The government officers of the Mughal Empire were called Amils. Some were honoured with the title Diwan.
These words, said to be of Persian origin, may have been used uniformly by earlier Islamic rulers. In Persian, ‘amal’ means ‘to administer’ with an implicit assumption that one who does so is conscientious, diligent and reliable.
An early record of the word Amil appears in chronicles of the mid-15th century: when Ahmed Shah, a ruler of the Muzaffarid dynasty, who reigned over the Gujarat Sultanate c1411-c1442, quelled his twelve-year spree of expansion and set about consolidating his empire, he “appointed amils, that is sub-divisional revenue officers”.
The Amils of Sindh emerged in the mid-1700s. While they capably donned the mantle of ‘amal’ it was with a strong consciousness that progress could only be achieved through ‘ilm’ or ‘education’ and this became, and continues to be, an essential component of their character.