Abstract

Abstract The huṇḍī or Indic mercantile instrument integrated networks of merchants and bankers across Persianate bazaars from South Asia to Central Asia, Iran and East Africa. Merchants performed long-distance financial transactions by means of this instrument, catering to both private individuals and the state. While much has been written about the commercial use of huṇḍīs, this paper turns to the working of huṇḍīs at the interface of mercantile and state institutions, looking in particular at the Jaipur state’s collection of nirakh huṇḍāwan registers—which tracked the rate of discounting of huṇḍīs on a daily basis. Produced at the mercantile centre of Sanganer, and open to inspection by the Jaipur state, these registers lie at the intersection of commerce and governance, and of corporation and state. They reveal an ‘economically curious’ state, which accessed and used data collected and maintained by mercantile entities to make significant economic decisions.

Highlights

  • Defined as a bill of exchange, promissory note, cheque or credit/ financial instrument that is used in transfer or remittance of money from via free access one place to another, the precise legal form of the huṇḍī is not easy to define

  • While much has been written about the commercial use of huṇḍīs, this paper turns to the working of huṇḍīs at the interface of mercantile and state institutions, looking in particular at the Jaipur state’s collection of nirakh huṇḍāwan registers—which tracked the rate of discounting of huṇḍīs on a daily basis

  • Vocalised with a hard retroflex “d,” and representable in the Perso-Arabic script only with South Asia-specific diacritics, the huṇḍī is a form of commercial instrument— associated with Indian merchants—that became a global phenomenon during the 19th century through its circulation in Central Asia, Iran, Russia, Europe, Arabia, and East Africa

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Summary

Introduction

Defined as a bill of exchange, promissory note, cheque or credit/ financial instrument that is used in transfer or remittance of money from via free access one place to another, the precise legal form of the huṇḍī is not easy to define. Huṇḍī and Nirakh Huṇḍāwan: Indic Mercantile Instruments in the Persianate Bazaar

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