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Mughal Karkhanas

Mughal karkhanas (Hindi: कारखाना, Karkhana, Karkana kārakhānā, Kar-kanyas, Qur khana, Urdu: کارخانہ ) were the manufacturing houses and workshops for craftsmen, established by the Mughals in their empire. Karkhana is a Hindustani language word that means factory. These karkhanas were small manufacturing units for various arts and crafts as well as for the emperor's household and military needs. karkhanas were named and classified based on the nature of the job. For example, 'Rangkhana' and 'Chhapakhana' were for textile dyeing and printing work.[1] The term 'tushak-khana' was used to describe workshops that made shawls and embellished them with embroidery or needlework.[2] Imperial or Royal Karkhanas were for luxury goods and weapons. The karkhanas were the place for various production activities and also for the exploration of new techniques and innovations. Some operations such as weaving, embroidery work, and brocade work were often done under one roof, resembling an integrated assembly line.[3][4][5][6][7][8]

The court of Akbar, an ill ama

Karkhanas

Karkhanas in the Mughal era especially in Akbar's time were much more organized and large as compared to the Sultanate period.[9] Mughals raised the standards of karkhanas attained previously by the Sultans under various dynasties.[10][specify] Mughals viewed administrative matters with great sincerity[11] and maintained proper hierarchy in the system, for instance, the Mansabdari system founded by Akbar. The Mughal empire was divided into "Subah" which were further subdivided into "Sarkar", "Pargana", and "Gram.",[12] additionally there were three methods of revenue collection i.e. Kankut, Rai And Zabti.[13] In the Mughal empire, rapidly accelerating urbanization and the vast army size (required to properly administer such a large region), necessitated the large-scale production of weapons and other goods. Hence there were large establishments of Royal Karkhanas.[14]

Administration

Karkhanas were the manufactories and storehouses that operated largely to fulfill state requirements.[15] These were places where the artisans were supposed to do their work as per the command (following the controllers' orders) unlike the artisan system (where there was considerable freedom and independent control over the manufacturing process).[16][17] Royal Karkhanas employed various artisans specializing in different crafts.[10]

Karkhanas were maintained by the state, nobles, mansabdars, and zamindars. One tahvildar, along with a 'Darogah' and a superintendent, was engaged at every Karkhana.[15] The khan-i-saman was the designation for the head of the royal karkhanas or workshops.[18][19] The administrators were supposed to present the best of the crafts to the emperor in compliance with the set protocols. Hence, engaging the best artisans was absolutely necessary.[4][16] As per the Ain-i-Akbari, there were 36 classified karkhanas.[20] Notably, one noble Bakhtawar established karkhanas at Delhi, Agra, Lahore, and Buharanpur.[4]

Accounts

Karkhanas operated much like the present day organized sector albeit with state funding, materials were supplied at pre-determined cost by the state, and the profit- loss accounts were maintained for each individual Karkhana.[21] There are records (of Amber rulers who were the nobles of Mughals) related to royal karkhanas explaining various accounts (heads) such as jama kharch, arhsatta, Tozi, Tozi (taujih) jama kharch topkhana, palkikhana, shutarkhana, zinkhana.[15][further explanation needed] 'Jama' and 'Kharch' are the words for incoming and outgoing entries in the account.[22] Various other relevant terms mentioned in the records are:-

  • Jama kharch a treasury account formerly kept (the monthly receipts and disbursements).[23]
  • Arhsatta is the revenue record.[24]
  • Tozi (are the records on separate sheets)[25] for the different state workshop and warehouses, the commodities manufactured and the wages given to the workers.[26]
  • Tozi Jama Kharch -Topkhana[27] is a statistical information in fine details about the daily expenditure incurred on the raw material, wages, repairing of the arms.
  • Silekhana is about the accounts of Silehaposh (Combatants).[28]
  • Shutarkhana is for the shipments received about animals (The Risalas received animal)[29]
  • Zinkhana are the records for harness, saddles and bridles.[30]

Large halls are seen at many places, called karkhanas or workshops for the artisans. In one hall, embroiderers are busily employed, superintended by a master. In another, you see the goldsmiths; in a third, painters; in a fourth, varnishers in lacquer-work; in a fifth, joiners, turners, tailors and shoe-makers; in a sixth, manufacturers of silk, brocade and fine muslins … The artisans come every morning to their karkhanas where they remain employed the whole day; and in the evening return to their homes. In this quiet regular manner, their time glides away; no one aspiring for any improvement in the condition of life wherein he happens to be born.

François Bernier[16]

Products and types

Karkhanas were producing arms, ammunition, and also various items for the court and emperor's need such as clothes, shawls, turbans, jewelry, gold and silverware, perfumes, medicines, carpets, beddings, tents, and for the imperial stable-harnesses for the horses in articles of iron, copper and other metals.[21][31]

  • Silakhana was the Karkhanas for manufacturing arms and arsenal.[32]
  • For textile production there were separate Karkhanas for example Chhapakhana and Rangkhana (Printing and dyeing), Toshkhana (shawl making and embellishment work), Kirkarakhana (kurkyaraq khana) (wardrobe).[32]
  • Farrash khana (for carpets, floor coverings, rugs, mats and tents)[33]

Weapons

Karkhans or Royal stores[34] or imperial karkhanas were responsible for producing and storing the required articles for artillery needs, there were about seventy different kind and type of items including heavy guns (cannons), armours, and various types of swords, daggers, spears and lances.[8][35]

Guns

Ganzals- a heavy gun which was carried by an elephant and, Narnals, the considerably lighter counterpart, carried by a single man.[8]

Swords

Khasa, Kotal, Jamadhar, Yakbandi and Khapwas.[8]

Armours

For sepoys, horses, and elephants.[8]

Textiles

The third Mughal emperor 'Akbar paid special attention in textiles' and improving the workmanship of local artisans. Fazl wrote

His Majesty pays much attention to various stuffs; hence Irana [Iranian], European and Mongolian articles of wear are in abundance. Skillful masters and workmen have settled in this country, to teach the people an improved system of manufacture. The imperial workshops, the towns of Lahore, Agra, Fatehpur, Ahmadabad, Gujarat, turn out many master-pieces of workmanship; and figures and patterns, knots and variety of fashion which now prevail, astonish experienced travellers. His Majesty himself acquired in a short time a theoretical and practical knowledge of the whole trade; and on account of the care bestowed on them the intelligent workmen of this country soon improved. All kinds of hair-weaving and silk spinning were brought to perfection; and the imperial workshops furnish all those stuffs which are made in other countries. A taste for fine material has since become general, and drapery use at feasts surpasses every description

— An observation of Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak

All the Mughal emperors, including Akbar, Jahangir, and Shah Jahan, took equal interest in manufacturing clothes. As per records, Akbar employed eleven thousand tailors for the supply of household goods.[2] Even Nur Jahan was directly controlling a few karkhanas. There were exclusive karkhanas for the royal families, such as karkhanas at Sonargaon, Junglabree, and Bazetpur, producing Malboos Khas (a superior mulmul cloth reserved for the aristocracy and the members of the royal family). Rulers or nobles were directly controlling these karkhanas.[37] Mughal clothing was stitched in these karkhanas from the best-chosen cloths, for instance, silk interwoven with gold and silver. The Ain-i-Akbari mentions various cloths with Zari work brocade, Embroidery from Gujarat, and Bengal. Khasa, Bafta, Gangajal are few of the fabrics given a mention.[38] Karkhanas produced numerous kinds of cotton, silk, and woolen textile piece goods.[39]

Remarks

François Bernier wrote "the riches and most exquisitely wrought brocades, fine linens and alachas or silk stuffs interwoven with gold and silver"[2]

Fabrics and costumes

Ain-i-Akbari has described clothes in the imperial wardrobe (toshkhana) along with details such as price, color, and weight. There are thirty-five items listed in the order of precedence. Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak explicitly informs about the imperial workshops for court needs situated at Lahore, Agra, Fatehpur Sikri, and Ahmedabad. The skilled artisans had their training from Persian or Turkistan trainers and then produced higher quality artistic work in local royal karkhanas. Akabar's special interests resulted the major transformation in the field of design, formerly imported stuffs from abroad could then be made in the royal workshops.[40]

Mughal clothing was characterized by luxurious styles and was made with muslin, silk, velvet and brocade. Elaborate patterns including dots, checks, and waves were used with colors from various dyes including cochineal, sulfate of iron, sulfate of copper and sulfate of antimony were used.

Cotton

Cotton had the highest share in the textiles, including calicos, muslins, available unbleached and in a variety of colors. Cotton contributed a large part of the empire's international (Europe) trade.[41] The production of cotton goods was across India. Coarser cotton goods have majored in western sides (Gujrat and Punjab), and fine cotton goods were renowned of the east of medieval India. Bengal emerged as the foremost muslin exporter in the world.[42]

The Indian subcontinent produced varieties of cotton cloths, especially fine muslins between the 16th to 18th centuries. The seven explicitly mentioned cloths are khasa, Salu, Doriya, Bafta, Dupatta, and Panchtoliya, named in the exhaustive list of cotton cloths in Ain-i-Akbari.[43]

Fine muslins

In 1586 Ralph Fitch remarked that in Sonargaon, just fifteen miles east of Dhaka, there is the best and finest cloth made of cotton that is in all India

— Remarks of Ralph Fitch consultant for the British East India Company[44]

Khasa[45], Tansukh,[46][47] Nainsook, Chautar,[48][49] and types of Mulmul (Sarkar ali, Sarbati, Tarindam)[50][51][52][53]

Other cotton materials

Abu'l-Fazl specifies the cotton fabrics of Khandesh in Ain-i-Akbari. He refers three cotton varieties in which 'Abasteh' is the fine cotton 'Sarisaf' and 'Bhiraun' were ordinary.[54][55] He also appreciated the Chautar and Khasa of Saharanpur.[56] The calicos of Calicut, muslins of Dhaka, Chintz of Machilipatnam, and Baftas of Baroch and Cambay, cotton piece goods and cloth of gold of Burhanpur, Surat and Vadodara were famous.[57][42]


Silk

Silk and wool was also significant but not in comparison to cotton. For selected silk, the raw materials were also imported from china.[42] Silk weaving was an important industry in Lahore, Agra and Gujrat.

Wool

Wool was limited to the particular areas such as Kashmir and Punjab.

Shawls and carpets

Shawl

Shawl, an article of loose clothing, was among the symbol of Mughal royalty. The Mughals improved not only the production but also the techniques of the craft of shawl making in Kashmir. The number of looms was grown to 40000. Royal workshops (karkhanas) introduced new colors and patterns, enhanced the shawl industry, which earned wealth and prosperity for Kashmir.[58]

Mughal carpets

Mughal carpets were a blend of Persian and Indian artistry. They were uniquely designed with scenic landscapes, floral, and animal patterns. Kashmir was producing the finest wool and silk carpets and rugs, including prayer rugs. Sometimes the knot density in these rugs was so fine and tight as 300 knots per square centimeter. Carpet weaving was renowned in Agra, Lahore, and Fatehpur Sikri. The Girdler's carpet is one of the best-documented examples of Mughul carpets.[59][60]

Brocade and Embroidery

Mughals admired Zardozi work on their costumes; this supported Karkhanas. Mughal ladies' favorite were embellished clothes with brocade, and various embroidery. There were a variety of options such as, Kantha, Kimkhwab, Chickankari, kashida, phulkari, etc.[61][62] The city of Amritsar was one of several centers of fine embroidery in the Punjab.[63]

