Karen Leonard
Karen Leonard
Karen Leonard
Title
The 'Great Firm' Theory of the Decline of the Mughal Empire
Permalink
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0jt639r0
Journal
Comparative Studies in Society and History, 21(2)
ISSN
0010-4175
Author
Leonard, K
Publication Date
1979-04-01
License
CC BY 4.0
Peer reviewed
and revolt. Two often-cited views focusing upon factions among the nobility are Satish
Chandra, Parties and Politics at the Mughal Court, 1707- 1740 (Aligarh, 1959), and M. Athar
Ali, The Mughal Nobility Under Aurangzeb (Aligarh, 1966). Two regional perspectives are
given by Philip Calkins, 'The Formation of a Regionally Oriented Ruling.Group in Bengal,
1700-1740,' Journal of Asian Studies, XXIX:4 (Aug. 1970), and Karen Leonard, 'The
Hyderabad Political System and Its Participants,' Journal of A sian Studies, XX : 3 (May,
1971), 569- 82.
3 See the two articles cited in footnote 1; Pearson argues that military efforts in the south
and the defeats inflicted by Shivaji decisively affected the loyalty of the nobles, and Richards
argues that policy miscalculations led to artificial jagir shortages and inattention to newly
incorporated warrior elites in the south.
0010-4175/79/2193-4333$2.00 © 1979 Society for Comparative Study of Society and History
151
152 KAREN LEONARD
one group whose relationship to the Mughal state and whose roles in the
political system were crucial: the bankers- sahukars, shroffs, mahajans-
particularly those in the 'great firms. ' It will be argued here that the great
banking firms of Mughal India played a key role in the decline of the
empire.
The 'great firm' theory of Mughal decline, which relies on secondary
sources for its comprehensive data base, clarifies and extends existing
economic theories of imperial decline. Indigenous banking firms were
indispensable allies of the Mughal state, and the great firms' diversion of
resources, both credit and trade, from the Mughals to other political
powers in the Indian subcon~inent contributed to the downfall of the
empire. The period of imperial decline coincided with the increasing in-
volvement of banking firms in revenue collection at regional and local
levels, in preference to their continued provision of credit to the central
Mughal government. This involvement increased from 1650 to 1750, and it
brought bankers, more directly than before, into positions of political
power all over India. This period of 'great firm' partnership with regional
powers, among them the East India Company, was followed by political
losses for the great banking firms. When in the 1750s the Company began
to achieve political dominance throughout India, it turned against
indigenous bankers and systematically displaced them, usurping their
functions as bankers to the Company and to ot~er political rulers and
downgrading their roles in the collection of land revenue. One consequence
was the relegation of indigenous bankers to less crucial roles in the political
system. A second effect was the diminished historical awareness of the
bankers' earlier importance in Mughal India.
The theoretical Hterature on historical bureaucratic empire points to the
importance of the banking firms to the state. Imperial authority derived
from a mixture of charismatic, legal- rational, and tr.aditional religions and
cultural factors. 4 A ruler's authority was strongest where the political order
was closely interwoven with the cosmic, religious, and cultural order, that
is, where political legitimacy was based on the maintenance of that tradi-
tional order. In Mughal India, with a ruling class which was largely Muslim
and initially drawn from outside, economic and political alliances were
extremely important to maintenance of the state. 5
The establishment of the Mughal empire required the conquerors to
co-opt indigenous groups and institutions and to counter the opposition of
various indigenous elites menaced by the imperial trend towards political
4
Useful discussions are by S. N. Eisenstadt, The Political Sys1ems of Empires (New York,
1963), and The Decline of Empires (New Jersey, 1967).
5
The generalization has interesting implications for scholars of cultural and intellectual
movements in medieval and early modern India, such as the bhakti movements, the develop-
ment of vernacular poetry, the shifts of artistic patronage to regional courts, and those
political movements led by Shivaji or the Sikh gurus.
