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Singranatore family

The Singranatore family (Bengali: সিংড়ানাটোর পরিবার) is the consanguineous name given to a noble family in Rajshahi of landed aristocracy in erstwhile East Bengal (present day Bangladesh) and West Bengal that were prominent in the nineteenth century till the fall of the monarchy in India by Royal Assent in 1947 and subsequently abolished by the newly formed democratic Government of East Pakistan in 1950 by the State Acquisition Act.

Singrahnator
সিংড়ানাটোর
Parent familyMughal Dynasty
CountryBengal
Current regionNorth Bengal
Place of originBritish Empire
Founded1887
FounderMirza Zahiruddin Shah
MembersJalaluddin Mirza
Mirza Zafar
Connected familiesMirzas of Hulhulia,
Singra Zamindari
Sardars of Natore
Chowdhurys of Atrai
Zamindars of Kharui
Suhrawardy family
DistinctionsAristocracy
TraditionsSunni Islam
HeirloomsMullah Bari Palace,
Mirza Mahal,
Gole Afroz College,
Rahmat Iqbal College

The family gets the name from their former estates and land holdings in the Upazila (sub-districts or counties) of Singra and Natore. They held significant influence in local politics and administration in the area and founded the first colleges. Serving as vassals to the Maharajas of Natore and the Maharajas of Dighapatia, the clan also produced many politicians and influentials.[1]

History edit

During the times of the Middle kingdoms of India rent was called rajasva (the King's share). The king's men used to collect rajasva from his subjects according to law, and none could be evicted if rajasva was paid regularly. Later, the Hindu 'rajasva' became 'jama' during Muslim rule of the Mughal Empire when zamindars belonged to the nobility when the Emperor granted them mansabs (military ranks) and their ancestral domains were treated as jagirs (feudal estates).[2][3][4]

Origins edit

Singranatore Zamindari
1887–1951
StatusZamindars of Natore
CapitalSingra, Natore
Common languagesEnglish, Urdu, Bangla
Religion
Islam
Zamindar Sahib 
History 
• Established
1887
• Disestablished
1951

The Mughals introduced new officials and courtiers named Zaamindaars (Persian زمین Zamīn, "earth/land", and the common suffix دار -dār, "-holder") to divert the revenue back to the Imperial Capital at Delhi.[5] Although zamindaris were allowed to be held hereditarily, the holders were not considered to be the proprietors of their estates.[6] Unlike the autonomous or frontier chiefs, the hereditary status of the zamindar class was circumscribed by the Mughal Emperors, and the heir depended to a certain extent on the pleasure of the sovereign.[7]

Heirs were set by descent or at times adoption by religious laws.[8] Under the British Empire, the zamindars were to be subordinate to The Crown and not act as hereditary lords, but at times family politics was at the heart of naming an heir.[9] At times, a cousin could be named an heir with closer family relatives present; a lawfully wedded wife could inherit the zamindari if the ruling zamindar named her as an heir.[10][11]

British rule edit

 
Bengal around the early 1900s

It was during the British rule, that the Zamindars of Bengal and Bihar became equivalents of the landed aristocracy.[12] Specifically in the laws of 1793, the zamindars were created absolute owners of the estates, and not just representatives of the sovereign rulers[13][14] It was also during the conquest of Bengal, that the British settlers gained power in India. In 1612, Sir Thomas Roe was instructed by King James I to visit the Mughal Emperor to arrange for a commercial treaty which would give the Company exclusive rights to reside and build factories in Surat and other areas. The British were given the ability to trade in the Indian Empire by Emperor Jahangir.

In 1757, after the Battle of Plassey, the rule of the Nawabs (governor or nobleman) were undermined by the British and later they received the diwani (Vice Royalty) from the Nawabs. In effect, the British now directly controlled Bengal and most of its zamindars who were previously under the Nawabs and the Imperial Mughal rule. The Seven Years' War (1756–1763) saw the transformation of events of 1757 to 1764 where European forces were in a struggle to oust the Indian rulers and establish rule in Bengal, that resulted in direct rule over all of India.

