[13] The Kānungo maintains the statistical registers of land-revenue, rent, cultivation, cropping, etc., for the District as a whole which are compiled from those prepared by the patwāris for each village.
[14] Hindus of Gujarāt, p. 60.
[15] Ibidem, p. 64.
[16] Ibidem, p. 61.
[17] Bhattachārya, Hindu Castes and Sects, p. 177. It is true that Dr. Bhattachārya states that the Kāyasths were also largely employed under the Hindu kings of Bengal, but he gives no authority for this. The Gaur Kāyasths also claim that the Sena kings of Bengal were of their caste, but considering that these kings were looked on as spiritual heads of the country and one of them laid down rules for the structure and intermarriage of the Brāhman caste, it is practically impossible that they could have been Kāyasths. The Muhammadan conquest of Bengal took place at an early period, and very little detail is known about the preceding Hindu dynasties.
[18] Risley, Tribes and Castes of Bengal, art. Bihār Kāyasth.
[19] Sherring, Tribes and Castes, vol. iii. pp. 253–254.
[20] Bhattachārya, Hindu Castes and Tribes, p. 177.
[21] Hindus of Gujarāt, p. 81.
[22] Ibidem, p. 67.