Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Malikâne> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 30 of
30
with 100 triples per page.
- Malikâne abstract "Malikâne was a form of tax farming introduced in the Ottoman empire in 1695. It was intended as an improvement on the Iltizam system, in which a tax-farmer was responsible for a single year. Malikâne contracts were for life; this provided more security for the tax farmer (malikaneci) and a less exploitative relationship with the peasants; malikanecis might even make investments to improve productivity. However, vested interests - from existing mültezims who benefited from the Iltizam system - prevented wider adoption of malikâne. Also, malikâne could not be converted into vakf - an important distinction from mülk.A malikâne tax-farm, typically for a village or district, would be auctioned to the highest bidder; in return for collecting all state taxes (rüsüm) from that area, the winner of the auction would make a large downpayment called muaccele, and then annual payments called mâl. The auction determined the initial payment - subject to a minimum price set by the treasury. A malikaneci might finance their initial payment by borrowing from a moneylender or sarraf - who would expect to take a cut of the tax revenue; this could even become a second layer of tax-farming.The winner of the auction was given a document called "berat", as proof of their right to the tax-farm. In theory, when the tenant died their tax farm would revert to the state, but a tenant could give the tax-farm to an heir if the treasury agreed (and officials would expect to be paid for their agreement).As the tax-farming market became more competitive, the treasury collected bigger payments, but profitability for tax-farmers decreased.The malikâne system may have been modelled on an earlier system of "double rent" paid by waqfs.From the treasury's perspective, malikâne was a more reliable source of revenue. Auctions of local tax-farming rights had the effect of integrating diverse provincial tax-farmers into the Ottoman state, and also helped build a more modern concept of private landownership.".
- Malikâne wikiPageID "37479791".
- Malikâne wikiPageLength "3253".
- Malikâne wikiPageOutDegree "8".
- Malikâne wikiPageRevisionID "573280897".
- Malikâne wikiPageWikiLink Auction.
- Malikâne wikiPageWikiLink Category:Land_management_in_the_Ottoman_Empire.
- Malikâne wikiPageWikiLink Category:Taxation_in_the_Ottoman_Empire.
- Malikâne wikiPageWikiLink Farm_(revenue_leasing).
- Malikâne wikiPageWikiLink Mülk.
- Malikâne wikiPageWikiLink Ottoman_Empire.
- Malikâne wikiPageWikiLink Ottoman_empire.
- Malikâne wikiPageWikiLink Rüsüm.
- Malikâne wikiPageWikiLink Tax_farming.
- Malikâne wikiPageWikiLink Vakf.
- Malikâne wikiPageWikiLink Waqf.
- Malikâne wikiPageWikiLinkText "Malikâne".
- Malikâne wikiPageWikiLinkText "malikâne".
- Malikâne hasPhotoCollection Malikâne.
- Malikâne wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Malikâne wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Taxation_in_the_Ottoman_Empire_sidebar.
- Malikâne subject Category:Land_management_in_the_Ottoman_Empire.
- Malikâne subject Category:Taxation_in_the_Ottoman_Empire.
- Malikâne comment "Malikâne was a form of tax farming introduced in the Ottoman empire in 1695. It was intended as an improvement on the Iltizam system, in which a tax-farmer was responsible for a single year. Malikâne contracts were for life; this provided more security for the tax farmer (malikaneci) and a less exploitative relationship with the peasants; malikanecis might even make investments to improve productivity.".
- Malikâne label "Malikâne".
- Malikâne sameAs m.0nb2_p8.
- Malikâne sameAs Q6743678.
- Malikâne sameAs Q6743678.
- Malikâne wasDerivedFrom Malikâne?oldid=573280897.
- Malikâne isPrimaryTopicOf Malikâne.