Painting workshops

There were exclusive workshops maintained for paintings also.[64]

Wages

Wages were paid to artisans and the unskilled labor on a daily basis, and only regular employees, whether craftsmen or domestic servants, received their pay monthly. The wages of skilled workers were notedly more in the Imperial karkhanas. As described in the Ain-i-Akbari (c.1595), which is an official account of the Mughal Empire. Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak (the grand vizier of the Mughal emperor Akbar, and author of the Akbarnama) explained the detailed wages for all such categories, and also stated invariably in copper coins when daily rates are quoted.[4]

End

It is important to observe, that of this vast tract of country, a large portion is extremely fertile; the large kingdom of Bengale (Bengal), for instance, surpassing Egypt itself, not only in the production of rice, corn, and other necessaries of life, but of innumerable articles of commerce which are not cultivated in Egypt; such as silks, cotton, and indigo. There are also many parts of the Indies, where the population is sufficiently abundant, and the land pretty well tilled; and where the artisan, although naturally indolent, is yet compelled by necessity or otherwise to employ himself in manufacturing carpets, brocades, embroideries, gold and silver cloths, and the various sorts of silk and cotton goods, which are used in the country or exported abroad. It should not escape notice that gold and silver, after circulating in every other quarter of the globe, come at length to be swallowed up, lost in some measure, in Hindustan.

— Bernier's description of both agriculture and craft production.

The rise, succession, despotism

The Karkhanas was one of the significant revenue-making establishments of Mughals. Textiles of India flourished under the Mughal Empire. Textiles became the largest manufacturing industry then.[65] The emperors acquired lot of wealth in trade but the artisans and peasants' condition was not improving. All profits were for the governmental bodies.[66]

The fall

Luke Scrafton, resident for the East India Company at the capital of Bengal in 1758, declared that until the invasion of Nader Shah in 1739 "there was scarce a better administered government in the world. The manufactures, commerce, and agriculture flourished exceedingly; and none felt the hand of the oppression but those who were dangerous by their wealth or power."

—Luke Scrafton, Reflections on the Government of Indostan (London, 1770).[67]

The fall of Karkhanas correlated with the fall of the Mughals has many reasons.

Still, major were the successive ruling and changes in administration and corruption at various levels of hierarchy. The corruption has risen since the reign of Jahangir.[68] They were relatively weak thus government affairs went into the hands of the unscrupulous ministers. They maintained a large number of servants, slaves, horses, elephants, etc. Bernier wrote about the Mughal tyranny and made the prophecy of the decline of the Mughal Empire, but Bernier could not visualize that the worst is yet to come and the British will be the next masters of the wealthiest part of the globe.[69][70]

Gallery

See also

References

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  63. ^ Dusenbury, Mary M.; Bier, Carol (2004). Flowers, Dragons & Pine Trees: Asian Textiles in the Spencer Museum of Art. Hudson Hills. p. 70. ISBN 978-1-55595-238-9.
  64. ^ Beach, Milo Cleveland (1987). Early Mughal Painting. Harvard University Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-674-22185-7.
  65. ^ Schmidt, Karl J. (2015-05-20). An Atlas and Survey of South Asian History. Routledge. p. 100. ISBN 978-1-317-47681-8.
  66. ^ "The nobles maintained households with a large number of wives, concubines, slaves and domestic servants. The Mughal emperor's own harem consisted of 5,000 females divided into two categories: (a) mahim-bano, that is, ..." Ascent and Decline of Native and Colonial Trading: Tale of ...books.google.co.in › books Vijay K Seth · 2019
  67. ^ "part2_16". www.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2021-01-08.
  68. ^ 1. Luke Scrafton, Reflections on the Government of Indostan (London, 1770). 2. Sidney J. Owen, The Fall of the Moghul Empire (London, 1912), pp. 1–4. [3]
  69. ^ "Bernier did make the prophecy of the decline of the Mughal Empire, but he never visualized that the English would be the master of the richest part of the globe by ..." The Quarterly Review of Historical Studies - Volume 44 - Page 47 2004
  70. ^ "In the seventeenth century, with the permission of Mughal emperors East India company established trade posts at various places in India" Page 27 India in Pictures - Page 27 Lee Engfer · 2002 [4]

