mauzadar
English
Alternative forms
- mouzadar
- mazumdar
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Noun
mauzadar (plural mauzadars)
- (now historical) An administrative official responsible for a mauza in British Assam.
- 1978, SM Dubey, North East India: A Sociological Study, p. 142:
- In Upper Assam, the mauzadars who might hail from outside the village were also very powerful at a time.
- 2004, Mahendra Narain Karna, Agrarian Structure and Land Reforms in Assam, p. 22:
- Only an influential and affluent resident of the concerned mauza was appointed as Mauzadar and was given the responsibility of collecting and depositing the land revenue demanded from his mauza by a stipulated date.
- 2011, Deepika Phukan, translating Arupa Patangia Kalita, The Story of Felanee:
- Was it a crime to belong to the Mauzadar’s family? Her mother had not chosen to be born in his house.
- 1978, SM Dubey, North East India: A Sociological Study, p. 142: