History, asked by jen1416, 8 months ago

what was subadar a Mughal​

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Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

Subedar is a historical civil or military rank originally relating to a senior official of the Mughal Empire who governed an assigned "Subah" ("province"). Under the British rule in India, "subedar" was the designation accorded to an Indian military officer of a rank equivalent to that of captainThe rank of Subedar was derived from subahdar: the title denoting a governor of a province in the Mughal Empire.

The rank of "Subedar" was created when the Mughal administration divided their territories into separate Subahs ("provinces"). Each province was governed by a Subedar who had full martial authority. Not much is known about the role of the early Mughal Subedars but the rank was superseded in importance during the late 18th century by that of Nawab.

Answered by beyourself20
1

Answer:

Subedar is a historical civil or military rank originally relating to a senior official of the Mughal Empire who governed an assigned "Subah" ("province"). Under the British rule in India, "subedar" was the designation accorded to an Indian military officer of a rank equivalent to that of captain.

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