1991 11 Matuzj PDF
1991 11 Matuzj PDF
1991 11 Matuzj PDF
Xl
İstanbul-1991
CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE OTTOMAN INSTITUTION
OF THE İLTiZA.Mı
Joseph E. MATUZ
qat' etme"k) and these delivery units were called muqata'a or 'determi-
ned delivery un i ts'.
Therefore the express.ion 1nuqata' a meant ıı. determined delivery unit,
a taxing district, a unit of a state-property, or a unlt of a stately-
supervised public .Pr<;>perty or the right of !ts utllizing, as well as the
mode of its administration and exploitatıon, furthermore it also meant
an actual lease or rent.
Consequently in the Ottoman Emplre therc were remarkably nu-
merous and extraordinarily many kinds of mtıqlita/a slnce in a district
all the ineames belonging to the state werc presented as muqdJa'a. So
the calleetion of each different tax could constitute a distinct muqCi.[a/a
such as for example the sheep-tax or the must-tax of a district (or
only that of a comrnunity), in cities the collection of the obligations
due by the slaughterhouses or ooza-pubs [boza = beverage made of
fermented millet], the price of the market-places, the ferry-fee, and
the duty paid at city-gates. Therefore the number of the mtıqaıa'a-s
in the Ottoman Empire camc up to several thousa.nds so in the de{ter-
btlne of Istanbul quite a few departments were occupled with them.
According to the dictionaries muqiita.'a has the toılowing meanings :
'delivery' (Ablieferung), 'rent' (Pacht), 'lease' (Pachtung), 'state-lease'
(Staatspachtung), 'financial lease' (Finanzpachtung) and other simi-
lar meani.ngs. The word muqlita'a is used ın the same sense in history
works too. (Fekete, the author in his earller work.s wrote Pachtung
and Piichter as well.) Nevertheless in the l!ght of arch!val research
this question should he judged in a signiflcantly dlfferent way, which
now will be touched upon more deeply.
The state assigned a person to be in charge of the collection of the
handing in (or simply the money) coming from the muqttta'a. That
person won the assignment who competed for lt and as an applicant
(tttıib) either by auction or in the form of a written proposition com-
mitted himself to band in the biggest suın and besides could present
one or more guaranters (kefil) fot' the money In questlon. The assign-
ment (Betrauung) was valid for a year or for an even shorter period
of time.
The assigned person was called enıtn 'assigned' (Betrauter), or
miiltezim 'who undertakes the business' so he was indicated as the
person who undertakes' (Übernehmer) or •entrepreneur' (Unterneh-
mer). Tbese two words could stand In status constructus as well:
emiıı-i miiltezim or 'the assigned one who undertakes the business'.
The enterprise was called em.Cinet 'assignment' (Betrauung) or ilt·izam
'enterprise' (Unternehmung). Another frcquent expressian in the same
context is der 'uhde-i ... ' in the enterprlse of .. .'
Concerning the assignment the state allocated the enterprise with
a dccree (nisan-i serif) with a ıuğra. For the time of his activity the
239
emiıı was granted a daily salary ('ulufe) and was compelled to do
bookkeeping on the incomes. Consequently the emin was a state-
employee obllged to do accounting.
For those who were not in know, who notlced ınerely that every
year or every half-year there was another person at the ferry or in
the market-place collecting state-dues, it mlght have seemed that the
coııector was a lessee for the collectıng of certain dues. But getting to
know the data presented above it is doubtlcssly mistaking to define
the posttion of this person as that of a lessee. The emin was not a
renter but an entrepreneur or comrnissioner who undertook this bu-
siness because he received a dally salary for the term of his office
and ln addition he could obtain unauthorlzed extra earnings. The
administration of iniand revenue demanded that he should pay the
sum which he had taken upon himself to collect, he was punisbed
severely if he postponed paying but most of the time the adrninis-
traUon did not bother about the circumstances to the collecting.:.
Osm.anh Ar§. F. 16
242
2. A tirman on the Remittance ot the Ottoman Tax-Farming
Units in the Sixteenth Century
r u__..
244
8 bi-maqamı
f (?) 8 Qosıanııniyye.
8 bi-maqamı
f (?) S Qosıanııniyye.
Commentary :
the beginning, even in our case, was later not fully operative any
more, since for the tax-farmer the possibility was given to ask that
cadi to be an inspector, who seemd to be appropriate for a har-
ınonious cooperation.