Chapter 1 – The Philosophy of Property in the Bengal Delta | The Ultimate
← Back to Treatise Index | Part I – Foundations & Jurisprudential Context – Chapter 1
Chapter 1: The Philosophy of Property in the Bengal Delta
From Mughal Diwani to Digital Land Governance
By Afzal Hosen Mandal, Legal Advisor & Digital Law Specialist, Afzal & Associates
Published: 01 May 2026 | Updated: 01 May 2026 | Reading Time: 55 min | Word Count: ~10,500
📑 Table of Contents
- Pre‑colonial Tenurial Systems: The Mughal Paradigm and Beyond
- The Permanent Settlement of 1793: The Great Transformation
- The Bengal Tenancy Acts (1859, 1885): The Reassertion of Occupancy Rights
- The Influence of English Common Law and Equity in Colonial Courts
- Partition of 1947: Abandoned Property, Evacuee Laws, and the Genesis of "Vested" Property
- Socialist Reorientation: The State Acquisition and Tenancy Act, 1950
- The Modern Constitutional Framework: Article 42 and the Limits of Property Rights
- The Law‑Development Nexus: Land Reforms and the Digital Turn
- Frequently Asked Questions
- References & Further Reading
1.1 Pre‑colonial Tenurial Systems: The Mughal Paradigm and Beyond
Figure 1: Mughal revenue collection as depicted in the Akbarnama (c. 1590). Zamindars present land revenue to imperial officers—a system that defined pre‑colonial property relations in Bengal. Source: Wikimedia Commons (public domain).
To comprehend the architecture of contemporary land law in Bangladesh, one must first excavate the juridical strata deposited by successive civilizations across the Bengal delta. The territory that now constitutes Bangladesh was, before the East India Company's fiscal experiments, governed by an intricate amalgam of Hindu customary law, Islamic principles of kharaj and ushr, and the administrative pragmatism of the Mughal Subahdars. This was not a landscape of absolute ownership but a mosaic of layered entitlements, where the sovereign, the revenue collector, the cultivating tenant, and the village community each possessed distinct, interlocking rights.
The Mughal Emperor, as the ultimate proprietor (malik‑ul‑mulk), claimed a portion of the agricultural yield—the kharaj—through a hierarchical chain of intermediaries. The zamindar was not an owner in the Roman‑legal sense of dominium; rather, he functioned as a hereditary revenue farmer (mutsaddi) who held an office (zamindari) with the obligation to collect and remit the state's share. His remuneration consisted of a percentage of the collection (nankar) and a tax‑free portion of land (jagir or inam). The office was transferable with imperial consent, but the land itself remained, in juristic theory, the property of the state.
Beneath the zamindar existed the actual cultivator, the raiyat. The raiyat possessed a heritable right of occupancy so long as he paid rent and cultivated the soil—a right that was deeply embedded in custom and recognised by the Mughal faujdari courts. The raiyat could not be arbitrarily evicted; his right was protected by the deshachar (local unwritten custom) and, in many cases, by the qanun‑i‑zamindari (the customary law of the zamindari). The rent was fixed by custom and could not be enhanced unilaterally. This mutual dependence—the zamindar needing the raiyat to generate revenue, the raiyat needing the zamindar's protection against external threats and imperial excess—created a stable, if hierarchical, agrarian order.
The Hindu legal tradition, applicable to the majority of the population prior to Islamization, conceived of property through the prism of dharma. The Dayabhaga school of Hindu law, which prevailed in Bengal, differed fundamentally from the Mitakshara school dominant elsewhere in India. Under Dayabhaga, the father, as karta (head of the family), held absolute ownership of all property—both ancestral and self‑acquired—and could alienate it at will during his lifetime. Sons did not acquire a right by birth in ancestral property; their right arose only upon the father's death. This principle had profound implications for land transactions in Bengal, as it meant that a single individual could convey absolute title without the consent of male heirs, a feature that colonial courts would later exploit to facilitate the market in zamindari estates.
Islamic law, as administered by the qazis in the urban centres of Bengal, introduced distinct categories of property that continue to shape Bangladesh land law. Milk (absolute ownership) conferred the right to use, enjoy, and transfer property without restriction, subject only to the Islamic law of inheritance (farā'iḍ). Waqf (plural awqāf), the perpetual dedication of property to charitable or family purposes, removed the property from commercial circulation. The waqf estate was administered by a mutawalli (trustee) under the supervision of the qazi, and any sale required proof of "necessity" (ḍarūra) and judicial sanction. Many of the oldest properties in Dhaka and Chittagong—mosques, madrasas, shrines, and family endowments—originate from waqf dedications executed in the 17th and 18th centuries.
