THE REIGN OF AKBAR (1556-1605) 119
the West, TATTA, or Lower Sind, was assessed by Sharing,
the State’s claim being one-third of the produce; I have
found nothing to show whether the Demand was made in
produce, or was commuted in cash.
The Mogul province of AJMER represents generally the
modern Rajputana, excluding the eastern portion, which
belonged to Agra. In Akbar’s time the province was
heterogeneous, some parts being administered on the
Regulation system, while the remainder was left in the
hands of the Chiefs. The standard of the revenve-Demand
was low, being described as one-seventh or one-eighth of
the produce, “and money little,” a cryptic phrase which
may possibly indicate that payment in kind prevailed.
Judging by the form of the statistics, three districts, Ajmer,
Ranthambhor, and Nagor, were administered mainly on
the Regulation system. Of the other districts enumerated,
Bikanir was obviously left entirely to the Chief; Sirohi was
divided between four Chiefs; while Jodhpur and Chitor
were held mainly by Chiefs, though some parganas in them
were directly administered. Scheduses of assessment-rates
are given for all districts except Bikanir and Sirohi, for
which they “had not been prepared”; but in the cases of
Jodhpur and Chitor they must be taken as applicable only
to the subdivisions administered directly by the Mogul
authorities.
MALWA was another heterogeneous province. The Regu-
lation system had been introduced, at least formally, but
it certainly did not extend to the districts of Marosor
(Mandasor) on the West, or Garha on the East, the figures
for which can be interpreted only on the view that they
were held by various Chiefs; while there is room for doubt
as to the position in other portions of the province. The
actual facts cannot be ascertained in detail! but so much is
t Ain, i. 381. The grouping of assessment circles in Malwa is unintelli-
gible. Reading the text as it stands, on the lines followed in other
provinces, Ujjain and Raisin would be in one circle, but the schedule
shows them as separate, and some words have apparently slipped out of
the description. The most probable reading is that (1) no schedules were
framed for Garha and Marosor; (2) one schedule applied to Chanderi and
Raisin; (3) a second schedule to Mando; (4) a third, named Ujjain, to
the remaining seven districts. Readers who are dependent on Jarrett’s
translation will find the figures for Garha under the erroneous heading
Kanauj (ii. 199).