THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY 127
on in the Revenue Ministry. A few passages, however,
from this work require notice. One is the seventh clause
of the regulations which he issued (Tuzuk, 4) on his accession
to the throne, to the effect that officials and assignees
should not take peasants’ land into their own cultivation
by force. We may infer from this that cases of the kind
had occurred, and had given rise to scandal; in most parts
of the Empire there was productive land to spare, but there
would often be choice plots coveted for their productivity
or situation, as Ahab coveted Naboth’s vineyard, and it is
in accordance with what we know of Jahangir’s character
that he should have condemned such conduct, though we
cannot be confident that his orders were vigorously enforced.
[n another passage! the Emperor, whose taste for choice
fruit is notorious, states that fruit-trees were, and had
always been, free of any demand ior revenue, and that a
garden planted on cultivated land was forthwith exempted
from assessment; but the language indicates, what is
known from other sources, that a cess on fruit-trees was
among the items of miscellaneous revenue which survived
repeated prohibitions.
The only definite innovation which Jahangir records? is
the institution of the Grant-under-seal (dltamgha), which is
of interest as constituting the nearest approach to land-
ownership, in the modern sense, which appears during the
Mogul period. The scope of such Grants was limited to
the case where a deserving officer applied for a grant of his
“home,” that is to say, of the village or pargana in which
he was born: in this case the grant was to be made under
a particular form of seal, and was not to be altered or
resumed, so that, by contrast with the other tenures of the
period, it may be regarded as permanent, though naturally
an absolute Emperor could not be prevented from annulling
it. This Grant-under-seal, it may be noted, was not an
t Tuzuk, 252. The cess on fruit-trees is called sar-darakhsi; Akbar had
remitted this impost (Ain, i. 3o1).
' Tuzuk, 10; Badshahnama, II. 409. At the opening of the British
period claims to dltamgha-grants were not uncommon, but the designation
had come to be used loosely during the disorders of the eighteenth century;
thus the grant of the Diwini of Bengal to the East India Company was
described as idltamgha (Aitchison’s Treaties (1892), i. 56), but it cannot
possibly be brought within the original definition.