THE LAST PHASE IN NORTHERN INDIA 175 whole of the area which was found included in the Dependencies held by Chiefs, because, as we have seen, some of them had been active in extending their Dependencies in the years immediately preceding the establishment of British administration; what portion of an estate recognised by the law of to-day represents ancient sovereignty, and what portion is a modern accretion, is a question of fact to be determined separately in each case. We know of landholders in Oudh whose estates date only from the nineteenth century; of others whose estates were founded in the Moslem period; and of others again whose traditions carry us even further back. As with the Brotherhood, so with the Chief; the institution is one of great antiquity, but we must not infer that all Chiefs date from the same period, or that their possessions have remained unchanged in sxtent. gs. CONCLUDING REMARKS In order to complete this account of the agrarian system 2s it existed in Northern India at the end of the eighteenth century, it is perhaps desirable to see how the various jetails fit in with the facts which have been discussed in previous chapters. The village as a unit stands, it will be seen, exactly where it stood in the time of Aurangzeb, the revenue due from it being assessed, usually for the year, at a lump sum of money, fixed with reference to its pro- ductive capacity, and intended to represent ordinarily half the gross produce, but not distributed by the assessors over the individual peasants. Inside the village we find the individual peasants contributing to this revenue on one or other of the familiar systems, either on an estimate (or sometimes a determination) of the produce gathered, or by rates on the area sown, or by a lump sum payable for the holding. The only apparent novelty is in the method of rating; in many cases we find crop-rates exactly like those -harged by Sher Shah or Akbar, but with simplified schedules: but in others we find rates varying with the soil and independent of the crops grown. I have not come across any definite evidence to show that any of the Moslem administrators who attempted to deal with individual peasants in this region, used these soil-rates,