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Taluqdar

Taluqdars or Talukdar (Bengali: তালুকদার talukdar, Hindustani: तालुक़दार/تالقدارtāluqdār; taluq "estate" + dar "owner"), were aristocrats who formed the ruling class during the Delhi Sultanate, Bengal Sultanate, Mughal Empire and British Raj. They were owners of a vast amount of lands, consistently hereditary,[1][2] and were responsible for collecting taxes. The Taluqdars played helpful roles in the progression of Indian architecture and Indian economy during the reign of Emperor Shah Jahan and Aurangzeb, particularly in Bengal Subah, the most economically developed province in South Asia.[3][page needed]

Being powerful peers, similar to those of Europe in the Middle Ages, after the decline of the Mughal state the Taluqdaris were to withstand the revenue collectors of the Colonial Powers while also bringing given number of villages under their dominion, and thus, according to many historians, the rapid development and enhancing power and wealth of the Taluqdaris during the early 19th century caused tremendous difficulties and concerns to the British East India Company.[note 1] The majority of the Taluqdaris constructed themselves enormous mud fortified towers throughout tropical forests and maintained immense bodies of armed affinities.[4]

The Taluqdars of Oudh were baronial,[5][6][7] with some representing the ancient families.[8] In other cases, the historical equivalent in Britain is similar to a member of the landed aristocracy, or perhaps a Lord of the Manor.[9] In contemporary usage, the term is often regarded as a noble tribe and clan,[10] although it may convey some diverse meanings in different parts of the Indian subcontinent.[11] It is mentioned that throughout Oudh till Bihar, there was a presence of large numbers of Rajput Taluqdars and they played an important role in 1857 in the region.[12]

Types of Taluqdars edit

(1) A hereditary owner of one or more Taluqas (land-tax jurisdictions)[13][14] or an imperial tax collector[15] with administrative power over a district of several villages in Punjab, Rajasthan, East Bengal (presently Bangladesh), and rest of North India/United Provinces. These kinds of Taluqdars were manorial, and often had both forts and military forces of their own, especially in Oudh,[16][17] where they were known as Barons. Before the British annexation of the Kingdom of Oudh, the larger Taluqdars of this type in the region had occupied a position which amounted to virtual independence.[18]

(2) An official and civil servant in Hyderabad State during the British colonial era, equivalent to a magistrate and tax collector.

(3) A landholder with peculiar tenures in various other parts of British India.

(4) Independent rulers of smaller states who exercised sovereign authority over their subjects despite being surrounded by princes. They were a few hundred in number, with hundreds of thousands of people under their jurisdiction. Such Taluqdars were autocrats and said to be the heads of despotic states.[19]

Taluqdaris edit

The district or estate ruled by a Taluqdar was known as talukdari or taluqdari. According to the Punjab settlement report of 1862, great land holders were appointed Taluqdars over a number of villages during the Mughal era. That Taluq or district usually comprised over 84 villages and a central town. The Talukdar was required to collect taxes, maintain law and order, and provide military supplies/manpower to the provincial government (similar to the role of feudal lords in Europe). In most cases the Talukdars were entitled to keep one tenth of the collected revenue. However, some privileged Talukdars were entitled to one quarter and hence were called Chaudhry, which literally means owner of the fourth part.

In Rajasthan, Kathiawar and Bengal, a talukdar was next only to a raja in extent of land control and social status; but in Punjab and the United Provinces talukdars were much more powerful and were directly under the provincial governor. The late Mughal era saw the rise of powerful talukdars in Oudh, northern India, such as Balrampur,[20][unreliable source?]Nanpara, Arkha, Itaunja, Kohra, Sarosi who seldom paid any collected revenue to the central government and became virtual rulers of their districts. Dr. Raja Rai Rajeshwar Bali was the President of the Taluqdar Association of Oudh. During a British parliamentary debate in 1858, Sir C. Wood brought to light the fact that Taluqdar oppression in Oudh was carried to an unthinkable extent. He mentioned that they had been taking over the lands of the remaining Rajas all over Oudh. Colonel Sleernan recalled the following act of war by a Taluqdar against a Raja:

They plundered the town of Boondee, and pulled down all the houses of the rajah and those of his relatives and dependents, and after plundering all the other villages, brought in 1,000 captives of both sexes and all ages, who were subjected to all manner of torture till they paid.[21]

Similarly, in northern Punjab, the talukdars of Dhanni, Gheb and Kot were extremely powerful.[citation needed]

Eighteenth century Bengal witnessed the rise of great territorial landholders at the expense of smaller landholders who were reduced to the status of dependent taluqdars, required to pay their revenue to the government through the intermediary of the great landlords called Rais, Ranas, Babus, Rajas and Maharajas. However many old taluqdars paid revenues to the government directly like Raja Jung Bahadur of Nanpara Estate and were as powerful as the Rajas. Some taluqdars like Thakur Ameer Haider Zaidi of estate Bahuwa,Thakur Ghulam Haider of estate Bahuwa, Chowdhury Ali Akhtar of Bilwa, Ramzan Ali Khan of Unnao, Raja Azam Ali Khan of Deogaon, and Thakur Roshan Zama Khan of Usmanpur were very close to the government and played an important role in tax collection in region of Awadh.