In 1764, the Battle of Buxar, saw the loss of Bengal from the Mughals, as Emperor Shah Alam II became a pensioner of the British after a loss. With him, Nawab Shuja-ud-Daula, the Ruler of Awadh was restored, while Nawab Mir Qasim, the Ruler of Bengal lost his control on Bengal. Murshid Quli Jafar Khan, the Nawab of Bengal governed Bengal, through his feudal chiefs, the Zamindars of Bengal who dominated all the villages in the region.[15]

Zamindari influence in Bengal edit

This European conquest of The Kingdom of Bengal would later instill the Company rule in India.[16] This would, later on, turn into the British Empire, which effectively began in 1757 after the Battle of Plassey, lasted until 1858, when, following the events of the Indian Rebellion of 1857. Under the Government of India Act 1858, the British Crown assumed direct administration of India in the new British Raj that would rule all of India (present-day India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal and Burma). While the Battle of Plassey secured a foothold for the British East India Company in the rich province of Bengal only, the Battle of Buxar is really the battle that secured its political ascendancy in India. The Viceroyalty and later direct Royal British Rule over Bengal started as the British being given the Jemmidarship (British diminutive of the word zamindari) by the Rulers of Bengal. It read:[17]

October 31st, 1698. The Prince having given us the three towns adjacent to our Settlement, viz. De Calcutta, Chutanutte, and Gobinpore, or more properly may be said the Jemmidarship of the said towns, paying the said Rent to the King as the Jemidars have successively done, and at the same time ordering the Zamindar of the said towns to make over their Right and Title to the English upon their paying to the Jemidar(s) One thousand Rupees for the same, it was agreed that money should be paid, being the best Money that ever was spent for so great a Privilege; but the Jemmidar(s) making a great Noise, being unwilling to part with their country and finding them to continue in their averseness, notwithstanding the Prince had an officer upon them to bring them to a Compliance, it is agreed that 1,500 Rupees be paid them, provided they will relinquish their title to the said towns, and give it under their Hands in Writing, that they have made over the same to the Right Honourable Company. Ext of Consns. at Chuttanutte, the 29th December (Printed for Parliament in 1788).

They were one of the few Muslim zamindars in Bengal, at a time when the territories were mainly ruled by the Hindu raj families (Royal families) such as the Maharajas of Dighapatia Raj (who were very close to the Singranatore family as well, the Mullahbari palatial complex houses various artefacts from the Hindu rajas). Structures have been deemed of historic significance by the government. The first ever trip of an elected Head of State in the history of the region was when former military ruler and President Lt General Hussain Muhammad Ershad in 1986 when he was invited by MM Rahmatullah.

During the Mughal era (specifically during the rule of Emperor Aurangzeb), the Mansabdari system, the military nobility evolved into the aristocratic landed zamindari system. The former, which was a military-type grading of all imperial officials of the Mughal Empire were courtiers who governed the empire and commanded its armies in the emperor's name. Mansabs were of three classes, 7,000 to 3,000 were called Amir-i-Azam or "the greater nobles"; 2,500 to 500 were called Amirs or nobles and 400 to 20 were called Mansabdars or officers. It is from the world Amir that the family title came to be. The word Mīrzā is derived from the Persian term ‘Amīrzāde which literally means "child of the 'Amīr" or "child of the ruler" in Persia‘Amīrzād in turn consists of the Arabic title ‘Amīr (engl. Emir), meaning "commander", and the Persian suffix -zād, meaning "birth" or "lineage". Due to vowel harmony in Turkic languages, the alternative pronunciation Morza (plural morzalar; derived from the Persian word) is also used.[18]

Though the mansabdars were usually aristocrats, they did not form a feudal aristocracy, for neither the offices nor the estates that supported them were hereditary. However, senior mansabdars were awarded a jagir (personal fief) rather than a salary. Rates of remuneration, which included both the mansabdar's salary and so much per Sowar (सवार,ਸਵਾਰ; meaning a cavalry troop), were matched by jagirs affording a similar aggregate yield. If their specified yield came to more, the surplus was due to the imperial treasury; if the jagirdar (or zamindar) extracted more than the specified yield, he kept it.

Descended from former mansabdars as hereditary Mirzas, they are a cadet branch of the Imperial family of India, descended from a perso-Turkic dynasty. They moved after the imperial family was abolished in 1858 following the first Indian war of independence, to Bengal (where around 70 more descendants moved)[19] possibly because Calcutta in Bengal was made the new capital (1858–1912) of the Empire.

