Under British rule, India’s countryside was ruled not just by colonial officers but by a class of landlords known as zamindars. Empowered by the Permanent Settlement of 1793, these intermediaries turned vast estates into engines of wealth — and misery. Their actions left scars on rural India, from starvation to rebellion, yet their legacy lingers in surprising ways. Many descendants of these landlords still enjoy economic and social prominence today. How did a system built on exploitation endure, and what does it tell us about power’s persistence? A System of Exploitation The Permanent Settlement, introduced by Lord Cornwallis, handed zamindars control over land revenue collection in regions like Bengal. They kept a share — typically 10–11% — while passing the rest to the British, a deal that incentivized squeezing tenants dry (Testbook, “Zamindari System in India UPSC Notes”). Rents often soared to 50–90% of a peasant’s harvest, leaving families teetering on survival. Failure to...