THE DECLINE OF THE MUG HAL EMPIRE 153
centralization. Moreover, the Mughal emperors had to achieve some mea-
sure of legitimacy in traditional terms through political accommodation
with traditional elites. And they had to form alliances with groups in the
population which could benefit from the establishment of a more unified
polity. Such allies theoretically could come from one of two categories:
those (largely urban) economic, cultural, and professional groups who
were by origin or interest opposed to the nobility and landholder; and the
larger, lower-class groups (for example, peasants) who could at least
indirectly benefit from the weakening of aristocratic forces and the estab-
lishment of greater order. The Mughals had to find and utilize such new
economic and political resources. 6
The creation of the mansabdari system, a new organ of centralized
administration directly supervised and staffed by new personnel, was
important in establishing the empire. But just as clearly, the Mughals
depended upon urban merchants and bankers for the provision of goods
and commodities and cash, the latter for direct spending and payment for
services. Given the geographic scope of the Mughal empire, the decentral-
ized military forces and their employment in expansionist ventures, these
financial resources had to be accessible and flexible. Since there was a
monetized market economy and a highly developed system of credit in
Mughal India, conditions of political stability encouraged the alliance of
the Mughals and indigenous bankers and ensured a continuous flow of
trade goods and notes of credit.
Yet the interests of the Mughal state and of the great banking firms
sometimes came into conflict. The rulers had a constant need to mobilize
extensive resources for military expansion. Such mobilization could either
exhaust the available resources or strengthen the groups which produced
and controlled those resources, making the bankers less dependent on the
rulers and ultimately threatening the basis of the political system. For the
banking firms, the conflict of interests was intensified by the practice of
short-term loans, increasing the dependence of the rulers on them but
possibly undermining the availability of resources in the long run. 7
The ruler's relationships with diverse groups and institutions had to be
carefully balanc~d, and any disruption could set off a chain of events
weakening the empire. External pressures combined with internal tensions
could intensify problems of imperial control. When other powers competed
with the Mughals for the credit and other services offered by Indian
bankers, the imperial bureaucracy was threatened. It became more depen-
dent upon the banking firms and it had to develop better working methods
6
The analysis draws upon Eisenstadt, Political Systems, particularly ch. 12.
7 Ibid., and his Decline of Empires, pp. 3-5; and A. L. Udovitch, 'Credit as a Means of
Investment in Medieval Islamic Trade,' i'n Journal of the American Oriental Society, 87: 3
(July- September, 1967), 60- 64.
154 KAREN LEONARD
and Compulsion: Gujarati Merchants and the Portuguese System in Western India,
1500-1600,' University of Michigan, 1971 . He has modified his view of their role in politics to
some extent in his article, 'Political Participation in Mughal India,' Indian Economic and
Social History Review IX: 2 (April- June 1972), 113- 31.
11 See Irfan Habib's three articles: 'Banking in Mughal India,' Contributions to Indian
Economic History , I (Calcutta, 1960), 1- 20; ' Potentialities of Capitalistic Development in the
Economy of Mughal India,' Journal of Economic History, XXIX (March 1969), 32- 78; and
'Usury in Medieval India,' Comparative Studies in Society and History, VI :4 (July 1964),
393- 423. Also, W. C. Smith, 'The Mughal Empire and the Middle Class-A Hypothesis,'
Islamic Culture, XVIII:4 (Oct. 1944), 349-63.
12 For examples of such treatments, see Pearson, 'Political Participation,' op. cit., p.
I 19- 23; D. R. Gadgil, Origins of the Modern Indian Business Class (New York, 1959),
especially pp. 23- 28, and the same author's tentative conclusion that 'mahajans' in Poona
were socio-religious organizations for immigrants, ' Immigrant Traders in Poona in the 18th
Century,' Artha Vijnana I (March I959), I 6; and K. L. Gillion, Ahmedabad (Berkeley, 1968),
pp. 16- 24.
13 T. A. Timberg, 'A Study ofa "Great" Marwari Firm: 1860- 1914,' Indian Economic and
Social History Review VIII : 3 (July- Sept. 1971), 267- 68. Gadgil, in Origins, speaks of firms
based on kinship units: p. 34. Neither defines the unit further.
