Maund

Maund

The maund (/ˈmɔːnd/), mun or mann (Bengali: মণ; Urdu: من) is the anglicized name for a traditional unit of mass used in British India, and also in Afghanistan, Persia, and Arabia:[1] the same unit in the Mughal Empire was sometimes written as mann or mun in English, while the equivalent unit in the Ottoman Empire and Central Asia was called the batman. At different times, and in different South Asian localities, the mass of the maund has varied, from as low as 25 pounds (11 kg) to as high as 160 pounds (72 kg): even greater variation is seen in Persia and Arabia.[2][3]

A one maund weighing stone of the Madras Presidency
The vast extent of the Bengal Presidency (shown here in 1858) facilitated the adoption of the standard of 100 Troy pounds for the maund throughout British India.

History

In British India, the maund was first standardized in the Bengal Presidency in 1833, where it was set equal to 100 Troy pounds (82.28 lbs. av.). This standard spread throughout the British Raj.[4] After the independence of India and Pakistan, the definition formed the basis for metrication, one maund becoming exactly 37.3242 kilograms.[5][6] A similar metric definition is used in Bangladesh and Nepal. Throughout Bangladesh, one মণ/mun/mann is 40 kg. In Nepal's southern plains one Mann equals 40 kilograms and is generally used to measure agricultural output.

The Old English, 'maund' may also be the origin of Maundy Thursday. As a verb, 'maund' : to beg; as a noun, 'a maund' : a small basket held out for alms.

South Asia

Delhi Sultanate

During the reign of Alauddin Khalji of the Delhi Sultanate, 1 mann was roughly equivalent to 15 kg.[7]

Mughal Empire

Prinsep (1840) summarizes the evidence as to the weight of the mun (later "maund") during the reign (1556–1605) of Akbar the Great,[8] which comes from the Ain-i-Akbari written by the vizier Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak (anglicized as "Abul Fuzl"). The principal definition is that the mun is forty seers; and that each seer is thirty dams.

1 mun = 40 seers = 1200 dams

The problem arises in assigning the values of the smaller units.

The section of the Ain-i-Akbari that defines the mun also defines the dam as five tanks. A separate section defines the tank as twenty-four ruttees. However, by the 19th century, the tank was no longer a uniform unit across the former Mughal territories: Prinsep quotes values of 50 grains (3.24 g) in Darwar, 72 grains (4.67 g) in Bombay and 268 grains (17.37 g) in Ahmednugur.[8]

The jilály, a square silver rupee coin issued by Akbar, was said by the Ain-i-Akbari to be 11+14 mashas in weight: surviving jilály and other Mughal rupee coins weigh 170–175 Troy grains (11.02–11.34 g), so the masha, defined as eight ruttees, would be about 15+12 grains (1 g). Masha weights sent back to London in 1819 agree with this value.[9] This basis gives a mun of 34+34 lb. av. (15.75 kg). One Koni was 4 muns.[10]

However, in yet another section of the Ain-i-Akbari, the dam is said to be "twenty mashas seven ruttees": using this definition would imply an Imperial mass of about 47 lb. av. (21.3 kg) for the mun. Between these two values, the maund in Central India was often found to be around 40 lb. av. (18 kg) in the East India Company survey of 1821.

A Maund was 55.5 British pounds mass under Akbar.[11]

Nineteenth century

British India is shown in pink on this 1837 map. The Madras Presidency is in the southeast, the Bombay Presidency is in the west and the Bengal Presidency is in the northeast.

The maund of India may as a genus be divided into four different species:

  1. That of Bengal, containing 40 seers, and averaging about 80 lbs. avoir.
  2. That of Central India (Malwa, Ajmeer, &c.) generally equal to 40 lbs. avoir. and containing 20 seers (so that the seer of this large portion of the continent assimilates to that of Bengal.)
  3. The maund of Guzerat and Bombay, equal to 14 cwt. or 28 pounds and divided into 40 seers of smaller grade.
  4. The maund of Southern India, fixed by the Madras government at 25 lbs. avoir.

