THE 13tH AND 1l4tH CENTURIES 47
more than a third or a fourth of his contract, he went into
rebellion, and shut himself up in the fort. He was,
however, easily captured, and was sent as a prisoner to
Delhi.
The other case! is that of the farmer of the province of
Karra. The chronicler’s scorn for him is expressed in
language too idiomatic for exact translation, but “a con-
temptible, drug-soaked, little idiot” gives, T think, the
general sense. He took the farm without capital, adherents,
or resources of any kind, failed to collect even a tenth part
of the sum he had promised to pay, and then, gathering a
rabble round him, went into rebellion, and assumed the
title of king. The rebellion was easily crushed by the
nearest Governor, the rebel farmer was flayed, and his skin
duly sent to Delhi. Even if we assume that the chronicler’s
description of these two speculators is overdrawn, the fact
remains that they were speculators pure and simple, with
no local ties, and no claim to be governors except that their
offers of revenue had been accepted. Nor would we be
justified in inferring that these two farms were exceptional.?
The only reason for the chronicler’s record of them is that
they resulted in rebellions, the heading under which the
episodes are recounted, but their terms are stated in such
a matter-of-fact way that it is reasonable to conclude that
they were typical of the ordinary provincial arrangements,
after the attempt at centralised administration had broken
down. We hear of the speculators who failed and rebelled,
1 Barni, 487. The description of the farmer is marduki bhangri
bhangi khurafati. The first word means ‘‘ mannikin,” hence “contemptible
fellow,” and the last ‘‘nonsensical’’ or ‘‘idiotic.”” Bhangri denotes
addiction to the use of hemp-drugs. My friend, Mr. R. Paget Dewhurst,
describes bhangi as a meaningless appositive, or jingle, with possibly a
punning allusion to its sense of ‘‘sweeper.” I do not myself take the
passage to assert that a man of the sweeper-caste had been allowed to
tarm the province, but this interpretation cannot be absolutely ruled out:
further on (p. 505), Barni complains bitterly of Muhammad Tughlaqg’s
patronage of men of low caste, barbers, liquor-sellers, gardeners, weavers,
and so on, who were made equal to nobles, and received high Court ap-
pointments and provinces. Acceptance of a sweeper’'s tender is not
therefore absolutely inconceivable, but probably the word conveys nothing
more than abusive assonance.
: Ibn Batidta was told (iv. 49) that the entire Deccan country had been
farmed to a Hindu for 17 krors, and that he was flayed for default. This
may possibly be a distorted account of the first episode given in the text,
but it reads more like a different occurrence.