The district or estate ruled by a Taluqdar was known as
talukdari or
taluqdari. According to the Punjab settlement report of 1862, great landholders were appointed taluqdars over a number of villages during the
Mughal era. That taluq, or district, usually comprised over 84 villages and a central town. The talukdar was required to collect taxes, maintain law and order, and provide military supplies/manpower to the provincial government (similar to the role of feudal lords in Europe). In most cases the talukdars were entitled to keep one-tenth of the collected revenue. However, some privileged Talukdars were entitled to one quarter and hence were called
Chaudhry, which literally means owner of the fourth part. In
Rajasthan,
Kathiawar, and
Bengal, a talukdar was next only to a raja in extent of land control and social status, but in Punjab and the United Provinces, talukdars were much more powerful and were directly under the provincial governor. During a British parliamentary debate in 1858, Sir C. Wood brought to light the fact that Taluqdar oppression in Oudh was carried to an unthinkable extent. He mentioned that they had been taking over the lands of the remaining rajas all over Oudh. Colonel Sleernan recalled the following act of war by a taluqdar against a Raja: They plundered the town of Boondee, and pulled down all the houses of the rajah and those of his relatives and dependents, and after plundering all the other villages, brought in 1,000 captives of both sexes and all ages, who were subjected to all manner of torture till they paid. Similarly, in northern Punjab, the talukdars of
Dhanni, Gheb, and Kot were extremely powerful. Eighteenth-century Bengal witnessed the rise of great territorial landholders at the expense of smaller landholders, who were reduced to the status of dependent taluqdars, required to pay their revenue to the government through the intermediary of the great landlords called
Rais,
Ranas,
Babus,
Rajas, and
Maharajas. However, many old taluqdars paid revenues to the government directly, like
Raja Farzand Ali Khan of
Jahangirabad Raj, Raja Jung Bahadur of Nanpara Estate, and were as powerful as the rajas. Some taluqdars, like Thakur Ameer Haider Zaidi of estate Bahuwa, Thakur Ghulam Haider of estate Bahuwa, Chowdhury Ali Akhtar of Bilwa, Ramzan Ali Khan of Unnao, Raja Azam Ali Khan of Deogaon, and Thakur Roshan Zama Khan of Usmanpur, were very close to the government and played an important role in tax collection in the region of Awadh. ==Hyderabad State==