94 Report on the District of Azimgurh. [Feb. 



Specification on the reverse. 



" Uf Pergunnahs 22, Nizamabad, 



\-J yj \^ r^ lsi Li^ifcu *£y Kowreea Tilhenee > G °p al P ore > 



^1 ^:JU ^ *J& abT Jia Su ^e, Mahomedabad, Goh- 



? ~ f .? i, ^ na, Ghosee, Chukeysur, Nu- 



^ v " v ^ ./ I *- ' thoopoor, Chenakote, Kenat 



^, ^ -^ j. ^ Mittoo, Belhabans, Deogaon, 



b^ &# jH >& jOTjji ^ Mown ^ Bhunjunj Shadee „ 



l^b ^^iUt^b^ aUT^C^S abad ^ Behreeabadj pachotur, 



CIj Ubitf^jSU'^i* 2^»u*Jb Seydpoor) B i t t r ee, Zuhoora- 



*;f ^ a b La-U ^ x &^ bab, Bhudaon. 



*^^*y *¥ ^* *^ T <**« Nankar 1,25,000 Rupees, 



^';>t^ *^>J ^^ jH*#" Zemindarry dues per village 



i£,!aJ*oj ^W &1 ] <*& *^X 2 Rs., per cent 1 Rs. 



31st. If the holder of this Sunnud had been in power when we 

 first acquired the country, it is not improbable that we should have 

 acknowledged him sole proprietor of all this tract of country, and have 

 reduced the real proprietors to the rank of mere tenants. 



32nd. From these revolutions the Pergunnah of Mahol was gene- 

 rally exempted. A family of Seyuds obtained possession of it in 

 a Zemindarry grant at a very early period, the tradition of which is 

 now lost. They contrived to locate themselves firmly in the Per- 

 gunnah. Branches of them entirely suppressed the Rajpoot commu- 

 nities in many of the villages. The Rajah was dispossessed of the 

 government by the Nuwab of Oude, previous to our acquisition of 

 the country, but he still retains many villages as his private property. 

 Some of these have passed from him, by sale for arrears of revenue, 

 to the hands of the notorious Amil Sheo Lall Dhoobe, and yet in some 

 of these villages the old Rajpoot communities exist, though they have 

 long been broken down, and the members reduced to the rank 

 of mere cultivators on fixed rates. Instances sometimes occur of 

 the strength with which ancient proprietary associations are maintain- 

 ed, even long after all exercise of the rights has ceased. The two 

 contiguous villages of Mohujah and Newadah had long been held by 



