Class 12 History – Ch. 8 PYQs Peasants, Zamindars and the State (Agrarian Society & the Mughal Empire)

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Class 12 History, Ch-8 (Peasants, Zamindars & the State)


A) Short-Answer PYQs (≈3 marks each)

Q1) What did jati panchayats do in the 16th–17th centuries?

  • Arbitrated civil disputes (inheritance, land boundaries, compensation) and monitored marriage norms within the caste.
  • Mediated contested claims on land and ritual precedence in village functions; could impose fines, social boycott, or penances.
  • Worked alongside the village panchayat; except in criminal justice, state officials usually respected their decisions.
  • Petitions in western India show people approached jati bodies against excess taxation and begar (unpaid labour).

Q2) Why were women considered an important resource in agrarian society?

  • Agrarian economy was labour-intensive; women were vital in sowing, weeding, transplanting, harvesting.
  • Key household/ artisanal tasks: spinning yarn, kneading clay for pottery, food processing, embroidery.
  • Their labour underpinned both subsistence (family survival) and market-oriented production (textiles, crafts).
  • Demographic point: child-bearing mattered in a system that prized larger working households.

Q3) Name a major crop of western India in the 17th century & how it reached India.

  • Maize emerged as a major crop in western India.
  • It reached India via Africa → Iberian circuit (Spain/Portugal) → Indian Ocean routes, and by the 1600s appears routinely in regional crop lists.

Q4) How were subsistence and commercial production intertwined on peasant holdings?

  • Same plot/household produced foodgrains (subsistence) and cash crops (revenue).
  • State policies pushed jins-i-kamil (perfect crops) like cotton & sugarcane; peasants mixed food + market crops.
  • Spread of new world crops (maize, chillies, potatoes) diversified baskets; peasants tilted choices with prices/dues in mind.
  • Outcome: a hybrid farm economy—grain for the pot, cotton/sugar for tax and trade.

Q5) Give three factors behind the expansion of agriculture (16th–17th c.).

  • Abundant land on the frontier—new clearings, settlement in riverine belts.
  • Labour mobility (khud-kashta vs pahi-kashta) and migration into better-term villages.
  • Irrigation works with state support—repairing old canals, digging new ones; plus local wells, tanks, embankments.

Q6) Sketch the condition of an average peasant in North India (17th c.).

  • Small holdings; often 1 pair of bullocks, 1–2 ploughs; 5–6 acres could be “affluent” in some regions.
  • Two categories: khud-kashta (resident) and pahi-kashta (non-resident/seasonal).
  • Faced price swings, famines, forced labour claims; yet land buying/selling occurred like other property.
  • Obligations to state, zamindars, and village headmen made the margin of subsistence thin.

Q7) Why did jati panchayats gain authority? Mention their scope of power.

  • Grew from need to regulate caste norms and inter-caste disputes in expanding villages/markets.
  • Scope: civil arbitration across castes, land claims, marital legitimacy, ritual precedence; could fine and boycott.
  • The state often endorsed their awards—so their social sanctions had real bite.

Q8) Explain kankut and batai/nasab as methods of land-revenue assessment.

  • Kankut (chak): estimate based on grain-ear count (kan) or sample cutting (kut) on measured strips—then convert to dues.
  • Batai/Share: a fixed share of actual produce after harvest (often one-third); nasab could mean customary rates.
  • Used with zabt (measurement + schedule of rates) depending on crop, region, and transaction costs.

Q9) What were the results of India’s overseas trade under the Mughals?

  • Silver bullion inflows via Europe expanded money supply (rupiya circulation).
  • Stable Asian empires (Ottoman–Safavid–Ming) enabled overland & maritime networks.
  • Wider commodity spread (textiles, indigo, pepper, sugar) and geographic reach.
  • Cash circulation helped tax collection in money and monetised rural transactions.

Q10) Why does the Ain-i Akbari remain an extraordinary document despite issues?