mughal, karkhanas, mughal, karkhanas, hindi, रख, karkhana, karkana, kārakhānā, kanyas, khana, urdu, کارخانہ, were, manufacturing, houses, workshops, craftsmen, established, mughals, their, empire, karkhana, hindustani, language, word, that, means, factory, the. Mughal karkhanas Hindi क रख न Karkhana Karkana karakhana Kar kanyas Qur khana Urdu کارخانہ were the manufacturing houses and workshops for craftsmen established by the Mughals in their empire Karkhana is a Hindustani language word that means factory These karkhanas were small manufacturing units for various arts and crafts as well as for the emperor s household and military needs karkhanas were named and classified based on the nature of the job For example Rangkhana and Chhapakhana were for textile dyeing and printing work 1 The term tushak khana was used to describe workshops that made shawls and embellished them with embroidery or needlework 2 Imperial or Royal Karkhanas were for luxury goods and weapons The karkhanas were the place for various production activities and also for the exploration of new techniques and innovations Some operations such as weaving embroidery work and brocade work were often done under one roof resembling an integrated assembly line 3 4 5 6 7 8 The court of Akbar an ill ama Contents 1 Karkhanas 1 1 Administration 1 2 Accounts 2 Products and types 2 1 Weapons 2 1 1 Guns 2 1 2 Swords 2 1 3 Armours 2 2 Textiles 2 2 1 Remarks 2 2 1 1 Fabrics and costumes 2 2 2 Cotton 2 2 2 1 Fine muslins 2 2 2 2 Other cotton materials 2 3 Silk 2 4 Wool 2 5 Shawls and carpets 2 5 1 Shawl 2 5 2 Mughal carpets 2 5 2 1 Brocade and Embroidery 2 6 Painting workshops 3 Wages 4 End 4 1 The rise succession despotism 4 2 The fall 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 ReferencesKarkhanas EditKarkhanas in the Mughal era especially in Akbar s time were much more organized and large as compared to the Sultanate period 9 Mughals raised the standards of karkhanas attained previously by the Sultans under various dynasties 10 specify Mughals viewed administrative matters with great sincerity 11 and maintained proper hierarchy in the system for instance the Mansabdari system founded by Akbar The Mughal empire was divided into Subah which were further subdivided into Sarkar Pargana and Gram 12 additionally there were three methods of revenue collection i e Kankut Rai And Zabti 13 In the Mughal empire rapidly accelerating urbanization and the vast army size required to properly administer such a large region necessitated the large scale production of weapons and other goods Hence there were large establishments of Royal Karkhanas 14 Administration Edit Karkhanas were the manufactories and storehouses that operated largely to fulfill state requirements 15 These were places where the artisans were supposed to do their work as per the command following the controllers orders unlike the artisan system where there was considerable freedom and independent control over the manufacturing process 16 17 Royal Karkhanas employed various artisans specializing in different crafts 10 Karkhanas were maintained by the state nobles mansabdars and zamindars One tahvildar along with a Darogah and a superintendent was engaged at every Karkhana 15 The khan i saman was the designation for the head of the royal karkhanas or workshops 18 19 The administrators were supposed to present the best of the crafts to the emperor in compliance with the set protocols Hence engaging the best artisans was absolutely necessary 4 16 As per the Ain i Akbari there were 36 classified karkhanas 20 Notably one noble Bakhtawar established karkhanas at Delhi Agra Lahore and Buharanpur 4 Accounts Edit Karkhanas operated much like the present day organized sector albeit with state funding materials were supplied at pre determined cost by the state and the profit loss accounts were maintained for each individual Karkhana 21 There are records of Amber rulers who were the nobles of Mughals related to royal karkhanas explaining various accounts heads such as jama kharch arhsatta Tozi Tozi taujih jama kharch topkhana palkikhana shutarkhana zinkhana 15 further explanation needed Jama and Kharch are the words for incoming and outgoing entries in the account 22 Various other relevant terms mentioned in the records are Jama kharch a treasury account formerly kept the monthly receipts and disbursements 23 Arhsatta is the revenue record 24 Tozi are the records on separate sheets 25 for the different state workshop and warehouses the commodities manufactured and the wages given to the workers 26 Tozi Jama Kharch Topkhana 27 is a statistical information in fine details about the daily expenditure incurred on the raw material wages repairing of the arms Silekhana is about the accounts of Silehaposh Combatants 28 Shutarkhana is for the shipments received about animals The Risalas received animal 29 Zinkhana are the records for harness saddles and bridles 30 Large halls are seen at many places called karkhanas or workshops for the artisans In one hall embroiderers are busily employed superintended by a master In another you see the goldsmiths in a third painters in a fourth varnishers in lacquer work in a fifth joiners turners tailors and shoe makers in a sixth manufacturers of silk brocade and fine muslins The artisans come every morning to their karkhanas where they remain employed the whole day and in the evening return to their homes In this quiet regular manner their time glides away no one aspiring for any improvement in the condition of life wherein he happens to be born Francois Bernier 16 Products and types EditKarkhanas were producing arms ammunition and also various items for the court and emperor s need such as clothes shawls turbans jewelry gold and silverware perfumes medicines carpets beddings tents and for the imperial stable harnesses for the horses in articles of iron copper and other metals 21 31 Silakhana was the Karkhanas for manufacturing arms and arsenal 32 For textile production there were separate Karkhanas for example Chhapakhana and Rangkhana Printing and dyeing Toshkhana shawl making and embellishment work Kirkarakhana kurkyaraq khana wardrobe 32 Farrash khana for carpets floor coverings rugs mats and tents 33 Weapons Edit Karkhans or Royal stores 34 or imperial karkhanas were responsible for producing and storing the required articles for artillery needs there were about seventy different kind and