THE REIGN OF AKBAR (1556-1605) 91
and consequently there would be no record of any special
orders on the subject. In general terms, then, we may say
that in practice the State continued to take some share in
the benefits and the burdens which in theory had been
entirely shifted to the peasant.
Such is my reading of the history of assessment in the
older provinces during this reign. A uniform set of grain-
rates per bigha, valued first at uniform, and then at local,
prices, gave way to local grain-rates valued at local prices;
and, when commutation broke down, schedules of cash-
rates were fixed on the basis of past experience, which lasted,
so far as we know, for the remainder of the reign. The
theoretical basis of the revenue-Demand, one-third of the
average produce, remained intact; the changes made were
matters of administration, determining only the methods
by which the Demand was calculated. It should, however,
be added that our knowledge of the last decade of Akbar’s
reign is imperfect. The historical account in the Ain stops
abruptly at the 24th year; the Akbarnama, which carries
the story further, becomes less detailed after the 43rd, when
its author was sent on service to the Deccan, and breaks off
in the 46th year, when he was murdered ; while the ‘“com-
pletion” of the work, prepared by a later writer, is very
concise and pays no attention to agrarian topics It is
possible then that definite changes may have been made
during this period, or else, what I think is more probable,
that a gradual evolution may have been in progress, but
on these points speculation is useless.
One important question remains: Did these assessment
rates apply to the whole area of the provinces, Assigned as
well as Reserved, or only to the portion administered directly
by the Revenue Ministry? We have seen in the last
chapter that under the Lodi dynasty assignees had in
practice entire freedom in regard to assessment; I have
found nothing to show whether this freedom lasted into
Akbar’s reign, or had been curtailed under Sher Shah.
It is clear, however, that the second, or ganiingo-rates,
directly affected assignees, because their complaints about
delay in commutation are specifically recorded (Ain, i. 348);
and a passage in the Akbarnama (iii. 381) makes it quite