Natore Raj and zamindari in Natore edit

In 1706 Raja Ramjivan Ray established his capital called "Nator" by filling the Chalan Beel. Nator meant 'stop the boat' as Nao meant boat and tharo meant stop. Natore was the headquarters of the British district of Rajshahi from 1769 to 1825 during colonial rule. From, Between 1786 and 1790, the new Governor-General Lord Cornwallis and Sir John Shore (later Governor-General) entered a heated debate over whether or not to introduce a permanent settlement with the zamindars. Shore argued that the native zamindars would not trust the permanent settlement to be permanent, and that it would take time before they realised it was genuine. Cornwallis believed that they would immediately accept it and begin investing in improving their land. In 1790 the Court of Directors issued a ten-year (Decennial) settlement to the zamindars, which was made permanent in 1800. By the Permanent Settlement Act of 1793 (Bengali: চিরস্থায়ী বন্দোবস্ত), the Zamindars class became more powerful than they were in the Mughal period. This agreement between the East India Company and Bengali lords to fix revenues to be raised from land, with far-reaching consequences for both agricultural methods and productivity in the entire Empire and the political realities of the Indian countryside. It was concluded in 1793, by the Company administration headed by Charles, Earl Cornwallis. It formed one part of a larger body of legislation enacted known as the Cornwallis Code. In 1825 the headquarters were moved to Rajshahi and in 1829 Natore became a subdivision of Rajshahi district. In 1845 Natore Mahukuma was established. Natore town became a Municipality in 1869. The Bengal Tenancy Act of 1885 was enacted. With the increase of population and rise of prices of agricultural produce in the nineteenth century, demand for land increased. As a result, zamindars used to increase rents and land revenues. The Ryots (tenants) refused to accept the zamindari right to enhance rent beyond the customary rates. Zamindars, as absolute lords of the lands were not prepared to recognise such customary rights.

1885 Bengal tenancy laws edit

Another factor that lead to the class discontent was the emergence of a landed intermediate class of lesser nobles (Chowdhurys and Taluqdars), whose existence contrary to the rules of the Permanent Settlement. The madhyasvatvas or intermediate interests acquired their rights by purchase, and not inheritance. According to the law, these madhyasvatvas did not exist. The law courts were giving conflicting judgements as regards the rights and liabilities of the intermediate classes and also of the peasants. The government tried to accommodate this class by enacting the Rent Act in 1859. To improve relations between landlord and tenant, a Rent Commission was set up in 1880. By the recommendations and observations of the Rent Commission, the Bengal Legislative Council enacted Act III of 1885 which defined rights and obligations of intermediate tenancies and raiyati tenancies. In 1905, Bengal was partitioned and then the Government of India Act of 1919 and 1935 were enacted. Finally in 1947, Bengal was further partitioned once again before the Indian Independence Act 1947 was enacted that separated the old Indian Empire into the Dominion of Pakistan and the Dominion of India in the month of August of the same year.

Abolition edit

The East Bengal State Acquisition and Tenancy Act of 1950 was passed by the newly formed Democratic Government of the Dominion of Pakistan for its eastern provinces (East Bengal, present day Bangladesh). The bill was drafted on 31 March 1948 during the after the fall of the British Monarchy in India, and passed on 16 May 1951. Most of the princely states in the western part of empire (Pakistan) merged into the Province of West Pakistan on 14 October 1955 and the new nation was declared a republic within a year although some of the frontier states continued to be administered as separate units. During the same period 1948–1950, some of the remaining princely states joined India, and the Indian zamindaris were also abolished.

In return for surrendering the government of their states in the case of Princes, and estates in the case of Zamindars, together with their revenues and military forces, the former ruling princes were guaranteed their hereditary styles and titles, certain privileges of rank and honour, as well as privy purses to cover the living expenses of themselves and their families. However, this too was abolished in 1956. In 1971, the styles and titles enjoyed by the former ruling families ceased to be officially recognised by the Government of Pakistan in January 1972. The previous year East province of Pakistan (East Pakistan) became independent as the sovereign state of the People's Republic of Bangladesh. Pakistan was renamed the Islamic Republic of Pakistan where most of the formerly ruling families continued to exercise significant influence and considerable political and economic power. After a year-long battle in Republic of India, an amendment to the Constitution at the end of 1971 abolished the privy purses, guaranteed by the Indian Constitution and eliminated the princely order and the zamindari system itself.