THE DE C LINE OF THE MUG HAL EMPIRE 155
essential: moneylenders were those individuals or firms habitually making
loans, while bankers were those individuals or firms which not only made
loans but received deposits and/or dealt in hundis, the written orders for
payment transmitted throughout India. 14 A further distinction in terms of
customers proves useful: moneylenders dealt customarily with agricultur-
alists; bankers very seldom dealt with agriculturalists. 15 The last distinc-
tion directs us away from questions of the degree of monetization of the
Mughal agrarian economy and brings us back to the extensive develop-
ment of credit facilities, not those oriented towards the production of
agricultural or other goods, but those oriented towards investment and
profit through transactions with the Mughal government and its func-
tionaries. A good working definition of the 'great firms' allied to the
Mughal government should specify a certain magnitude of the firm's
operations, both in volume of credit and in geographic range through the
firm's branches: such specifications must await more empirical data.
' GREAT FIRMS ' AND THE MUG HAL STATE: TO 1750
Historians have found scattered evidence of the transactions between the
great firms and the Mughal state. Irfan Habib's two articles on bankers and
moneylenders in seventeenth-century India include many useful facts,
although he places no emphasis on the political aspects of the transactions.
Bankers performed important, but, in his view, limited services: they
validated and minted money, maintained exchange ratios between.different
currencies, and issued hundis. 16 D.R. Gadgil has also discussed bankers at
length, delineating their functions as money-changers and dealers in hundis
and adding a major role in government finance. Here he mentions bankers
serving as lenders of cash and credit, as receivers and remitters of land
revenue, and as financiers of tax farmers. 1 7
Particularly crucial were the bankers' roles as state treasurers. Specific
banking firms were frequently appointed by a ruler to provide cash and
credit for the payment of salaries and other expenses on a regular basis.
Thus the delays and irregularities consequent upon sole dependence on the
seasonally delivered land revenues to the capital could be avoided. There
are many examples of such appointments.
The Jagat Seth firm gained fame in this treasurer role in mid-eighteenth-
century Bengal. The Jain family firm had moved from Rajputana to Patna,
14 L. C. Jain, Indigenous Bank ing in India (London, 1929), makes this distinction on p. 3. He
also gives the best explanation of the hundi system which was extremely complex.
15 V. Krishnan, Indigenous Banking in South India (Bombay, 1959), p . 9. In a twentieth-cen-
tury survey, he found that 80 percent of moneylenders dealt with agriculturalists, while only 3
percent of the bankers did so.
16 Habib, ' Banking,' pp. 3-8.
1 7 Gadgil, Origins, pp. 32-34. Hameeda Khatoon Naqvi, Urban Centres and Industries in
Upper India, 1556-1603 (New York, 1968), gives specific instances: pp. 62-63, 127- 28, 286.
156 KAREN LEONARD
and from there to Dacca and Murshidabad with the Mughal governors of
Bengal. In the seventeenth century, the Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb had
personally honored the firm's head, Manek Chand, for his large loans to
the government. Manek Chand's nephew was appointed 'imperial Trea-
surer' and awarded the title, Jagat Seth, by the Emperor Farukhsiyar. Jagat
Seth was accorded mint privileges by 1717, and after 1728 the imperial
tribute from Bengal was sent to Delhi by draft on this banking house. The
house of J agat Seth had personal access to the M ughal emperor in the 1720s
and 1730s, and it could allegedly obtainfarmans.of appointment for high
officials. 1 8
Other great firms served as treasurers to rulers throughout India. Kalli-
daikurichy Brahmin firms were bankers to the Rajas of Cochin and Tra-
vancore. 19 Branches of a single Marwari firm served as bankers to the
Nawab of Fatehpur, the Pindari Nawabs, and Ranjit Singh. 20 Particular
firm& were named as bankers to the Nawab of Arcot and to the Nizam of
Hyderabad. 21 l\lany other examples can be cited and the practice has been
generally recognized; its significance, however, has been understated by
historians. 2 2
Other strong connections between great firms and the M ughal state came
through the loans and credit extended to individual nobles and officials.
Successive attempts by the state to regulate or prohibit these transactions
testify to their persistence and to the state's perception of them as weaken-
ing imperial control. Nobles borrowed money frequently, using theirjagirs
('land assignments') as security and giving claims upon the anticipated land
revenues to bankers. High interest rates prevailed, but nobles allegedly
preferred jagirs to payment of a cash salary, since jagirs were acceptable
- ~ecurity for bankers. 23 The Emperor Akbar tried to establish a royal
treasury and avoid reliance on 'moneylenders,' and he tried to advance
18 J. H. Little, 'The House of Jagatseth,' in Bengal Past & Present XX (Jan.- June, 1920),
111- 200, and XXII (Jan- June, 1921), 1- 119, is a fascinating history of this firm. The material
used here comes from XX, 112- 32. Brijen K. Gupta, Sirajuddallah and the East India
Company, 1756- 1757 (Leiden, 1962), also documents this firm's closeness to the Mughals,
especially pp. 3~31 and 96- 97.