type of items including heavy guns cannons armours and various types of swords daggers spears and lances 8 35 Guns Edit Ganzals a heavy gun which was carried by an elephant and Narnals the considerably lighter counterpart carried by a single man 8 Swords Edit Khasa Kotal Jamadhar Yakbandi and Khapwas 8 Armours Edit For sepoys horses and elephants 8 Further information Mughal weaponsFurther information Mughal artillery Textiles Edit The third Mughal emperor Akbar paid special attention in textiles and improving the workmanship of local artisans Fazl wrote His Majesty pays much attention to various stuffs hence Irana Iranian European and Mongolian articles of wear are in abundance Skillful masters and workmen have settled in this country to teach the people an improved system of manufacture The imperial workshops the towns of Lahore Agra Fatehpur Ahmadabad Gujarat turn out many master pieces of workmanship and figures and patterns knots and variety of fashion which now prevail astonish experienced travellers His Majesty himself acquired in a short time a theoretical and practical knowledge of the whole trade and on account of the care bestowed on them the intelligent workmen of this country soon improved All kinds of hair weaving and silk spinning were brought to perfection and the imperial workshops furnish all those stuffs which are made in other countries A taste for fine material has since become general and drapery use at feasts surpasses every description An observation of Abu l Fazl ibn Mubarak All the Mughal emperors including Akbar Jahangir and Shah Jahan took equal interest in manufacturing clothes As per records Akbar employed eleven thousand tailors for the supply of household goods 2 Even Nur Jahan was directly controlling a few karkhanas There were exclusive karkhanas for the royal families such as karkhanas at Sonargaon Junglabree and Bazetpur producing Malboos Khas a superior mulmul cloth reserved for the aristocracy and the members of the royal family Rulers or nobles were directly controlling these karkhanas 37 Mughal clothing was stitched in these karkhanas from the best chosen cloths for instance silk interwoven with gold and silver The Ain i Akbari mentions various cloths with Zari work brocade Embroidery from Gujarat and Bengal Khasa Bafta Gangajal are few of the fabrics given a mention 38 Karkhanas produced numerous kinds of cotton silk and woolen textile piece goods 39 Remarks Edit Francois Bernier wrote the riches and most exquisitely wrought brocades fine linens and alachas or silk stuffs interwoven with gold and silver 2 Fabrics and costumes Edit Ain i Akbari has described clothes in the imperial wardrobe toshkhana along with details such as price color and weight There are thirty five items listed in the order of precedence Abu l Fazl ibn Mubarak explicitly informs about the imperial workshops for court needs situated at Lahore Agra Fatehpur Sikri and Ahmedabad The skilled artisans had their training from Persian or Turkistan trainers and then produced higher quality artistic work in local royal karkhanas Akabar s special interests resulted the major transformation in the field of design formerly imported stuffs from abroad could then be made in the royal workshops 40 Mughal clothing was characterized by luxurious styles and was made with muslin silk velvet and brocade Elaborate patterns including dots checks and waves were used with colors from various dyes including cochineal sulfate of iron sulfate of copper and sulfate of antimony were used Further information Mughal clothing Cotton Edit Cotton had the highest share in the textiles including calicos muslins available unbleached and in a variety of colors Cotton contributed a large part of the empire s international Europe trade 41 The production of cotton goods was across India Coarser cotton goods have majored in western sides Gujrat and Punjab and fine cotton goods were renowned of the east of medieval India Bengal emerged as the foremost muslin exporter in the world 42 The Indian subcontinent produced varieties of cotton cloths especially fine muslins between the 16th to 18th centuries The seven explicitly mentioned cloths are khasa Salu Doriya Bafta Dupatta and Panchtoliya named in the exhaustive list of cotton cloths in Ain i Akbari 43 Fine muslins Edit In 1586 Ralph Fitch remarked that in Sonargaon just fifteen miles east of Dhaka there is the best and finest cloth made of cotton that is in all India Remarks of Ralph Fitch consultant for the British East India Company 44 Khasa 45 Tansukh 46 47 Nainsook Chautar 48 49 and types of Mulmul Sarkar ali Sarbati Tarindam 50 51 52 53 Further information Mulmul Other cotton materials Edit Abu l Fazl specifies the cotton fabrics of Khandesh in Ain i Akbari He refers three cotton varieties in which Abasteh is the fine cotton Sarisaf and Bhiraun were ordinary 54 55 He also appreciated the Chautar and Khasa of Saharanpur 56 The calicos of Calicut muslins of Dhaka Chintz of Machilipatnam and Baftas of Baroch and Cambay cotton piece goods and cloth of gold of Burhanpur Surat and Vadodara were famous 57 42 Silk Edit Silk and wool was also significant but not in comparison to cotton For selected silk the raw materials were also imported from china 42 Silk weaving was an important industry in Lahore Agra and Gujrat Wool Edit Wool was limited to the particular areas such as Kashmir and Punjab Shawls and carpets Edit Shawl Edit Shawl an article of loose clothing was among the symbol of Mughal royalty The Mughals improved not only the production but also the techniques of the craft of shawl making in Kashmir The number of looms was grown to 40000 Royal workshops karkhanas introduced new colors and patterns enhanced the shawl industry which earned wealth and prosperity for Kashmir 58 Mughal carpets Edit Mughal carpets were a blend of Persian and Indian artistry They were uniquely designed with scenic landscapes floral and animal patterns Kashmir was producing the finest wool and silk carpets and rugs including prayer rugs Sometimes the knot density in these rugs was so fine and tight as 300 knots per square centimeter Carpet weaving was renowned in Agra Lahore and Fatehpur Sikri The Girdler s carpet is one of the best documented examples of Mughul carpets 59 60 Brocade and Embroidery Edit Mughals admired Zardozi work on their costumes this supported Karkhanas Mughal ladies favorite were embellished clothes with brocade