Chapter - I
Introduction
INTRODUCTION
Under Mughals, the province of Gujarat had a special status of its own.
It was one of the most flourishing regions of India and was the most
urbanized.1
With the conquest of Gujarat, the Mughal Empire came for the first
time into possession of a considerable number of seaports, great and small,
some of them like Surat and Cambay, enjoying a large foreign trade and
visited by mariners and traders from all over the world. With the arrival of
Dutch and English East India Companies in the seventeenth century, the
mercantile activities in the region of Gujarat became even more brisk. A
variety of commodities were exported from Gujarat ports like cotton textiles,
indigo, saltpeter, spices, etc., the first two being most significant. To purchase
these items, European Companies brought bullion in large quantities to India
through Gujarat ports making the Mughal Empire one of the biggest importers
of bullion mostly silver outside Europe in the seventeenth century. The
quantity of this influx and its impact on Mughal economy especially on
mintage of silver coins has been studied and debated by modern scholars.2
During the medieval period, Gujarat was well known for its
manufactures. Ahmadabad, Surat, Baroda and Broach were major
manufacturing centre of cotton textiles. Silk-weaving, using Bengal silk, was
done in Ahmadabad, Surat and Cambay. Indigo was produced in Sarkhej, near
Ahmadabad, but was refined in Cambay. In addition, it also had a strong
1 Shireen Moosvi, The Economy of the Mughal Empire, c.1595, Delhi, 1987, p.315.
2 Aziza Hasan, Silver Currency output of the Mughal Empire, IESHR , IV, I,1969, pp.85-116;
Shireen Moosvi, Silver Influx, Money Supply, Prices and Revenue Extraction in Mughal
India, JESHO, XXX, I, 1987, pp.47-94; Najaf Haider, Precious Metal Flows and Currency
Circulation in the Mughal Empire, JESHO, XXXIX, 3, 1996, pp.289-304.
2
handicraft industry, making weapons, furniture and jewellery. Gujarat also
supplied a great variety of drugs and medicinal products to the rest of India
and abroad.3
The administration of ports was unique to the provincial administration
of Gujarat as it was not found in non-coastal provinces of Mughals. The brisk
foreign trade from these ports became an important source of income for
Mughal Empire. So for these port cities, Mughal Empire came up with
different apparatus of administration with officers like mutasaddis,
shahbandars etc.
Barring the ports of Gujarat especially Surat and Cambay, sources of
the period do not provide consistent and enough information about the ports
under Mughals in other non-coastal provinces. In the light of this meagre
information, the study of port administration in Gujarat becomes even more
important. It can be assumed that the structure of administration which the
Mughals established at Gujarat ports especially Surat was broadly applicable
to ports in other provinces.
The province of Gujarat is also important in terms of Agriculture and
land revenue system. There is no uniform opinion regarding the method of
land revenue assessment in Mughal Gujarat. This province was very
extensively cultivated and revenue incidence in money terms was high,
suggestive of high productivity in cash crops like cotton, indigo etc.4
3 For more details, see Surendra Gopal, Commerce and Crafts in Gujarat,16th and 17th
Centuries, New Delhi, 1975, pp.186-217. Also see , The Cambridge Economic History of
India, I,c.1200-1750 , eds. Tapan Raychaudhury and Irfan Habib, Cambridge, 1982, pp. 261-
307.
4 [Link], Agrarian System of Mughal India, 1556-1707, New Delhi, 1999, pp.234, 265-267;
Shireen Moosvi, The Economy of Gujarat, c.1600: The A’in’s Statistics, PIHC, 44th session,
Burdwan, 1983, Delhi, 1984, pp.224-233.
3
To cater to the needs of mercantile activities, the Mughals established
mints in the province of Gujarat. Among a number of mints, Ahmadabad and
Surat were successively the largest mints of the Empire-former in the last
quarter of the sixteenth century and the latter in the seventeenth century.
Mints were also a source of considerable income to the state, so their proper
organization was an administrative necessity.
The present study of administration of Gujarat under Mughals is
important in the sense that the attempt is to take into account the general
features of Mughal provincial administration marking out such features as
were unique to the province of Gujarat like port administration, mint
administration etc. The attempt would also include an assessment of degree
and level of penetration of Mughal administration into the Gujarat province.
Lastly, the present research would also take into account that whether the
administrative structure imposed by the Mughals in Gujarat was an exact
replica of administration as prevalent in other Mughal subas or had variations.
Sources
The province of Gujarat under Mughals is fortunate in terms of source
material. These sources are enormous as well as varied. They include Persian
works (like official histories, administrative manuals, memoirs, collection of
letters etc), English and Dutch Factory records, travellers’ accounts etc. In
addition to these literary sources, there is epigraphic and numismatic
evidence.
