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The Evolution of the Manṣab System Under Akbar Until 1596–7
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 March 2011
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The organization of the nobility of the Indian Mughal Empire in numerical grades (manṣabs) is now generally recognized as one of the basic elements of its administrative and military structure. Equally general, perhaps, has been a recognition of the manṣab system's many complexities. However, by combining the information in Abu 'l-Faẓl's Ā'īn-i Akbarī with a number of 17th-century texts and documents, it has been possible to construct a tolerable picture of the working of the manṣab system during the 17th century. In many respects, the basic features were first delineated by Moreland and Abdul Aziz; but their views have been greatly refined, and often substantially revised, by M. Athar Ali and Irfan Habib. It is now accepted as beyond argument that by Akbar's death (1605), manṣab was explained in two numerical representations: the first, zāt, determined the holder's personal pay (ṭalab-i khāṣa) and status in the hierarchy; the second (sawār) indicated the number of horsemen to be maintained by the holder and set the amount sanctioned to cover their pay (ṭalab-i tābīnān). In each case, the rank-number was converted into monetary claims and military obligation by means of the schedules (dastūr al-'amals) in force at the time. The system undoubtedly gave to the Mughal nobility and military machine a high degree of uniformity and regularity in its functioning, which is likely to have contributed greatly to the stability and strength of the Empire.
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References
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15 Akbar-nāma, II, 270. My translation of this and other passages from Abu 'l-Faẓl is independent of that by Beveridge, where the precise technical sense is often missed.
16 cf. the rather brief remarks of Qaisar, , 156–7.Google Scholar It is difficult to agree with him, however, that the Akbar-nāma passage indicates the existence of-“three kinds of jāgīrs”.
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25 To cite a few names, with the manṣabs assigned in the Ā ‘īn-i Akbarī, appearing within brackets.
(Note: The 18th regnal year = A.H. 980–81)
While the Tabaqāt does not assign any fictitious manṣabs to those who died before the 18th regnal year, it lacks the completeness of the Ā 'īn-i Akbarī's list in that it fails to assign numerical ranks to some who appear on its list and died well after the 18th year. For example, Maqṣūd 'Alī (No. 136 in the Ā 'īn's list) received the manṣab of 1,000 in the 25th regnal year (Akbar-nāma, III, 304–5Google Scholar); but the does not credit him with any manṣab. There are others who were alive at the time the was completed; yet, though they are assigned manṣabs in the Ā 'īn, the refrains from recording any under their names. To cite a few examples, with the Ā 'īn's manṣabs within brackets:
Moreover, the list does not mention manṣabs below 1,000 (there is only one exception viz. Aḥmad 'Alī Beg's rank of 700).
These deficiencies in the information show that the Ā 'īn-i Akbarī's list remains indispensable. Such deficiencies, however, do not by any means weaken the significance of the list in exposing the fictitious nature of manṣabs assiged in the Ā 'īn to a whole group of persons.
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32 Badāūnī, II, 190.Google Scholar
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34 In the 17th-century chronicles, it is thus common to find the use of the formula panj hazārī chahār hazār to indicate 5000 zār/4000 sawār, and so on.
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41 The text reads dākhil; however, dākhilī would seem to be the correct reading.
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43 Habib, Irfan (cf. n. 2 above), 233.Google Scholar
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45 ibid., I, 194. It is further stated (p. 175) that if a manṣabdar found it difficult to muster horsemen, he was given some “enrolled” (branded) troopers, in proportion to his rank as part of his contingent. These were paid directly from the Imperial treasury and were called dākhilī. The forty dākhilī troopers that Bayazid mentions were apparently troopers of this kind.
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41 See Ā 'īn, I, 176–8, for both the statement regarding the 18th year and the schedules of rates.Google Scholar
49 ibid., I, 180–5.
50 ibid., I, 178.
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54 In a passage in a letter ascribed to Abu '1-Faẓl, the complaint is made that “there are some manṣabdārs who have jāgīrs (for the rank) of hazārī (1,000) but do not have even a few men with them, while there are many who are ṣadis (100) and have 50 good horsemen (each) for service in the Deccan and ready for endeavour all the time; and yet the latter remain without jāgīrs”. (Ruq'āt-i Abū 'l-Faẓl, Kanpur, 1879, 45Google Scholar). It will be noticed that Abu 'l-Faẓl does not compare the actual contingent maintained with the second (sawār) rank, but with the single rank, always indicated, as we have seen, by the suffix yā (-ī). Abu 'l-Faẓl reached the Deccan early to the 44th regnal year (1599), and the letter was apparently sent to the Emperor shortly afterwards. Unfortunately, in this letter as well as in some other letters of this collection, there are departures from Abu '1-Faẓl's usual style, and apparent inaccuracies of fact, which, casting doubt on the genuineness of the documents, detract from their authority as a source.
55 cf. Habib, Irfan (n. 2 above), 234.Google Scholar
56 Akbar-nāma, III, 717, for Mīrzā Shāhrukh and for prince Dāniyāl (p. 271). In the latter case the formula employed for stating the paired manṣab is what henceforth became standardized, namely, haft hazāri zāt u sawār (“7,000 zāt and (7,000) sawār”).Google Scholar
57 Akbar-nāma, III, 717.Google Scholar
58 For these changes, notably, the conversion of bar-āwardī into the sole form of payment for sawār rank; the institution of do-aspa sih-aspa ranks; the modification of size of cavalry contingents according to geographical location; and the institution of the month scales, cf. Habib, Irfan (n. 2 above), 233–9.Google Scholar
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