In 1984, Natore subdivision was turned into a district in independent Bangladesh.

British media sometimes accorded their zamindar status as 'Princes'. After the War of 1971, they held considerable alliances with ruling presidents, military dictators and prime ministers, all the while refraining from elected public offices. The family still owns most of the lands as private estates, and taxes the inhabitants on produce from the lands, which in turn pays for the upkeep of the land holdings, buildings, etc. Most of the residences used by the family lies mostly uninhabited, yet under the ownership of the family.

Philanthropy edit

 
Goleafroz College

The family set the Gole Afroz College in the provincial government of East Pakistan and it became and still stands as the only public college of Singra. It is one of the five government colleges in the Natore District, and the third oldest, established before the War of 1971 and the Independence of Bangladesh.[20] Although it was a private college of the aristocratic Singranatore family, in 1986, the then President and former military ruler, HM Ershad announced that it would be made into a public college. Since then it is under the Ministry of Education of the Government of Bangladesh.[21] It is named after Begum Gole Afroz, a member of the Singranatore family of Rajshahi, the daughter of Begum GulBadan and Shamezuddin Ahmed. She was a granddaughter of Mirza Jalaluddin, the last zamindar of Natore and the wife of MM Rahmatullah.[22]

Buildings and estates edit

Notables members edit

See also edit

Sources edit

  1. ^ Syed Ismail Ashraf (14 March 2013). "Legacy of Bengali zamindars". Daily Sun. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  2. ^ "Mughal Society: Zamindars". Historytuition.com. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  3. ^ Metcalf 1984, p. 269
  4. ^ "An account of the Ruling Classes of Mughal Empire". Preservearticles.com. 30 October 2011. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  5. ^ Hansen & Curtis 2008, p. 461
  6. ^ "Mughal Zamindars". Historytution.com. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  7. ^ Islam, Sirajul; Akhter, Shirin (2012). "Zamindar". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
  8. ^ Presidency 1888, p. 385
  9. ^ McLane 2002, p. 223
  10. ^ Higgingbotham 1872, p. 209
  11. ^ Monnier 1902, p. 5498
  12. ^ Ramchandani 2000, p. 302
  13. ^ Quayum, Abdul (2012). "East Bengal State Acquisition and Tenancy Act 1950". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
  14. ^ Islam, Sirajul (2012). "Rent". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
  15. ^ Markovits 2002, p. 301
  16. ^ Report 1804, p. 155
  17. ^ Burnell & Yule 1903, p. 980
  18. ^ Mirza in Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged HarperCollins Publishers
  19. ^ "Mughal Descendants". Fravahr.org. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  20. ^ Government Colleges of Bangladesh Bangladesh Daily Needs 21 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ GuleAfrozCollege Prathista Porichiti 1996 page 29
  22. ^ GuleAfrozCollege Prathista Porichiti 1996 page 30

Bibliography edit

References edit

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Singra and Natore Zamindari family at Genealogical Gleanings of the Indian Princely States
  • The '' – Official website of the Sub-district Welfare Council of Singra.