Hyderabad State edit

During the rule of the Nizams in Hyderabad State the top of the administrator / tax revenue collector hierarchy was the Subedar, who had responsibility for the largest divisions of the country, i.e. the Princely State of Hyderabad, of which there were five. Below this rank, the official title of the lower division (i.e. subdivisions of the five above) post holder was Tehsildar and below that the rank of Taluqdar, so in effect it could be equated to the three-tier ranking from province administrator to county administrator to district administrator in size from the largest to smallest. These are further divided into villages, under a village officer.

Today, the names Talukdar and Choudhry (with variations in spelling) are common in India and in Indians settled overseas among the descendants of those who held this rank or role in times past.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Zastoupil, Lynn (2006). John Stuart Mill and India. California, USA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0804766173.

References edit

  1. ^ "Talukdar Meaning | Best 1 Definitions of Talukdar". www.yourdictionary.com.
  2. ^ Luscombe, Stephen. "The British Empire, Imperialism, Colonialism, Colonies". www.britishempire.co.uk.
  3. ^ Muttalib, M. A. (1988). Administration of Justice Under the Nizams, 1724-1948. State Archives, Andhra Pradesh. OCLC 22242042.
  4. ^ Gupta, Gautam. 1857 The Uprising. 8123022994.
  5. ^ Sir John William Kaye (1876). A history of the Sepoy war in India, 1857-1858. Vol. 3. W. H. Allen & Co. p. 423.
  6. ^ James Kennedy (1993). Life and Work in Benares and Kumaon, 1839-1877. Asian Educational Services. p. 218. ISBN 9788120607514.
  7. ^ Princes and Peasants; or, The Rent Difficulty in Oudh. Thacker's Indian Directory. 1865. p. 32.
  8. ^ Chanana, Priyanka (2013). "Caste Ties, Allodial Rights and Colonial. Administration in Oudh During Summary Settlement and After 1858: The Taluqdar Association and the British Policies Upto 1870s". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 74: 458–469. JSTOR 44158846.
  9. ^ "A chronic inability of taluqdars to meet the revenue demands". Economic and Political Weekly. II. 1997.
  10. ^ Sisson, Richard; Wolpert, Stanley, eds. (2006) [First published 1988]. Congress and Indian Nationalism: The Pre-independence Phase. University of California Press. p. 408. ISBN 978-0-520-06041-8. taluqdar: large landlord in UP
  11. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Talukdar" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 26 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 386.
  12. ^ Thomas R.Metcalf (8 December 2015). Aftermath of Revolt: India 1857-1970. p. 299. ISBN 9781400876648.
  13. ^ Sir Simon Michael Schama (2012). A History of Britain: Volume III. Random House. p. 262. ISBN 978-1409018353.
  14. ^ Darogah Haji Abbas Ali (1880). An Illustrated Historical Album of the Rajas and Taaluqdars of Oudh. North-Western Provinces and Oudh Government Press. pp. 4–5 (List of Taaluqdars of Oudh arranged by districts).
  15. ^ Colonel Sykes, Member of Parliament for Aberdeen (14 May 1858). "Oude". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Parliament of the United Kingdom: House of Commons. col. 729.
  16. ^ Sir George de Lacy Evans, Member of Parliament for Westminster (5 August 1859). "Indian Reinforcements — The National Defences". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Parliament of the United Kingdom: House of Commons. col. 1062.
  17. ^ Mr. Mangles, Member of Parliament for Guildford (18 March 1858). "East India Mutinies". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Parliament of the United Kingdom: House of Commons. col. 371.
  18. ^ Report of the Indian Statutory Commission Volume One Survey (PDF). Her Majesty's Stationery Office. 1930. p. 64.
  19. ^ Mr. Amery, Mr. Maxton, Mr. Sorensen, Members of Parliament (14 March 1944). "Clause 1—(Attachment Of States)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Parliament of the United Kingdom: House of Commons. col. 187, 188, 186, 183, 195.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2015.
  21. ^ Sir C. Wood, Member of Parliament for Halifax (17 May 1858). "Oude". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Parliament of the United Kingdom: House of Commons. col. 778.