There are, however many other varieties of maund, from 15 to 64 seers in weight; which it is unnecessary to particularize.

Prinsep (1840), p. 77

Prinsep's values for the maund come from a survey organized by the East India Company in 1821. The Company's agents were asked to send back examples of the standard weights and measures used in the places they were stationed, and these were compared with the English standards in London by Patrick Kelly, the leading British metrologist of the time. The results were published as an appendix to the second edition of Kelly's Universal Cambist (1831), and later as a separate book entitled Oriental Metrology (1832).

It will be seen from Kelly's results below that Prinsep's generalizations are only partially correct. The Gujarat maund is more closely related to the Central Indian maund than to the standardized Bombay maund, except in the town of Anjar, except that it is divided into 40 seers instead of 20 as was found in Malwa.

Central India and Gujarat

Ahmadābād
Ahmadābād
Amod
Amod
Bārdoli
Bārdoli
Baroda
Baroda
Broach
Broach
Calicut
Calicut
Cambay
Cambay
Doongurpoor
Doongurpoor
Hānsot
Hānsot
Indore
Indore
Jambusar
Jambusar
Kota
Kota
Kumbharia
Kumbharia
Kurod
Kurod
Masulipatam
Masulipatam
Mundissor
Mundissor
Okalesur
Okalesur
Oujein
Oujein
Pertabgurh
Pertabgurh
Rutlam
Rutlam
Surat
Surat
Tellicherry
Tellicherry
Vizagapatam
Vizagapatam
The towns where the maund was found to be approximately 40 lb. av. (18 kg) in the 1821 East India Company survey, superimposed onto a map of modern India.
Chanadore
Chanadore
Dewas
Dewas
Dindoor
Dindoor
Jamkhair
Jamkhair
The towns where the maund was found to be more than 130 lb. av. (59 kg) in the 1821 East India Company survey, superimposed onto a map of modern India.
More information Place, Sub- division ...

Bombay Presidency

Anjar
Anjar
Belgaum
Belgaum
Bombay
Bombay
Cochin
Cochin
Mangalore
Mangalore
Poona
Poona
Quilon
Quilon
The towns where the maund was found to be approximately 28 lb. av. (12+34 kg) in the 1821 East India Company survey, superimposed onto a map of modern India.
More information Place, Sub- division ...

Madras Presidency

Maund
Bellary
Bellary
Coimbatoor
Coimbatoor
Goa
Goa
Hyderabad
Hyderabad
Madras
Madras
Madura
Madura
Mangalore
Mangalore
Negapatam
Negapatam
Onore
Onore
Pondicherry
Pondicherry
Poona
Poona
Maund
Maund
The towns where the maund was found to be approximately 25 lb. av. (11+13 kg) in the 1821 East India Company survey, superimposed onto a map of modern India.
More information Place, Sub- division ...

Maund was known as Mudi in Tulu language

Bengal

Ahmednugur
Ahmednugur
Aurungabunder
Aurungabunder
Bairseah
Bairseah
Calcutta
Calcutta
Maund
Indore
Indore
Jaulnah
Jaulnah
Luckipoor
Luckipoor
Masulipatam
Masulipatam
Poona
Poona
Tranquebar
Tranquebar
Vizagapatam
Vizagapatam
The towns where the maund was found to be approximately 80 lb. av. (36 kg) in the 1821 East India Company survey, superimposed onto a map of modern India.
More information Place, Sub- division ...

Notes

  1. Kelly's transliterations of place names have been retained, but the transliterations of names of districts have been updated where possible.

References

  1. "maund", A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles, vol. 6B, 1908, p. 250.
  2. Doursther, Horace (1840), Dictionnaire universel des poids et mesures anciens et modernes, Brussels: Hayez, pp. 259–63.
  3. maund, Sizes.com, retrieved 2010-02-12.
  4. Schedule 1 to the Standard Weights and Measures Act (No. 89 of 1956).
  5. Narang, Kirpal Singh; Gupta, Hari Ram (1969). History of the Pubnab, 1500-1858 (2nd. ed.). Delhi: U.C. Kapur. p. 181.

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