singranatore, family, this, article, focuses, noble, family, rajshahi, information, places, singra, natore, division, bangladesh, landholdings, from, which, family, takes, name, singra, natore, bengali, পর, consanguineous, name, given, noble, family, rajshahi,. This article focuses on the noble family in Rajshahi for information on the places Singra and Natore in the division of Bangladesh the landholdings from which the family takes its name see Singra and Natore The Singranatore family Bengali স ড ন ট র পর ব র is the consanguineous name given to a noble family in Rajshahi of landed aristocracy in erstwhile East Bengal present day Bangladesh and West Bengal that were prominent in the nineteenth century till the fall of the monarchy in India by Royal Assent in 1947 and subsequently abolished by the newly formed democratic Government of East Pakistan in 1950 by the State Acquisition Act Singrahnatorস ড ন ট রParent familyMughal DynastyCountryBengalCurrent regionNorth BengalPlace of originBritish EmpireFounded1887FounderMirza Zahiruddin ShahMembersJalaluddin MirzaMirza ZafarConnected familiesMirzas of Hulhulia Singra Zamindari Sardars of Natore Chowdhurys of Atrai Zamindars of Kharui Suhrawardy familyDistinctionsAristocracyTraditionsSunni IslamHeirloomsMullah Bari Palace Mirza Mahal Gole Afroz College Rahmat Iqbal CollegeThe family gets the name from their former estates and land holdings in the Upazila sub districts or counties of Singra and Natore They held significant influence in local politics and administration in the area and founded the first colleges Serving as vassals to the Maharajas of Natore and the Maharajas of Dighapatia the clan also produced many politicians and influentials 1 Contents 1 History 2 Origins 3 British rule 3 1 Zamindari influence in Bengal 3 2 Natore Raj and zamindari in Natore 3 3 1885 Bengal tenancy laws 4 Abolition 5 Philanthropy 5 1 Buildings and estates 6 Notables members 7 See also 8 Sources 9 Bibliography 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory editMain articles Zamindar Zamindars of Bengal and Zamindars of Natore This section may contain material not related to the topic of the article Please help improve this section or discuss this issue on the talk page July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message During the times of the Middle kingdoms of India rent was called rajasva the King s share The king s men used to collect rajasva from his subjects according to law and none could be evicted if rajasva was paid regularly Later the Hindu rajasva became jama during Muslim rule of the Mughal Empire when zamindars belonged to the nobility when the Emperor granted them mansabs military ranks and their ancestral domains were treated as jagirs feudal estates 2 3 4 Origins editThis section may contain material not related to the topic of the article Please help improve this section or discuss this issue on the talk page July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Singranatore Zamindari1887 1951StatusZamindars of NatoreCapitalSingra NatoreCommon languagesEnglish Urdu BanglaReligionIslamZamindar Sahib History Established1887 Disestablished1951The Mughals introduced new officials and courtiers named Zaamindaars Persian زمین Zamin earth land and the common suffix دار dar holder to divert the revenue back to the Imperial Capital at Delhi 5 Although zamindaris were allowed to be held hereditarily the holders were not considered to be the proprietors of their estates 6 Unlike the autonomous or frontier chiefs the hereditary status of the zamindar class was circumscribed by the Mughal Emperors and the heir depended to a certain extent on the pleasure of the sovereign 7 Heirs were set by descent or at times adoption by religious laws 8 Under the British Empire the zamindars were to be subordinate to The Crown and not act as hereditary lords but at times family politics was at the heart of naming an heir 9 At times a cousin could be named an heir with closer family relatives present a lawfully wedded wife could inherit the zamindari if the ruling zamindar named her as an heir 10 11 British rule editThis section may contain material not related to the topic of the article Please help improve this section or discuss this issue on the talk page July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Bengal around the early 1900sIt was during the British rule that the Zamindars of Bengal and Bihar became equivalents of the landed aristocracy 12 Specifically in the laws of 1793 the zamindars were created absolute owners of the estates and not just representatives of the sovereign rulers 13 14 It was also during the conquest of Bengal that the British settlers gained power in India In 1612 Sir Thomas Roe was instructed by King James I to visit the Mughal Emperor to arrange for a commercial treaty which would give the Company exclusive rights to reside and build factories in Surat and other areas The British were given the ability to trade in the Indian Empire by Emperor Jahangir In 1757 after the Battle of Plassey the rule of the Nawabs governor or nobleman were undermined by the British and later they received the diwani Vice Royalty from the Nawabs In effect the British now directly controlled Bengal and most of its zamindars who were previously under the Nawabs and the Imperial Mughal rule The Seven Years War 1756 1763 saw the transformation