please tell me about muhgal administration who tells first his/her answer would be Marked as brainliest answer
Answers
The Mughal rule was not theoretic. The king was accepted as the arbiter in case of difference of opinion regarding Islamic laws.
The King:
The King or the emperor was the head of the state. He was the chief executive, law-maker, the commander-in-chief and the final dispenser of justice. During the time of Akbar, the emperor was accepted as the final arbiter in case of difference of opinion regarding Islamic laws. The emperor became the highest authority in the state.
The Ministers of the Mughal government were:
1. Vazir or Diwan (The Prime Minister)
2. The Mir Bakhsi (The Paymaster)
3. Sadr-i-Sudur
4. The Khan-i-Saman (Lord of High Steward)
5. Qazi-ul-Quzat
6. The Muhtasib (Censorship of Public Morals)
7. Mir-i-atish (Artillery)
8. Daroga-i-dak-chauki (Intelligence and Post)
Provincial Administration:
For the convenience of administration the Mughal Empire was divided into a number of provinces. These provinces were Allahabad, Agra, Awadh, Ajmer, Bihar, Bengal, Ahmedabad, Delhi, Kabul, Lahore, Multan, Malwa, Berar, Khandesh and Ahmednagar. Every prince had its provincial capital. The provinces were known as Suba.
Administration of Revenue:
Sher Shah was the first Muslim ruler who laid down the principles for the administration of revenue. The state demand was fixed at the one-third of the produce and regulations were adopted for the collection of revenue. But the untimely death of Sher Shah his excellent land revenue system failed.
I think this much is ok . Hope its to the point !
PLZ mark as brainliest.