and various embroidery There were a variety of options such as Kantha Kimkhwab Chickankari kashida phulkari etc 61 62 The city of Amritsar was one of several centers of fine embroidery in the Punjab 63 Painting workshops Edit There were exclusive workshops maintained for paintings also 64 Further information Mughal paintingWages EditWages were paid to artisans and the unskilled labor on a daily basis and only regular employees whether craftsmen or domestic servants received their pay monthly The wages of skilled workers were notedly more in the Imperial karkhanas As described in the Ain i Akbari c 1595 which is an official account of the Mughal Empire Abu l Fazl ibn Mubarak the grand vizier of the Mughal emperor Akbar and author of the Akbarnama explained the detailed wages for all such categories and also stated invariably in copper coins when daily rates are quoted 4 End EditIt is important to observe that of this vast tract of country a large portion is extremely fertile the large kingdom of Bengale Bengal for instance surpassing Egypt itself not only in the production of rice corn and other necessaries of life but of innumerable articles of commerce which are not cultivated in Egypt such as silks cotton and indigo There are also many parts of the Indies where the population is sufficiently abundant and the land pretty well tilled and where the artisan although naturally indolent is yet compelled by necessity or otherwise to employ himself in manufacturing carpets brocades embroideries gold and silver cloths and the various sorts of silk and cotton goods which are used in the country or exported abroad It should not escape notice that gold and silver after circulating in every other quarter of the globe come at length to be swallowed up lost in some measure in Hindustan Bernier s description of both agriculture and craft production The rise succession despotism Edit The Karkhanas was one of the significant revenue making establishments of Mughals Textiles of India flourished under the Mughal Empire Textiles became the largest manufacturing industry then 65 The emperors acquired lot of wealth in trade but the artisans and peasants condition was not improving All profits were for the governmental bodies 66 The fall Edit Luke Scrafton resident for the East India Company at the capital of Bengal in 1758 declared that until the invasion of Nader Shah in 1739 there was scarce a better administered government in the world The manufactures commerce and agriculture flourished exceedingly and none felt the hand of the oppression but those who were dangerous by their wealth or power Luke Scrafton Reflections on the Government of Indostan London 1770 67 The fall of Karkhanas correlated with the fall of the Mughals has many reasons Still major were the successive ruling and changes in administration and corruption at various levels of hierarchy The corruption has risen since the reign of Jahangir 68 They were relatively weak thus government affairs went into the hands of the unscrupulous ministers They maintained a large number of servants slaves horses elephants etc Bernier wrote about the Mughal tyranny and made the prophecy of the decline of the Mughal Empire but Bernier could not visualize that the worst is yet to come and the British will be the next masters of the wealthiest part of the globe 69 70 Gallery Edit Emperor Farrukhsiyar Bestows a Jewel on a Nobleman Sir Nawab Khwaja Salimullah was a zamindar with the title of Nawab Late 17th century portrait of Firuz Jang Khan ruler of Bijapur Late 19th century Costume of India Moguls picture depicting Mogul woman upper left Mogul Emperor Farrukhsiyar center died 1719 and Emperor Humayun upper right died in 1556 Vizier Qamar ud Din circa 1735 Portrait of Mogul father with his children in Delhi Shepherd amp Robertson circa 1863 Mughal soldier 19th century Mughal officer 17th century Officer of the Mughal Army with large Matchlock Zulfikar a Mughal sword Ain i Akbari weaponry Prince Dara Shikuh s sword and scabbard number 8 at the V amp A Museum in London Ceremonial Mace chob Dhal shield North India Mughal period 17th century steel gold silk leather Royal Ontario Museum DSC04543 Idealized Portrait of the Mughal Empress Nur Jahan 1577 1645 LACMA M 81 271 7 Nur Jahan with her servants A woman in fine Bengali muslin Jama coat worn during Mughal period 17th century The Metropolitan Museum of ArtSee also EditDelhi Sultanate was an Islamic empire based in Delhi that stretched over large parts of the Indian subcontinent for 320 years 1206 1526 Akbar was the third Mughal emperor who reigned from 1556 to 1605 Abu l Fazl ibn Mubarak was the grand vizier of the Mughal emperor Akbar and author of the Akbarnama the official history of Akbar s reign in three volumes the third volume is known as the Ain i Akbari and a Persian translation of the Bible Fathullah Shirazi was a Persian Indian polymath a scholar Islamic jurist finance minister mechanical engineer inventor mathematician astronomer physician philosopher and artist who worked for Akbar ruler of the Mughal Empire Ain i Akbari a 16th century detailed document recording the administration of the Mughal Empire under Emperor Akbar written by his court historian Abu l Fazl in the Persian language Mughal clothing refers to clothing developed by the Mughals in the 16th 17th and 18th centuries throughout the extent of their empire in the Indian subcontinent Mughal Empire was an early modern empire in South Asia Noble Nobility is a social class normally ranked immediately below royalty and found in some societies that have a formal aristocracy Zamindar in the Indian subcontinent was an autonomous or semiautonomous ruler of a state who accepted the suzerainty of the Emperor of Hindustan Mansabdar was a military unit within the administrative system of the Mughal Empire introduced by Akbar Mughal weapons significantly evolved during the ruling periods of Babur Akbar Aurangzeb and Tipu Sultan Mughal artillery included a variety of cannons rockets and mines employed by the Mughal Empire Muslin a wide range of superfine delicate and sheer fabrics Bafta cloth a kind of calico produced in Bharuch formerly known as Broach Girdler s carpetReferences Edit Saxena Rajendra Kumar 2002 Karkhanas of the Mughal Zamindars A Study in the Economic Development of 18th Century Rajputana Publication Scheme pp 69 70 63 ISBN 978 81 86782 75 0 a b c Mukherjee Soma 2001 Royal