge p 174 ISBN 978 1 136 82552 1 Technological Dynamism in a Stagnant Sector Safety at Sea during the Early Industrial Revolution PDF a b Jarrett H S 1949 1891 The Ain i Akbari by Abul Fazl i Allami Vol II ed J N Sarkar Calcutta The Asiatic Society pp 142 55 Sarkar Jadunath 1984 Sinh Raghubir ed A History of Jaipur c 1503 1938 Orient Longman pp 81 94 ISBN 81 250 0333 9 Gommans Jos 2002 Mughal Warfare Indian Frontiers and Highroads to Empire 1500 1700 Oxon Routledge p 27 ISBN 0 415 23988 5 Chatterjee Anjali 2012 Azim us Shan In Islam Sirajul Jamal Ahmed A eds Banglapedia National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh Second ed Asiatic Society of Bangladesh Islam Sirajul 2012 Nawab In Islam Sirajul Jamal Ahmed A eds Banglapedia National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh Second ed Asiatic Society of Bangladesh Eaton Richard M 1993 The Rise of Islam and the Bengal Frontier 1204 1760 Berkeley University of California Press pp 325 6 ISBN 0 520 20507 3 Further reading EditIrfan Habib 1999 First published 1963 The Agrarian System of Mughal India 1556 1707 2nd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 807742 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bengal Subah amp oldid 1151198294, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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