1
9 Krishnan, Indigenous Banking, p. 3.
2 0 Timberg, 'A "Great" Marwari Firm,' in the footnotes pp. 272-74.
1
21 For the Nawab of Arcot, Bavany Doss Nanasa Soucar and Dave Boocunji Cashee Dass
Soukar were the largest creditors in 1805: Jain, Indigenous Banking, p. 2 l. For Hyderabad,
there were the 'Panch Bhai' bankers, which in the early nineteenth century certainly included
Seth Kishen Das (now a famous jewelry firm) , Makhdum Seth, Mahanand Ram Puran Mal,
probably Surat Ram Govind Ram, and perhaps Palmer and Company.
22 Writers on later systems of finance and banking often referred to this prior function of
indigenous banking firms, for example, P. Datta, 'Rise of the Calcutta Money Market in
Relation to Public Borrowing and Public Credit ( 1772-1833),'Calcutta Review 46 (Feb. 1933),
171- 203, and N. Das, 'The Old Agency Houses of Calcutta,' Calcutta Review 46 (March,
1933), 317- 26. But these and other authors completely fail to deal with the historical transition
which the indigenous bankers have undergone, even at a descriptive level.
2
3 Habib, 'Usury,' pp. 408-09.
THE DECLINE OF THE MUGHAL EMPIRE 157
loans from the treasury at an interest below that asked by bankers. 24 In the
time of Aurangzeb, state officials served as intermediaries to recover debts
for bankers from nobles: officials usually claimed one-fourth of the debt for
this service, a practice Aurangzeb tried to stop. 2 5
Both the central administration and its individual officials often had to
transfer large amounts of money from one place to another, and this was
done through banking firms. Habib's impression from the authorities he
has seen is that the total amounts transferred on behalf of the Mughal
government and individual officials 'rivalled if not exceeded' money remit-
ted for purposes of trade. 26 In a similar attempt to estimate the volume and
kind of various business transactions, Gadgil contradicts himself on
whether the larger banking firms were more likely to be engaged in govern-
ment financing or in trade. 2 7 These are questions of major historical
importance, and while further empirical data are obviously needed, the
impressions of both of these scholars emphasize the political potential of
the functions banking firms performed in Mughal India.
In addition to investment through the extension of credit to the central
administration and its officials, three other types of profitable activities
linked bankers to the Mughal state. These activities are often dismissed as
examples of wast~ful extravagance and dissipation of capital, 28 but that
assessment must be reconsidered. First, there were the organized units of
production and supply to the court, the karkhanahs, which Gadgil suggests
were the major banking firms' most direct connection with 'industry' at the
time. 29 Second, contracting for the construction of public edifices in the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries- mosques, tombs, pleasure gardens
and so forth- must have been extremely profitable. It was a major type of
capital expenditure by the Mughal state. 30 Third, dealers in bullion and
jewelry played major roles i~ economic life, and they were often involved in
the great banking firms. Habib ws surprised to find that shroffs rather than
jewelers and goldsmiths were the chief buyers of foreign silver in Mughal
India, 3 1 but in fact most banking firms were engaged in several enterprises
and jewelry was a common sideline. 32 These court-related economic activi-
24 Habib, 'Banking,' p. 6, and 'Usury,' p. 409'. 25 Habib, ' Usury,' pp. 414-15.
27
20 Habib, ' Banking,' pp. 10-11. Gadgil, Origins, p. 34.
28
Habib falls into this category most of the time. See his article 'Potentialities of Capitalis-
tic Development,' p. 69, where he sees the karkhanahs as engaged in the 'production of luxury
articles.... This naturally set limits to their economic significance,' and similar remarks on
pp. 57- 60.
29 Significantly, Gadgil remarks that by 1750 such karkhanas had diminished in impor-
century.
36 A. M . Shah, 'Political Systems in 18th Century Gujarat,' Enquiry, I : I (Spring, 1964),
century; despite the failure to date its origin, it indicates the complex possibilities the revenue
system offered for intermediary profits.