Mughal Ladies and Their Contributions Gyan Books p 86 ISBN 978 81 212 0760 7 Verma Tripta 1994 Karkhanas Under the Mughals from Akbar to Aurangzeb A Study in Economic Development Pragati Publications p 34 ISBN 978 81 7307 021 1 a b c d Raychaudhuri Tapan Habib Irfan Kumar Dharma Habib Professor Emeritus History Irfan Desai Meghnad 1982 The Cambridge Economic History of India Volume 1 C 1200 c 1750 CUP Archive p 180 ISBN 978 0 521 22692 9 Young India Navajivan Publishing House 1929 p 303 Saxena Rajendra Kumar 2002 Karkhanas of the Mughal Zamindars A Study in the Economic Development of 18th Century Rajputana Publication Scheme pp 16 20 159 ISBN 978 81 86782 75 0 Khan Sumbul Halim 2015 Art and Craft Workshops Under the Mughals A Study of Jaipur Karkhanas Primus Books ISBN 978 93 84082 30 7 a b c d e Seth Vijay K 2017 09 29 The Story of Indian Manufacturing Encounters with the Mughal and British Empires 1498 1947 Springer p 50 ISBN 978 981 10 5574 4 Khan Hussain Ahmad 2014 12 19 Artisans Sufis Shrines Colonial Architecture in Nineteenth Century Punjab Bloomsbury Publishing p 18 ISBN 978 1 78673 946 9 a b Gupta Versha 2018 07 27 Botanical Culture of Mughal India Ad 1526 1707 Partridge Publishing ISBN 978 1 5437 0336 8 The Mughal karkhana were more extensive establishments compared to their counterparts in the Sultanate period They included administrative departments Artisans Sufis Shrines Colonial Architecture in Page 18 Hussain Ahmad Khan 2014 State and Society Quarterly Journal of the Indian Institute for Regional Development Studies The Institute 1986 p 18 Malik Dr Malti 1943 History of India New Saraswati House India Pvt Ltd p 187 ISBN 978 81 7335 498 4 historical records to establish the fact that the best quality steel used by Greek and Hellenistic monarchies was imported from India During Mughal rule due to the existence of a vast army and increase in extent of urbanization the demand for iron for making weapons manufacturing the Mughal state had big manufacturing units which have been described by historians as royal karkhanas factories Ascent and Decline of Native and Colonial Trading Vijay K Seth 2019 a b c KHAN SUMBUL HALIM 1991 Karkhanas of a Mughal Nobleevidence from the Amber Jaipur Records Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 52 432 438 ISSN 2249 1937 JSTOR 44142638 a b c Bernier described in 1666 what he saw in the palace at Delhi in the following terms Large halls are seen in many places called Karkkanas or workshop for the artisans In one hall embroiderers are employed superintended by a master in another you see goldsmiths in a third painters in a fifth tailors etc in a sixth manufacturers of silk brocades and fine muslins Indian Cotton Textile Industry BY M P GANDHI M A F R Econ S F S S 1 Indian Journals www indianjournals com Retrieved 2021 01 06 Nijjar Bakhshish Singh 1968 Panjab Under the Great Mughals 1526 1707 Thacker p 111 ISBN 978 0 8426 0127 6 There were also the persons having royal origins were taken Khan i Saman Head of the royal household and the royal karkhanas or buyutats workshops his gradual Central Administration ascendancy into The only lim ministers and officers at the centre though not as imits on the autocracy of the king were the nobility and portant as the above clarification needed General Studies History 4 Upsc Page B 93books google co in books Reddy 2005 The Ain separately describes 26 of the karkhanas and indirectly or briefly refers to 10 others making a total of 36 Classified List of Karkhanas The Mughal karkhanas as enumerated in the Zawabit Karkhanas Under the Mughals from Akbar to Aurangzeb A Page 20books google co in books Tripta Verma 1994 a b Verma Tripta 1994 Karkhanas Under the Mughals from Akbar to Aurangzeb A Study in Economic Development Pragati Publications p 18 ISBN 978 81 7307 021 1 THE A kind of account which the author of the Zubdatu l kawanin says is the same as a monthly Jama kharch ارسته که عبارت از جمع خرچ ماهواري و مجمل وازخام است Memoirs on the History Folk lore and Distribution of the Page 11books google co in books Sir Henry Miers Elliot John Beames 1869 Wilson Horace Hayman 1855 A Glossary of Judicial and Revenue Terms And of Useful Words Occurring in Official Documents Relating to the Administration of the Government of British India from the Arabic Persian Hindustani Sanskrit Hindi Bengali Uriya Marathi Guazrathi Telugu Karnata Tamil Malayalam and Other Languages W H Allen and Company p 229 Congress Indian History 1994 Proceedings Indian History Congress p 333 Development of Record rsad artandculture rajasthan gov in Retrieved 2021 01 06 Arhsatta Karkhanejat in the Jaipur Section of RSAB contain tozi records on separate sheets on the different state workshop cum warehouses the commodities manufactured and the wages given to the workers there Politics of Patronage and Protest The State Society and Page 252 Nandita Prasad Sahai 2006 Topkhana Hazuri meaning arms store Building Jaipur The Making of an Indian City Page 49 Vibhuti Chakrabarti Vibhuti Sachdev Giles Henry Rupert Tillotson 2002 Saxena Rajendra Kumar 2002 Karkhanas of the Mughal Zamindars A Study in the Economic Development of 18th Century Rajputana Publication Scheme pp 135 136 ISBN 978 81 86782 75 0 Shutarkhana i e department of camel corps which deals with the maintenance of camels and their supply to the army Indica Volumes 22 24 Page 143books google co in books 1985 Verma Tripta 1994 Karkhanas Under the Mughals from Akbar to Aurangzeb A Study in Economic Development Pragati Publications p 21 ISBN 978 81 7307 021 1 Sharma Sri Ram 1951 Mughal Government and Administration Hind Kitabs p 61 a b Sumit 2012 An Eighteenth Century Survey of Jaipur Chhapakhana Based on Jaipur Karkhanajat Records Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 73 421 430 ISSN 2249 1937 JSTOR 44156233 Farrash khana furniture tents and carpets Page 174 Karkhanas Under the Mughals from Akbar to Aurangzeb A books google co in books Tripta Verma 1994 Chandra Satish 2004 Medieval India From Sultanat to the Mughals Delhi Sultanat 1206 1526 Part One Har Anand Publications p 140 ISBN 978 81 241 1064 5 Srivastava M P 1995 The Mughal Administration Chugh Publications p 121 ISBN 978 81 85613 97 0 Ibn Mubarak Abu l Faḍl 1873 The Ain i Akbari 1 Seth Vijay K 2019 02 05 Ascent and Decline of Native and Colonial Trading Tale of Four Indian Cities SAGE Publications India ISBN 978 93 5328 085 7 Mubarak Abu al Faz l ibn 