"The pre‑colonial landscape was a textured mosaic of overlapping rights and obligations. No single individual held the absolute, individualistic ownership that the colonial state would later impose through the Permanent Settlement." — Sir Henry Maine, Village‑Communities in the East and West (1871)
Related Resource: For the official text of the constitutional guarantee that now protects property rights emerging from this historical matrix, see Article 42 of the Constitution of Bangladesh.
1.2 The Permanent Settlement of 1793: The Great Transformation
Figure 2: Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis (1738–1805), Governor‑General of India whose Permanent Settlement of 1793 fundamentally restructured property rights in Bengal. Source: Wikimedia Commons (public domain).
On 22 March 1793, Lord Cornwallis, Governor‑General of Bengal, promulgated Regulation I of 1793, known to history as the Permanent Settlement. This legislative act was not merely a revenue reform; it was a revolutionary redefinition of the concept of property in the Bengal delta. Its declared aim was to create a class of improving landlords, modelled on the English gentry, who would invest capital, raise agricultural productivity, and provide political stability to the Company's richest possession. Its mechanism was brutally simple: the government fixed the land revenue demand in perpetuity for each zamindar, and in exchange, the zamindar was recognised as the absolute proprietor of the estate, with the power to evict tenants who failed to pay rent.
The revenue demand was, however, fixed at an exorbitant level, based on inflated estimates of production and optimistic projections of future yields. The most draconian feature of the settlement was the "sunset rule" (Regulation VII of 1799): the entire revenue demand for the year had to be paid into the Company's treasury by sunset on the qist (instalment) day. A single hour's delay triggered the immediate sale of the estate at public auction. Between 1794 and 1807, nearly half of the originally settled estates in Bengal were auctioned—a catastrophic transfer of property from the old zamindari families to Calcutta banias (merchant‑bankers), Company servants, and speculators.
"The auctioneer's hammer became the arbiter of landed property in Bengal. Ancient families, who had held their estates since the time of the Pathans, were dispossessed in an afternoon." — Sir Henry Strachey
This frenzied auction market generated the first major wave of land litigation in colonial India. The newly established Sadar Diwani Adalat (the Supreme Revenue Court) was inundated with suits challenging the validity of auction purchases: allegations of fraud, collusion, undervaluation, and mistaken identity. Many modern land disputes in Dhaka, Mymensingh, and Chittagong can trace their genealogical root to a hastily drawn auction sale of 1803 or 1805. The paper title—the auction certificate and the Collector's patta—became the sole determinant of ownership, overriding ancient custom, oral testimony, and physical possession.
The greatest injury was inflicted upon the cultivating raiyats. The Permanent Settlement, by declaring the zamindar "absolute proprietor," reduced the raiyat to a mere tenant‑at‑will. The zamindar was empowered, in theory, to evict any tenant who refused to pay an enhanced rent. The customary occupancy right was not formally extinguished, but it became legally invisible—a lex non scripta that the Company's courts could not or would not enforce.
To manage their sprawling estates and to raise capital, the zamindars began to create subordinate tenures. The patni (a perpetual lease for a fixed rent), the darpatni (a sub‑lease under the patni), and the se‑patni (a further sub‑lease) proliferated. By 1850, a single plot in rural Pabna might be subject to six or seven tiers of intermediate interests. The "patni problem" became a major source of agrarian unrest and, in the 1870s, led to the Pabna Peasant Uprising.
The Permanent Settlement bequeathed to Bangladesh a set of enduring juridical pathologies:
- The primacy of paper title over possession: Ownership was determined by documentary evidence—the Collector's patta, the auction certificate, the registered deed—not by the fact of cultivation.
- The fragmentation of title: The proliferation of intermediate interests made it nearly impossible to identify the "true owner" of a plot. After the abolition of zamindari in 1950, the state faced the Herculean task of identifying the actual possessor among a thicket of vanished patnidars, darpatnidars, and se‑patnidars.
- The commodification of land: Land became a marketable commodity, subject to speculation, mortgage, and sale. The ground was laid for the modern frenzy of land speculation in Dhaka and Chittagong.
1.3 The Bengal Tenancy Acts (1859, 1885): The Reassertion of Occupancy Rights
Figure 3: Title page of the Bengal Tenancy Act, 1885. This statute mandated the Cadastral Survey (CS) and created the legal framework for the Record of Rights (Khatian) that remains the foundation of land records in Bangladesh today. Source: Wikimedia Commons (public domain).
The agrarian distress that followed the Permanent Settlement forced the colonial state to re‑legislate the rights of the cultivating tenantry. The Bengal Rent Act, 1859 (Act X of 1859), provided that any raiyat who had cultivated land continuously for twelve years acquired a statutory right of occupancy. This right was heritable, transferable by local custom, and protected against arbitrary eviction and rent enhancement.
