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Show 52 But extortion paying the military. the adventurers who had little military their subjects times, they long as even went they regard for the interest of paid, they were the extent of to besides extortion. reason . were satisfied.113 requisitioning and landed estates of innocent and law ostensible in lands occupied by for the country's long-term economic and social or As progress. arose soon . f orce d aga1ns t th' e1r W1 '11 to em1grate. 114 W'1t h t h ese -c - iqta no people mny amirates, the domain and the income of the caliphate During the Saljuq period, the the houses abiding subjects for Consequently, Some- were · 1n d epen d ent were reduced. imposed by the Buwayhids system • became the order of the day, and the iqtiC became • hereditary e t hroug h t h e goo d height of the Saljuqsj t h e S ultans 0f graces or by usurpat10n. US either Af ter t h e petty independent principalities multiplied with the result that the caliphate ultimately deprived of its was ' resources Ii The expenses of the small hold military however, regarded were, in comparison with the vast amounts spent generally. 116 " on the as royal house- The expenses of the royal household, with all its 113Tax-farming usually had with no squeezing time. Tenure had its defects. People who farmed the land it and interest in were concerned mainly permanent as was much as could from it they normally one year, in the shortest possible though could be extended 114 'Eclipse, Va298-9 J also in c E" Bosworth g'Military Organization of the BUyitis of Persia and Iraq," Oriens, XVIII-XIX , (1967)9 p. '159" -0 q 115Lambton, EncyLandlords, Ch. III Al so Cl Cahenj itlkta Cahen quotes the military officers clopedia of Islam, New ed., p. 462. saying, "The fief belongs to us, it is our propertYj we pass it on to our run children from father to ei the risk of death; 116 iLevy, Ij son tI and in return for it we are The Social Structure, p. 3238 willing to |