Description
This scholarly work provides an in-depth examination of the agricultural community in the Aurungabad district of the Nizam’s Dominions. Furdoonji Jamshedji offers a comprehensive account of the farming practices, economic conditions, and social organization of local agriculturists during this historical period.
The text serves as an important historical and ethnographic record, documenting traditional agricultural methods, land tenure systems, and the daily lives of farming populations in colonial-era India. Through careful observation and detailed notes, the author captures the complexity of agricultural society, including labor practices, crop cultivation, and the relationship between farmers and local governance structures.
This work is valuable for historians, researchers studying Indian agriculture, and those interested in the social and economic history of the Deccan region under the Nizam’s rule.







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