Herat800,000rupees=£80,000
Kandahar800,000=£80,000
Kabul2,000,000=£200,000

Nearly twenty years later, in 1857, during a conference with the Governor-General of India at Peshawar, Dost Mahommed submitted an estimate of his returns which, excluding a million rupees which had to be disbursed to tribal chiefs, was as follows:

Kabul2,222,000rupees=£222,200
Kandahar444,000=£44,400
Turkestan342,800=£34,280
Supplementary sources1,000,000=£100,000
Total4,008,800=£400,880

While the receipts of Afghan Turkestan were incorporated with these figures, the Herat territory was still an independent sphere and its income on that account is not included. A few years later, under Shir Ali, the revenue from all sources rose to £710,000; which, together with the very handsome subsidy annually paid by the Government of India, and if it had been assisted by a liberal fiscal policy under Abdur Rahman, well might have expanded to an annual income of one million sterling.

A CUSTOMS STATION IN THE PLAINS

Prior to their systematic collection under the arrangements which were devised by Abdur Rahman, the monies of Afghanistan were obtained by an elaborate process of taxation, which, if not altogether excessive, was accompanied by much unauthorised exaction. Taxes were imposed upon all live-stock, upon cultivated ground, upon all varieties of produce, upon houses and upon certain classes of the population, the apparent aim of the authorities, irrespective of their actual needs, being to extract as much as possible from their unhappy subjects. The following table represents the taxes which were imposed in the territories of Herat, Kandahar and Kabul.

Article. Imposts. £ s. d.
Merchants’ shops 336  jindeks[33] per annum = 5 12 0
Nomads’ tent-tax 44  = 0 14 8
Afghans’ hut-tax 6  = 0 2 0
Camels and horses 16  = 0 5 4
Cows = 0 1 0
Sheep } ewes ½ = 0 0 2
Goats
Farm produce 8  = 0 2 8
Fruit gardens 30  = 0 10 0
Kitchen gardens 37½ = 0 12 6
Poll-tax, Hindu 15  = 0 5 0
Horses exported 73  = 1 4 4

In addition to these taxes there were the inter-territorial levies upon merchandise in transit from one principality to another. These were upon—