taluqdar, also, surname, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, ja. See also Taluqdar surname This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Taluqdar news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Taluqdars or Talukdar Bengali ত ল কদ র talukdar Hindustani त ल क द र تالقدار taluqdar taluq estate dar owner were aristocrats who formed the ruling class during the Delhi Sultanate Bengal Sultanate Mughal Empire and British Raj They were owners of a vast amount of lands consistently hereditary 1 2 and were responsible for collecting taxes The Taluqdars played helpful roles in the progression of Indian architecture and Indian economy during the reign of Emperor Shah Jahan and Aurangzeb particularly in Bengal Subah the most economically developed province in South Asia 3 page needed Being powerful peers similar to those of Europe in the Middle Ages after the decline of the Mughal state the Taluqdaris were to withstand the revenue collectors of the Colonial Powers while also bringing given number of villages under their dominion and thus according to many historians the rapid development and enhancing power and wealth of the Taluqdaris during the early 19th century caused tremendous difficulties and concerns to the British East India Company note 1 The majority of the Taluqdaris constructed themselves enormous mud fortified towers throughout tropical forests and maintained immense bodies of armed affinities 4 The Taluqdars of Oudh were baronial 5 6 7 with some representing the ancient families 8 In other cases the historical equivalent in Britain is similar to a member of the landed aristocracy or perhaps a Lord of the Manor 9 In contemporary usage the term is often regarded as a noble tribe and clan 10 although it may convey some diverse meanings in different parts of the Indian subcontinent 11 It is mentioned that throughout Oudh till Bihar there was a presence of large numbers of Rajput Taluqdars and they played an important role in 1857 in the region 12 Contents 1 Types of Taluqdars 2 Taluqdaris 3 Hyderabad State 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesTypes of Taluqdars edit 1 A hereditary owner of one or more Taluqas land tax jurisdictions 13 14 or an imperial tax collector 15 with administrative power over a district of several villages in Punjab Rajasthan East Bengal presently Bangladesh and rest of North India United Provinces These kinds of Taluqdars were manorial and often had both forts and military forces of their own especially in Oudh 16 17 where they were known as Barons Before the British annexation of the Kingdom of Oudh the larger Taluqdars of this type in the region had occupied a position which amounted to virtual independence 18 2 An official and civil servant in Hyderabad State during the British colonial era equivalent to a magistrate and tax collector 3 A landholder with peculiar tenures in various other parts of British India 4 Independent rulers of smaller states who exercised sovereign authority over their subjects despite being surrounded by princes They were a few hundred in number with hundreds of thousands of people under their jurisdiction Such Taluqdars were autocrats and said to be the heads of despotic states 19 Taluqdaris editThe district or estate ruled by a Taluqdar was known as talukdari or taluqdari According to the Punjab settlement report of 1862 great land holders were appointed Taluqdars over a number of villages during the Mughal era That Taluq or district usually comprised over 84 villages and a central town The Talukdar was required to collect taxes maintain law and order and provide military supplies manpower to the provincial government similar to the role of feudal lords in Europe In most cases the Talukdars were entitled to keep one tenth of the collected revenue However some privileged Talukdars were entitled to one quarter and hence were called Chaudhry which literally means owner of the fourth part In Rajasthan Kathiawar and Bengal a talukdar was next only to a raja in extent of land control and social status but in Punjab and the United Provinces talukdars were much more powerful and were directly under the provincial governor The late Mughal era saw the rise of powerful talukdars in Oudh northern India such as Balrampur 20 unreliable source Nanpara Arkha Itaunja Kohra Sarosi who seldom paid any collected revenue to the central government and became virtual rulers of their districts Dr Raja Rai Rajeshwar Bali was the President of the Taluqdar Association of Oudh During a British parliamentary debate in 1858 Sir C Wood brought to light the fact that Taluqdar oppression in Oudh was carried to an unthinkable extent He mentioned that they had been taking over the lands of the remaining Rajas all over Oudh Colonel Sleernan recalled the following act of war by a Taluqdar against a Raja They plundered the town of Boondee and pulled down all the houses of the rajah and those of his relatives and dependents and after plundering all the other villages brought in 1 000 captives of both sexes and all ages who were subjected to all manner of torture till they paid 