1873 The Ain I Akbari Asiatic Society of Bengal Verma Tripta 1994 Karkhanas Under the Mughals from Akbar to Aurangzeb A Study in Economic Development Pragati Publications pp 109 68 2 ISBN 978 81 7307 021 1 A further refinement took into account the colours of which thirty five are listed in the order of precedence Abul Fazl further records that imperial workshops had been set up in the cities of Lahore Agra Fatehpur Sikri and Ahmedabad where the best of the local craftsmen were requisitioned to supply the needs of the court 2 Persian masters were brought in to teach improved techniques It is questionable whether the Hindu weaver had much to learn from Persia in this traditional field of cotton and silk weaving What does seem likely is that while the shawl industry which Akbar improved may itself have been a foreign import to Kashmir by Muslim craftsmen from Turkistan as late as the 15th century 3 Whatever the impact of the Persian intervention in the technical field and Ain i Akbari states that many categories of 81 textile formerly imported from abroad could then be made in the royal workshops there can be no doubt that by far the greatest transformation took place in the field of design Page 80 81 2 Karl J Schmidt 2015 An Atlas and Survey of South Asian History page 100 Routledge a b c Raychaudhuri Tapan Habib Irfan Kumar Dharma Habib Professor Emeritus History Irfan Desai Meghnad 1982 The Cambridge Economic History of India Volume 1 C 1200 c 1750 CUP Archive pp 271 270 269 ISBN 978 0 521 22692 9 Sangar S P 1965 FEMALE COSTUMES IN THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES as reflected in the contemporary Hindi literature Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 27 243 247 ISSN 2249 1937 JSTOR 44140630 Eaton Richard M 1996 07 31 The Rise of Islam and the Bengal Frontier 1204 1760 University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 20507 9 Museum Maharaja Sawai Man Singh II Museum Maharaja of Jaipur 1979 Textiles and Costumes from the Maharaja Sawai Man Singh II Museum Maharaja Sawai Man Singh II Museum Trust pp XII Khadi Gramodyog Khadi amp Village Industries Commission 2001 p 88 Congress Indian History 1967 Proceedings Indian History Congress p 243 Burnell Arthur Coke 2017 05 15 The Voyage of John Huyghen van Linschoten to the East Indies From the Old English Translation of 1598 The First Book containing his Description of the East In Two Volumes Volume I Taylor amp Francis p 60 ISBN 978 1 317 01231 3 Sangar Pramod 1993 Growth of the English Trade Under the Mughals ABS Publications p 171 ISBN 978 81 7072 044 7 Sinha Narendra Krishna 1961 The Economic History of Bengal from Plassey to the Permanent Settlement Firma K L Mukhopadhyay p 177 Cotton clothes 1 Khasa per piece than 3 rupiya to 15 muhr 2 Chautar per piece 2 rupiya to 9 muhr 3 Malmal per piece 4 rupiya 4 Tansukh per piece 4 rupiya to 5 muhr Page 87 https ir nbu ac in bitstream 123456789 2751 13 13 chapter 205 pdf Chaudhury Sushil 2020 03 10 Spinning Yarns Bengal Textile Industry in the Backdrop of John Taylor s Report on Dacca Cloth Production 1801 Routledge ISBN 978 1 000 07920 3 Bhattacharya Ranjit Kumar Chakrabarti S B 2002 Indian Artisans Social Institutions and Cultural Values Anthropological Survey of India Government of India Ministry of Culture Youth Affairs and Sports Department of Culture p 87 ISBN 978 81 85579 56 6 Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency Khandesh Printed at the Government Central Press 1880 p 248 kinds of cloth Ain i Akbari mentions the cotton products of Khandesh and the stuffs called sarisaf and Bhiram coming from Dharangam Abul Fazl says that His Majesty encouraged the production of Kashmir shawls He started their History of India and Pakistan Volume 2 Page 683 Muhammad Tariq Awan 1991 Abul Fazl in his Ain i Akbari refers to the cotton fabrics of Khandesh A Social Cultural and Economic History of India Page 98books google co in books Pran Nath Chopra Baij Nath Puri Manmath Nath Das 1974 A Social Cultural and Economic History o Sw5uAAAAMAAJ hl en amp gbpv 1 amp bsq Prakash Om 1998 06 28 European Commercial Enterprise in Pre Colonial India Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 25758 9 Ashfaque Farzana 2009 Shawl and Carpet Industry in Kashmir Under the Mughals Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 70 285 296 ISSN 2249 1937 JSTOR 44147675 Bell James Elton Bell Frances Jean 2007 Sir Robert Bell and His Early Virginia Colony Descendants A Compilation of 16th 17th and 18th Century English and Scottish Families with the Surname Bell Beale Le Bel Et Al Wheatmark Inc p 95 ISBN 978 1 58736 747 2 Irwin John 1962 The Girdlers Carpet order of the Court of Girdlers Company Mukherjee Soma 2001 Royal Mughal Ladies and Their Contributions Gyan Books p 10 ISBN 978 81 212 0760 7 Indian Journal of Social Research Department of Sociology J V College 2001 p 183 Dusenbury Mary M Bier Carol 2004 Flowers Dragons amp Pine Trees Asian Textiles in the Spencer Museum of Art Hudson Hills p 70 ISBN 978 1 55595 238 9 Beach Milo Cleveland 1987 Early Mughal Painting Harvard University Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 674 22185 7 Schmidt Karl J 2015 05 20 An Atlas and Survey of South Asian History Routledge p 100 ISBN 978 1 317 47681 8 The nobles maintained households with a large number of wives concubines slaves and domestic servants The Mughal emperor s own harem consisted of 5 000 females divided into two categories a mahim bano that is Ascent and Decline of Native and Colonial Trading Tale of books google co in books Vijay K Seth 2019 part2 16 www columbia edu Retrieved 2021 01 08 1 Luke Scrafton Reflections on the Government of Indostan London 1770 2 Sidney J Owen The Fall of the Moghul Empire London 1912 pp 1 4 3 Bernier did make the prophecy of the decline of the Mughal Empire but he never visualized that the English would be the master of the richest part of the globe by The Quarterly Review of Historical Studies Volume 44 Page 47 2004 In the seventeenth century with the permission of Mughal emperors East India company established trade posts at various places in India Page 27 India in Pictures Page 27 Lee Engfer 2002 4 Look up क रख न in Wiktionary the free dictionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mughal Karkhanas amp oldid 1084682274, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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