The Bengal Tenancy Act, 1885 (Act VIII of 1885), is arguably the single most important statute for understanding the land record architecture of modern Bangladesh. It mandated a comprehensive Cadastral Survey (CS) and the preparation of a Record of Rights (Khatian) for every revenue village (mouza). Section 103A declared that "every entry in a Record of Rights finally published... shall be presumed to be correct until the contrary is proved." This provision, transplanted into the SAT Act, 1950, and read with the Evidence Act, 1872, is the legal rock upon which millions of land claims rest.
Related Resource: To search the modern digital version of the CS Khatian, visit the official E‑Porcha Portal. For an understanding of how CS, SA, RS, and BS Khatians interrelate, consult the professional guide at LegalSeba's Khatian Types Explained.
1.4 The Influence of English Common Law and Equity in Colonial Courts
Figure 4: Fort William, Calcutta (engraving c. 1735). The Supreme Court of Judicature at Fort William applied English common law and equity to property disputes in Bengal, creating a hybrid jurisprudence that persists in modern Bangladesh. Source: Wikimedia Commons (public domain).
The Transfer of Property Act, 1882 (Act IV of 1882), was a direct transplantation of English conveyancing principles into Indian law. Key doctrines incorporated include Lis Pendens (Section 52), Fraudulent Transfer (Section 53), Part Performance (Section 53A), and the Equity of Redemption (Section 60)—the cherished principle that "once a mortgage, always a mortgage."
The Limitation Act, 1859 (replaced by the Limitation Act, 1908), introduced the English doctrine of adverse possession. Under Article 142 of the 1908 Act, a person in continuous, open, hostile, and uninterrupted possession of immovable property for 12 years could extinguish the true owner's title and acquire ownership by prescription. This doctrine created a legal earthquake in Bengal, where millions of cultivators who had occupied land for generations without paper title suddenly possessed a statutory pathway to ownership.
Related Resource: The full consolidated text of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 is essential reading for every conveyancing lawyer.
1.5 Partition of 1947: Abandoned Property, Evacuee Laws, and the Genesis of "Vested" Property
Figure 5: Map of the Partition of Bengal, 1947. The Radcliffe Line bisected the delta, triggering mass migrations and creating the juridical category of "evacuee property" that later evolved into "enemy property" and finally "vested property." Source: Wikimedia Commons (public domain).
The partition of British India on 14–15 August 1947 was a juridical cataclysm for the property regime of East Bengal. Mass migration—Hindus to West Bengal, Muslims from Bihar to East Pakistan—created a vast reservoir of what the nascent state termed "evacuee property." The East Bengal Evacuee Property (Administration) Act, 1949, vested the management of properties left behind by Hindu migrators in a Custodian of Evacuee Property.
The Indo‑Pakistani War of 1965 transformed the legal character of evacuee property. The Enemy Property (Custody and Registration) Order, 1965, declared all property owned by those who had "taken the citizenship of any enemy state" to be "enemy property." The temporary custodial measure of 1949 was now a permanent confiscation.
In independent Bangladesh, the Enemy Property Act was replaced by the Vested Property Act, 1974 (Act No. XLIV of 1974). The properties were vested in the Government of Bangladesh, free from all encumbrances. The Act scheduled properties into two lists: Ka Schedule (properties of Indian citizens) and Kha Schedule (properties of other enemy nationals). An estimated 2.6 million to 3.5 million acres of agricultural and urban land were vested. The original owners' titles were extinguished. Any subsequent deed of sale, mortgage, or gift executed by the original owners or their heirs was void ab initio.
The Return of Vested Property Act, 2001, established a tribunal system for the return of vested properties to their original owners or their legal heirs. The Vested Property Tribunals, composed of District Judges, were empowered to hear claims and order release. However, the process is notoriously slow; the burden of proof is heavy; and many properties have been sold to third parties in good faith.
Related Resource: The full text of the Vested Property Return Act, 2001 and the Vesting of Property and Assets Order, 1972.
1.6 Socialist Reorientation: The State Acquisition and Tenancy Act, 1950 – A Constitutional Moment
The State Acquisition and Tenancy Act, 1950 (East Bengal Act XXVIII of 1951), was the legislative instrument that dismantled the Permanent Settlement and abolished the zamindari system. Section 3 acquired all rent‑receiving interests and vested them in the State. The actual cultivators—the raiyats and occupancy tenants—were converted into direct tenants (maliks) of the government.
Section 90 of the SAT Act fixed a ceiling on individual ownership: 100 bighas (33.3 acres) of agricultural land and 10 bighas of non‑agricultural land. Land in excess of the ceiling was acquired by the government and vested in the state as Khas land. Section 96 enacted a statutory right of pre‑emption (agrokroy)—a right of first refusal for co‑sharers, contiguous landowners, and tenants. Pre‑emption litigation is one of the largest categories of land suits in Bangladesh today.