40
Even for this commission method, an initial large nazr or payment seems to have been
necessary.
41
Pearson argues that the impact upon the nobility was crucial: 'Shivaji and the Decline,'
op. cit.
42
Pearson , 'Shivaji and the Decline,' pp. 227-28, and his ' Political Participation,' op cit.,
118-19.
43
Ibid., particularly the latter article, pp. 124, 129- 30. See also Satish Chandra, 'Commer-
cial Activities of the Mughal Emperors During the Seventeenth Century,' in Bengal Past &
Present, 78: 146 (July-Dec. 1959), 92- 97, where he argues that the jagir crisis may have
induced nobles to turn to commerce, and his 'Some Aspects of the Growth of A Money
Economy in India during the Seventeenth Century,' Indian Economic and Social History
Review, III : 4 (Dec., 1966), 321-36.
160 KAREN LEONARD
India Quarterly 2: 1 & 2 (1957) 142, for Husain Ali Khan's action (the governor of Bihar).
4 9 Satish Chandra, in his articles cited in footnote 43 , suggests that Mughal commercial
activities were increasing in the seventeenth century and persisted right through the eighteenth
century; I suspect that their activities were characteristic earlier as well, and that his evidence
supports the line of argument here for interdependence.
so For example, S. Arasaratnam, 'Aspects of the Role and Activities of South Indian
Merchants c 1650- 1750,' in Proceedings ofthe First International Conference Seminar of Tamil
Studies (University of Malaya, 1968), vol. I, pp. 582- 96. He prefaces his material on mer-
chants dealing with Europeans after 1650 with these sentences (p. 582): 'After the decline of
the great medieval collective enterprises, the mercantile tradition seems to have lived on
among certain families with commercial roots in the past. When the European traders . ..
came to southern India they ... soon established firm relations with them .' See also, Susi!
THE DECLINE OF THE MUG HAL EMPIRE 161
Period and His Relations with the Peshwa and Damaji Gaikwad,' in Journal of the University
of Bombay Vol. 6 (July, 1937), 87-91.
53
B. A. Saletore, 'A Forgotten Gujarati Brahman Banker,' Indian Historical Records
Commission XXX (1954), 155-60.
54
See Philip Catkin's article (cited in footnote 2) and his unpublished paper, 'The Role of
Murshidabad as a Regional and Sub-regional Center in Bengal,' which suggests that the city's
importance derived more from its commercial orientation towards European factories even in
the seventeenth century than from its administrative orientation to the Mughals (8- 14).
55
For the Hyderabad firms, Sundaram, 'Revenue Administration,' p. 12; for the Marwari
firm, Timberg, 'A "Great" Marwari Firm,' 264-65, 283.
56
This has been stated by Jain, Indigenous Bankers, p. 17, and Gadgil, Origins, p. 32, where
he notes that de Bussy in the Deccan and Karnatak obtained a loan from 'a great banker.'
Instances of Kanara Saraswat merchants who allied themselves with the British are given in V.
N. Kudra, History of the Dakshinatya Saraswats (Madras, 1972), 117- 18.
162 KAREN LEONARD
firms with the East India Gompany during this century before 1750 is
plentiful and unambiguous. Detailed evidence from Surat and from the
J agat Seth firm in Bengal documents an early and strong transition to doing
business with the Company. While early seventeenth-century Dutch
records from Surat show that the Mughals failed to protect Indian traders
from Dutch and English competition from the sea trade then, 5 7 other
records show at least eight leading Gujarati firms providing extensive credit
to the English at Surat from 1634 to 1677. 5 8 Pearson shows that Gujarati
merchants at Surat strongly opposed English traders in the 1620s, but by
the 1660s they considered European traders to be among their best cus-
tomers. 59 One Gujarati firm originally from Surat moved to Murshidabad,
then to Calcutta and Benares, proudly claiming to be 'bankers to the
Company' by the late eighteenth century. This firm showed a marked
preference for the English throughout the second half of the eighteenth
century. Its historian asks why that should have been the case and what the
wealth of that firm and others like it actually was, when that firm alone lent
one lakh of rupees a month to the English Company. 60
The history of the Jagat Seth firm, already discussed in its Mughal
context, is perhaps more fascinating in relation to the East India Company.
Most accounts first link the firm to the English in mid-eighteenth-century
Bengal, but in fact it had loaned funds to the English factory in Patna as
early as 1652. An even stronger tie to the Company existed through the
'real' family of Jagat Seth- for Jagat Seth was the son of Manek Chand's
sister, adopted by Manek Chand to continue his firm. Jagat Seth's natal
family operated a great banking firm in Patna and Agra in the seventeenth
century, the very firm which in 1714 extended credit to the English trade
embassy from Calcutta when other leading Delhi bankers refused it credit.
Mitra Sen of this firm, real brother to Jagat Seth, represented the East India
Company in Delhi from 1712 to 1739, allegedly supervising its interests in
all three presidencies. 61 The firm's prominent political role in the 1750s,
when it helped the East India Company overthrow Nawab Sirajuddaula, is
well known and caused Gadgil to term it 'exceptional.' 62 The argument
57 Karl Fischer, 'The Beginning of Dutch Trade with Gujarat,' unpublished paper, pp.
16-18.
5 8 Saletore, 'A Forgotten Gujarati Brahman Banker,' p. 155, citing early East India
Company records which he lists in his footnote; see also Habib's charts in 'Usury,' pp. 402- 03,
and H. Q. Naqvi , Urban Centres and Industries, pp. 63- 64.
5 9 Pearson, 'Political Participation,' pp. 125- 27. This is also clear in Ashin Das Gupta, 'The
Merchants of Surat, c. 1700-50,' in Edmund Leach and S.N. Mukherjee, eds., Elites in South
Asia (Cambridge, 1970), pp. 201 - 22.
60 Saletore, 'A Forgotten Gujarati Brahman Banker,' pp. 158- 60.
6 1 Little, 'The House of Jagatseth,' (Vol. XX), 115- 16, for the 1652 loan , and 126-29,
dars indebted to the bankers (who were always paid before the Company's
current demand was met), a circuit committee in 1785 proposed drastic
remedies. Reforms of the 'vicious system' succeeded in 'suppressing the
private interests' and replaced 'commercial ideas by administrative ideas'
in the collection of revenue in the Circars. 68 At this time, of course, the
Company itself was still a private and SQ_mmercial concern.
Not only were indigenous banking firms displaced in Company terri-
tories, the Company acted against them in princely states. It did not enforce
payment of debts to bankers when Company agents took over from or
dealt with ruling princes. This happened in Benares in 1773, in Oudh in
1798, and in the case of the Nawab of Arcot in 1805. 69 The East India
Company's view of bankers was much in evidence in the notorious case of
Palmer and Company in Hyderabad State in the 1820s. Here, too, the
ruler's debts to the banking firm were overlooked by the Company, and the
Resident strongly disapproved of the political power exercised by the
Palmers in Hyderabad. He said:' ... it tends to draw them quite out of their
sphere of merchants.... I lament the power which they exercise ... in an
authoritative manner not becoming their mercantile character. ... ' 70
By the nineteenth century, if one compares the functions of indigenous
banking firms before and after the advent of foreign traders, a reversal has
occurred. Before, bankers had been state treasurers and were often directly
involved in the collection of revenue. The financing of external trade before
the seventeenth century had been chiefly in the hands of Indian trading
firms; then it was taken over by European firms; and, in the nineteenth
century, by European banking institutions. With the 1835 imposition of
uniform currer,icy throughout British India, bankers lost much of their
money-changing business as well as their mint privileges. In the nineteenth
century, bankers and moneylenders were most noted for the financing of
internal trade and the extension of agricultural credit; the British created
government treasuries and a system of European banking institutions in
India. 71 But we have come very far from Mughal India, and part of the
reason for doing so is to demonstrate how historians have lost sight of the
great Indian banking firms of those days.
The theory proposes that it was the redirection of economic and political
support by the great banking firms of Mughal India from 1650 to 1750
68 Ibid., pp. 77-78.
69 Jain, Indigenous Banking, pp. 20-22.
70 This was Charles Metcalfe, in a letter to the Governor General, September, 1821: E. J.
transition period from the point of view of the Company is by B. Ramachandra Rau,
'Organized Banking in the Days of John Company,' in Bengal Past and Present Vol. 37
(Jan.-June. 1929), 145- 57, and Vol. 38 (July- Dec. 1929), 60-80.
