______ described the ways in which the jotedars of Dinajpur in North Bengal resisted being disciplined by the zamindars and undermined their power. |
Captain Hearsey Charles Ball Francis Buchanan George Chinnery |
Francis Buchanan |
The correct answer is Option (3) → Francis Buchanan " While many zamindars were facing a crisis at the end of the eighteenth century, a group of rich peasants were consolidating their position in the villages. In Francis Buchanan’s survey of the Dinajpur district in North Bengal we have a vivid description of this class of rich peasants known as jotedars. By the early nineteenth century, jotedars had acquired vast areas of land – sometimes as much as several thousand acres. They controlled local trade as well as moneylending, exercising immense power over the poorer cultivators of the region. A large part of their land was cultivated through sharecroppers (adhiyars or bargadars) who brought their own ploughs, laboured in the field, and handed over half the produce to the jotedars after the harvest.". |