of events of 1757 to 1764 where European forces were in a struggle to oust the Indian rulers and establish rule in Bengal that resulted in direct rule over all of India In 1764 the Battle of Buxar saw the loss of Bengal from the Mughals as Emperor Shah Alam II became a pensioner of the British after a loss With him Nawab Shuja ud Daula the Ruler of Awadh was restored while Nawab Mir Qasim the Ruler of Bengal lost his control on Bengal Murshid Quli Jafar Khan the Nawab of Bengal governed Bengal through his feudal chiefs the Zamindars of Bengal who dominated all the villages in the region 15 Zamindari influence in Bengal edit This European conquest of The Kingdom of Bengal would later instill the Company rule in India 16 This would later on turn into the British Empire which effectively began in 1757 after the Battle of Plassey lasted until 1858 when following the events of the Indian Rebellion of 1857 Under the Government of India Act 1858 the British Crown assumed direct administration of India in the new British Raj that would rule all of India present day India Pakistan Bangladesh Nepal and Burma While the Battle of Plassey secured a foothold for the British East India Company in the rich province of Bengal only the Battle of Buxar is really the battle that secured its political ascendancy in India The Viceroyalty and later direct Royal British Rule over Bengal started as the British being given the Jemmidarship British diminutive of the word zamindari by the Rulers of Bengal It read 17 October 31st 1698 The Prince having given us the three towns adjacent to our Settlement viz De Calcutta Chutanutte and Gobinpore or more properly may be said the Jemmidarship of the said towns paying the said Rent to the King as the Jemidars have successively done and at the same time ordering the Zamindar of the said towns to make over their Right and Title to the English upon their paying to the Jemidar s One thousand Rupees for the same it was agreed that money should be paid being the best Money that ever was spent for so great a Privilege but the Jemmidar s making a great Noise being unwilling to part with their country and finding them to continue in their averseness notwithstanding the Prince had an officer upon them to bring them to a Compliance it is agreed that 1 500 Rupees be paid them provided they will relinquish their title to the said towns and give it under their Hands in Writing that they have made over the same to the Right Honourable Company Ext of Consns at Chuttanutte the 29th December Printed for Parliament in 1788 They were one of the few Muslim zamindars in Bengal at a time when the territories were mainly ruled by the Hindu raj families Royal families such as the Maharajas of Dighapatia Raj who were very close to the Singranatore family as well the Mullahbari palatial complex houses various artefacts from the Hindu rajas Structures have been deemed of historic significance by the government The first ever trip of an elected Head of State in the history of the region was when former military ruler and President Lt General Hussain Muhammad Ershad in 1986 when he was invited by MM Rahmatullah During the Mughal era specifically during the rule of Emperor Aurangzeb the Mansabdari system the military nobility evolved into the aristocratic landed zamindari system The former which was a military type grading of all imperial officials of the Mughal Empire were courtiers who governed the empire and commanded its armies in the emperor s name Mansabs were of three classes 7 000 to 3 000 were called Amir i Azam or the greater nobles 2 500 to 500 were called Amirs or nobles and 400 to 20 were called Mansabdars or officers It is from the world Amir that the family title came to be The word Mirza is derived from the Persian term Amirzade which literally means child of the Amir or child of the ruler in Persia Amirzad in turn consists of the Arabic title Amir engl Emir meaning commander and the Persian suffix zad meaning birth or lineage Due to vowel harmony in Turkic languages the alternative pronunciation Morza plural morzalar derived from the Persian word is also used 18 Though the mansabdars were usually aristocrats they did not form a feudal aristocracy for neither the offices nor the estates that supported them were hereditary However senior mansabdars were awarded a jagir personal fief rather than a salary Rates of remuneration which included both the mansabdar s salary and so much per Sowar सव र ਸਵ ਰ meaning a cavalry troop were matched by jagirs affording a similar aggregate yield If their specified yield came to more the surplus was due to the imperial treasury if the jagirdar or zamindar extracted more than the specified yield he kept it Descended from former mansabdars as hereditary Mirzas they are a cadet branch of the Imperial family of India descended from a perso Turkic dynasty They moved after the imperial family was abolished in 1858 following the first Indian war of independence to Bengal where around 70 more descendants moved 19 possibly because Calcutta in Bengal was made the new capital 1858 1912 of the Empire Natore Raj and zamindari in Natore edit In 1706 Raja Ramjivan Ray established his capital called Nator by filling the Chalan Beel Nator meant stop the boat as Nao meant boat and tharo meant stop Natore was the headquarters of the British district of Rajshahi from 1769 to 1825 during