Book contents
- Frontmatter
- INTRODUCTION
- PART I c. 1200–1500
- PART II c. 1500–1750
- VI Population
- VII State and the Economy
- VIII Systems of Agricultural Production
- IX Agrarian Relations and Land Revenue
- X Non-Agricultural Production
- XI Inland Trade
- XII The Monetary System and Prices
- XIII Foreign Trade
- XIV Towns and Cities
- XV Standard of Living
- 1 Mughal India
- 2 Maharashtra and the Deccan
- Appendix The Medieval Economy of Assam
- Bibliography
- Map 10 Asia and the Indian Ocean: major trade routes and ports, seventeenth century
- References
2 - Maharashtra and the Deccan
from XV - Standard of Living
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- INTRODUCTION
- PART I c. 1200–1500
- PART II c. 1500–1750
- VI Population
- VII State and the Economy
- VIII Systems of Agricultural Production
- IX Agrarian Relations and Land Revenue
- X Non-Agricultural Production
- XI Inland Trade
- XII The Monetary System and Prices
- XIII Foreign Trade
- XIV Towns and Cities
- XV Standard of Living
- 1 Mughal India
- 2 Maharashtra and the Deccan
- Appendix The Medieval Economy of Assam
- Bibliography
- Map 10 Asia and the Indian Ocean: major trade routes and ports, seventeenth century
- References
Summary
The information relating to the standard of living in the Deccan and Maharashtra is scarce and fragmentary. On the basis of such unsatisfactory data, a sketchy account is given below of the rural people, the urban residents and government servants.
RURAL PEOPLE
As was pointed out in chapter IX, there was a considerable economic differentiation among the peasantry in the medieval Deccan. The small peasants who held the land below 10 acres or so as well as the village artisans and servants may be regarded as the rural poor. Though the living conditions of the small peasants of the time is little known, there is hardly any doubt that the ordinary rural folk used to live in mud huts thatched with straw. They seem to have worn fewer clothes than they do now, possibly due to the simpler habit of the age.
When the village artisans and servants collectively called twelve balutedārs were given their balute-payment in cash instead of in kind, the annual amount was Rs. 10 each to carpenter, leather-worker, rope-maker, and mahār (an untouchable caste of watchman and other menial workers), Rs. 5 each to blacksmith, potter, barber, and washerman, and Rs. 2½ each to goldsmith, astrologer, Hindu temple-keeper, and Masjid-keeper in a western Deccan village towards the end of the eighteenth century. At any rate, these cash payments were remarkably small in amount as compared with urban wages to be mentioned later. Moreover, it should be noted that the balute-payment was not made to each family of balutedārs but to each watan, so that if there were several families sharing a watan, they had to divide the money among themselves.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Economic History of India , pp. 471 - 477Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1982
References
- 14
- Cited by