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Imperial Impact on Rajputana: The Case of Alwar, 1775–1850
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
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One of the functions of any imperial system is to stabilize the subordinate political structures over which it exercises suzerainty. Without such a role for the central authority, control of local politics becomes impossible and, without such centralization, the stability of the entire empire is threatened. This policy has often acted to support or maintain local socio-economic relationships which, in the absence of overarching centralization, would show greater instability and flux. The precise nature of these relations can best be seen in an examination of the interregnum period between the decline of one imperial power and the imposition of a new generation of centralized stability.
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References
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18 Mean area 4,431 bighās, mean cultivated area 3,691 bīghās, mean ṭan 10,887.
19 Pratap Singh granted jāgīrs, as follows: Para thikānā, 2; Khora thikānā, Palwa thikānā, 2; non-bārah kōtri, 2. Only Khora ṭhikānā had held a jāgīrs in Narukhand before 1775. Five jāgīrs were near Rajgarh, 3 near Alwar, and 1 near Lachmangarh. For the distribution of jāgīrs by area and era, see Map III.
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62 RA, 18-General (1870).Google Scholar
63 FC, December 30, 1848, 328.Google Scholar
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