Zamindar, also known as Zamindari, or the Zamindari System (Persian: زمیندار) were employed by the Mughals to collect taxes from peasants. The practice was continued under British rule. After independence, however, the system was abolished in India and East Pakistan (present day Bangladesh), but is still current in Pakistan.
The word 'Zamindar' has for some time been used for a peasant who owns land.
Zamindar was also the name of a popular and very influential Muslim newspaper in the Indian subcontinent run by Maulana Zafar Ali Khan.
Zamindar is a Persian word which literary means "A holder of the real estate" and this meaning is its usual daily use in the Urdu or Persian speaking countries (Pakistan, Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan) today.
The territorial zamindars had judicial powers. Naturally, judge-magistracy, as an element of state authority conferred status with attendant power, which really made them the lords of their domains. They held regular courts, called zamindari adalat. The courts fetched them not only power and status but some income as well by way of fines, presents and perquisites. The petty zamindars also had some share in the dispensation of civil and criminal justice. The Chowdhurys, who were zamindars in most cases, had authority to deal with the complaints of debts, thefts and petty quarrels and to impose paltry fines.
The Zamindari system was a way of collecting taxes from peasants. The zamindar was considered a lord, and would collect all taxes on his lands and then hand over the collected taxes to the British authorities (keeping a portion for himself). The similarities to medieval feudalism are evident.
Under the British, they resembled landed gentry (although they lived similarly privileged lives under the Mughals) and sometimes styled themselves as little kings, or rajas. Some new Zamindars were old Rajas. Many descended from eighteenth century revenue speculators and military adventurers. Several families are of very ancient lineage and had been independent rulers at earlier periods of history. They frequently intermarried with the ruling families of the princely states. Their tenants numbered from dozens to many thousands, and under imperial law, had to pay rent to Zamindars to retain rights to their land.
Zamindari mansions were generally large, spacious homes built of stone and teak wood, with a wraparound porch and rooms leading off from a large central courtyard, although this varied with the region. The mansion was a part of a vast estate.
Indian feudalism | Persian loanwords | Noble titles | Titles in India | Titles in Pakistan | Mughal empire | Fürstenstaat | État princier des Indes | ザミンダー | Vasallstater i Brittiska Indien
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"Zamindar".
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