Related Resource: The full text of the State Acquisition and Tenancy Act, 1950 contains the complete pre‑emption procedure under Section 96.
1.7 The Modern Constitutional Framework: Article 42 and the Limits of Property Rights
Article 42 of the Constitution of the People's Republic of Bangladesh proclaims:
"(1) Subject to any restrictions imposed by law, every citizen shall have the right to acquire, hold, transfer or otherwise dispose of property, and no property shall be compulsorily acquired, nationalised or requisitioned save by authority of law, which provides for the acquisition... and which fixes the amount of compensation..."
The Supreme Court, in Jibendra Kishore Acharyya v. Province of East Pakistan (1957) 9 DLR (SC) 21, held that the right to property is not a fundamental right in the absolute sense; it is a constitutional right that can be regulated or restricted by a validly enacted law. The "restrictions" clause has been invoked to justify a web of regulatory statutes that curtail free alienability, including the Vested Property Act, the Non‑Agricultural Tenancy Act, the Environment Conservation Act, the Forest Act, and the CHT Regulation, 1900.
Related Resource: The full text of Article 42 of the Constitution and the Land Acquisition and Requisition of Immovable Property Act, 2017.
1.8 The Law‑Development Nexus: Land Reforms and the Digital Turn
The sweeping land reforms of the 1950s and 1970s were ideologically driven, but the state's failure to invest in accurate cadastral records and efficient mutation processes created a chasm between the paper title and the ground reality. The backlog of land disputes in the civil courts—estimated at over 3.8 million pending cases—prompted the government, with support from the World Bank and the UNDP, to embark on an ambitious digitalisation drive.
The components of this digital turn include: E‑Porcha (digitalisation of all Khatians), E‑Namjari (digital mutation), NID Integration (biometric verification at Sub‑Registry offices), the National Land Portal (land.gov.bd), and the Bhumi App (mobile land services). However, technology alone cannot undo a legacy of ambiguous and contradictory surveys. The fundamental question that has haunted the Bengal delta since the Permanent Settlement—What is the land, and who truly owns it?—remains deeply entangled in the archives of a thousand years of tenure.
Related Resources: National Land Portal | E‑Porcha Portal | Bhumi App – Apple App Store
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What was the Permanent Settlement of 1793?
A: The Permanent Settlement was a land revenue reform enacted by Lord Cornwallis on 22 March 1793. It fixed the land revenue demand in perpetuity for each zamindar and, in exchange, recognised the zamindar as the absolute proprietor of the estate. It transformed the zamindars from imperial revenue officers into private owners of the soil.
Q: How did the partition of 1947 affect property rights in East Bengal?
A: The partition triggered mass migration. Properties left behind by Hindu migrators were classified first as "evacuee property" (1949), later as "enemy property" (1965), and finally as "vested property" under the Vested Property Act, 1974. An estimated 2.6–3.5 million acres were vested in the government, extinguishing all prior private titles.
Q: What does Article 42 of the Bangladesh Constitution guarantee?
A: Article 42 guarantees every citizen the right to acquire, hold, transfer, or dispose of property. It also protects against compulsory acquisition without compensation. However, the right is subject to restrictions imposed by law, and the courts have upheld a wide range of regulatory statutes that curtail free alienability.
Chapter References & Further Reading
- Sir Henry Maine, Village‑Communities in the East and West (John Murray, 1871).
- Eric Stokes, The English Utilitarians and India (Oxford University Press, 1959).
- Sirajul Islam, The Permanent Settlement in Bengal: A Study of Its Operation, 1790–1819 (Bangla Academy, 1979).
- M. A. Rahim, The History of the Bengal Tenancy Act, 1885 (University of Dhaka, 1970).
- Jibendra Kishore Acharyya v. Province of East Pakistan (1957) 9 DLR (SC) 21.
- Shaukat Mahmud, The Law of Transfer of Property in Bangladesh (Mullick Brothers, 2020).
- Transfer of Property Act, 1882 – Official Text
- State Acquisition and Tenancy Act, 1950 – Official Text
- Vested Property Return Act, 2001 – Official Text
- Constitution of Bangladesh – Article 42
How to Cite This Chapter (APA Style):
Mandal, A. H. (2026). Chapter 1: The Philosophy of Property in the
Bengal Delta. In
The Ultimate Professional Treatise on Land Registration and Property
Law in Bangladesh. Retrieved from [CANONICAL_URL].
Next Chapter: Chapter 2 – The Hierarchy of Laws and Conflict Resolution →
Comments