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Land, Agriculture And Money In Central India and Beyond (c.100 to c.1300 CE)

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Land, Agriculture And Money In Central India and Beyond (c.100 to c.1300 CE)

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The present monograph is an attempt to retrieve some aspects of economic history, with a distinctive focus on the role of land, agriculture and money in defining contours of socio-economic formation during a span of more than a millenium (circa 100 to circa 1300 CE). Data from more than four hundred and seventy settlements figuring in nearly 140 inscriptions, about forty archaeological sites and several numismatic finds (all represented in six maps) form the bases of this study. Spatially, it covers forested areas, plateaux, marshy creeks and coastal territories of Central India, the Northern Deccan and the West Indian Konkan coast. The chiefs of the Valkha (modern Bagh, near Gwalior in Madhya Pradesh) region, and the rulers of the different branches of the Vakatakas and the Silaharas and their people of varying social strata were the dramatics personae of this new, evolving and essentially land-based social formation, which has been unambiguously characterised here as ‘feudal’, notwithstanding their varying political/state formations. Therefore, all case studies included in this monograph also help us in comprehending the transition from the ‘Ancient’ to the ‘Early Medieval/Middle’ India in a nuanced manner. Krishan Mohan Shrimali is a former Professor of History, University of Delhi.

Krishna Mohan Shrimali

Krishna Mohan Shrimali is professor of history at the University of Delhi. He is the author of A History of Pañcala, 2 vols (1983, 1985); Agrarian Structure in Central India and the Northern Deccan: A Study in Vakataka Inscriptions (1987); and Dharma, Samaj aur Sanskriti (2005). He edited Indian Archaeology since Independence (1996) and Reason and Archaeology (1998). He has published widely in academic journals, on ancient Indian history and archaeology. He is currently working on a projected Dictionary of Social, Economic and Administrative Terms in Indian Inscriptions.

Title

Land, Agriculture And Money In Central India and Beyond (c.100 to c.1300 CE)

Author

Krishna Mohan Shrimali

Publisher

Aakar Books

Number of Pages

488

Category

  • Development
  • Economics
  • Agriculture
  • First Published

    JAN 2024

    The present monograph is an attempt to retrieve some aspects of economic history, with a distinctive focus on the role of land, agriculture and money in defining contours of socio-economic formation during a span of more than a millenium (circa 100 to circa 1300 CE). Data from more than four hundred and seventy settlements figuring in nearly 140 inscriptions, about forty archaeological sites and several numismatic finds (all represented in six maps) form the bases of this study. Spatially, it covers forested areas, plateaux, marshy creeks and coastal territories of Central India, the Northern Deccan and the West Indian Konkan coast. The chiefs of the Valkha (modern Bagh, near Gwalior in Madhya Pradesh) region, and the rulers of the different branches of the Vakatakas and the Silaharas and their people of varying social strata were the dramatics personae of this new, evolving and essentially land-based social formation, which has been unambiguously characterised here as ‘feudal’, notwithstanding their varying political/state formations. Therefore, all case studies included in this monograph also help us in comprehending the transition from the ‘Ancient’ to the ‘Early Medieval/Middle’ India in a nuanced manner. Krishan Mohan Shrimali is a former Professor of History, University of Delhi.
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