  • Systematic, quantitative listings: revenues, crops, prices (selectively), mansabs, jurisdictions.
  • Reveals state–zamindar–peasant interfaces, regulation of agriculture, officials’ roles.
  • Abu’l Fazl cross-checked oral/written reports; the five-book structure covers admin to culture.
  • Yet read critically: imperial bias, calculation errors, skewed coverage.

Long Answer type questions Q1) “There was more to rural India than sedentary agriculture.” Substantiate.

  • Landscape mosaic: alongside ploughed fields, large belts of forests/scrub (eastern/central India, Jharkhand, Western Ghats, Deccan).
  • Forest livelihoods: jangli communities practised shifting cultivation, hunting, gathering, fishing, seasonally structured (e.g., Bhils—spring for collection, monsoon for cultivation, winter for hunting).
  • State’s view & needs: forests seen as subversive refuges for rebels; also vital for war elephants and timber.
  • Circulation & exchange: forest folk traded honey, wax, lac, medicinal herbs with qasbahs/banjaras; agrarian villages sourced fodder, fuelwood, pastures from commons (banjar/virgin lands).
  • Cultural interfaces: Sufi lineages and agrarian expansion brought new cults, shrines, and norms into frontier zones; forest groups sometimes assimilated into peasant society as clearings advanced.
  • Conclusion: Rural India = agrarian–pastoral–forest continuum, not just fixed fields; these sectors interlocked in labour, markets, and state extraction.

  • What it is: Part of the Akbarnama; five books—admin & fiscal systems, mansabdars, provinces, customs, and akhlaq (sayings).
  • Why exceptional:
    • Offers unusually granular data on crops, assessment units, officials, jagirs/khalisa, and the work of daftar/diwan.
    • Shows how the state secured cultivation to ensure stable revenue, and how it regulated zamindars.
    • Abu’l Fazl’s method: compilation + verification of reports; multiple revisions.
  • Read with care:
    • Imperial project to legitimise Akbar → harmonious order narrative.
    • Arithmetical errors, sparse regional price/wage series, and skew towards fiscal-administrative sectors.
  • Bottom line: When triangulated with farmans, revenue daftar, regional chronicles, archaeology, it becomes a cornerstone source for Mughal agrarian history.

Q3) Village panchayats regulated rural society. Discuss their structure & functions.

  • Composition: Assembly of respected elders; headed by muqaddam/mandal; maintained a common fund (fines, contributions).
  • Administrative tasks: Irrigation, path/embankment repairs, village accounts (with patwari), cleanliness, watch-and-ward.
  • Social regulation: Upheld caste limits, policed marriage customs, ritual precedence; could fine, ostracise, or impose penance.
  • Economic mediation: Resolved land boundary disputes, tenancy matters (khud-kashta vs pahi-kashta), remissions in bad seasons; negotiated begar demands.
  • Interface with state: Often respected by officials; petitions from peasants (incl. women) show panchayats as first resort of justice.
  • Why effective: Drew legitimacy from custom + village consensus; linked zamindar, headmen, and jati bodies into a layered order.

Q4) Roles of zamindars in Mughal India—power, obligations, contradictions.

  • Intermediary elites with hereditary claims to revenue collection & local authority; controlled waste, forests, pastures, sometimes large cultivable tracts.
  • Functions: Mobilised revenue & labour, maintained order, hosted markets, supported roads/tanks/embankments; patronised mosques/temples and fairs.
  • Power base: Customary dues (nazrana), armed retainers, kin networks; could convert rights into zamindari forts/havelis.
  • Tensions: Extractive practices, illegal cesses, or forced labour provoked peasant resistance; yet in uprisings zamindars often led or sheltered raiyats—hence peasant support.
  • State–zamindar bargain: Crown sought checks (measurement/zabt, transfers, jagir audits), but also needed zamindars’ local clout for stable cultivation.

Q5) Show how agriculture was organised around two seasonal cycles with examples.

