| Sir Alfred C. Lyall - 1870 - 334 頁
...tiuverumeut. Nizam's • Sovereignty. of Berar must have been shut out from the markets; cultivation fell ofi' just when the finances were strained by the long wars;...officers rebelled ; the army became mutinous; and the Mar;it has easily plundered a weak province, when they had divided its sinews by cutting oft'its trade.... | |
| Sir Alfred C. Lyall - 1870 - 330 頁
...Berár must have been shut out from the markets; cultivation fell ofl' just when the finances wero strained by the long wars ; the local revenue officers rebelled ; the army became mutinous ; and the Maráthas easily plundered a weak province, when they had divided its sinews by cutting oil' its trade.... | |
| W.W. Hunter - 1885 - 526 頁
...Described in the Ain-i- Akbari as highly cultivated, and in parts populous, supposed by M. de Thevenot in 1667 to be one of the wealthiest portions of the...cutting off its trade. Wherever the Emperor appointed a jdgirddr, the Marathas appointed another, and both claimed the revenue, while foragers from each side... | |
| William Wilson Hunter - 1885 - 552 頁
...Described in the Ain-l-Akban as highly cultivated, and in parts populous, supposed by M. de The'venot in 1667 to be one of the wealthiest portions of the...cutting off its trade. Wherever the Emperor appointed a jdgirddr, the Mardthds appointed another, and both claimed the revenue, while foragers from each side... | |
| William Wilson Hunter - 1885 - 526 頁
...be one of the wealthiest portions of the Empire, it fell on evil days before the close of the i7th century. Cultivation fell off just when the finances...officers rebelled ; the army became mutinous ; and the Marathds easily plundered a weak Province, when they had divided its sinews by cutting off its trade.... | |
| James Sutherland Cotton, Sir Richard Burn, Sir William Stevenson Meyer - 1908 - 452 頁
...wealthiest portions of the Mughal empire, it fell on evil days before the close of the seventeenth century. Cultivation fell off just when the finances...Marathas easily plundered a weak province when they had severed its sinews by cutting off its trade. Wherever the Mughals appointed a collector the Marathas... | |
| Henry Robert Crosthwaite - 1916 - 568 頁
...wealthiest portions of the Mughal Empire, Berar fell on evil days before the close of the seventeenth century. Cultivation fell off just when the finances...revenue officers rebelled ; the army became mutinous. " The Nizam's territories," wrote General Wellesley in January, 1804, " are one complete chaos from... | |
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