Who was an Iptadar?
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An iqtaʿ, Iḳṭāʿ and occasionally iqtaʿa was an Islamic practice of tax farming that became common in Muslim Asia during the Buyid dynasty. The prominent Orientalist Claude Cahen described the iqtaʿ as follows: a form of administrative grant, often translated by the European word "fief".
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The Khaljis and the Tughlaqs appointed local commanders called 'iqtadar' or' muqti', and the lands given to them to manage were called 'iqtas'. The 'iqtadars' led military campaigns, maintained law and order, collected taxes, and paid their soldiers. their positions were not inheritable.
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