colonial rule From Between 1786 and 1790 the new Governor General Lord Cornwallis and Sir John Shore later Governor General entered a heated debate over whether or not to introduce a permanent settlement with the zamindars Shore argued that the native zamindars would not trust the permanent settlement to be permanent and that it would take time before they realised it was genuine Cornwallis believed that they would immediately accept it and begin investing in improving their land In 1790 the Court of Directors issued a ten year Decennial settlement to the zamindars which was made permanent in 1800 By the Permanent Settlement Act of 1793 Bengali চ রস থ য বন দ বস ত the Zamindars class became more powerful than they were in the Mughal period This agreement between the East India Company and Bengali lords to fix revenues to be raised from land with far reaching consequences for both agricultural methods and productivity in the entire Empire and the political realities of the Indian countryside It was concluded in 1793 by the Company administration headed by Charles Earl Cornwallis It formed one part of a larger body of legislation enacted known as the Cornwallis Code In 1825 the headquarters were moved to Rajshahi and in 1829 Natore became a subdivision of Rajshahi district In 1845 Natore Mahukuma was established Natore town became a Municipality in 1869 The Bengal Tenancy Act of 1885 was enacted With the increase of population and rise of prices of agricultural produce in the nineteenth century demand for land increased As a result zamindars used to increase rents and land revenues The Ryots tenants refused to accept the zamindari right to enhance rent beyond the customary rates Zamindars as absolute lords of the lands were not prepared to recognise such customary rights 1885 Bengal tenancy laws edit Another factor that lead to the class discontent was the emergence of a landed intermediate class of lesser nobles Chowdhurys and Taluqdars whose existence contrary to the rules of the Permanent Settlement The madhyasvatvas or intermediate interests acquired their rights by purchase and not inheritance According to the law these madhyasvatvas did not exist The law courts were giving conflicting judgements as regards the rights and liabilities of the intermediate classes and also of the peasants The government tried to accommodate this class by enacting the Rent Act in 1859 To improve relations between landlord and tenant a Rent Commission was set up in 1880 By the recommendations and observations of the Rent Commission the Bengal Legislative Council enacted Act III of 1885 which defined rights and obligations of intermediate tenancies and raiyati tenancies In 1905 Bengal was partitioned and then the Government of India Act of 1919 and 1935 were enacted Finally in 1947 Bengal was further partitioned once again before the Indian Independence Act 1947 was enacted that separated the old Indian Empire into the Dominion of Pakistan and the Dominion of India in the month of August of the same year Abolition editThis section may contain material not related to the topic of the article Please help improve this section or discuss this issue on the talk page July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The East Bengal State Acquisition and Tenancy Act of 1950 was passed by the newly formed Democratic Government of the Dominion of Pakistan for its eastern provinces East Bengal present day Bangladesh The bill was drafted on 31 March 1948 during the after the fall of the British Monarchy in India and passed on 16 May 1951 Most of the princely states in the western part of empire Pakistan merged into the Province of West Pakistan on 14 October 1955 and the new nation was declared a republic within a year although some of the frontier states continued to be administered as separate units During the same period 1948 1950 some of the remaining princely states joined India and the Indian zamindaris were also abolished In return for surrendering the government of their states in the case of Princes and estates in the case of Zamindars together with their revenues and military forces the former ruling princes were guaranteed their hereditary styles and titles certain privileges of rank and honour as well as privy purses to cover the living expenses of themselves and their families However this too was abolished in 1956 In 1971 the styles and titles enjoyed by the former ruling families ceased to be officially recognised by the Government of Pakistan in January 1972 The previous year East province of Pakistan East Pakistan became independent as the sovereign state of the People s Republic of Bangladesh Pakistan was renamed the Islamic Republic of Pakistan where most of the formerly ruling families continued to exercise significant influence and considerable political and economic power After a year long battle in Republic of India an amendment to the Constitution at the end of 1971 abolished the privy purses guaranteed by the Indian Constitution and eliminated the princely order and the zamindari system itself In 1984 Natore subdivision was turned into a district in independent Bangladesh British media sometimes accorded their zamindar status as Princes After the War of 1971 they held considerable alliances with ruling presidents military dictators and prime ministers all the while refraining from elected public offices