As far as the use and utilization of these sources is concerned, almost
all the sources are utilized or are being in the process of utilization for writing
history of the region and province from different angles. For instance,
4
[Link] has made use of Portuguese sources for the history of Gujarat
Sultanate and early phase of Mughal Empire in the region of Gujarat and
western India in his various works.5 On the other hand, Ashin Das Gupta has
exploited Dutch sources for his study of Surat Port and trade and commerce
of the region.6 The regional Persian chronicles both official and unofficial,
like Tabaqat-i Akbari, Mir’at-i Sikandari and Mir’at-i Ahmadi, as the basic
sources for any study of Gujarat, have been widely used for various studies
concerning the Gujarat, especially for political and administrative history.
Same is the case with the English Factory Records. But still, there are archival
sources in Persian for the region of Gujarat of the 17th and 18th centuries
which are yet to be utilized for writing the history of administration of Gujarat
province under Mughals.
In this category, comes the Akhbarat which are often translated as
newsletters. They are really reports of the public proceedings at the courts of
the Mughal Emperor and headquarters of Provincial Governors, recorded by
wakils or agents of nobles and high officials. Though not strictly “official”,
these served as important source of information for contemporary historians,
both official and unofficial.
These Akhbarat are in ‘shikast’ Persian which is difficult to read and
understand. The Akhbarat we concern ourselves with are those sent by the
wakil or agent of the Amber ruler, Jai Singh Sawai, to his master from Prince
A‘zam’s headquarters at Ahmadabad. Prince A‘zam was Governor of Gujarat
5 [Link], Merchants and Rulers in Gujarat: The Response to the Portuguese in the
Sixteenth Century, New Delhi, 1976.( It is his pioneer work. His many books include
Pilgrimage to Mecca: The Indian Experience, The Portuguese in India, India and The Indian
Ocean 1500-1800 jointly edited with Ashin Das Gupta, The World of the Indian Ocean, 1500-
1800:Studies in Economic, Social and Cultural History).
6 Among many books, his pioneer work is Indian Merchants and Decline of Surat ,c. 1700-50,
Wiesbadan, 1979.
5
from R.Y.46 to 50 (1701-1705 AD). The extant Akhbarat cover only the
period R.Y.s 46-47 (1702-04). The originals are in the library of the Royal
Asiatic Society, London (Morley 133).7 These daily reports cover a variety of
subjects concerning provincial administration such as orders regarding
various administrative matters (problems of law and order, collection of
tribute from chiefdoms, administration of refractory areas etc.); appointments
to posts, transfers, degradations and dismissals of officials, or their
reinstatement, or their leave or posting; grant of robes of honour, presentation
of gifts, administration of justice; working of Jagir, mansabdari, branding
and verification systems; complaints concerning a wide range of matters
(against officials, jagirdars etc.); information on provincial finance etc.
For Surat and its administration, there is an extremely important source
in the form of a collection of documents that was compiled by an anonymous
middle or low ranking official in Surat towards the middle of seventeenth
century. These documents concern Surat and neighbouring localities and
provide extremely important and useful information on its administration,
commerce and socio-political life. From administrative point of view, it
provides information on the working of land revenue administration, port
administration and judicial administration as prevailed under Mughals among
other information.
These documents are in ‘shikast’ Persian and their only extant copy is
available at the Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris.8
7 Also available at the Centre of Advanced Study in History, AMU, microfilm no.34, the sheets
marked A1 to A231.
8 I have consulted the microfilm copy of these documents available at the Centre of Advanced
Study in History, AMU (microfilm no. 470).
6
The other sources which are yet to be utilized adequately for study of
Gujarat under Mughals includes a collection of contemporary documents
from Cambay and Mir’at-ul Haqaiq, the dairy of a retired Mughal official in
Surat, I‘timad Ali Khan, written in 1727. The former is found in the National
Archives of India (New Delhi) and are more than fifty in number. It includes
papers concerning transactions of property, disputes of property, marriage
deeds, etc. The latter is another very important source for the study of Mughal
administration in the Gujarat.9 Although, it is a later source when Mughal
Empire began to loose its sheen, yet it is important in the sense that it contains
official papers and revenue statistics and taxes at Surat and Cambay, among
other information. But the most important part of this source is the author’s
dairy, who, as a low medium level bureaucrat in Mughal India, held around
twenty administrative posts, spanning over a period of thirty years.
9 The only extant copy of the manuscript is found in the Bodleian Library, Oxford, Fraser
Collection, 124. I have consulted the microfilm copy available at the Centre of Advanced
Study in History, AMU (microfilm no.127).