  • Kharif (monsoon sowing): Jowar, bajra, rice, cotton—sown with rains; harvest in autumn.
  • Rabi (winter sowing): Wheat, barley, gram, mustard—after monsoon retreat; harvest spring.
  • Cropping choices: Varied by soils/irrigation/market; peasants mixed grains + jins-i-kamil (cotton/sugar) to meet both subsistence and cash needs.
  • New crops: Maize, chillies, potatoes integrated where climate allowed.
  • Administration tie-in: Revenue schedules and remissions recognised crop cycles and calamities; banjar tracts were brought under the plough season by season.

Q6) Trace how the lives of forest dwellers changed (16th–17th c.).

  • Seasonal rhythms—collection, fishing, shifting plots, hunting.
  • Contact zones: Trade lac, honey, timber, and elephants to the state; frequent royal hunts doubled as grievance-hearing tours.
  • Pressure from expansion: Clearance of forests, push of revenue frontier, and military policing narrowed free access to commons.
  • Religious-cultural currents: Sufi networks & agrarian settlers fostered new shrines/rituals; some groups settled as peasants.
  • Net effect: Gradual integration and control—more dues, less mobility; yet forest people remained critical to the rural economy.

Q7) Using the Ain-i Akbari, explain the administrative and army organisation under Akbar.

  • Mansabdari system: Graded mansabs (zat/sawar) determined rank, pay, & cavalry quotas; periodic brand/chehra checks curbed fraud.
  • Jagir–khalisa split: Jagirs assigned for mansabdar salary; khalisa remained crown lands for central treasury.
  • Bureaucracy: Diwan (fiscal chief), bakhshi (military pay/roll), sadr (grants), qazi/mir-adls (justice), suba-sarkar-pargana tiers with qazis, amils, qanungos.
  • Army: Emphasis on high-quality cavalry, artillery parks, elephants; forts and road/serai network for movement.
  • Fiscal logic: Measurement (zabt), assessed rates, and cash-nexus underwrote army provisioning and pay.

Q8) “Zamindars often enjoyed peasant support in rural resistance.” Explain.

  • Shared village world: Zamindars were local patrons—credit, protection, ritual leadership; peasants tied by kinship & custom.
  • Grievance alignment: When state demand overshot capacity (bad harvests, war levies), zamindars themselves were squeezed—leading to joint resistance.
  • Means: Control over retainers, fortified houses, and paths/forests enabled mobilisation and safe retreat.
  • Outcomes: Some uprisings forced revenue remissions or office changes; others ended in punitive action and confiscations.
  • Hence: Support reflected a political economy coalition, not mere “class harmony”.

Q9) Explain methods of revenue assessment & collection and their regional fit.

  • Zabt (measurement + assessed rates schedule) worked in core wheat–cotton belts with stable yields.
  • Batai/Share (apportioned after harvest) suited riskier tracts; reduced assessment disputes but raised collection costs.
  • Kankut/Chak (sample estimation) balanced speed and fairness when full measurement was costly.
  • Local officials: Amil, qanungo, patwari implemented entries; remissions allowed for drought/flood/locusts.
  • Why mix matters: Region, crop, irrigation, and transaction costs dictated the optimal method.

Q10) Write a note on pastures, tanks/canals & rural commons in village life.

  • Commons (banjar/grazing grounds) provided fodder, fuelwood, leaf-manure; panchayats regulated access & fines.
  • Waterworks: Step-wells, tanks, canals underpinned rabi crops; villages and zamindars managed desilting/embankments.
  • Risk-sharing: Access to commons buffered dearth/famines; shared labour in repairs built social obligation.
  • Linkages: Pastures and tanks tied pastoralists, farmers, and artisans into a single ecology of work.

Q11) Caste, gender & law: how did patriarchy operate in Mughal rural society?

  • Norm enforcement: Jati panchayats/village elders regulated marriage, sexuality, inheritance, and ritual status.
  • Women’s petitions: Archival cases from Rajasthan/Gujarat/Maharashtra show women approaching panchayats against excess dues/begar or marital violations—suggesting agency within constraints.
  • Sanctions: Fines, penance, excommunication—social penalties had material consequences (access to water, fields, credit).
  • State stance: Except in criminal justice, state deferred to local bodies—so customary law effectively governed daily life.

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