Mughal Bengal: Revenue, Rivers, and Regional Power
MTA
Economic systems, naval logistics, and provincial governance under Mughal rule in Bengal
2nd Edition
*Mughal Bengal: Revenue, Rivers, and Regional Power* explores the sophisticated intersection of ecology, economics, and imperial administration in the Bengal delta. The book argues that the region’s unique hydrological landscape—defined by shifting river courses, seasonal monsoons, and fertile alluvial soils—was not merely a geographic backdrop but the primary driver of Mughal statecraft. By mastering naval logistics and creating a "riverine state," the Mughals transformed a distant, watery frontier into the empire's most profitable province, where authority was projected through mobile flotillas and customs posts (*chokis*) rather than traditional land-based cavalry.
The text details a complex administrative and fiscal grid where the separation of powers between the *Subahdar* (governor) and the *Diwan* (finance minister) ensured steady revenue flow to the imperial center. This system relied heavily on a Persianate bureaucracy of scribes and hereditary local intermediaries, such as *kanungos* and *zamindars*, who negotiated the extraction of wealth from a dynamic agrarian frontier. The book highlights how the monetization of the economy—supported by state mints and the sophisticated credit networks of *sarrafs*—allowed Bengal to integrate into global trade circuits, exporting high-value textiles, saltpeter, and sugar in exchange for a massive influx of silver bullion.
As central Mughal authority weakened in the 18th century, the book traces the transition toward "Nawabi autonomy" under leaders like Murshid Quli Khan. This period saw the provincial capital shift to Murshidabad and the rise of powerful local banking houses and large *zamindari* estates, which maintained Mughal administrative continuities while asserting regional independence. The narrative also examines the growing influence of European trading companies, particularly the English East India Company, whose fortified settlements like Calcutta began to challenge the traditional riverine power structures.
Ultimately, the work illustrates how the environmental rhythms of the delta—including floods, cyclones, and the Little Ice Age—forced a constant recalibration of rule. The book concludes that the legacies of Mughal fiscal logic and riverine logistics provided the essential infrastructure for the succeeding colonial order. By treating revenue and rivers as mutually constitutive, the text offers a spatial history of how a pre-modern empire harnessed a volatile landscape to create a stable and extraordinarily wealthy regional power.
This book is intended for students and scholars of early modern South Asian history, particularly those specializing in Mughal administrative systems, economic history, and environmental history. Researchers interested in provincial governance within empires, the interplay between geography and state power, and the transition from imperial to regional autonomy in Bengal will find the detailed analysis of revenue systems, riverine logistics, and agrarian transformation especially valuable. It also serves specialists in pre-colonial Indian economic history seeking to understand how fiscal structures interacted with ecological dynamics to produce one of the Mughal Empire's most prosperous provinces.
April 5, 2026
40,879 words
2 hours 52 minutes
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