Indian feudalism
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The term Indian feudalism is an attempt to classify Indian history according to a European model. Historians have become very reluctant to classify other societies into European models and today it is rare for Indian history to be described as feudal by academics; it still done in popular usage, however, but only for pejorative reasons to express disfavour, typically by critics. These include zamindar, jagir, desmukh, chowdhury. Most of these "systems" were abolished after the Independence of India and the rest of the Subcontinent, but some still exist, officially or in its remnants.
[edit] Further reading
- Yadav, Sima. The Myth of Indian Feudalism (in English). Delhi: B.R. Publishers. ISBN 81-7646-465-1.