[9]. [The normal revenue is now believed to be about 65 lakhs of rupees, roughly speaking, £433,000 (IGI, xiii. 395).]

[10]. [This may possibly be Kamban in Bharatpur State.]

[11]. Kanod was the fief of Amir Singh, Khangarot, one of the twelve great lords of Amber.

[12]. [Udaka means the rite of offering water to deceased relations; hence, assignments of lands to Brāhmans at such rites (H. T. Colebrooke, Essays on the Religion and Philosophy of the Hindus, ed. 1858, p. 115; Monier-Williams, Brāhmanism and Hinduism, 4th ed. p. 304).]

[13]. Barwara, Khirni, Sawar, Isarda, etc., etc.

[14]. Antardah, Balwan, and Indargarh.

[15]. See Dissertation on the Religious Establishments of Mewār, Vol. II. p. [590].

[16]. [See pp. [1416], [1422].]

[17]. [At present the military forces of the State consist of about 5000 infantry, 5000 Nāgas, 700 cavalry, 860 artillery-men, and 100 mounted on camels (IGI, xiii. 397).]

[18]. [There have been several changes in this list of fiefs since the Author’s time. A later, but apparently inaccurate, list is given in Rājputāna Gazetteer, 1879, ii. 139. An earlier list, made in 1790 by W. Hunter, appears in “A Narrative of a Journey from Agra to Oujein,” Asiatic Researches, vi. 69.]