The family still owns most of the lands as private estates and taxes the inhabitants on produce from the lands which in turn pays for the upkeep of the land holdings buildings etc Most of the residences used by the family lies mostly uninhabited yet under the ownership of the family Philanthropy editMain article Gole Afroz College nbsp Goleafroz CollegeThe family set the Gole Afroz College in the provincial government of East Pakistan and it became and still stands as the only public college of Singra It is one of the five government colleges in the Natore District and the third oldest established before the War of 1971 and the Independence of Bangladesh 20 Although it was a private college of the aristocratic Singranatore family in 1986 the then President and former military ruler HM Ershad announced that it would be made into a public college Since then it is under the Ministry of Education of the Government of Bangladesh 21 It is named after Begum Gole Afroz a member of the Singranatore family of Rajshahi the daughter of Begum GulBadan and Shamezuddin Ahmed She was a granddaughter of Mirza Jalaluddin the last zamindar of Natore and the wife of MM Rahmatullah 22 Buildings and estates edit nbsp One of the old gates of the Gole Afroz College nbsp Doorway to Durbal hall boithok khana or meeting chamber nbsp Doorway nbsp Chest at the entrance of the Malabare Mansion nbsp Old window of the Malabare Mansion nbsp Notables members editJalaluddin Mirza Mirza Zafar Colonel Retd Sarwar AzamSee also editFeudalism Feudalism in England Landed property Maharaja Manorialism Medieval demography Middle Ages Princely States Protofeudalism Puthia Raj family Quia Emptores Raja Ryotwari Serfdom Statutes of MortmainSources edit Syed Ismail Ashraf 14 March 2013 Legacy of Bengali zamindars Daily Sun Retrieved 16 March 2013 Mughal Society Zamindars Historytuition com Retrieved 5 May 2013 Metcalf 1984 p 269 An account of the Ruling Classes of Mughal Empire Preservearticles com 30 October 2011 Retrieved 5 May 2013 Hansen amp Curtis 2008 p 461 Mughal Zamindars Historytution com Retrieved 5 May 2013 Islam Sirajul Akhter Shirin 2012 Zamindar In Islam Sirajul Jamal Ahmed A eds Banglapedia National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh Second ed Asiatic Society of Bangladesh Presidency 1888 p 385 McLane 2002 p 223 Higgingbotham 1872 p 209 Monnier 1902 p 5498 Ramchandani 2000 p 302 Quayum Abdul 2012 East Bengal State Acquisition and Tenancy Act 1950 In Islam Sirajul Jamal Ahmed A eds Banglapedia National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh Second ed Asiatic Society of Bangladesh Islam Sirajul 2012 Rent In Islam Sirajul Jamal Ahmed A eds Banglapedia National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh Second ed Asiatic Society of Bangladesh Markovits 2002 p 301 Report 1804 p 155 Burnell amp Yule 1903 p 980 Mirza in Collins English Dictionary Complete and Unabridged HarperCollins Publishers Mughal Descendants Fravahr org Retrieved 5 May 2013 Government Colleges of Bangladesh Bangladesh Daily Needs Archived 21 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine GuleAfrozCollege Prathista Porichiti 1996 page 29 GuleAfrozCollege Prathista Porichiti 1996 page 30Bibliography editBurnell A C Yule Henry 1903 First published 1890s Crooke William ed Hobson Jobson A Glossary of Colloquial Anglo Indian Words and Phrases and of Kindred Terms Etymological Historical Geographical and Discursive New ed London John Murray Hansen Valerie Curtis Kenneth 2008 Voyages in World History Volume 2 Stamford Connecticut Wadsworth Publishing ISBN 978 0 618 07725 0 Higgingbotham J 1872 Madras High Court reports reports of cases decided in the High Court of Madras Madras India High Court of India Markovits Claude 2002 A History of Modern India 1480 1950 Bangladesh Anthem Press ISBN 978 1 84331 004 4 McLane John R 2002 Land and Local Kingship in Eighteenth Century Bengal Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 05120 0 Metcalf Barbara Daly 1984 Moral Conduct and Authority The Place of Adab in South Asian Islam University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 04660 3 Monnier Emile Henry 1902 A digest of Indian law cases containing High court reports 1862 1900 and Privy council reports of appeals from India 1836 1900 with an index of cases Volume 3 Calcutta India Great Britain Privy Council Judicial Committee Presidency Indian 1888 The Indian law reports Madras series University of California Ramchandani Indu 2000 Students Britannica India Volumes 1 5 United Kingdom Encyclopaedia Britannica ISBN 978 0 85229 760 5 Report House Committee 1804 Reports from Committees of the House of Commons repr by order of Volume 4 House of Commons of the United Kingdom References edit nbsp This article incorporates text in the public domain from the National Archives of Bangladesh Further reading editBoswell James August 2011 Scots Magazine Vol 45 Charleston South Carolina Nabu Press p 626 ISBN 978 1175225252 External links editSingra and Natore Zamindari family at Genealogical Gleanings of the Indian Princely States The Singra Upazilla Kallyan Samity Official website of the Sub district Welfare Council of Singra Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Singranatore family amp oldid 1189002321, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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