THE DECLINE OF THE MUGHAL EMPIRE 165
which proved the decisive factor in the decline of the empire. The banking
firms had been crucial to the functioning of the central government and to
the functioning of many of its employees' households. It is not being argued
that the great firms were directly incorporated into the governmental
structure, or that a centrally-directed economic policy was being imple-
mented through them, for the Mughal state did. not exercise tight control
over these firms and their activities. Not only the state 'treasury,' however,
but individual mansabdars,jagirdars, zamindars, and talukdars were more
than likely to be directly dependent upon these banking firms.
The situation of the bankers in Mughal India contrasts strongly with that
of bankers in imperial China, and the contrast is an instructive one. 72 Most
historians agree that the Chinese bureaucracy tightly regulated the mer-
chant classes. For example, when Chinese bankers invented 'flying money'
(the equivalent of hundis in India), the government took over the system as
a bureaucratic monopoly. The Chinese imperial bureaucracy was also able
to establish control over promissory notes or paper currency, developed
somewhat later. But in Mughal India, while there were attempts to regulate
some aspects of banking activities, the regulation of hundis was never
proposed, and other attempted regulations appear to have failed more
often than not. The position of the bankers in India was that of an allied
support group, one which provided essential resources to the state and had
a good'bargaining position with respect to it. Contrast their position with
that of the co-hong merchants at the Chinese treaty ports, closely regulated
and acting for their government as they carried out commercial transac-
tions with foreigners.
Banking firms in Mughal India had greater power and autonomy than
their Chinese counterparts. The tensions between short-term and long-
term aims of the Mughal state and its creditors needed careful and constant
attention. This was particularly true when military expansion or defense
efforts impelled the state to call for more resources, or when banking firms
were presented with alternative patrons or clients. From all indications, the
later Mughal emperors did not give sufficient consideration to their rela-
tionships with the great banking firms, and many firms relocated and
redirected their transaction after 1650.
While further research is admittedly necessary to test and fully substan-
tiate this theory, it offers certain immediate advantages over other theories
72 Both Panikkar (Asia and Western Dominance, p. 99) and Gupta (Sirajuddallah and the
East India Company, p. 32) compare the Indian mercantile class to 'Shangahi compradors,'
but they do not investigate this comparison further. For China, see the following: E. Balazs,
'The Birth of Capitalism in China,' in Eisenstadt, (ed.) Decline of Empires, p. 109; Lien-sheng
Yang, Money and Credit in China, A Short History (Cambridge, 1952); 'Economic Aspects of
Public Works in Imperial China,' in Excursions in Sinology (Cambridge, 1969); and 'Govern-
ment Control of Urban Merchants in Traditional China,' in the Tsing Hua Journal of Chinese
Studies, new series (2nd) 8, August 1970, 186- 206. See also Mark Elvin, The Pattern of the
Chinese Past (London, 1973), particularly pp. 155, 161- 62, 215- 25, and 285-97.
166 KAREN LEO N ARD
lished paper, 'Speculative Gains and Primitive Accumulation' which deals only with the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Tim berg' s problem is the theoretical one of entrepreneur-
ial values; he had no problems with sources. Morris D. Morris, in a recent unpublished paper,
'South Asian Entrepreneurship and the Rashomon Effect,' also deals with the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries and emphasizes the significance of indigenous banking and entrepreneur-
ial activities and how little we still know about them (paper presented at a Conference on
Colonial Port Cities in Berkeley, June 1976).
THE DE C LINE OF TH E MUG HAL EMPIRE 167
methods. Determined collection of data can result in the reconstruction of
a grid of great firms and their relationships with the political powers of the
time. New analytical perspectives will also be useful. Many who have
theorized about merchants and bankers in Mughal India have done so
from a Marxist perspective, forcing the data into a fairly rigid framework.
Other researchers have seldom ventured beyond description, collecting
detailed data on specific individuals, firms, or caste groups, following the
traditional emphasis up.on the diverse and specialized nature of financial
communities in India. But now an attempt must be made to describe and
analyze this heterogeneous category according to the organization and
volume of their economic activities, focusing on the great indigenous
banking firms of Mughal and early British India and their decisive partici-
pation in politics.