21 Similarly in northern Punjab the talukdars of Dhanni Gheb and Kot were extremely powerful citation needed Eighteenth century Bengal witnessed the rise of great territorial landholders at the expense of smaller landholders who were reduced to the status of dependent taluqdars required to pay their revenue to the government through the intermediary of the great landlords called Rais Ranas Babus Rajas and Maharajas However many old taluqdars paid revenues to the government directly like Raja Jung Bahadur of Nanpara Estate and were as powerful as the Rajas Some taluqdars like Thakur Ameer Haider Zaidi of estate Bahuwa Thakur Ghulam Haider of estate Bahuwa Chowdhury Ali Akhtar of Bilwa Ramzan Ali Khan of Unnao Raja Azam Ali Khan of Deogaon and Thakur Roshan Zama Khan of Usmanpur were very close to the government and played an important role in tax collection in region of Awadh Hyderabad State editDuring the rule of the Nizams in Hyderabad State the top of the administrator tax revenue collector hierarchy was the Subedar who had responsibility for the largest divisions of the country i e the Princely State of Hyderabad of which there were five Below this rank the official title of the lower division i e subdivisions of the five above post holder was Tehsildar and below that the rank of Taluqdar so in effect it could be equated to the three tier ranking from province administrator to county administrator to district administrator in size from the largest to smallest These are further divided into villages under a village officer Today the names Talukdar and Choudhry with variations in spelling are common in India and in Indians settled overseas among the descendants of those who held this rank or role in times past See also editExamples of feudalism Feudalism in India Feudalism in Pakistan Tribe Zamindar Ghatwals and Mulraiyats Lord Taluqa Tehsil Tehsildar ChaudharyNotes edit Zastoupil Lynn 2006 John Stuart Mill and India California USA Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0804766173 References edit Talukdar Meaning Best 1 Definitions of Talukdar www yourdictionary com Luscombe Stephen The British Empire Imperialism Colonialism Colonies www britishempire co uk Muttalib M A 1988 Administration of Justice Under the Nizams 1724 1948 State Archives Andhra Pradesh OCLC 22242042 Gupta Gautam 1857 The Uprising 8123022994 Sir John William Kaye 1876 A history of the Sepoy war in India 1857 1858 Vol 3 W H Allen amp Co p 423 James Kennedy 1993 Life and Work in Benares and Kumaon 1839 1877 Asian Educational Services p 218 ISBN 9788120607514 Princes and Peasants or The Rent Difficulty in Oudh Thacker s Indian Directory 1865 p 32 Chanana Priyanka 2013 Caste Ties Allodial Rights and Colonial Administration in Oudh During Summary Settlement and After 1858 The Taluqdar Association and the British Policies Upto 1870s Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 74 458 469 JSTOR 44158846 A chronic inability of taluqdars to meet the revenue demands Economic and Political Weekly II 1997 Sisson Richard Wolpert Stanley eds 2006 First published 1988 Congress and Indian Nationalism The Pre independence Phase University of California Press p 408 ISBN 978 0 520 06041 8 taluqdar large landlord in UP Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Talukdar Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 26 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 386 Thomas R Metcalf 8 December 2015 Aftermath of Revolt India 1857 1970 p 299 ISBN 9781400876648 Sir Simon Michael Schama 2012 A History of Britain Volume III Random House p 262 ISBN 978 1409018353 Darogah Haji Abbas Ali 1880 An Illustrated Historical Album of the Rajas and Taaluqdars of Oudh North Western Provinces and Oudh Government Press pp 4 5 List of Taaluqdars of Oudh arranged by districts Colonel Sykes Member of Parliament for Aberdeen 14 May 1858 Oude Parliamentary Debates Hansard Parliament of the United Kingdom House of Commons col 729 Sir George de Lacy Evans Member of Parliament for Westminster 5 August 1859 Indian Reinforcements The National Defences Parliamentary Debates Hansard Parliament of the United Kingdom House of Commons col 1062 Mr Mangles Member of Parliament for Guildford 18 March 1858 East India Mutinies Parliamentary Debates Hansard Parliament of the United Kingdom House of Commons col 371 Report of the Indian Statutory Commission Volume One Survey PDF Her Majesty s Stationery Office 1930 p 64 Mr Amery Mr Maxton Mr Sorensen Members of Parliament 14 March 1944 Clause 1 Attachment Of States Parliamentary Debates Hansard Parliament of the United Kingdom House of Commons col 187 188 186 183 195 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Balrampur Taluqdari Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 4 October 2015 Sir C Wood Member of Parliament for Halifax 17 May 1858 Oude Parliamentary Debates Hansard Parliament of the United Kingdom House of Commons col 778 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Taluqdar amp oldid 1214753097, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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