Habib-MANSABSYSTEM15951637-1967 231120 185024
Habib-MANSABSYSTEM15951637-1967 231120 185024
Habib-MANSABSYSTEM15951637-1967 231120 185024
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Proceedings of the Indian History Congress
1595-1637
It is apparent from th
been made in the schedule
zat meant substantial re
Jahangir were on the who
For the period after 160
we come to the reign of
that until 1618, at any r
largely in force.
In 1616 Sir Thomas Ro
noble of the rank of 5,00
received for maintaining
rup. a day".12 In other wo
prescribed under the sche
A still more reliable source of information for us consists of cer-
tain farmans. especially two, one of 1615 and the other of 1618, which
are in nature very similar to those of the time of Shahjahan that More-
land had studied. Their original texts are not available to us; but they
were rendered into Hindi, with considerable care, by Shýamaldas in his
At the end of the schedule said to have been in force at the death
of Akbar in 1605, we find rates given for these three classes, but in
tankas : Sih-aspa , 1,000 tankas per month; do-aspa , 800 tankas ; and yak-
aspa , 400 t&nkas.22 The rates for the first two categories are exactly the
same as in the Akbarnama ; the rate for yak-aspa is different, and if the
dams in the earlier passage are mistakes for tankas , it is substantially
lower. 400 tankas per month are the exact equivalent of 9,600 dams
per year.
In 1616, Roe reports a Mughal noble as telling him that "the pay
of everie one ('horse' of his rank) was 200 rupias by years;"25 i.e. 8,000
dams per year - unless 200 is a misprint for 220 which would make it
Abul Fazl complains that there were mansabdars who enjoyed jagirs
sufficing for the pay of 1,000 (rank), but did not have with them even
a few men; and yet at the same time there were sadis (holders of 100),
who had 50 good horsemen ready for service and were yet without
jagirs.3* Thus Abul Fazl appears to regard it as a sufficient reason for
immediate sanction of pay and an assignment to provide for it (at the
barawardi rate presumably) , once a mansabdar had engaged a number
of men equal to just half the number of his rank. He is, of course, presu-
mably speaking in general terms, and detailed regulations might be
assumed to have existed which would have laid down the minimum
required size of the contingent to be maintained on receipt of mansab.
Such regulations would have continued in force once the barawardi
rate became iihe standard permanent rate for pay against sawar rank.
Since this transformation occurred, on our showing, during the early years
of Jahangir's reign, his administration would not have had any reason
to demand even on paper the maintenance, upon ordinary rates of pay,
of what was the ideal, highest paid contingent under Akbar.
That, therefore, something very closely similar to the rule under
which the number of men was to be a third of the rank ( the so-called
'Rule of one-third ) actually prevailed under Jahangir, is indicated by
Roe's report on what a Mughal noble told him about his own pay and
Gold Copper
1595-96 100 100
1609 111 100
1614 119 95 to 105
1621 111
1626 156 133
1628 .. 161
1633 138 161
1636 . . 149
1637 .. 133
1638 .. 138
1640 144
1641-42 156
1644-45 156
12. The Embassy of Sir Thomas Roe , ed. W. Foster, pp. 210-11.
13. The pay for 5,000 is given in the f arman of 1615, and of the remaining man-
sabs in that of 1618 (Vir Vinod , II, pp, 241, 259, £01-2). The Hindi text of
ten reads dam where it should obviously read 'rupee.*
14. JRAS , 1936, pp. 658-59.
15. See, for example, Selected Documents of Shahjahan's Reign , p. 84.
16. Tazkira-i Humayun-o -Akbar, ed. M. Hidayat Hosain, Bib, Ind. 1941, p. S73.
17. Ain-i Akbari , I, 176.
18. Ain-i Akbari , I, 187-8.
19. Barawardi-i-mahwara, in MS. Br. Mus. Add. 21,207. The printed text drops
the letter 'i' and reads óarawarďí-i-mahwara.
20. Akbarnama , III, 671-72; Add. 26,207 f. 204a-b.
21. JRAS , 1936, p. 668. It may be noted in passing that Moreland ignores the
lower rates sanctioned for Rajputs, on accout of Sih~aspa and do-aspa.
22. Br. Mus. Or. 1834, f. 233a.
23. Early Travels ed. Foster, 114.
24. Vir Vinod, II, 241.
25. The Embassy of Sir Thomas Roe , 210.
26. Tuzuk , 299.
27. Moreland, who notices Hawkins* account seems to have overlooked Roe's
statements.
32. Lahori, Badshahnama, Bib. Ind., I, p. 113, See also Moreland, JRAS, 1936,
pp. 646-662.
33. Ain-i-Akbarit I, 188, Cf. JRAS , 1936, p. 658.
34. Lahori, Badashahnama , II, 506-7. Cf. JRAS 1936, pp. 654-5,659.
35. Ruqa'at-i Abul Fazl , litho. ed, P. 45. This is different from the standard collec-
tion of Abul Fazl's letters, in three volumes, and contains much interpolated
matter.
42. See my Agrarian System of Mughal India , pp. 264-65 & n.; and M. Athar Ali.
The Mughal Mobility under Aurangzeb , pp. 46-49 & passim .
43. Ta'rikh-i Tahiri. Or. 1685, ff. 118a-119b.
44. Selected Documents of Shah Jahan's Reign , 77. The first in Lahori is appa-
rently in Vol. II, p. 205.
45. Ain-i-Akbari, I, 222-23.
46. Badshahnama , I, ii, pp. 292-328.
47. A Contemporary Dutch Chronicle of Mughal India, tr. Brij Narain and Sri Ram
Sharma, Calcutta, 1957, pp. 34- 3 ").
48. De Laet, Tr, J. S. Hoyland and S. N. Banerjee, The Empire of the Great Mogol
Bombay, 1928, pp. 113-14.
49. Aziz Koka ( Akbarnama , III, 483 ^ ; Man Singh (Iqbalnama-i-Jahangirit II, 510)
Mirza Shahrukh (ibid., I, 508.)
50. Rai Karan's mansab of 5, C00 zat , 5,000 sawar is by some oversight not recorded
by Jahangir. But it is included in our list on the authority of the f arman
reproduced in the VirVinod.
L. Deshpande (Nagpur)