42 THE AGRARIAN SYSTEM OF MOSLEM INDIA
essentials the position they had held in the thirteenth
century, but—where the Governor was sufficiently strong—
with less freedom in regard to their treatment of their
peasants.
A third element in the policy of Ghiyisuddin was his
insistence on the dignity of provincial Governors, and on a
correspondingly high standard of conduct on their part.
[t is clear that, at his accession, speculative farming of the
revenue was common; and the Ministry was crowded with
touts and pests of various kinds, whose functions have to be
guessed from the designations applied to them,—“spies,”
“farmers,” ‘“enhancement-mongers,”” and “wreckers.” The
King put a stop to the activities of these pests, and chose
his Governors from the nobility; he ordered that they were
to receive all due consideration from the audit-staff of the
Ministry; but he made it clear that their position and
dignity would depend on their own conduct. They might
honourably take the ordinary perquisites of the post,
described as “a half-tenth or half-eleventh, and the one-
tenth or one-fifteenth of the revenue’; while their sub-
ordinates were allowed to appropriate “a half or one per
cent.” in addition to their salaries; but exactions were to
be limited to these figures, which we may assume were
already traditional! and any substantial misappropriations
were to be sternly punished.
These orders call for a few words of explanation regarding
the relations which subsisted between the provincial execu-
tive and the audit staff of the Revenue Ministry. The
audit was periodical, not continuous. An official was left
at work for some time, and then called to the Ministry for
the two-fold process denoted audit (muhdsaba) and recovery
»mutdlaba); the auditors, as might be expected, strove to
bring out a balance due, and payment of this balance was
enforced by torture. The first mention I have found of
recovery by torture is in the proceedings of Sharaf Qai,
which have been referred to under the reign of Alauddin
(Barni, 288). There is no suggestion in that passage that
officers of the rank of Governor were tortured, but the orders
! Ibn Batiita, who was in India during the next reign, raentions (iii. 112]
that Governors received a half-tenth on the revenue as a regular thing,